diff options
| author | Roger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org> | 2025-10-15 02:18:09 -0700 |
|---|---|---|
| committer | Roger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org> | 2025-10-15 02:18:09 -0700 |
| commit | 8443583d245c29f9f158df9fb6affd7876d71db4 (patch) | |
| tree | fbe57527ef100016cdede3e4852c9d7446cf7201 | |
| -rw-r--r-- | .gitattributes | 3 | ||||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-8.txt | 9665 | ||||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-8.zip | bin | 0 -> 181715 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h.zip | bin | 0 -> 3793091 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/25618-h.htm | 14128 | ||||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img001.jpg | bin | 0 -> 36729 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img002.jpg | bin | 0 -> 41134 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img003a.jpg | bin | 0 -> 6799 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img003b.jpg | bin | 0 -> 8310 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img003c.jpg | bin | 0 -> 7812 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img003d.jpg | bin | 0 -> 7229 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img003e.jpg | bin | 0 -> 8087 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img003f.jpg | bin | 0 -> 6600 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img004.jpg | bin | 0 -> 41405 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img005.jpg | bin | 0 -> 40940 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img006.jpg | bin | 0 -> 42383 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img007.jpg | bin | 0 -> 34150 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img008.jpg | bin | 0 -> 40667 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img009.jpg | bin | 0 -> 56855 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img010.jpg | bin | 0 -> 52260 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img011a.jpg | bin | 0 -> 6725 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img011b.jpg | bin | 0 -> 7834 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img011c.jpg | bin | 0 -> 7443 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img011d.jpg | bin | 0 -> 7315 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img011e.jpg | bin | 0 -> 7435 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img012.jpg | bin | 0 -> 41148 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img013.jpg | bin | 0 -> 50053 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img014a.jpg | bin | 0 -> 8095 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img014b.jpg | bin | 0 -> 8093 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img014c.jpg | bin | 0 -> 7931 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img014d.jpg | bin | 0 -> 7236 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img014e.jpg | bin | 0 -> 8578 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img015a.jpg | bin | 0 -> 6802 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img015b.jpg | bin | 0 -> 8408 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img015c.jpg | bin | 0 -> 7622 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img015d.jpg | bin | 0 -> 8359 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img015e.jpg | bin | 0 -> 7405 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img016.jpg | bin | 0 -> 45555 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img017.jpg | bin | 0 -> 50841 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img018.jpg | bin | 0 -> 34846 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img019.jpg | bin | 0 -> 44661 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img020.jpg | bin | 0 -> 46204 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img021.jpg | bin | 0 -> 42969 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img022.jpg | bin | 0 -> 50354 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img023.jpg | bin | 0 -> 39940 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img024.jpg | bin | 0 -> 50142 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img025.jpg | bin | 0 -> 38673 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img026.jpg | bin | 0 -> 43970 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img027.jpg | bin | 0 -> 49289 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img028.jpg | bin | 0 -> 47770 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img029.jpg | bin | 0 -> 41789 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img030.jpg | bin | 0 -> 43692 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img031.jpg | bin | 0 -> 34625 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img032.jpg | bin | 0 -> 48022 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img033a.jpg | bin | 0 -> 7126 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img033b.jpg | bin | 0 -> 8436 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img033c.jpg | bin | 0 -> 6202 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img033d.jpg | bin | 0 -> 8080 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img033e.jpg | bin | 0 -> 6923 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img033f.jpg | bin | 0 -> 7054 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img034.jpg | bin | 0 -> 50683 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img035.jpg | bin | 0 -> 45337 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img036.jpg | bin | 0 -> 42046 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img037.jpg | bin | 0 -> 37957 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img038.jpg | bin | 0 -> 43415 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img039.jpg | bin | 0 -> 41617 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img040.jpg | bin | 0 -> 32697 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img041.jpg | bin | 0 -> 44739 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img042.jpg | bin | 0 -> 42831 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img043.jpg | bin | 0 -> 41065 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img044.jpg | bin | 0 -> 45236 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img045.jpg | bin | 0 -> 49295 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img046.jpg | bin | 0 -> 40424 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img047.jpg | bin | 0 -> 41266 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img048.jpg | bin | 0 -> 38951 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img049.jpg | bin | 0 -> 38775 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img050.jpg | bin | 0 -> 44420 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img051.jpg | bin | 0 -> 47613 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img052.jpg | bin | 0 -> 249099 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img052tb.jpg | bin | 0 -> 38893 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img053.jpg | bin | 0 -> 38642 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img054.jpg | bin | 0 -> 41687 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img055.jpg | bin | 0 -> 40062 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img056.jpg | bin | 0 -> 41930 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img057.jpg | bin | 0 -> 302257 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img057tb.jpg | bin | 0 -> 51884 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img058.jpg | bin | 0 -> 43302 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img059.jpg | bin | 0 -> 43219 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img060.jpg | bin | 0 -> 37431 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img061.jpg | bin | 0 -> 88005 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img062.jpg | bin | 0 -> 42917 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img063.jpg | bin | 0 -> 42423 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img064.jpg | bin | 0 -> 41347 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img065.jpg | bin | 0 -> 40613 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img066.jpg | bin | 0 -> 63045 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img067.jpg | bin | 0 -> 42693 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img068.jpg | bin | 0 -> 61621 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-h/images/img069.jpg | bin | 0 -> 51007 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/f0001.png | bin | 0 -> 1761603 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/f0002-image.png | bin | 0 -> 835664 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/f0002.png | bin | 0 -> 69872 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/f0003.png | bin | 0 -> 53408 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/f0004.png | bin | 0 -> 63938 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/f0005.png | bin | 0 -> 62622 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/f0006.png | bin | 0 -> 46314 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/f0007.png | bin | 0 -> 26088 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/f0008.png | bin | 0 -> 13401 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/f0009.png | bin | 0 -> 34264 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/f0010.png | bin | 0 -> 32985 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/f0011.png | bin | 0 -> 44863 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/f0012.png | bin | 0 -> 33622 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0001.png | bin | 0 -> 12675 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0002-blank.png | bin | 0 -> 10799 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0003.png | bin | 0 -> 47060 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0004.png | bin | 0 -> 66246 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0005.png | bin | 0 -> 66383 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0006.png | bin | 0 -> 65346 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0007.png | bin | 0 -> 65832 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0008-insert.png | bin | 0 -> 1739164 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0008.png | bin | 0 -> 67175 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0009.png | bin | 0 -> 62977 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0010-image.png | bin | 0 -> 573774 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0010.png | bin | 0 -> 40551 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0011.png | bin | 0 -> 76442 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0012.png | bin | 0 -> 65303 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0013.png | bin | 0 -> 67484 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0014.png | bin | 0 -> 64276 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0015.png | bin | 0 -> 45094 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0016.png | bin | 0 -> 56847 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0017.png | bin | 0 -> 74551 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0018-image.png | bin | 0 -> 586043 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0018.png | bin | 0 -> 57114 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0019.png | bin | 0 -> 68928 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0020.png | bin | 0 -> 63997 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0021.png | bin | 0 -> 62670 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0022.png | bin | 0 -> 50295 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0023-image.png | bin | 0 -> 590647 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0023.png | bin | 0 -> 66228 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0024-image.png | bin | 0 -> 1850749 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0024.png | bin | 0 -> 66540 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0025.png | bin | 0 -> 63359 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0026.png | bin | 0 -> 81618 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0027.png | bin | 0 -> 63562 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0028.png | bin | 0 -> 60692 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0029.png | bin | 0 -> 69821 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0030.png | bin | 0 -> 62332 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0031.png | bin | 0 -> 74909 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0032-insert.png | bin | 0 -> 1083430 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0032.png | bin | 0 -> 63057 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0033.png | bin | 0 -> 14609 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0034-insert.png | bin | 0 -> 1363522 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0034.png | bin | 0 -> 55225 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0035.png | bin | 0 -> 60347 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0036-image.png | bin | 0 -> 609397 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0036-insert.png | bin | 0 -> 1509736 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0036.png | bin | 0 -> 51406 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0037.png | bin | 0 -> 60694 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0038.png | bin | 0 -> 62943 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0039.png | bin | 0 -> 64569 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0040-insert.png | bin | 0 -> 1773557 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0040.png | bin | 0 -> 64044 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0041-image.png | bin | 0 -> 626260 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0041.png | bin | 0 -> 47364 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0042.png | bin | 0 -> 47468 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0043.png | bin | 0 -> 79460 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0044.png | bin | 0 -> 62581 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0045.png | bin | 0 -> 74113 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0046.png | bin | 0 -> 61097 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0047.png | bin | 0 -> 77654 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0048.png | bin | 0 -> 68749 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0049.png | bin | 0 -> 72967 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0050.png | bin | 0 -> 67384 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0051.png | bin | 0 -> 72575 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0052.png | bin | 0 -> 62596 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0053.png | bin | 0 -> 62764 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0054.png | bin | 0 -> 44938 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0055.png | bin | 0 -> 49405 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0056-insert.png | bin | 0 -> 1653703 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0056.png | bin | 0 -> 68159 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0057.png | bin | 0 -> 61131 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0058.png | bin | 0 -> 63786 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0059.png | bin | 0 -> 86549 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0060.png | bin | 0 -> 32776 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0061.png | bin | 0 -> 72225 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0062.png | bin | 0 -> 63178 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0063.png | bin | 0 -> 79351 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0064-insert.png | bin | 0 -> 1509533 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0064.png | bin | 0 -> 62796 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0065-image.png | bin | 0 -> 592523 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0065.png | bin | 0 -> 61474 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0066.png | bin | 0 -> 61553 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0067-image.png | bin | 0 -> 670918 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0067.png | bin | 0 -> 60344 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0068.png | bin | 0 -> 60557 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0069-image.png | bin | 0 -> 552085 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0069.png | bin | 0 -> 47433 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0070-image.png | bin | 0 -> 627255 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0070.png | bin | 0 -> 54939 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0071.png | bin | 0 -> 73513 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0072-image.png | bin | 0 -> 666908 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0072.png | bin | 0 -> 61237 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0073-image.png | bin | 0 -> 595005 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0073.png | bin | 0 -> 85469 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0074-image.png | bin | 0 -> 638940 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0074.png | bin | 0 -> 69020 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0075-image.png | bin | 0 -> 647412 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0075.png | bin | 0 -> 79413 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0076.png | bin | 0 -> 52622 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0077.png | bin | 0 -> 84575 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0078.png | bin | 0 -> 67742 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0079.png | bin | 0 -> 80649 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0080.png | bin | 0 -> 64445 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0081.png | bin | 0 -> 84903 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0082.png | bin | 0 -> 36027 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0083-image.png | bin | 0 -> 646515 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0083.png | bin | 0 -> 67540 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0084-image.png | bin | 0 -> 614314 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0084.png | bin | 0 -> 54183 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0085.png | bin | 0 -> 71666 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0086.png | bin | 0 -> 65144 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0087-image.png | bin | 0 -> 628996 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0087.png | bin | 0 -> 71860 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0088-insert.png | bin | 0 -> 1330530 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0088.png | bin | 0 -> 65623 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0089-image.png | bin | 0 -> 620055 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0089.png | bin | 0 -> 68266 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0090.png | bin | 0 -> 63597 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0091-image.png | bin | 0 -> 572983 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0091.png | bin | 0 -> 87468 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0092.png | bin | 0 -> 63488 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0093-image.png | bin | 0 -> 676422 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0093.png | bin | 0 -> 45301 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0095.png | bin | 0 -> 23001 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0096-blank.png | bin | 0 -> 2789 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0097.png | bin | 0 -> 67278 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0098.png | bin | 0 -> 63504 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0099-image.png | bin | 0 -> 594644 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0099.png | bin | 0 -> 66545 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0100.png | bin | 0 -> 63467 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0101.png | bin | 0 -> 70373 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0102.png | bin | 0 -> 59266 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0103.png | bin | 0 -> 69966 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0104-image.png | bin | 0 -> 633249 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0104-insert.png | bin | 0 -> 1612494 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0104.png | bin | 0 -> 55916 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0105.png | bin | 0 -> 60862 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0106-image.png | bin | 0 -> 623213 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0106.png | bin | 0 -> 58939 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0107-image.png | bin | 0 -> 584762 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0107.png | bin | 0 -> 57078 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0108-image.png | bin | 0 -> 610880 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0108.png | bin | 0 -> 57666 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0109.png | bin | 0 -> 70708 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0110-image.png | bin | 0 -> 573005 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0110.png | bin | 0 -> 36778 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0111.png | bin | 0 -> 55904 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0112-insert.png | bin | 0 -> 1820307 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0112.png | bin | 0 -> 62907 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0113.png | bin | 0 -> 68255 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0114.png | bin | 0 -> 72063 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0115.png | bin | 0 -> 64047 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0116.png | bin | 0 -> 67659 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0117.png | bin | 0 -> 72134 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0118.png | bin | 0 -> 72213 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0119.png | bin | 0 -> 64086 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0120-image.png | bin | 0 -> 668378 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0120-insert.png | bin | 0 -> 1311644 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0120.png | bin | 0 -> 40842 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0121.png | bin | 0 -> 48930 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0122.png | bin | 0 -> 63738 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0123-image.png | bin | 0 -> 619454 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0123.png | bin | 0 -> 74327 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0124.png | bin | 0 -> 62691 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0125-image.png | bin | 0 -> 587036 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0125.png | bin | 0 -> 61957 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0126.png | bin | 0 -> 61966 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0127-image.png | bin | 0 -> 645232 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0127.png | bin | 0 -> 59975 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0128.png | bin | 0 -> 63896 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0129.png | bin | 0 -> 70453 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0130.png | bin | 0 -> 62359 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0131.png | bin | 0 -> 71385 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0132.png | bin | 0 -> 75411 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0133-image.png | bin | 0 -> 602602 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0133.png | bin | 0 -> 61605 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0134.png | bin | 0 -> 69297 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0135.png | bin | 0 -> 68229 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0136-image.png | bin | 0 -> 648456 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0136.png | bin | 0 -> 59354 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0137.png | bin | 0 -> 73162 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0138.png | bin | 0 -> 57608 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0139.png | bin | 0 -> 66914 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0140.png | bin | 0 -> 38806 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0141.png | bin | 0 -> 61120 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0142-image.png | bin | 0 -> 582743 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0142.png | bin | 0 -> 53923 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0143.png | bin | 0 -> 72333 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0144.png | bin | 0 -> 64457 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0145.png | bin | 0 -> 72844 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0146.png | bin | 0 -> 67267 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0147.png | bin | 0 -> 66762 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0148.png | bin | 0 -> 68696 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0149-image.png | bin | 0 -> 612106 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0149.png | bin | 0 -> 44543 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0150.png | bin | 0 -> 64330 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0151.png | bin | 0 -> 63521 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0152-image.png | bin | 0 -> 571044 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0152.png | bin | 0 -> 49338 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0153.png | bin | 0 -> 72978 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0154-image.png | bin | 0 -> 588517 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0154.png | bin | 0 -> 46484 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0155-image.png | bin | 0 -> 633711 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0155.png | bin | 0 -> 68559 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0156.png | bin | 0 -> 61137 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0157.png | bin | 0 -> 76667 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0158.png | bin | 0 -> 58003 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0159.png | bin | 0 -> 71704 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0160.png | bin | 0 -> 69162 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0161.png | bin | 0 -> 71874 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0162.png | bin | 0 -> 67213 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0163-image.png | bin | 0 -> 619393 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0163.png | bin | 0 -> 65570 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0164.png | bin | 0 -> 56935 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0165.png | bin | 0 -> 66515 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0166.png | bin | 0 -> 60056 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0167.png | bin | 0 -> 60700 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0168-insert.png | bin | 0 -> 3612065 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0168.png | bin | 0 -> 66562 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0169.png | bin | 0 -> 63661 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0170-image.png | bin | 0 -> 587500 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0170.png | bin | 0 -> 51068 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0171.png | bin | 0 -> 70418 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0172.png | bin | 0 -> 70634 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0173-image.png | bin | 0 -> 615389 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0173.png | bin | 0 -> 72516 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0174.png | bin | 0 -> 70841 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0175.png | bin | 0 -> 63735 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0176.png | bin | 0 -> 71388 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0177.png | bin | 0 -> 68620 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0178-image.png | bin | 0 -> 605219 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0178.png | bin | 0 -> 52195 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0179.png | bin | 0 -> 71401 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0180.png | bin | 0 -> 66412 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0181-image.png | bin | 0 -> 979007 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0181.png | bin | 0 -> 61197 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0182.png | bin | 0 -> 54085 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0183.png | bin | 0 -> 64430 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0184-insert.png | bin | 0 -> 1186929 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0184.png | bin | 0 -> 67323 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0185.png | bin | 0 -> 64041 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0186.png | bin | 0 -> 79079 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0187.png | bin | 0 -> 62087 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0188.png | bin | 0 -> 58199 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0189.png | bin | 0 -> 71226 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0190.png | bin | 0 -> 62989 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0191.png | bin | 0 -> 72211 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0192-image.png | bin | 0 -> 629238 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0192.png | bin | 0 -> 53438 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0193-image.png | bin | 0 -> 573259 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0193.png | bin | 0 -> 54626 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0194.png | bin | 0 -> 65389 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0195.png | bin | 0 -> 75141 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0196-image.png | bin | 0 -> 548728 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0196.png | bin | 0 -> 60830 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0197.png | bin | 0 -> 71049 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0198.png | bin | 0 -> 63487 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0199.png | bin | 0 -> 67999 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0200-insert.png | bin | 0 -> 1443006 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0200.png | bin | 0 -> 53269 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0201-image.png | bin | 0 -> 602901 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0201.png | bin | 0 -> 54640 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0202.png | bin | 0 -> 16457 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0203.png | bin | 0 -> 12753 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0204-blank.png | bin | 0 -> 2611 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0205.png | bin | 0 -> 57703 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0206.png | bin | 0 -> 44229 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0207.png | bin | 0 -> 61772 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0208.png | bin | 0 -> 57583 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0209.png | bin | 0 -> 69038 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0210-image.png | bin | 0 -> 885145 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0210.png | bin | 0 -> 56018 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0211-image.png | bin | 0 -> 609098 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0211.png | bin | 0 -> 63785 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0212.png | bin | 0 -> 60476 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0213-image.png | bin | 0 -> 892366 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0213.png | bin | 0 -> 60612 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0214.png | bin | 0 -> 59590 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0215.png | bin | 0 -> 64575 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0216-insert.png | bin | 0 -> 2062103 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0216.png | bin | 0 -> 45670 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0217.png | bin | 0 -> 46891 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0218.png | bin | 0 -> 59390 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0219-image.png | bin | 0 -> 947455 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0219.png | bin | 0 -> 72508 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0220.png | bin | 0 -> 64018 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0221.png | bin | 0 -> 70959 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0222.png | bin | 0 -> 62262 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0223.png | bin | 0 -> 64617 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0224.png | bin | 0 -> 62897 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0225.png | bin | 0 -> 71123 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0226.png | bin | 0 -> 61945 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0227.png | bin | 0 -> 73000 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0228.png | bin | 0 -> 53735 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0229.png | bin | 0 -> 55280 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0230.png | bin | 0 -> 67522 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0231.png | bin | 0 -> 72707 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0232-insert.png | bin | 0 -> 1894738 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0232.png | bin | 0 -> 61269 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0233.png | bin | 0 -> 67496 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0234.png | bin | 0 -> 63914 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0235.png | bin | 0 -> 71158 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0236.png | bin | 0 -> 55655 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0237.png | bin | 0 -> 29373 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0238-insert.png | bin | 0 -> 1600825 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0238.png | bin | 0 -> 39607 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0239.png | bin | 0 -> 10116 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0240-blank.png | bin | 0 -> 2620 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0241.png | bin | 0 -> 54643 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0242.png | bin | 0 -> 60753 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0243.png | bin | 0 -> 73475 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0244.png | bin | 0 -> 41297 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0245.png | bin | 0 -> 55172 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0246.png | bin | 0 -> 55133 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0247.png | bin | 0 -> 53748 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0248.png | bin | 0 -> 48518 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0249.png | bin | 0 -> 57452 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0250.png | bin | 0 -> 52949 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0251.png | bin | 0 -> 44236 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0252.png | bin | 0 -> 53027 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0253.png | bin | 0 -> 42260 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0254.png | bin | 0 -> 37357 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0255.png | bin | 0 -> 48194 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0256.png | bin | 0 -> 74540 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0257.png | bin | 0 -> 51973 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0258.png | bin | 0 -> 50726 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0259.png | bin | 0 -> 54618 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0260.png | bin | 0 -> 57568 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0261.png | bin | 0 -> 60514 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0262.png | bin | 0 -> 57039 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0263.png | bin | 0 -> 56358 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0264.png | bin | 0 -> 54860 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0265.png | bin | 0 -> 57095 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0266.png | bin | 0 -> 53830 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0267.png | bin | 0 -> 51404 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0268.png | bin | 0 -> 61642 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0269.png | bin | 0 -> 58163 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0270.png | bin | 0 -> 61144 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0271.png | bin | 0 -> 47872 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618-page-images/p0272.png | bin | 0 -> 6996 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618.txt | 9665 | ||||
| -rw-r--r-- | 25618.zip | bin | 0 -> 181676 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | LICENSE.txt | 11 | ||||
| -rw-r--r-- | README.md | 2 |
453 files changed, 33474 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes new file mode 100644 index 0000000..6833f05 --- /dev/null +++ b/.gitattributes @@ -0,0 +1,3 @@ +* text=auto +*.txt text +*.md text diff --git a/25618-8.txt b/25618-8.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..bd63049 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-8.txt @@ -0,0 +1,9665 @@ +The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Second Battalion Royal Dublin Fusiliers +in the South African War, by Cecil Francis Romer and Arthur Edward +Mainwaring + + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + + + + +Title: The Second Battalion Royal Dublin Fusiliers in the South African War + With a Description of the Operations in the Aden Hinterland + + +Author: Cecil Francis Romer and Arthur Edward Mainwaring + + + +Release Date: May 26, 2008 [eBook #25618] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 + + +***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE SECOND BATTALION ROYAL DUBLIN +FUSILIERS IN THE SOUTH AFRICAN WAR*** + + +E-text prepared by Jonathan Ingram, Christine P. Travers, and the Project +Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team (https://www.pgdp.net) + + + +Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this + file which includes the original illustrations. + See 25618-h.htm or 25618-h.zip: + (https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/2/5/6/1/25618/25618-h/25618-h.htm) + or + (https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/2/5/6/1/25618/25618-h.zip) + + +Transcriber's note: + + Obvious printer's errors have been corrected. All other + inconsistencies are as in the original. The author's spelling + has been maintained. + + + + + +THE SECOND BATTALION ROYAL DUBLIN FUSILIERS IN THE SOUTH AFRICAN WAR + +With a Description of the Operations in the Aden Hinterland + +by + +MAJORS C. F. ROMER & A. E. MAINWARING + + + + + + + +[Illustration: _W. & D. Downey._ + +H.R.H. The Duke of Connaught and Strathearn, K.G., +Commander-in-Chief of The Mediterranean Forces, and Colonel-in-Chief +of The Royal Dublin Fusiliers.] + + + +[Illustration: E Libris, The Royal Dublin Fusiliers.] + + +London: A. L. Humphreys, 187 Piccadilly, W. +1908 + + + + +PREFACE + + +The 2nd Battalion Royal Dublin Fusiliers is one of the oldest +regiments in the service. It was raised in February and March, 1661, +to form the garrison of Bombay, which had been ceded to the Crown as +part of the dowry of the Infanta of Portugal, on her marriage with +King Charles II. It then consisted of four companies, the +establishment of each being one captain, one lieutenant, one ensign, +two sergeants, three corporals, two drummers, and 100 privates, and +arrived at Bombay on September 18th, 1662, under the command of Sir +Abraham Shipman. Under various titles it took part in nearly all the +continuous fighting of which the history of India of those days is +principally composed, being generally known as the Bombay European +Regiment, until in March, 1843, it was granted the title of 1st Bombay +Fusiliers. In 1862 the regiment was transferred to the Crown, when the +word 'Royal' was added to its title, and it became known as the 103rd +Regiment, The Royal Bombay Fusiliers. In 1873 the regiment was linked +to the Royal Madras Fusiliers, whose history up to that time had been +very similar to its own. By General Order 41, of 1881, the titles of +the two regiments underwent yet another change, when they became known +by their present names, the 1st and 2nd Battalions Royal Dublin +Fusiliers. + +The 2nd Battalion first left India for home service on January 2nd, +1871, when it embarked on H.M.S. _Malabar_, arriving at Portsmouth +Harbour about 8 a.m. on February 4th, and was stationed at Parkhurst. +Its home service lasted until 1884, when it embarked for Gibraltar. In +1885 it moved to Egypt, and in 1886 to India, where it was quartered +until 1897, when it was suddenly ordered to South Africa, on account +of our strained relations with the Transvaal Republic. On arrival at +Durban, however, the difficulties had been settled for the time being, +and the regiment was quartered at Pietermaritzburg until it moved up +to Dundee in 1899, just previous to the outbreak of war. + +The late Major-General Penn-Symons assumed command of the Natal force +in 1897, and from that date commenced the firm friendship and mutual +regard between him and the regiment, which lasted without a break +until the day when he met his death at Talana. The interest he took in +the battalion and his zeal resulted in a stiff training, but a +training for which we must always feel grateful, and remember with +kind, if sad, recollections. It was his custom to see a great deal of +the regiments under his command, and he very frequently lunched with +us, by which means he not only made himself personally acquainted with +the characters of the officers of the regiment, but also had an +opportunity of seeing for himself the deep _esprit de corps_ which +existed in it, and without which no regiment can ever hope to +successfully overcome the perils and hardships incidental to active +service. + +As the shadow of the coming war grew dark and ever darker on the +Northern horizon, the disposition of the Natal troops underwent some +change, and General Penn-Symons' brigade, of which the regiment formed +part, was moved up to Dundee, and was there stationed at the time of +the outbreak of hostilities. In spite of the long roll of battle +honours, of which both battalions are so justly proud, the South +African Campaign was the first active service either had seen under +their present titles, and the first opportunity afforded them of +making those new titles as celebrated as the old ones which had done +so much towards the acquisition of our Indian Empire. Imbued with +these feelings the regiment lay camped within full view of Talana +Hill, waiting the oncoming of the huge wave of invasion which was so +shortly to sweep over the borders, engulf Ladysmith, and threaten to +reach Maritzburg itself. But that was not to be. Its force was spent +long ere it reached the capital, and a few horsemen near the banks of +the Mooi River marked the line of its utmost limit in this direction. + +The present work only claims to be a plain soldier's narrative of the +part taken by the 2nd Battalion Royal Dublin Fusiliers in stemming +this rush, and its subsequent efforts, its grim fights on the hills +which fringe the borders of the River Tugela, its long and weary +marches across the rolling uplands of the Transvaal, and its +subsequent monotonous life of constant vigil in fort and blockhouse, +and on escort duty. + +All five battalions took part in the war. The 1st sailed from Ireland +on November 10th, 1899, and sent three companies under Major Hicks to +strengthen the 2nd Battalion. They arrived in time to share in the +action at Colenso on December 15th, and all the subsequent fighting +which finally resulted in the relief of Ladysmith, after which they +returned to the headquarters of the 1st Battalion, which formed part +of the Natal army under General Sir Redvers Buller, and later on +advanced through Laing's Nek and Alleman's Nek into the Transvaal. The +3rd Battalion sent a very strong draft of its reserve, and the 4th and +5th Battalions volunteered and came out to the front, where they +rendered most excellent service. In addition to the battalions there +were a good many officers of one or other battalion employed in +various ways in the huge theatre of operations. Major Godley and Major +Pilson had been selected for special service before the war, and the +former served in Mafeking during the siege, while the latter served +under General Plumer in his endeavours to raise it. Captain Kinsman +also served with the latter force. Major Rutherford, Adjutant of the +Ceylon Volunteers, arrived in command of the contingent from that +corps. Lieutenants Cory and Taylor served with the Mounted Infantry +most of the time, as did Lieutenants Garvice, Grimshaw, and Frankland, +after the capture of Pretoria, while Captain Carington Smith's share +in the war is briefly stated later on. Captain MacBean was on the +staff until he was killed at Nooitgedacht. The M.I. of the regiment +served with great distinction, and it is regretted that it is +impossible to include an account of the many actions and marches in +which they took part, but the present volume deals almost exclusively +with the battalion as a battalion. + +The authors are desirous of expressing their most hearty and cordial +thanks to all those who have assisted them in the preparation of this +volume. They are especially indebted to Colonel H. Tempest Hicks, +C.B., without whose co-operation the work could not have been carried +out, for the loan of his diary, and for the sketches and many of the +photographs. To Colonel F. P. English, D.S.O., for the extracts from +his diary containing an account of the operations in the Aden +Hinterland and photographs. To Captain L. F. Renny for his Ladysmith +notes. Also to Sergeant-Major C. V. Brumby, Quartermaster-Sergeant +Purcell, and Mr. French (late Quartermaster-Sergeant), for assistance +in collecting data, compiling the appendix, and for photographs, +respectively. + + C. F. ROMER. + + A. E. MAINWARING. + + + + +CONTENTS + + +PART I.--FIGHTING. + + CHAP. Page + + I. Talana 3 + + II. The Retreat from Dundee 16 + + III. From Colenso to Estcourt 22 + + IV. Estcourt and Frere 28 + + V. The Battle of Colenso 34 + + VI. Venter's Spruit 42 + + VII. Vaal Krantz 55 + + VIII. Hart's and Pieter's Hills--The Relief of Ladysmith 61 + + IX. The Siege of Ladysmith 76 + + X. Aliwal North and Fourteen Streams 83 + + +PART II.--TREKKING. + + I. From Vryburg to Heidelberg 97 + + II. Heidelberg 111 + + III. After De Wet 121 + + IV. September in the Gatsrand 141 + + V. Frederickstadt--Klip River--The Losberg 164 + + VI. Buried Treasure--The Eastern Transvaal--The + Krugersdorp Defences 182 + + VII. The Last Twelve Months 193 + + +PART III. + + I. The Aden Hinterland 205 + + II. The Return Home and Reception 217 + + III. The Memorial Arch 229 + + +APPENDIX 239 + + + + +ILLUSTRATIONS + + +FULL-PAGE PLATES. + + H.R.H. The Duke of Connaught and Strathearn, + K.G., Commander-in-chief of the + Mediterranean Forces, and Colonel-in-chief + of the Royal Dublin Fusiliers _Frontispiece_ + + Regimental Book-Plate _Title-page_ + + Casualties at Talana _Facing page_ 8 + + Major-General C. D. Cooper, C.B., commanding + 2nd Royal Dublin Fusiliers in Natal " " 24 + + Captain C. F. Romer and Captain E. Fetherstonhaugh " " 32 + + General Hart's Flank Attack from the + Boers' Point of View (Plan) " " 34 + + Casualties at Colenso " " 36 + + Group of twenty Sergeants taken after the + Battle of Colenso, all that remained + of Forty-Eight who left Maritzburg " " 40 + + Casualties at Tugela Heights " " 56, 64 + + Taking Fourteen Streams (Plan) " " 88 + + Miscellaneous Casualties " " 104 + + Colonel H. Tempest Hicks, C.B., commanding + 2nd Royal Dublin Fusiliers, March, 1900--March, + 1904 _facing Page_ 112 + + Plan of Position at Zuikerbosch " " 120 + + Plan of Battle of Frederickstadt " " 168 + + Sketch Plan of Kilmarnock House and Fortifications " " 184 + + Krugersdorp from Kilmarnock House " " 200 + + Officers of the 2nd Battalion Royal Dublin + Fusiliers who embarked for Aden " " 216 + + The Memorial Arch, Dublin " " 232 + + The South African Memorial, Natal " " 238 + + +ILLUSTRATIONS IN TEXT. + + The Last Rites 10 + + Armourer-Sergeant Waite--'Delenda Est Carthago' 18 + + Railway Bridge at Colenso 23 + + Boer Trenches, Colenso 36 + + Bringing down the Wounded 41 + + After the Fight 65 + + The Grave of Colonel Sitwell and Captain Maitland, + Gordon Highlanders (attached), near Railway + at Pieter's Hill 67 + + Pieter's Hill, Feb. 27th, 1900 69 + + Pontoon Bridge, River Tugela, Feb. 28th, 1900 70 + + 2nd Royal, Dublin Fusiliers, heading Relief Troops, + marching into Ladysmith, March, 1900, 72 + + General Sir Redvers Buller, V.C., entering Ladysmith 73 + + The Dublins are coming--Ladysmith 74 + + Sir George White watching Relief Force entering + Ladysmith 75 + + Sergeant Davis in Meditation over 'Long Cecil' at + Kimberley. 'Shall I Take it for the Officers?' 83 + + St. Patrick's Day in Camp. Private Monaghan, the + Regimental Butcher, in Foreground 84 + + A Wash in hot Water--Aliwal North 87 + + The Regimental Maxim in Action at Fourteen + Streams 89 + + Captain Jervis, General Fitzroy Hart, C.B., C.M.G., + and Captain Arthur Hart 91 + + Issuing Queen Victoria's Chocolate. Colour-Sergeant + Connell, 'G' Company, on left 93 + + First Entry into Krugersdorp. Captain and Adjutant + Fetherstonhaugh in Foreground 99 + + 'Speed, Dead Slow' 104 + + Hoisting the Union Jack at Krugersdorp 106 + + Johan Meyer's House, five Miles outside Johannesburg 107 + + Sergeant Davis, evidently with all we wanted 108 + + Paardekraal Monument, Krugersdorp 110 + + The Officers' Mess 120 + + Corporal Tierney and Chef Burst 123 + + Fourth Class on the Z.a.s.m. 125 + + Fifth Class on the Z.a.s.m. 127 + + The Vaal River, Lindeque Drift 133 + + The R.D.F. Bathing in Mooi River, Potchefstroom 136 + + Father Mathews 142 + + Funeral of Commandant Theron and a British + Soldier, Sept. 6th, 1900 149 + + Buffelsdoorn Camp, Gatsrand Hills 152 + + A Group of Boer Prisoners taken at the Surprise + of Pochefstroom 153 + + Colour-Sergeant Cossy issuing Beer 154 + + 'Come to the Cook-house Door, Boys!' 163 + + Sergeant French and the Officers' Mess, Nachtmaal 170 + + 4·7 crossing a Drift, assisted by the Dublin Fusiliers 172 + + Boy Fitzpatrick waiting at Lunch 178 + + 'The Latest Shave.' Captain G. S. Higginson (mounted) + and Major Bird 181 + + The Hairdresser's Shop 192 + + Kilmarnock, Krugersdorp 193 + + A Blockhouse 196 + + The 'Blue Caps' relieving the 'Old Toughs' 201 + + Dthala Camp 210 + + Dthala Village, From Camp 211 + + A Frontier Tower--Abdali Country 213 + + Homeward bound at last, after twenty Years' + Foreign Service 219 + + + + +PART I. + +FIGHTING. + + + + +THE 2ND BATTALION + +ROYAL DUBLIN FUSILIERS + + + + +CHAPTER I. + +TALANA. + + 'The midnight brought the signal sound of strife, + The morn the marshalling in arms, the day-- + Battle's magnificently stern array.' + + _Byron._ + + +The 2nd Battalion of the Royal Dublin Fusiliers left India for +Maritzburg, Natal, in 1897, and therefore, on the outbreak of the war +between Great Britain and the South African Republics, had the +advantage of possessing some acquaintance with the topography of the +colony, and of a two years' training and preparation for the long +struggle which was to ensue. + +The political situation had become so threatening by July, 1899, that +the military authorities began to take precautionary measures, and the +battalion was ordered to effect a partial mobilisation and to collect +its transport. On September 20th it moved by train to Ladysmith,[1] +and four days later proceeded to Dundee. Here Major-General Sir W. +Penn-Symons assumed the command of a small force, consisting of 18th +Hussars, 13th, 67th, and 69th Batteries R.F.A., 1st Leicestershire +Regiment, 1st King's Royal Rifles, and 2nd Royal Dublin Fusiliers. +Each infantry battalion had a mounted infantry company. The brigade +was reinforced on October 16th by the 1st Royal Irish Fusiliers. + + [Footnote 1: It was at Ladysmith that the battalion adopted + the green tops on the helmets, a distinguishing badge which + was worn throughout the war. The 1st Battalion painted theirs + blue on account of the historic nickname, 'Blue-caps,' + acquired by them at the time of the Mutiny.] + +The country was still nominally at peace, but the Dundee force held +itself ready for emergencies, and sent out mounted patrols by day and +infantry piquets by night, while the important railway junction at +Glencoe was held by a company. The General utilised this period of +waiting in carrying out field-firing and practising various forms of +attack. As he was a practical and experienced soldier, he succeeded in +bringing his command to a high state of efficiency, and the battalion +owed much to his careful preparation. It was due largely to his +teaching that the men knew how to advance from cover to cover and +displayed such ready 'initiative' in the various battles of the Natal +Campaign. The opportunity of putting into practice this teaching soon +presented itself, for on October 12th news was received that the South +African Republics had declared war on the previous day. + +Consideration of the advisability of pushing forward a small force to +Dundee, and of the reasons for such a movement, does not fall within +the scope of this work; but a glance at the map will show that Sir W. +Penn-Symons had a wide front to watch, since he could be attacked from +three sides. Although precise information regarding the Boer forces +was lacking, it was known that commandoes were assembling at +Volksrust, along the left bank of the Buffalo River, and on the far +side of Van Reenan's Pass. + +Early in the morning of October 13th a telegram was received from Sir +G. White, asking General Penn-Symons to send a battalion to Ladysmith +at once, as the Boers were reported to be advancing on that town. The +General paid the 2nd Royal Dublin Fusiliers the compliment of +selecting them for this duty, and they entrained accordingly, about +4.30 a.m., reaching Ladysmith some four hours later. They detrained +with the utmost haste and marched at once towards Dewdrop, whither the +Ladysmith garrison had been sent; but the report of a Boer advance was +discovered to be without foundation, and the battalion was halted five +miles outside Ladysmith, and ordered to return. It did not reach the +camp at Dundee until 11 p.m. + +On the following day Sir W. Penn-Symons moved his detachment closer to +the town of Dundee, and placed his camp three or four hundred yards +north of the road to Glencoe Junction. It soon became clear that the +Boers meant to invade Natal, and Newcastle was occupied by them on the +15th, while the mounted patrols of the Dundee force were already in +touch with the commandoes on the left bank of the Buffalo. The +detached company at Glencoe was withdrawn on the 18th, and on the 19th +three companies of the regiment, under Major English, were sent to the +Navigation Colliery in order to bring away large quantities of mealie +bags stored there. + +Colonel Cooper, commanding the 2nd Battalion Royal Dublin Fusiliers, +had been given an extension of his command, and was hurrying back from +a short period of leave in England, so the battalion was at this time +under the command of Major S. G. Bird. + +It was now evident to every one that we were on the eve of +hostilities, and a spirit of keen excitement and anticipation ran +through all ranks. After a long tour of foreign service, during which +the regiment had not had the good fortune to see active service, +though on three occasions they had been within measurable distance of +it, they were now to have the long-wished-for chance of showing that, +in spite of altered denominations and other changes, they were +prepared to keep their gallant and historical reputation untarnished. +Our advanced patrols had already seen the first signs of the coming +torrent of invasion, and one and all were seized with that feeling, +common to all mankind, of longing to get the waiting and the +preparation over, and to commence the real business for which they had +been so carefully and so thoroughly prepared. Full of the most +implicit confidence in their brave leader, the regiment knew to a man +that they would soon be at hand-grips, and their two years' residence +in the country and knowledge of the history of the last Boer War, and +the stain to be rubbed out, made every pulse tingle with the desire to +show that the past had been but an unfortunate blunder, and that the +British soldier of the present day was no whit inferior to his +predecessors of Indian, Peninsular, Waterloo, and Crimean fame. + +On the night of the 19-20th October, Lieutenant Grimshaw was sent with +a patrol of the Mounted Infantry company of the battalion to watch the +road to Vant's and Landsman's Drifts, ten miles east of Dundee. About +2 a.m. on October 20th this officer reported that a Boer commando was +advancing on the town. At a later hour he forwarded a second message +to the effect that he was retiring before superior numbers, one man of +his party having been wounded, and that the enemy were in occupation +of the hills to the east of the town. On the receipt of this message +General Penn-Symons ordered two companies of the Dublin Fusiliers to +support Lieutenant Grimshaw. 'B' and 'E' companies, under Captains +Dibley and Weldon, accordingly left camp at 4 a.m., and, moving +through the town, took up a position in Sand Spruit, which runs along +the eastern edge of Dundee. The whole brigade stood to arms, as usual, +at 5 a.m., but was dismissed at 5.15 a.m. At about 5.30 a.m. the mist +lifted, and everybody's gaze was directed on Talana Hill, where +numbers of men in black mackintoshes could be seen. The general +impression was that they were members of the town guard, but the +arrival of the first shell soon dispelled this illusion. + +Soon after 5.30 a.m. the Boer artillery opened fire on the camp. Their +fire was accurate enough, considering that the range was near 5400 +yards, but the damage done was practically nothing, as very few shells +burst, and these only on impact. Our own artillery (13th and 69th +Field Batteries, with 'D' company of the battalion as escort) did not +immediately respond, as they were at the time engaged in watering +their horses; but as soon as possible they were in position to the +east of the camp, and began to shell the crest of Talana Hill. They +obtained the range almost immediately, and in a short time overpowered +the hostile guns, which were thus prevented from playing an important +part in the day's battle. + +As soon as the Boers started shelling the camp, the battalion fell in +on its parade-ground in quarter-column and waited for orders. But when +a shell fell just behind the ranks, Major Bird moved it at the double +through the camp to a donga which afforded good cover. The men then +removed their great-coats, and stayed for some minutes watching the +Boer shells passing over their heads. Eventually the King's Royal +Rifles, Royal Irish Fusiliers, and the battalion were ordered by the +General to move in extended order through the town, and to concentrate +in the spruit already occupied by 'B' and 'E' companies. The +Leicesters and 67th Battery were left near the camp to watch Impati +Mountain, since it was probable that the Boer force which had occupied +Newcastle would appear from that direction. The mounted troops (18th +Hussars and the Mounted Infantry company of the Dublin Fusiliers, +under Captain Lonsdale, less Lieutenant Cory's section, which, +fortunately for it, was sent off in another direction), under the +command of Colonel Möller, were sent to turn the right flank of the +Boers' position on Talana Hill and so threaten their rear. + +As the extended lines of the infantry moved through the town they were +greeted by pompom fire, which, however, did no damage. It was their +first introduction to this hated and under-rated weapon, whose moral +effect is so great that, even if the casualties it inflicts are small +in number, it is always likely to exercise a marked influence, more +especially on young troops and at the commencement of a campaign. Men +heard it in wonder, asking each other what it was, and why had we +nothing like it, and similar questions. By 6.30 a.m. the three +battalions were assembled in the bed of the spruit, and the General +rode up with the Staff in order to give his orders for the attack. The +2nd Royal Dublin Fusiliers were to form the firing line, with the 60th +Rifles in support and the Royal Irish Fusiliers in reserve. Under +Talana Hill is a wood surrounding a small house known as Smith's Farm. +Between this wood and Sand Spruit is a long stretch of veld, which on +the day of the battle was intersected by several wire fences. The +battalion received orders to cross this open ground by successive +companies, 'H' company, under Lieutenant Shewan, formed the right of +the line, and was the first company to leave the shelter of the +spruit. It made for the south-east corner of the wood, where it was +afterwards joined by the maxims, and at once opened fire on Talana and +Dundee Hills. 'B' company under Captain Dibley, 'A' company under +Major English, and 'E' company under Captain Weldon extended to ten +paces, and followed in succession. The enemy had by this time +developed a vigorous fire, but the range was long and the casualties +small. The advancing companies moved on steadily, reached the edge of +the wood, and entered it. They now became somewhat separated. 'A,' 'G' +(Captain Perreau), and 'F' inclined to the left, 'C' and 'E' remained +in the centre with 'B' on their right, while 'H' was held back at the +corner of the wood. The latter was bounded on the far side by a stone +wall, beyond which stretched an open piece of ground until, further up +the hill, there was a second wall. At this point there was a sudden +change in the slope of the ground, which rose almost precipitously to +the crest. Immediately opposite the point where 'B' company issued +from the wood a third wall ran up the hill, connecting the two already +mentioned. When the attackers reached the far end of the wood, they +came under such a well-directed and heavy fire that their progress was +at first checked, in spite of the support afforded by our artillery, +which rained shrapnel on the hostile position. The Boers, lying behind +the boulders on the crest of Talana Hill, found excellent cover; while +from Dundee Hill they could bring an effective enfilade fire on the +open space between the two parallel walls. Opposite 'A' company a +donga ran up the hill, and at first sight seemed to offer an excellent +line of approach for an attacking force. Major English, in command of +the company, rushed forward and, in spite of a heavy fire, succeeded +in cutting a wire fence which closed the mouth of the donga. He then, +at about 8 a.m., led his company into the latter, and was followed by +'G' and 'F' (Captain Hensley) companies; but the donga proved almost a +death-trap, since it was swept by the rifles of some picked marksmen +on the right of the Boer position. + +[Illustration: Casualties at Talana. + + Capt. G. A. WELDON. _Killed._ + Second Lieut. GENGE. _Died of Wounds._ + Capt. A. DIBLEY. _Wounded._ + Major LOWNDES. _Wounded._ + Lieut. C. N. PERREAU. _Wounded._ + Ser.-Maj. (Now Qr.-Mr) BURKE. _Wounded._] + +It was impossible for these three companies to advance any further, +and they were therefore forced to limit their efforts to an attempt to +keep down the Boer fire. Meanwhile, General Penn-Symons had, about +9.15 a.m., come up to the far edge of the wood, and crying, 'Dublin +Fusiliers, we must take the hill!' crossed the wall. Shortly +afterwards he received a mortal wound. Captain Weldon was also killed +near the same spot in a gallant effort to help a wounded comrade, No. +5078 Private Gorman. Captain Weldon, together with several men of his +company, had surmounted the wall in face of a heavy fire, and had +taken cover in a small depression on its further side. Private Gorman +was hit in the very act of surmounting the obstacle, and was falling +backwards, when Captain Weldon, rushing out from his cover, seized him +by the arm, and was pulling him into safety when he himself was +mortally wounded. Privates Brady and Smith dragged him in under cover, +but he only lived a few minutes. His dog, a fox-terrier named Rose, +had accompanied him through the fight, and when his body was later on +recovered, the faithful little animal was found beside it, and was +afterwards taken care of by the men of 'E' company. There was no more +popular officer in the regiment than George Weldon, and his loss was +deeply felt by all ranks. He was the first officer of the Dublin +Fusiliers to fall in the war, which thus early asserted its claim to +seize the best. He was buried that same afternoon in the small +cemetery, facing the hill on which he had met his death. + +[Illustration: The Last Rites.] + +By this time, 9.30 a.m., the Rifles and Irish Fusiliers had closed up +and become merged in the firing line. Slowly, and by the advances of +small parties at a time, the attackers gained ground, principally by +creeping along the transverse wall which afforded cover from the enemy +on Dundee Hill, Helped by the incessant fire of the artillery, which +at 11.30 a.m. moved up to the coalfields railway, the infantry +gradually collected behind the second wall. They were now within 150 +yards of the crest, and the roar of battle grew in intensity. About +11.30 a.m. Colonel Yule came up and ordered the hill to be assaulted, +directing the battalion to charge the right flank of the hill, and the +Rifles the centre. Captain Lowndes, who was with the companies on the +right, led them across the wall and over an open piece of ground. He +gave the command 'Right incline,' and so well were the men in hand +that the order was promptly obeyed, shortly after which he was badly +wounded. Meanwhile, in the centre, men of all three regiments, led by +the Staff and regimental officers, dashed over the wall and began to +clamber up the steep and rocky slope. The artillery quickened its fire +and covered the crest with shrapnel. But the Boers still remained +firm. Many of them stood up, their mackintoshes waving in the wind, +and poured a deadly fire on the assaulting infantry. Though most of +these brave burghers paid for their daring with their lives, they +repulsed this first gallant charge. The Dublin Fusiliers suffered many +casualties in this first assault. Captain Lowndes, the Adjutant, had +his leg practically shattered, as he, with the other officers, ran +ahead to lead the charge. Captain Perreau was shot through the chest; +Captain Dibley was almost on the top of the hill when hit. He had a +dim recollection of the gallant Adjutant of the Royal Irish Fusiliers +racing up almost alongside him and within a few paces of the summit, +when he suddenly saw an aged and grey-bearded burgher drawing a bead +upon him at a distance of a few paces only. He snapped his revolver at +him, but only to fall senseless next moment with a bullet through his +head. Marvellous though it seems he made a comparatively speedy +recovery, and was able to ride into Ladysmith, at the head of his +company, in the following February, having been in the hospital in the +besieged town in the interval. Evidence of the temporary nature of +the discomfort caused by a bullet through the head is afforded by the +fact that he is to-day one of the best bridge-players in the regiment. +Poor young Genge, who had only recently joined, was mortally wounded, +and died shortly after the battle, killed in his first fight and in +the springtime of life. + +Sergeant-Major Burke's (now Quartermaster) experiences may be best +told in his own words: 'It must have been shortly after poor Weldon +was killed that I came across "E" company; finding no officer with +them I assumed command, and on arrival at the donga handed them over +to Major Bird, and accompanied Colonel Yule, who had just arrived, and +was ascending the hill. We had only gone a few yards, and were about +six paces from the top wall, when I was bowled over, hit in the leg. +It was a hot place, for as I lay there another bullet hit me in the +shoulder. I crawled as well as I could to a rock, and sitting up +underneath it lit a pipe. Scarcely had I got it to draw when a bullet +dashed it out of my hand, taking a small piece of the top of my thumb +with it. Two men were shot dead so close that they fell across my +legs, effectually pinning me to the ground, while two more were +wounded and fell alongside of me. At this juncture Colour-Sergeants +Guilfoyle (now Sergeant-Major) and James dashed out of cover, and, +picking me up, carried me to a more sheltered position, whence I could +see what was going on all round, without myself being seen.' He was +left at Dundee with the wounded, and subsequently taken to Pretoria +with other prisoners of war. + +Whilst the men and officers were thus recovering their breath for a +renewed attack, a large number were undoubtedly hit by our own +shrapnel, as they clung closely to the hillside to avoid coming under +fire from the enemy, who still held the top. It was imperative to draw +our gunners' attention to their situation, to effect which purpose, an +intrepid signaller, Private Flynn, Royal Dublin Fusiliers, jumped +up, and at the imminent risk of his own life freely exposed himself in +his endeavour to 'call up' the guns. Finding, after repeated attempts, +that he could not attract their attention, he boldly walked back down +the hillside, torn as it was by mauser fire, and personally delivered +his message, a glorious and courageous example of that devotion to +duty which proved so strongly marked a characteristic of our N.C.O.'s +and privates throughout the war. + +Major English now extricated his company from the donga and managed to +reach the second wall, where he collected all available men, including +'F' and 'G' companies, and maintained an incessant fire on Dundee and +Talana Hills. The artillery behind had never slackened in their +efforts to support the infantry, and their shrapnel searched the whole +length of the crest line. This combined fire began at last to tell. +The rattle of the enemy's musketry, which had lasted since 6.30 a.m., +gradually grew feebler, until about 1 p.m. our infantry made a second +dash across the wall and this time reached the top of the hill. Below +them they saw the stream of flying Boers hurrying across the veld. It +was the moment for a vigorous outburst of musketry, but 'some one +blundered,' and the fleeting moment sped without being taken advantage +of. It is true that those men who first arrived on the summit were +firing away, and were joined in doing so by every other man who +breathlessly arrived. The company officers had just got their men well +in hand, and were directing the fire, when to every one's disgust, and +sheer, blank amazement, the 'Cease fire' sounded clear above the din +of the fight. There was nothing for it but to stop, but the sight of +the enemy streaming away in dense masses just below them, that enemy +who had up to now been pouring a relentless hail of bullets on them +for hours, was too much. Captain Hensley rushed up to Major English, +and after a brief conference, feeling certain the call must have been +blown in error, the latter gave the command to re-open fire. Barely +was it obeyed when the imperative bugle once more blared forth its +interference, and the company officers, the commanders of the +recognised battle-units, had nothing left them but compliance. + +The guns with 'D' company as escort had come to the neck between +Talana and Dundee Hills, but did not fire. The fight was over and +Major English formed up the battalion. It then marched back as a +rearguard to the brigade, through Dundee to the camp, much as if after +a field-day, halting half-way to receive an issue of rations sent out +by the A.S.C. It had lost two officers and six men killed, and three +officers and fifty-two men wounded. As the troops passed through the +town they were warmly cheered by the inhabitants. Late in the +afternoon news reached the camp that the Mounted Infantry company, +together with a squadron of the 18th Hussars, had been captured, but +this was kept from the rank and file of the battalion. As already +stated above, Colonel Möller had been sent with the mounted troops +round the right flank of the Boers. He succeeded in his task, but +proceeded too far, and when the enemy retreated from Talana Hill he +found himself with some 200 rifles attempting to stop a force of 4000 +Boers. He was roughly handled, but managed to get clear. Then, +unluckily misled by the mist, he lost his way, and, instead of +returning to camp, moved towards Impati Mountain, where he stumbled +into the Boer main commando advancing from Newcastle. He took up a +defensive position, placing the cavalry in a kraal and the mounted +infantry on some rising ground near. The enemy brought up artillery +and soon surrounded him, finally forcing him to surrender. + +Talana Hill, in point of numbers, may not rank as a great battle, but +its moral effect can scarcely be exaggerated. It was the first +conflict of the war. It was Majuba reversed, and the issue had +far-reaching consequences. The news of the victory spread quickly +through South Africa, and had considerable influence on the Dutch +Colonists, who were, to use an expressive colloquialism, 'sitting on +the fence,' and kept them sitting there, at a time when had they +descended on the wrong side their action could not have failed to be +extremely prejudicial to the interests of the Empire; but over and +above all else it showed to the world that the British infantry could +still attack and carry a position in face of modern rifle-fire, a +lesson which was never forgotten by Boer or Briton, in spite of after +events. Moreover, Talana must ever be a memorable name in the annals +of the Royal Dublin Fusiliers, since it was the first battle in which +they had fought under their new title, which was from that day on to +become as well known as that of any regiment in the army. + +The other regiments engaged had also suffered very severely, the 60th +Rifles losing, amongst other officers, their gallant chief, Colonel +Gunning. It was curious that on the last occasion the 2nd Royal Dublin +Fusiliers had seen active service--the siege and capture of +Mooltan--they should then have fought alongside the 60th, as they did +in the present instance. + + + + +CHAPTER II. + +THE RETREAT FROM DUNDEE. + + 'I am ready to halt.'--_Ps._ xxxviii. 17. + + +On the morning of October 21st, Colonel Yule, who, as senior officer, +had taken over command of the brigade, received the news that a Boer +commando, under General Joubert, was advancing by the Newcastle road. +As the camp was within long-range artillery fire from Impati Mountain, +the brigade moved off at a moment's notice to the south and took up a +defensive position. The tents were left standing, but each man carried +a waterproof sheet, a blanket, and great-coat, while the waggons, +massed in rear, had three to four days' supplies. Soon after 4:30 p.m. +the enemy appeared on Impati, and at once opened fire with a big gun, +probably a forty-pounder. The shells at first fell in the vacated +camp, but the Boer artillerymen quickly discovered the brigade, and +made good practice, although they caused but slight damage. Our +batteries attempted to reply, but were outranged, their shells falling +far short. Luckily for us a mist came on, and the Boer gun ceased +firing. + +As soon as night fell the troops began to entrench themselves, for the +situation of the brigade was sufficiently unpleasant. In front was an +enemy with superior numbers and heavier artillery, and in rear, +between Dundee and Ladysmith, another hostile force of unknown +strength. To make matters worse, it rained persistently and the night +was cold. About 3 a.m. the brigade retreated to Indumana Kopje, some +one and a half miles to the south-east of the camp. Here a new +position was taken up before dawn, the guns and transport being massed +behind the hill in order to be out of sight from Impati. + +Early in the morning of the 22nd, the spirits of the small force were +raised by the news of the victory at Elandslaagte. This caused great +delight among the men: they were proud of their own victory at Talana, +and this further success roused them to a still higher pitch of +enthusiasm. The strategic side of the situation seldom appeals to the +rank and file, and the consequence was that when the retreat was +commenced they were under the impression that they were being led to +yet another victory. When they were undeceived, they were undoubtedly +very savage, especially so at, what seemed to them, the callous +desertion of their wounded comrades in Dundee. + +Since it was possible that some of the defeated Boers might be +retreating through the Biggarsberg, a demonstration towards Glencoe +Junction was ordered, the troops detailed being the 2nd Royal Dublin +Fusiliers, the 60th Rifles, one battery, and some cavalry. No time was +given for breakfasts, but the detachment moved off at 8 a.m. with the +battalion as advance guard. On arriving within 1500 yards of the +Junction, the battery shelled a party of the enemy on a hill to the +west of the railway, a proceeding which promptly provoked an answer +from the Boer gun on Impati, but another timely mist and rain saved +the detachment from this unwelcome attention. No Boers were seen in +the pass, so the force, with the battalion as rearguard, returned to +Indumana Kopje at 12.30 p.m., when they were able to obtain dinners, +the majority of the men having been without food for twenty-four +hours. + +At 9 p.m. that evening orders were issued for the reoccupation of +Talana Hill by the whole force, but the various commanding officers +were informed confidentially that Colonel Yule's real intention was a +retreat to Ladysmith by the Helpmakaar road. It was an extremely dark +night, and the battalion occupied nearly two hours in collecting the +companies and reaching the place of assembly at the foot of the +kopje. It was not until after 11 p.m. that the brigade actually +started on the retreat in the following order: 1st 60th Rifles +(advance-guard), 1st Royal Irish Fusiliers, 13th Battery, Mounted +Infantry, Transport, 67th and 69th Batteries, 2nd Royal Dublin +Fusiliers, 18th Hussars, 1st Leicestershire Regiment (rearguard). The +force occupied about four miles of road. The route was through Dundee, +over Sand Spruit, and down the Helpmakaar road through the Coalfields +village. It was impossible to find an opportunity for a return to the +camp, which was left standing. All the tents, stores, and baggage, +together with the wounded, were left to the enemy. The battalion thus +lost its band instruments and camp equipment, while the officers had +to sacrifice all their personal kit, and many articles belonging to +the mess. The waggons carried nothing but supplies, and no one in the +force was able to take away anything beyond what he carried on his +person. + +[Illustration: Armourer-Sergeant Waite. 'Delenda Est Carthago.'] + +The column marched throughout the night, and far into the morning of +the 23rd, only halting at 10 a.m., when dinners were eaten on the +high ground south of Blesbok Pass, about fifteen miles from Dundee. +That the Boers were watching the retreat was proved by one of their +heliographs trying to 'pick up' the column. The march was resumed +after a two hours' rest, and continued to Beith (twenty-one miles from +Dundee), where, at 3 p.m., another halt was made. The men cooked their +teas, and had a chance of a brief sleep, but at 11 p.m. they had to +start again. The road, a very bad one, lay through the pass leading to +the Waschbank River. The battalion formed the advance-guard, with two +Natal mounted policemen as guides. It was a weary tramp, for, owing to +the wretched road, long halts were necessary in order to allow the +waggons to close up. At dawn, the 18th Hussars took over the duties of +advance-guard, and were supported by 'F' company, under Captain +Hensley. + +During the night a mysterious heliograph was seen twinkling and +blinking away on the left flank. After some difficulty it was +ascertained that it was communicating with the farm of a man named +Potgieter, professedly a British subject. He was, in fact, caught _in +flagrante delicto_ in full communication with the unknown Boer +signaller, and paid for his crime with his life. + +At 10 a.m. on the 24th, the head of the column reached the Waschbank +(thirty-six miles), crossed, and halted on the south side of the +river. The waggons were not over until 12.30 p.m. A welcome meal and a +bathe in the stream refreshed the men, some of whom had had no proper +sleep for three nights. Heavy firing was heard from the direction of +Ladysmith, and the mounted troops, with the artillery, were sent off +to reconnoitre and see if they could render any assistance to Sir +George White. They met with nothing, however, and returned before 5 +p.m. Meanwhile the infantry had also been disturbed, for at 2 p.m. +they recrossed the river in order to occupy a better position to +oppose a rumoured pursuit of the Boers. As the latter did not appear, +the river was again forded at 4 p.m., and only just in time. A violent +thunderstorm burst, and the water rose ten feet in two hours. 'H' +company, under Lieutenant Shewan, and a patrol of the 18th Hussars +were left on the north bank, and were thus cut off from the main body +for several hours. + +It rained in torrents until 11 p.m., and the battalion, formed in +quarter-column, had to lie down in pools of water, and get what sleep +it could. At 5 a.m. on the 25th, in bright sunshine, the retreat was +resumed. 'H' company crossed to the south bank a few minutes before +the column moved off, although the water was still up to the men's +waists. The Dublin Fusiliers formed the rearguard, and marched till +mid-day, when Sunday's River (forty-eight miles) was reached. 'A' +company remained on the north bank to cover the crossing of the +waggons, and at 2.30 p.m. the column went on, only halting at 4.30 for +tea. Everybody hoped to have a long rest here, but at 6.30 p.m. Major +Bird was sent for, and informed that, as the Boers were in close +pursuit, a night march was necessary. + +The brigade accordingly started at 7 p.m., at the same moment that +heavy rain began to fall. The road quickly became inches deep in mud, +every one was soon wet to the skin, and the night was so dark that a +man in each section of fours had to hold on to the canteen strap of +the man in front in order to keep the proper direction. As an +additional evil, the battalion was still rearguard, which is generally +the most tiring position in a column. Halts were frequent, and the men +were so exhausted that many of them, when they stopped for a moment, +fell down in the mud and slept. Soon after midnight the 18th Hussars, +who were keeping connection between the Irish Fusiliers and the +rearguard, disappeared. It was so dark that the latter could have no +certainty of being on the right road, but was obliged to struggle on +blindly. Majors Bird and English established a code of signals by +whistle, in order to keep the companies closed up. Dawn still found +the battalion marching, dead tired, but luckily in its proper place +behind the column, and without a man missing. It was not until 8 a.m. +on the 26th that this wearisome march ended. Then Modderspruit, seven +miles north of Ladysmith, and sixty-five from Dundee, was reached, and +the men sank down, too weary to care about anything. After a brief +interval, however, they recovered sufficiently to eat their bully beef +and biscuits. It had been a trying march for all, although the column +had accomplished only twelve miles in eleven hours. As an instance of +the general weariness, it is recorded that a subaltern, during the +meal, was asked to pass the mustard, and fell asleep with his arm +outstretched and the mustard-pot in his hand. + +But the brigade was still not allowed to rest. At 11 a.m. it was on +the 'trek' again, and marched till 2 p.m., when the long retreat came +to an end, and Ladysmith was entered. Here the Devonshire and +Gloucestershire Regiments earned the undying gratitude of the regiment +by providing officers and men with a meal, as well as by pitching a +camp for them. + +On arriving at Ladysmith, tents, equipment, mules, and, in fact, all +that had been lost at Dundee, were issued, and the battalion went into +camp near the cemetery. + +The column was fortunate in having Colonel (now General) Dartnell with +it. This officer, after serving with distinction for many years in the +regular army, had, on retirement, settled down in Natal, where he was, +previous to the war, in command of the Natal Police. A great hunter +and fisherman, he knew every inch of the country, knowledge which +proved of invaluable assistance in the trying march. + + + + +CHAPTER III. + +FROM COLENSO TO ESTCOURT. + + 'If thou hope to please all, thy hopes are vaine; + If thou feare to displease some, thy feares are idle.' + + _Francis Quarles._ + + +On October 28th Colonel Cooper arrived at Ladysmith from England and +took over the command from Major Bird. The battalion was able to rest +from the 27th to the 29th, and recover from the fatigue of the retreat +to Ladysmith. + +The Headquarter Staff issued orders on the 29th for a general +movement, to take place the next day, against the enemy, who were +closing in on the town. The Dublin Fusiliers formed part of Colonel +Grimwood's brigade, which also included the 1st and 2nd King's Royal +Rifles, the Leicesters, and the Liverpools. The task assigned to +Colonel Grimwood was the capture of Long Hill. + +In order to be in position for the assault by dawn, it was necessary +for the brigade to make a night march, and the battalion paraded about +9.30 p.m. on Sunday evening, the 29th October. It formed the rear of +the brigade, to which was attached a brigade of artillery. 'F' and 'B' +companies were left behind on piquet duty. + +Owing to the difficulties inherent in a night march, and, perhaps, +also to faulty staff management, the artillery, the Dublin Fusiliers, +and Liverpool Regiment diverged from the route followed by the rest of +the brigade. As a result of this mistake the battalion took +practically no part in the battle of the 30th, but, after a vain +endeavour to find Colonel Grim wood's force, spent the morning lying +on the crest of a small ridge near Lombard's Kop. It came under shell +and long-range rifle fire, but lost no men. The attempt to drive back +the Boers was a failure, and the army fell back on Ladysmith about +mid-day. The battalion reached camp at 2 p.m. and was dismissed. All +ranks were somewhat tired, for the sun had been hot, and after dinner +sleep reigned supreme. + +[Illustration: Railway Bridge at Colenso.] + +But about 4 p.m. Colonel Cooper received from Headquarters an order to +proceed by train to Colenso, with the object of protecting the +important railway bridge which crosses the Tugela at that place. The +Natal Field Artillery, in addition to his own unit, was placed under +his command. On the receipt of this order, camp was struck, and the +tents and baggage sent down to the station. The piquets found by the +Dublin Fusiliers were ordered to be relieved by other corps, but +although 'F' company, under Captain Hensley, came in, Lieutenant H. W. +Higginson's piquet, on the ridge to the east of the cemetery, could +not rejoin in time, principally owing to the fact that the greater +part of the Gloucestershire Regiment, which had been detailed to find +the relief, had been captured at Nicholson's Nek. Lieutenant Higginson +and his men were thus left to share in the siege of Ladysmith. The +battalion transport, under Lieutenant Renny, also had to remain +behind. An account of their experiences during the siege is given by +Lieutenant Renny in Chapter IX. + +With these exceptions the whole battalion marched down to the station +soon after 11 p.m., and was dispatched in two trains. As Boers had +been reported on Bulwana Hill during the afternoon, a certain amount +of risk seemed to attend the journey. There was nothing to prevent the +enemy from cutting the line at any point in the hilly country between +Ladysmith and Pieter's Station, while even a small hostile force could +have played havoc with the crowded trucks. + +However, the enemy had luckily not penetrated to the railway line, and +after an uneventful, though unpleasant, journey, Colenso was reached +at 4.30 a.m. on the 31st. + +The two railway bridges over the Tugela and Onderbrook Spruit were +already protected by a small force, consisting of the Durban Light +Infantry, a squadron of the Imperial Light Horse, and a detachment of +the Natal Naval Volunteers, with a gun. These units had made good +defensive works, notably Forts Wylie and Molyneux, guarding the +railway bridges over the Tugela and Onderbrook Spruit respectively. + +We encamped some 300 yards south-west of Colenso, and the day (October +31st) was spent in making further defences, and dividing the garrison +into sections. Colenso was not, however, an easy place to defend. It +was commanded by the lofty hills on the left bank of the Tugela, and +by Hlangwane Hill on the right bank to the east of the village. The +garrison, moreover, was lacking in artillery, having only some +muzzle-loading guns with a very limited range. Colonel Cooper +telegraphed to Maritzburg asking for a naval twelve-pounder, which, +however, could not be obtained. + +[Illustration: Major-General C. D. Cooper, C.B. Commanding 2nd Royal +Dublin Fusiliers in Natal.] + +The necessity for such an addition soon arose. At 8.15 a.m. on +November 1st, the staff at Ladysmith sent a wire to say that a Boer +force had moved at daybreak towards Colenso. On receipt of this news +the garrison was warned to be ready, and patrols of the Imperial Light +Horse and the Mounted Infantry section of the battalion were +dispatched towards Ladysmith, Springfield, and the country beyond +Hlangwane. These patrols returned soon after 1 p.m., and the party +which had reconnoitred towards Ladysmith reported that it had come +into touch and exchanged shots with the enemy. Later on in the +afternoon, Lieutenant Cory, commanding the Mounted Infantry section, +went out again and reported that he had seen a hostile force, +estimated at 2000 men, which was off-saddled near the main Ladysmith +road, some six miles out. He had skirmished with the scouts of this +commando and had lost one man. Another wire came from Ladysmith at the +same time announcing that the enemy had guns. Our piquets were, in +consequence of these events, pushed forward to the horseshoe ridge on +the left bank of the Tugela, while the parties guarding the two +bridges (road and railway) over this river were reinforced. The night, +however, passed quietly. + +Mounted patrols were sent out at dawn of the 2nd, and Lieutenant Cory +was able to report, at 6.45 a.m., that the Boers were still in the +same position. But two hours later he forwarded another message to the +effect that the enemy was advancing on Grobelaar's Kloof. Soon +afterwards distant rifle-shots were heard, and the Mounted Infantry +retired into camp. About 10 a.m. parties of the enemy appeared on the +top of Grobelaar's Mountain, and by the aid of a good telescope it +could be seen that they were busily engaged in digging. Their +intention was not long in doubt, for a thin cloud became visible on +the sky-line, and the next moment a shell buried itself in the +river-bank. + +Colonel Cooper at once ordered the tents to be lowered and the +trenches to be manned. But the enemy made no signs of attacking +Colenso, and contented themselves by occasionally firing shells which +invariably fell short. The interruption of telegraphic communication +with Ladysmith soon after 3 p.m. proved, however, that the enemy was +not being idle. Groups of Boers could be seen on the hills overhanging +the railway, and a train carrying General French was shelled after +leaving Pieters. The activity of our foes assumed a more aggressive +character when, about 5 p.m., they began to bombard Fort Molyneux. +From Colenso the shrapnel could be plainly seen bursting over the +work, and the piquets on the left bank of the Tugela reported that +heavy rifle-fire was in progress. As the garrison of the fort +consisted only of eighty men of the Durban Light Infantry, some +anxiety was felt regarding their safety, and this uneasiness was +intensified by the arrival of one of the defenders, who announced that +the redoubt was hard pressed. Lieutenant Shewan, with one hundred men +mostly from 'E' company, was promptly dispatched to reinforce them in +the armoured train. He found that the fort had been evacuated, but +managed to pick up several of the garrison in spite of the enemy's +rifle and shrapnel fire. Captain Hensley, who was holding the +horseshoe ridge, also advanced with 'F' company, and, by firing +long-range volleys, helped to cover the retirement of the remainder of +the garrison, the whole of which reached Colenso in the night. Colonel +Cooper telegraphed an account of these events to Brigadier-General +Wolfe-Murray at Maritzburg, who replied at nightfall that, since the +safety of Colenso bridge was very important, he would send the Border +Regiment next day to reinforce the garrison. But no mention was made +of any artillery. + +Colonel Cooper had now a difficult decision to arrive at. In front of +him lay a superior force of the enemy with guns far outranging his own +obsolete muzzle-loaders, and during the afternoon disquieting rumours, +which might be true, of another commando at Springfield had reached +him. Ladysmith was invested, and the small garrisons of Colenso and +Estcourt alone stood between the Boers and Maritzburg. Having +consulted the senior officers of the garrison, Colonel Cooper sent +another wire to General Wolfe-Murray explaining the situation, and in +reply was authorised to fall back to Estcourt if he could not hold +Colenso. About 10 p.m. he reluctantly determined to retire. + +The mounted troops and the Natal Field Artillery went by road, +starting at midnight. It was decided to send the rest of the garrison +by railway, and the stationmaster at Colenso, with great energy, +succeeded in obtaining three trains which arrived in the early hours +of November 3rd. + +The operation of entraining was at once commenced. The night was dark, +and the packing of all the tents, supplies, and equipment in the +trucks proceeded but slowly. The Natal Naval Volunteers had to bring +their nine-pounder gun down the steep slope of Fort Wylie, a task +requiring great care and time; the piquets on the left bank of the +river had to be withdrawn, and the two bridges guarded up to the very +last moment. Although everything was done in the utmost possible +silence, it yet seemed that the necessary shunting of the trains must +warn the Boers of the evacuation, and bring on an attack. But there +was no interruption, and the last train steamed out of Colenso station +half an hour before dawn. + +Estcourt was reached two hours later. The little town was already +occupied by a detachment of the Imperial Light Horse and Natal Mounted +Rifles. During the morning there also arrived from Maritzburg the 2nd +Border Regiment,[2] afterwards to be the comrades of the battalion in +the 5th Brigade. + + [Footnote 2: A great friendship sprang up between this + celebrated regiment and ourselves.] + +Colonel Cooper took over the command of the garrison and immediately +set to work on the arrangement of the defences. The next day, however, +General Wolfe-Murray and his staff appeared on the scene. Estcourt had +thus the honour of having three different commandants in two days. + + + + +CHAPTER IV. + +ESTCOURT AND FRERE. + + 'Great men are not always wise: neither do the aged understand + judgment.'--_Job_, xxxii. 9. + + +The stay at Estcourt (November 3rd to 26th) was a period of great +anxiety and hard work. That there was cause for anxiety may be easily +understood when the state of affairs is remembered. The Army Corps had +not yet arrived from England, nor could any fresh troops be expected +before the 10th. The Boers had invaded Natal, had shut up in Ladysmith +the only British army in the field, and could still afford to send +five or six thousand men against Maritzburg. The Estcourt garrison +alone stood in their way. + +There were necessarily many outposts, and tours were long and +frequent. Thunderstorms, Natal thunderstorms, visited the town with +painful regularity, and rendered piquet work even more uncomfortable +than usual. It was a period of strained waiting, when every one +wondered whether a Boer commando or a British brigade would be the +first arrival. Reliable news was scarce, though rumours of every kind +were rife. + +The battalion was encamped in the market square, while the officers +inhabited a small room encumbered with planks. Trenches covered the +town to the north and north-east, and were pushed forward some two +miles on the Weenen road. The citadel, so to speak, was the sugar-loaf +hill, on which Lieutenant James, R.N., constructed, towards the middle +of the month, emplacements for his two naval twelve-pounders. These +guns arrived on November 14th, a welcome addition to the garrison, +which had been strengthened on the 13th by the West Yorkshire +Regiment. These reinforcements came at an opportune moment, for the +Boers had at last moved forward and on November 14th their patrols +were close to Estcourt. Their approach caused a certain amount of +alarm, and at first the evacuation of the town was proposed. The camp +was even struck, and a great part of the baggage was put on to trains +which were kept ready in the station. Later on other counsels +prevailed, and tents were raised again. It had rained most of the day, +and a general wetting was the chief result of this 'scare.' The Boers +quickly made their presence felt, and the next day inflicted a severe +blow on the garrison. + +Our mounted troops had been busily engaged in reconnaissance work, and +in an evil hour it occurred to the authorities that the armoured train +was also an excellent means of gaining news. Captain Hensley had taken +it to Colenso on the 5th and 6th, and on the latter day surprised a +party of Boers engaged in looting the village. The dispatch of the +train, unsupported by any mounted troops, soon became almost a matter +of daily routine. This defiance of common sense could have only one +result. On November 15th, Captain Haldane,[3] of the Gordon +Highlanders, went out in the train with 'A' company and some men of +the Durban Light Infantry. He reached Frere and, learning from a Natal +policeman that the front was clear, pushed on to Chieveley. Here he +saw in the distance a small body of the enemy moving southwards, and, +having telegraphed the information to Estcourt, turned back. But as +the train was running down a steep gradient the Boers suddenly opened +fire with two guns from a ridge to the west of the line. Almost +immediately afterwards the train was derailed by stones placed on the +line, and the leading truck upset, thus stopping the engine. + + [Footnote 3: He had been wounded at Elandslaagte, and, being + unable to rejoin his corps in Ladysmith, was attached to the + battalion.] + +It was a predicament trying to the nerves of even the bravest. The +Boer shells were well aimed, and came in quick succession. But Captain +Haldane and his men did all that could be done. Lieutenant Frankland +directed from the rear truck a vigorous fire, which kept the enemy at +a respectful distance, and even made them shift their gun. Meanwhile +Mr. Winston Churchill, who had accompanied the expedition as a Press +correspondent, collected some men and set to work to push the derailed +truck off the line. They were exposed to a heavy fire, but eventually +succeeded in their task. The train began to move again; luck did not, +however, favour them, for the coupling between the engine and rear +truck was broken by a shell. Then Captain Haldane ordered the engine +to return to Estcourt with as many wounded men as possible, while he +attempted with the remainder of the force to reach Frere station. The +engine reached Estcourt, but Captain Haldane was not so fortunate. The +men left the trucks and started to run along the line. No sooner did +our rifle-fire cease than the Boers galloped down the hill and, before +Captain Haldane could realise the danger, they were among the men, and +he had no course open but to surrender. The casualties of 'A' company +were three men killed, four or five wounded, and forty-two prisoners. +Private Kavanagh afterwards received the Distinguished Conduct Medal +for his gallantry on this occasion. The sound of the Boer guns could +be distinctly heard at Estcourt, and great anxiety was felt. A little +group of officers assembled in the trenches to the west of the +station, and eagerly scanned the country through their glasses. +Nothing could be seen, and the firing had ceased. Suddenly through the +air rang the shrill whistle of an engine, and at the sound every one +gave a sigh of relief. It was the armoured train, and all was well. +Another whistle, and round a sharp curve steamed the engine--but, +alas! without the trucks. It was evident that a disaster had occurred, +although particulars were not received until late in the afternoon; +while it was weeks later before the list of casualties could be +ascertained. Luckily this mishap occurred when the situation had in +other respects improved. The Army Corps was landing, and troops were +being pushed forward as quickly as possible. On the 16th, Estcourt was +reinforced by the 2nd Queen's and 2nd East Surreys of General +Hildyard's brigade, and General Barton's Fusilier brigade was +assembling at Mooi River. + +The Boers were thus too late, and so lost the opportunity of capturing +Maritzburg. Although they doubtless knew of the arrival of fresh +troops, they still advanced, and, moving round Estcourt, appeared on +the hills to the north-west of Mooi River station. A detachment +reconnoitred Estcourt on the 18th, but a couple of shells from +Lieutenant James's naval guns induced them to stay at a distance. + +The telegraph line south of the town was interrupted on the 22nd, and +for a brief period the garrison was cut off from the rest of the +world. But the action of Willow Grange, in which the battalion took no +part, caused a retirement of the enemy, who retreated through Weenen +on the 24th. + +Their retreat was in no degree molested by our troops; but on November +26th the long-desired advance took place. It was an exhilarating +feeling to leave Estcourt, and lose sight of those hills and trenches, +the scene of so many weary vigils. The army did not, however, make a +big stride forward. The advance was only to Frere, some ten miles +nearer the Tugela. + +As the column started at 8 a.m. there seemed every prospect of an easy +day. But on active service it is never safe to assume anything. +Although no opposition was met with, and the mounted troops hardly saw +a Boer, the progress was very slow, and sunset found the rear of the +column still three miles distant from Frere. The battalion had the +ill-luck to be in the rearguard, behind a seemingly interminable line +of transport. Then the inevitable drift intervened, and waggon after +waggon broke down. Finally, part of the transport decided to halt till +the morning, and the unfortunate rearguard was obliged to form a line +of outposts. As the battalion transport was some distance in front, +this meant no blankets, no food, nothing save a limited amount of +Natal water. The men were not allowed to consume the emergency +rations, and therefore had to suffer from cold and hunger. The night +passed somehow, however, and with the break of day we marched into +Frere, to find our waggons and obtain food. + +Another monotonous fortnight was spent at Frere, the only excitement +being the arrival of fresh troops and the building of a temporary +railway bridge over the Blaukranz. The arrival of Sir Redvers Buller +and his staff gave hopes of an early advance, and everybody discussed +what our General ought to do, strategical plans becoming as numerous +as sandstorms. + +Since leaving Ladysmith, the 2nd Dublin Fusiliers had not been +attached to a brigade, and now that the Army Corps had come there were +not wanting pessimists who foretold that as the battalion was nobody's +child it would be sent to guard the lines of communication. Early in +December, however, it was assigned to General Hart's 5th, or Irish, +Brigade, in place of the 1st Battalion. The latter was ordered to send +three companies, with a total strength of 287 men, to make up for the +wastage of six weeks' operations. These companies, which were +commanded by Major Tempest Hicks, arrived on December 7th, and were +allowed at first to maintain a separate organization, so that the 2nd +Battalion had eleven companies. + +[Illustration: Capt. C. F. ROMER (standing) and Capt. E. +FETHERSTONHAUGH.] + +The 5th Brigade was encamped close behind the ridge which lies to the +north-west of the railway station. General Hart utilised the fortnight +at Frere in making his battalions accustomed to his methods. Every +day the whole brigade stood to arms an hour before dawn, and advanced +up the slope of the ridge, where it stayed until scouts had reported +the front all clear. The General was also very particular about the +cleanliness of the camp, and made it a rule to go through the lines +every morning. + + + + +CHAPTER V. + +THE BATTLE OF COLENSO. + + 'Never shame to hear what you have nobly done.'--_Coriolanus._ + + +On December 12th, the 6th and Naval Brigades marched from Frere to +Chieveley, and the rest of the army followed the next day. The +battalion happened to be finding the outposts, and could not march +with the 5th Brigade. Some delay in collecting the companies was +experienced, so it was not until 1 p.m. that a start was made, and +darkness came on before Chieveley was reached. It was, however, a +glorious moonlight night, and marching across the veld had a charm +which even the dust could not quite destroy. But romance soon gave way +to more worldly feelings when, on arriving at Chieveley about 8 p.m., +it became necessary to find the brigade camp among the hundreds of +tents already pitched. + +On the evening of the 14th, it was known that the army was to advance +next day, and attempt the passage of the Tugela. Colonel Cooper +assembled his officers in order to explain the Divisional and Brigade +orders. He stated that the 5th Brigade would cross the river at a +drift two miles west of Colenso, then move down the left bank so as to +take in rear the Boers defending Colenso bridge, which would be +attacked by the 2nd Brigade. The Brigade orders detailed the Dublin +Fusiliers to lead the advance to the river, and afterwards to cover +the rear of the brigade when it moved down the left bank. General Hart +urged in addition the necessity of keeping the men well in hand. They +were to cheer in the event of a charge, but were not to be allowed to +make a wild rush. + +[Illustration: 2 miles West of Colenso. Genl. Hart's flank attack from +the Boer Point of View. 15th Dec/99. From a sketch by Col. H. Tempest +Hicks, C.B.] + +Every one was early astir on December 15th. Breakfasts were at 3 a.m., +but before that hour tents had been struck and packed in the +waggons, on which great-coats, blankets, and mess-tins were also +placed, so that the men only carried their haversacks, water-bottles, +rifles, and 150 rounds. The brigade fell in at 3.30 a.m. It was still +quite dark, and the Brigadier spent the ensuing half-hour in drilling +his command. The advance was commenced just as the eastern horizon +grew grey with the dawn. + +The battalion, which led the brigade, deployed into line to the right, +and then advanced by fours from the right of companies. In front rode +the General with his staff and a Kaffir guide; behind came the other +three battalions of the brigade in mass. The deployment of the +battalion had brought 'A' on the left, and 'H' and the three companies +of the 1st Battalion on the right. + +In this order the brigade moved across the broad expanse of veld, +leading to the banks of the Tugela. In front, beyond the river, rose +tier on tier of ridges and kopjes, backed by the towering mass of +Grobelaar's Kloof. In the morning light they looked strangely quiet +and deserted. Only on a spur to the left front could be seen a few +black specks, the figures of watching Boers. + +Soon the naval guns in front of Chieveley opened fire, dropping their +shells on the horseshoe ridge to the north of Colenso, and into a +kraal further to the west. But no answer came. The brigade moved on, +tramping through the long grass, wet with the dew. There was a +momentary halt in order to cross a spruit running diagonally across +the line of march. The ridges in front grew nearer and plainer. They +still seemed deserted, although the eyes of many foes might be +watching the advancing khaki-clad troops. Behind came the thunder of +the big guns, and the shells screamed in the air overhead. It was past +6 a.m. Suddenly the hiss of a shell sounded marvellously close, there +was a metallic clang, and a cloud of dust arose some hundred yards in +front. It was a Boer shrapnel, and the battle had begun. + +Each company of the battalion, without waiting for orders, +'front-formed,' and doubled forward. The mounted officers at once +dismounted, Major Hicks' horse being shot under him as he was in the +very act of getting off its back. Somehow it did not seem a bit +strange to him at the time that his horse should be down, and it never +occurred to him then that it had been shot. Another shrapnel burst +over the line and then the enemy's musketry blazed forth, finding an +excellent target in the massed brigade, which was deploying as best it +could. + +[Illustration: Boer Trenches, Colenso.] + +The battalion was dangerously crowded together, for it had been +advancing as if drilling on the barrack square, although Colonel +Cooper had tried to open out to double company interval, a proceeding +which the General had promptly counter-ordered. But all did their +best. The men rushed forward after their officers, and at their signal +lay down in the long grass, whence fire was opened at the invisible +foe. + +It was very difficult to discover the Boer positions. There was one +long trench near the kraal which the naval guns had been shelling, +and further to the west could be seen another parapet from which came +an occasional puff of smoke betraying a Martini rifle and black +powder. But if the Boers could not be seen, they could be both heard +and felt. There was one ceaseless rattle of mausers, and a constant +hum of bullets only drowned by the scream of the shells. + +[Illustration: Casualties at Colenso. + + Capt. BACON. _Killed._ + Lieut. HENRY. _Killed._ + Capt. H. M. SHEWAN. _Wounded._ + Major GORDON (_1st Battalion, attached_). _Wounded._ + Second Lieut. MACLEOD (_1st Battalion, attached_). _Wounded._] + +Short rushes were made as a rule, and the flank companies edged away +in order to give room for a more reasonable extension. But no sooner +had the battalion opened out than it was reinforced by companies of +the Connaught Rangers, and, later, of the Inniskilling Fusiliers and +the Border Regiment. In a comparatively short time, after the first +Boer shell, the 5th Brigade had been practically crowded into one +line. Officers led men of all the four regiments, and encouraged them +with the cry, 'Come on, the Irish Brigade!' + +There was no control, no cohesion, no arrangement in the attack. No +attempt was made to support, by the careful fire of one part of the +line, the advance of the remainder; nor did any order from the higher +ranks reach the firing line. Small groups of men, led by an officer, +jumped up, dashed forward a few scores of yards, and then lay down. +Nobody knew where the drift was, nobody had a clear idea of what was +happening. All pushed forward blindly, animated by the sole idea of +reaching the river-bank. + +On the left, part of the battalion was almost on the river when the +Boers first opened fire, and quickly reached the bank. After a short +halt they turned to their right and moved in single file along the +river, being exposed all the time to a heavy fire. They passed through +a kraal, and eventually, not being able to find the drift, assembled +in a hollow, where they stayed until orders to retire reached them. +The centre and right advanced through low scrub into a loop of the +river. Some sections of the 1st Battalion, on the extreme right, came +upon a spruit, and, under shelter of its banks, pushed ahead of the +line. + +Thus, by short and constant rushes, the assailants worked their way +forward. A brigade of field artillery was supporting the attack from +behind, but they found it as difficult as the infantry did to locate +the Boers, and most of their shells were quite harmless to the enemy, +while a few dropped close to the attacking infantry. They aided the +latter indirectly, however, since the Boer guns turned their attention +to them. + +General Sir Redvers Buller had early recognised the difficulties of +the 5th Brigade, and sent orders for it to retire. But it is easier to +send a force into a battle than to draw it back. The great difficulty +at Colenso was to communicate with the company officers, who had to be +left entirely to their own 'initiative.' Finally an officer of the +Connaught Rangers volunteered to take to the firing line General +Hart's written order to retire. He succeeded in reaching the front, +but then, thinking he had struck the right of the line, turned to his +left. In reality he had gone to the centre of the attack, and, +consequently, the retirement was carried out partially and by +fractions. The left fell back about 10 a.m. in good order, though the +Boers, as usual, redoubled their fire when they saw their foes begin +to retreat. The centre and right, having received no order nor +warning, clung to their ground, and in some cases even made a further +advance. Section after section, however, gradually realised that their +left flank was uncovered and a general retreat of the brigade in +progress. A score of men, under the command of an officer, would rise +up and double back, causing, as they did so, an instant quickening of +the enemy's fire. All around the running figures the bullets splashed, +raising little jets of dust. Occasionally a man would stumble forward, +or sink down as if tired, but it seemed wonderful that the rain of +bullets did not claim more victims. They claimed enough, however, of +the unfortunate three companies of the 1st Battalion, whom the order +to retire never reached. Till 1 p.m., and the arrival of the Boers, +they lay where they were, suffering a loss of some 60 per cent. When +at last Major Hicks realised the situation, he touched with his stick +the man on his right, to tell him to pass the word to retire, but he +touched a dead man; he turned to the left, only to touch another +corpse. One company was brought out of action by a lance-corporal. +Then the Boers arrived, and began making prisoners. One shouted to +Major Hicks for his revolver; he replied that he had not got one--it +was in his holsters on his dead horse--and stalked indignantly off the +battlefield, without another question being put to him. + +Major Gordon, who was commanding one of the three companies of the 1st +Battalion, had been shot through the knee early in the day by a rifle +bullet. He lay for two hours or so momentarily expecting to be hit +again. After a time he noticed that as long as he lay still no bullets +came in his direction, but that the moment he attempted to move there +would be a vicious hiss and spurt of sand and dust close beside him. +In spite of this he managed to crawl through a pool of blood to a +neighbouring ant-heap, which offered some sort of protection, and into +which a bullet plunged just as he reached it. Here he remained till +the retirement, when, assisted by two sergeants of the regiment, +Keenan and Dillon, he managed to hobble away. Even then he noticed +that as long as they kept away from the troops who were still actively +engaged few bullets came their way, as though the Boers were purposely +not firing at the wounded. + +The Boer heavy artillery pursued the retiring troops with shells, +which made a prodigious noise, and raised clouds of dust, but seldom +did any damage. Gradually a region of comparative peace was reached, +where the ground was not being continually struck by bullets, and only +an occasional shell fell. The extended lines of the 4th Brigade, +ordered to cover the retirement, came into view, and behind them the +men of the Irish Brigade collected again in companies and battalions. +Then, although the artillery was still roaring fiercely, and the +mausers rattled with tireless persistence, the brigade trudged back to +its former camping-ground, pitched tents, and began to cook dinners. A +prosaic but practical ending to an impossible attack. + +But there was still one task to accomplish--the preparation of the +casualty list: The regiment had suffered heavily. Two officers, +Captain Bacon (1st Battalion) and Lieutenant Henry, had been killed, +and three, Major Gordon (1st Battalion), Captain Shewan, and +Lieutenant Macleod (1st Battalion), wounded. The total casualties were +219, of whom 52 were killed. Among the latter were Colour-Sergeant +Gage (mortally wounded) and Sergeant Hayes. + +Captain Bacon (1st Battalion) was killed by a bullet, and must have +died immediately. He had previously served for a short time with the +2nd Battalion, in which he had many friends, and his loss was bitterly +deplored by Officers, N.C.O.'s, and Privates alike. + +Lieutenant Henry had scarcely two years' service, but had in that +short space of time endeared himself to every one in the regiment, and +was as smart and efficient a young officer as ever joined it. His +death must also have been mercifully instantaneous, as he was hit by a +shell. + +Second Lieutenant Macleod had only joined the 1st Battalion a few days +before it left the Curragh on November 10th. He was very severely +wounded, his thigh being broken, and although his leg was saved, it +was left two inches shorter than it had been, and in the end he had to +leave the service on this account. + +Major Gordon (1st Battalion), who received a Brevet +Lieutenant-Colonelcy for his services, was invalided home, but came +out again later on; while Captain Shewan, who had been shot through +the leg by a bullet, was back at work again in twelve days, a sterling +proof of that devotion to duty which was later on rewarded by the +well-merited distinction of the D.S.O. + +[Illustration: Group of Twenty Sergeants taken after the Battle of +Colenso. All that remained of forty-eight who left Maritzburg. + +The names reading from left to right in rows are:--(back row) Sergt. +Hanna; Band-Sergt. Cragg; Sergt. Davis; Lance-Sergt. Cullen; Sergt. +Rooney; Arm.-Sergt. Waite; Col.-Sergt. Cossey; Sergt. Smith; Sergt. +Sheridan. (2nd row) Sergt. Keenan; Sergt. French; Col.-Sergt. Ambrose; +Capt. Fetherstonhaugh; Col. Cooper; Col.-Sergt. Guilfoyle: Sergt. +McNay; Sergt. Hobson; Pioneer-Sergt. Duncan. (3rd row) Sergt. +Moriarty; Sergt. Purcell; Col.-Sergt. Connell; Sergt. Beatty.] + +The three companies of the 1st Battalion had been the greatest +sufferers. Being on the right, they were the last to retire; in fact, +some of the men did not get in till 5 p.m., while a few were taken +prisoners on the banks of the river. + +[Illustration: Bringing down the Wounded.] + +Amongst a host of others who showed their worth under the trying +circumstances of this unfortunate day, was Bugler Dunne, a small boy +who did his duty well, and had the good fortune to be received by Her +Majesty the Queen on his return home. His father was also in South +Africa, a Colour-Sergeant in the 5th Battalion. Isolated cases must +always receive undue prominence--it is the way of the world--but the +spirit of the men was quite remarkable throughout, and made officers +and N.C.O.'s proud to command and lead them. Instead of depressing +them, the reverse seemed to have a contrary effect, and merely +hardened their determination to succeed. + + + + +CHAPTER VI. + +VENTER'S SPRUIT. + + 'Now no chastening for the present seemeth to be joyous, but + grievous.'--_Heb._ xii. 11. + + +The greater part of December 16th was spent in burying the dead. At +nightfall orders were received to strike camp, and the brigade marched +back to Frere, which was reached in the early morning of the 17th, +when we occupied our former camping-ground. + +Another weary wait followed. Frere at the best of times is an +uninteresting spot, but it became absolutely repulsive as the grass +disappeared and mud and flies reigned supreme. Life in the camp was +monotonous, only slightly preferable to the long tours of outpost +duty, and a bathe in the river, varied by a walk round the lines, +formed the only amusement. + +General Hart did not relax any of his precautions, and his command +still stood to arms every morning. The rest of the army assembled at +Frere seemed, so far as could be seen, to rely on the 5th Brigade, for +no other unit followed the latter's example. + +Our listlessness was broken on January 6th, when the thunder of the +guns around Ladysmith was so distinct that it seemed as if Chieveley +must be attacked. Everybody soon learned that the Boers were making a +desperate attempt to capture the town, and there was naturally some +anxiety as to the result. + +A few days afterwards, signs of another forward movement became +apparent. One cheerful omen was the arrival of the doctors, whose duty +it was to convey the wounded back to the base, and of a large body of +civilian stretcher-bearers. General Warren's Division, fresh from +England, marched in, and the second effort to relieve Ladysmith was +begun. + +The 5th Brigade left Frere at daybreak on January 11th, and, covered +by the 'Royals,' took the Springfield road. It had been raining +heavily, and the road, never good, soon became execrable. The column +was followed by a long line of waggons carrying baggage, supplies, +ammunition, pontoons, &c. On arriving at Pretorius' Farm, the brigade +halted and pitched camp. The battalion found the outposts, which were +especially ordered to protect themselves by building 'sangars' or +digging trenches. + +Meanwhile the apparently endless line of waggons had been blocked by a +bad drift below the camp, and the brigade was called upon to help. The +road was somewhat improved by throwing into the soft mud stones +obtained from a wall, and many waggons had to be hauled by ropes +through the spruit. For over forty-eight hours did that collection of +vehicles continue to cross and require help. + +On Thursday, January 12th, the 4th Brigade and General Warren's +Division passed through the camp and went straight on to Springfield, +since the cavalry had ascertained that there were no Boers south of +the Tugela in that direction. The 5th Brigade followed on the +afternoon of the 15th, crossing the Little Tugela by a foot +trestle-bridge made of spars cut by the Engineers from trees on the +bank. As the battalion approached Springfield, the sound of +artillery-fire greeted it, and our shrapnel could be seen bursting +against a hill which was evidently on the left bank of the Tugela. It +was clear that the army was again in touch with the enemy, but nobody +knew what Sir Redvers Buller had decided upon, although everybody, of +course, dogmatised on what he ought to do. + +On the afternoon of the 16th, orders were issued for the brigade to +march that night, although nothing was stated regarding its +destination. Vigorous operations were plainly intended, since the +force was to move as lightly as possible. No tents or blankets were +allowed, and the great-coats were carried by the regimental transport, +in which officers were permitted to pack twenty pounds of baggage. Six +days' rations were also taken. + +The army moved from Springfield at dusk, leaving the camp standing in +charge of a few details (cooks, &c.), who had strict orders to light +fires and walk about, so that the vigilant burgher might not discover +that the army had slipped away. The general direction of the march was +north-west. It was a bright moonlight night, but the column moved +slowly, for the numerous waggons took up the centre of the road, while +the troops moved on the side. About midnight it began to rain, which +made everybody cold and uncomfortable, especially as halts were long +and frequent. It was not easy to see where the army was going, +although the Tugela could not be far off. Nobody knew the plan of +operations, which, however, evidently aimed at a surprise crossing of +the river, and it seemed as if the enemy must hear the noise of the +creaking transport and tramping men. + +About 2 a.m. there came a halt on the top of a ridge, where General +Hart formed up his brigade. Each regiment deployed into line, and then +lay down one behind the other in the following order: Royal +Inniskilling Fusiliers, Connaught Rangers, Royal Dublin Fusiliers, and +Border Regiment. Fatigued by a long night-march, every one soon fell +asleep. Unfortunately, however, the slumbers of the brigade were +disturbed by an incident which shows how easily confusion can arise in +night operations. A horse from somewhere in front broke loose and +galloped over the veld, straight into the ranks of the sleeping +regiments. For a moment everything was in confusion, and a general +panic nearly took place. Luckily the first glimmer of dawn had come, +and the company officers soon regained control of their men, but it +might have been a different tale had darkness still prevailed. + +When daylight came, it showed the army to be on the top of a hill +overlooking Trichardt's Drift. On the other side of the river the +ground rose to a long ridge flanked on the east by a steep mountain, +and on the west by a bastion-like hill. Nobody then knew the country, +but that mountain was Spion Kop, and the ridge lying so calmly in the +morning light was to be the scene of six days' continuous fighting. At +dawn of January 17th, however, the ridge, which the natives called +Tabanyama, seemed deserted, and not a Boer was to be seen. + +It was now learnt that Sir Redvers Buller had divided his forces, +sending two brigades, under General Lyttelton, to Potgieter's Drift, +while the remainder of the army, under General Warren, was assembled +ready to cross the river at Trichardt's Drift. + +The battalion breakfasted quietly, and then 'H' company was sent down +to the drift in order to help in the construction of a bridge. As the +company descended the steep slope, the artillery from the heights +began to shell a farm on the far side of the river, whence a Boer +patrol had been sniping. The Engineers had massed the pontoon waggons +round a farm by the drift, and were looking for a suitable point for +the bridge. The pontoons were launched, and by 11.30 a.m. the first +bridge was ready. The infantry immediately began to cross, but the +artillery and transport had to wait for a second bridge, which was not +completed until after dark. + +The 5th Brigade marched down to the river at 2 p.m. and crossed. On +reaching the left bank the battalion deployed into line, with four or +five paces between the men, and slowly moved up the slope in support +of the widely-extended lines of the Lancashire Brigade. Except for an +occasional shot from the artillery at Potgieter's Drift, everything +was still and peaceful; although, as the army moved away from the +river, most of the officers expected to be greeted by the familiar +'pick-pock' of the enemy's mausers. + +The brigade in front eventually halted on the top of a minor ridge, +some three thousand yards or more from the crest-line of Tabanyama, +and separated from it by open and gently-sloping ground. The Dublin +Fusiliers formed quarter-column immediately behind the Lancashire +Brigade, and prepared to bivouac. Many of the officers strolled higher +up in order to look at the country through their glasses. The main +crest-line was evidently occupied, for men could be seen busily +digging. It was somewhat trying to think that precious time was being +wasted, while the burghers were preparing a defensive position. + +Our transport was still on the other side of the Tugela, and +consequently we had to do without blankets, great-coats, and kettles. +The officers' mess was saved by a subaltern, who succeeded in +procuring a Kaffir cooking-pot and some very tough fowls, which +Captain Hensley boiled with great skill. The night was unpleasant, for +khaki drill is but an inefficient protection against the cold and +heavy dew. The experience proved too much for Major Butterworth, +R.A.M.C., who had to go on the sick list soon afterwards. He had been +with the battalion since Ladysmith, and his coolness and devotion at +the battle of Colenso had made him popular with all ranks. + +The next day, January 18th, was spent in idleness, and the different +corps remained in their bivouacs. There was nothing to do except watch +the Boers still digging on the crest-line, and the shells fired by the +guns of General Lyttelton, who was apparently making a reconnaissance. +The greater part of General Warren's artillery crossed to the left +bank and took up a position close to the battalion. + +On the 19th the regiment took part in the movement which was +initiated with the evident purpose of turning the Boer right by the +Acton Holmes road. Leaving the artillery and the Lancashire Brigade on +the ridge, the remainder of the army descended into the plain, and +moved up the left bank of the Tugela. The column marched along the +base of the main ridge, and was carefully watched by the Boer patrols +from Bastion Hill. + +After fording Venter's Spruit the battalion halted about 2 p.m. on +some rising ground, whence a good view of the surrounding country was +obtained. As there seemed every prospect of a long halt, the men began +to take off their boots and putties, in order to dry them, but they +had to put them on again hurriedly enough, since the guns suddenly +opened fire. At first everybody imagined that the Boers were attacking +the artillery and Lancashire Brigade. Soon, however, it was seen that +the latter were making a reconnaissance. Not much opportunity for +looking at the spectacle was afforded, since we received an order to +recross Venter's Spruit and bivouac. The movement by Acton Holmes had +been given up for some reason which was unknown, and it was not +difficult to see that the alternative was a frontal attack on the +position which everybody had watched being fortified. + +The battalion halted close to Venter's Spruit, and had a piquet ('H' +company) on the Trichardt's Drift road. The transport succeeded in +reaching the brigade that night, and the men were thus able to have +their great-coats. Not much sleep was, however, allowed. At a very +early hour, long before daylight, on the 20th, the brigade was +aroused. Great-coats were again packed on the waggons, and then, +without breakfast or any opportunity of issuing rations, the battalion +fell in and marched off. Owing to darkness and the rough track by +which the column marched, progress was at first very slow. When the +feeble light of early dawn enabled the country to be seen, the +regiment was crossing a spruit near Fairview Farm, lying at the foot +of the ridge. It then ascended a small valley leading to Three Tree +Hill, where the Field Artillery had concentrated. + +The latter soon afterwards opened the battle, and fired on the Boer +trenches, which stood out more prominently than usual on the crest of +the ridge. The enemy's artillery did not reply, although a vigorous +rifle-fire was directed on the skirmishers of the Lancashire Brigade. + +The Connaught Rangers had been temporarily detached on escort duty, +and General Hart now moved his three remaining battalions to the left +in line of quarter-columns. It was a hot day, and the men, who had +eaten nothing that morning, suffered some discomfort from such a close +formation. The ground, too, was broken and covered with long grass and +scrub, so that it was no easy matter to satisfy the General's +injunctions in the matter of 'dressing.' The brigade moved in full +view of the enemy, and so compact a body of men must have been a great +temptation to the Boer gunners, who, however, were either not ready or +exercised much self-restraint. After scrambling through a remarkably +steep valley, the brigade halted in a gentle depression, where it was +safe from the random bullets that were falling near. A long pause +ensued, and the men were able to obtain some much-needed water. + +It was past noon before the infantry, in this part of the field, +advanced in earnest. Then the York and Lancaster Regiment and +Lancashire Fusiliers were sent forward as the firing-line against the +centre of the Boer position, and were supported by the Borders and 2nd +Royal Dublin Fusiliers. The formation adopted by General Hart for the +support was two lines. The first line, which was two deep, consisted +of the right half-battalions of the two regiments, the Borders being +on the right, and was followed at a distance of about two hundred +yards by a similar line, composed of the left half-battalions. + +On emerging from the depression where it had been resting, the support +came under rifle-fire. The range must, however, have been a long one, +and the casualties were few. The attack was moving astride of a spur +which ran from the Boer position to the Tugela, a little distance to +the west of Three Tree Hill. At first this spur was broad, forming +almost a plateau, but further on it narrowed, and consequently the +left of the two lines advanced up a narrow valley, which afforded +excellent cover. + +Led by General Hart, the brigade advanced at a steady pace and, after +a time, closed up on the firing-line. It then halted, and from a +slight elevation opened fire in order to support the Lancashire +Regiments, who, having taken the enemy's advanced position, found that +some thousand yards of very open and almost-level ground lay between +them and the Boer trenches, which lined the northern edge of the +summit of the ridge. The attack could now only advance slowly, since +it was exposed to a cross-fire from both flanks. Hitherto it had only +faced rifle-fire, but about 1.45 p.m. the Boer guns, posted somewhere +near Spion Kop, came into action. They were able to rake the whole +assaulting line, and, in fact, many officers thought at first that the +shells were 'short' ones from our own artillery. The Boers on this +occasion managed to burst their shrapnel with some accuracy, and it +was fortunate that the attack could find good cover. + +This artillery and the increased rifle-fire on the right flank caused +the line to swing round in that direction, but any further advance was +suspended by superior orders soon after 4.30 p.m. The Borders, who had +pushed ahead, were ordered back, and the other regiments took cover +among the rocks, and maintained a vigorous fire. The rattle of +musketry gradually died away as the light failed, until after +nightfall the battalion assembled behind a wall and bivouacked. + +By great efforts the regimental transport had succeeded in getting +touch with the battalion, which was thus able to obtain rations. But +it was not until 8 p.m. that the men could get anything to eat. + +Thus ended the fight of January 20th. It had cost the regiment one of +its most efficient officers, Captain Hensley, who was mortally +wounded.[4] Major English had been hit in the leg--he was back within +a fortnight--and of the rank and file four were killed and twenty +wounded--among the former being Lance-Sergeant Taylor, a most +excellent N.C.O. Although the opposing forces were so close, the night +passed quietly. With daylight (January 21st), however, the rifle-fire +at once broke out. The battalion had just managed to have a scratch +meal when orders were received to move to the support of the 2nd +Brigade, which was away to the left. General Hart ordered Colonel +Cooper to move by the straightest line, first down a ravine across a +spruit, and then over a hill. While climbing the latter, the battalion +was in full view of the enemy, who at once opened fire with guns and +rifles. Each company extended in succession, and doubled, so far as +possible, over the exposed ground. Once over the hill a region of +comparative safety was reached, and General Hart finally formed up his +command behind a rocky ridge overlooking the position held by the 2nd +Brigade. The latter were having a rifle duel with the Boer trenches +but did not advance. The 5th Brigade played a very passive part, and +spent the day behind the rocks. Bullets continually whistled overhead, +and the hostile artillery near Spion Kop burst an occasional shrapnel +along the position. Otherwise there was no excitement. + + [Footnote 4: Poor Hensley was not only one of the most + popular officers in the regiment, but also one of the best + and bravest. All his life he had been devoted to field + sports, and his fame as a plucky big-game hunter and skilful + shot was well known in many a Central Indian village and + Cashmere valley. Educated at the Canadian Military College, + he was a master of his profession, while the long months + spent in Indian jungles had turned him into a handy man + indeed. Wonderful and varied were the uses to which he could + put an empty paraffin-tin or biscuit-box, and excellent were + the stews he could produce out of a mess-tin. On one occasion + in India a wounded panther was mauling one of his beaters. + His rifle was empty, but without a moment's hesitation he + dashed in, and drove the animal away by beating it over the + head. Alas! poor Hensley, we could spare him ill, but, after + all, we know he died the death he would have chosen.] + +Towards evening, the regiment received orders to move some few hundred +yards to the right, and bivouac. Colonel Cooper directed the companies +to close in succession, and march from the rocks to the new position. +This movement almost escaped the notice of the Boer artillery, and it +was not until the last company ('H') moved that two shells were fired. +They fell to the right and in front of the leading fours, and did no +damage. The battalion assembled in a narrow amphitheatre just below +the southern crest, and at the head of a valley leading to Fairview +Farm. Although the bivouac could not be seen by the enemy, except from +Spion Kop, it was not altogether sheltered from fire, for every now +and then a bullet would clear the crest-line and strike the ground +below. + +In this amphitheatre we perforce remained for three days, having a far +from pleasant time. From sunrise to sunset the rattle of musketry +practically never ceased, only at intervals the hum of the passing +bullets was drowned by the clang of bursting shrapnel. The Boer guns, +posted both directly in front and on the right flank, burst their +shells just over the crest, and fired intermittently all day. There +were four battalions crowded in the amphitheatre, and each one +occupied in turn the crest, whence an uninterrupted fire was directed +on the Boer trenches opposite. The enemy's marksmen had the range of +this crest-line, and it was a dangerous matter to stand up even for a +minute. Stone sangars were built and the companies relieved each other +by the men crawling up the slope. The enemy's artillery near Spion Kop +could rake the line of sangars, thus necessitating numerous +traverses. When not in the firing line, we lay behind the slope in +column, each company being protected by a parapet of earth or stone. +Immediately below the amphitheatre the ground fell steeply, forming a +ravine in which the cooks set up their field kitchens in comparative +security. It was characteristic of the British soldier that whereas +during the greater part of the day he crouched behind his cover, the +sight of a fatigue party with the kettles made him forget the shells +and bullets, and he dashed off for his food regardless of danger. + +On Tuesday night (January 22nd) the proposed assault on Spion Kop was +announced, and every one hoped that a general advance would be the +result. + +The morning of January 23rd dawned with a thick white mist, which hid +everything from view. It was our turn to occupy the ridge, and the +companies lay there for nearly an hour before the usual exchange of +rifle-fire began. No news of the capture of Spion Kop had reached the +amphitheatre, but the fact could be guessed from the absence of the +Boer guns in that direction. Only the artillery in front of the +battalion's position fired in the morning, and even that ceased during +the afternoon. The enemy was evidently concentrating the greater part +of his forces against Spion Kop, and parties of mounted burghers could +be seen moving from their extreme right. On Spion Kop hung the white +clouds of bursting shrapnel, and the stuttering sound of the pompom +scarcely ceased for a moment, but the 5th Brigade made no advance. The +companies behind the sangars fired hundreds of rounds at the Boer +trenches, while their comrades below ate and slept. + +At dawn of the 25th, glasses and telescopes were turned on to the +summit of the mountain, and it was a bitter blow when the moving +figures there were seen to be Boers. It was not until late in the +forenoon, however, that the evacuation of Spion Kop was officially +communicated. But the renewal of the Boer artillery fire against the +crest-line had been a sufficiently eloquent announcement of the fact. + +As there seemed no reason why the regiment should remain in the +amphitheatre when it was not required to man the sangars, Colonel +Cooper obtained permission that afternoon to move down the valley +below Bastion Hill. The new bivouac was more sheltered, although an +occasional Boer shell still fell near. + +It was now evident that the second attempt to relieve Ladysmith had +failed, and that the army would have to recross the Tugela. On the +afternoon of the 25th, fatigue parties were sent by the battalion to +improve the track leading to Fairview Farm, and it was rumoured that +the retreat would take place that night. At 10.30 p.m. 'H' company was +sent to the farm, with orders to hold it during the retirement. But +the army did not move until Friday night, January 26th. At 10 p.m. on +that date, General Hart's command began to descend the valley in heavy +rain, which rendered the track extremely greasy. + +Only a short distance had been covered when there was an outburst of +rifle-fire from the rearguard, which was still holding the sangars. +For a moment it seemed as if the Boers had anticipated the retreat and +were attacking. The battalion halted, but the firing soon ceased, and +the march was continued, the men stumbling down the track as quickly +as the many boulders would permit. At Fairview Farm the column halted +for a considerable period, in order to let the rearguard close up. By +this time every one was wet to the skin, and the enforced rest was +somewhat trying, owing to the cold. + +However, after a wait of about an hour, the retirement was resumed. +The track was marked by orderlies and tins, but even with this help it +was difficult to find the way in the utter darkness. The surface of +the road, too, had become so slippery that falls were frequent. +Altogether, progress was painfully slow and the march a very +fatiguing one. It was past 4 a.m., January 27th, before the pontoon +bridge at Trichardt's Drift was reached. The column had another +prolonged wait here, and so tired were the men that many of them +dropped to the ground and slept in the mud. Early dawn had come when +the brigade recrossed the Tugela and toiled up the steep slope on the +other side. A Boer gun sent a parting shell just as the column reached +the summit. + +It was a great relief to look back towards Tabanyama, where the +discarded biscuit tins were gleaming in the morning light, and say +good-bye to that long line of sangars and trenches. The men's spirits +were, moreover, cheered up by the sight of the 'Scotch' cart with the +kettles and rations. Breakfasts were cooked, and after a short rest +the brigade moved to the camping-ground selected for it. But it +arrived only to find that the position was within view and artillery +range of Spion Kop. So once more it had to trudge over the veld, +General Hart moving it in line of quarter-columns, and being as +particular about the 'dressing' as if he were on Laffan's Plain. His +command hardly appreciated this smartness at the time. But all were +finally rewarded by the arrival of the transport with tents and +baggage, and every one spent the night in comparative luxury. + + + + +CHAPTER VII. + +VAAL KRANTZ. + + 'The best laid schemes o' mice and men + Gang aft agley. + And lea'e us naught but grief and pain + For promised joy.' + + _Burns._ + + +On January 30th we were reinforced by a draft of 400 men, principally +militia reservists, who were brought up by Captain Venour. They were a +welcome addition, being a physically fine body of men, and, although +their training was naturally not so good as that of their 'regular' +comrades, they proved equally brave and ready to follow their +officers. + +The battalion shifted its camp on January 29th to Spearman's Hollow, +where it stayed a week. It was here that Sir Redvers Buller visited +every brigade in turn, and made his speech stating that the fighting +around Spion Kop had enabled him to discover the key to Ladysmith. He +had earned the gratitude of the men by putting them on extra rations, +and was always a warm favourite with the rank and file, who love a +brave man and instinctively know one. + +On February 2nd the regiment left Spearman's Hollow for Spearman's +Hill, and, on the afternoon of Sunday, February 4th, marched with the +rest of the brigade towards Potgieter's Drift. The trek was a short +one, and at 6 p.m. we bivouacked behind Swaartz Kop. At nightfall the +officers were assembled and informed of the proposed operations for +the next day. The idea was to make a feint attack on Brakfontein and +then assault Vaal Krantz, the capture of which, it was thought, would +break the enemy's line. + +We rose at dawn on the 5th, had a comfortable breakfast, and only +moved off about 7 a.m., just as the heavy artillery on Mount Alice and +Swaartz Kop began the fight by shelling Brakfontein. The hills around +rolled with the thunder of the guns, while the faint echoes of the +lyddite explosions on the distant ridges formed a piano accompaniment. +With this music in its ears, the battalion marched through the gap +between Mount Alice and Swaartz Kop by the road leading to Potgieter's +Drift. There was a short halt made at the gap, from which a splendid +view of the battlefield was obtainable. Immediately below stretched +the silver line of the Tugela, with all its many loops and twistings +visible. Beyond came a small brown ridge, which had evidently been +held by our troops, since a few biscuit-tins glistened on the near +slope. Further away was the background formed by the Boer position, +extending in a gigantic curve from Spion Kop on the spectator's left +to the lofty mass of Doorn Kloof on his right, the centre being formed +by Brakfontein and Vaal Krantz, over both of which heavy columns of +smoke were hanging. The Lancashire Brigade had commenced the feint +attack, and its extended lines could be plainly seen as they advanced +slowly in succession, while behind them the batteries of field +artillery had unlimbered on the plain, and were already shelling the +Boer trenches. + +After a short pause the regiment began to descend the hill. The 5th +Brigade was following the 4th, both of them marching in 'fours.' +Before reaching the drift, the head of the column wheeled to the right +and proceeded along the narrow plain between the Tugela and Swaartz +Kop. The sight of that long winding line must have been a great +temptation to the Boer gunners, but they remained silent. Not even a +rifle had spoken. It was only when the Lancashire Brigade began to +retire that the enemy disclosed himself. Then Brakfontein spluttered +with musketry, and the Boer artillery vented its wrath on the +batteries dotted over the plain. But both our infantry and gunners +seemed to treat the fusillade with contempt. The former marched +back without apparently quickening their pace, and the latter, +limbering up, trotted off to support the attack on Vaal Krantz. This +hill was being literally covered with shells, and soon had the +appearance of a smoking volcano. + +[Illustration: Casualties at Tugela Heights. + + Second Lieut. LANE. _Wounded at Hart's Hill._ + Lieut. J. MCD. HASKARD. _Wounded at Pieter's Hill._ + Second Lieut. BRADFORD. _Wounded at Pieter's Hill._ + Capt. A. V. HILL (_1st Battalion, attached_). _Wounded at Pieter's + Hill._ + Second Lieut. BRODHURST HILL (_1st Battalion, attached_). _Wounded + at Pieter's Hill._] + +About 1 p.m. the Durham Light Infantry filed over the pontoon under +Swaartz Kop, and extended for the attack. At the same time we were +moved to a position below the southern end of the Kop in order to +cover by long-range rifle-fire the right of the 4th Brigade. 'B' +company fired a few volleys at some invisible snipers on the slopes of +Doorn Kloof, but with this exception we did not come into action. + +Watched by the whole army the Durhams advanced against Vaal Krantz, +which they took about 4 p.m. amidst the cheers of the onlookers. But +with this success the operations practically ended for the day. + +The battalion remained all the afternoon in the same position, and +then finally bivouacked there, having luckily succeeded in +communicating with the transport, so that the men had blankets. Its +outposts were pushed well round the southern slopes of Swaartz Kop, +thus overlooking the Tugela. A reconnoitring patrol was fired on from +the left bank, but otherwise the night passed without incident. + +We did not move on the 6th, and had practically nothing to do. The +artillery on both sides fired continually, although the damage done +must have been very small in proportion to the noise and expenditure +of ammunition. + +Every one watched with special interest a duel between our heavy +artillery and a large Boer gun which had suddenly been unmasked on +Doorn Kloof. This gun fired black powder, and its discharge could be +plainly seen, but it was apparently run up for every round behind a +parapet. It displayed absolute impartiality in its attentions. One +round would be directed against the infantry on Vaal Krantz, another +covered with dust a field battery on the plain, a third just missed +the battalion, while a fourth shell would crash among the trees on +Swaartz Kop. All our heavy guns had a try at silencing it, and their +efforts sometimes met with partial success. The Boer gun would cease +firing for a time, but it always re-appeared when least expected. +Towards the evening it became quite lively and put a shell through the +pontoon bridge. + +The night of February 6th-7th was spent in comparative peace, although +the Boer artillery somewhat spoiled the first part of the night by +shelling Vaal Krantz. February 7th was a repetition of the 6th, except +that the gun on Doorn Kloof paid slightly more attention to our +position. The Colonel found it necessary to post a man on the +look-out, whose duty it was, on seeing the white puff of smoke, to +blow a whistle, whereupon everybody sought the shelter of the nearest +and largest boulder. But although, when the huge shell burst, the air +seemed unpleasantly full of whizzing iron fragments, no damage was +done, and the gun merely mitigated, to some extent, the monotony of +idleness. + +By this time it was clear that Sir Redvers Buller did not intend to +press the attack home, and no one was surprised to find the army in +retreat on the morning of the 8th. The battalion acted as rearguard +and marched back between the river and Swaartz Kop in widely extended +lines. The Boer guns on Doorn Kloof, the shoulder of Spion Kop, and +Brakfontein shelled us on our way, and one man of the rear company +('H') was killed, this being our only casualty between February 5th +and 8th. The heavy artillery on Mount Alice covered the retreat and +prevented the enemy's guns from being too attentive. + +The 5th Brigade halted at Springfield, and two days later went on to +Pretorius' Farm. On the 18th it made a march of fourteen miles to the +Blaukranz River, starting about 3.30 a.m. The day was hot, and as +there was no water on the route the newly-joined militia reservists +suffered considerably. After a rest of two days the brigade moved to +a camp near Gun Hill at Chieveley, where the naval six-inch gun was in +position. + +The rest of the army was now engaged in the operations against Cingolo +and Hlangwane, and the battalion occupied itself in guarding +Chieveley, in beginning the construction of a railway to Hussar Hill, +and in convoying ammunition to the latter place. This was a somewhat +trying task, as during part of the way the convoy became the object of +many a Boer shell. The operations against Cingolo and Hlangwane proved +successful, and these positions were captured on the 19th. The next +day General Hart took the regiment on a reconnaissance towards +Colenso. It advanced cautiously on the west of the railway in column +of extended companies. The village was found unoccupied, but a party +of Boers, holding the horseshoe ridge on the left bank of the Tugela +opened a vigorous fire. The leading companies at once doubled forward +and lined the right bank, whence they answered the Boer marksmen. The +left half-battalion remained in support behind the village. A +detachment of Thorneycroft's Mounted Infantry appeared on the scene, +and having forded the Tugela above the road bridge, turned the Boers +out of their position. Later on in the afternoon a train steamed into +Colenso station from Chieveley, and took us back just before dusk. + +At 6 a.m. on February 21st, the Connaught Rangers and the Dublin +Fusiliers went by train to Colenso, where they were joined by a +battery. The horseshoe ridge on the left bank was being held by a +detachment of Thorneycroft's Mounted Infantry, but General Hart was +desirous of crossing the river with at least part of his force. For +this purpose he had brought on the train a boat, which was promptly +launched. As, however, the boat was small, and hardly capable of +holding more than four men, the General gave orders for the +construction of a raft. After some trouble this was ready by 4 p.m., +and some two hours later about seven companies of the Connaught +Rangers had succeeded in reaching the left bank. + +General Hart now received an order to cross early next morning, with +three battalions of his brigade, the pontoon bridge, which had been +constructed under Hlangwane. The regiment bivouacked in Colenso, and +at 5 a.m. on February 22nd marched down the right bank and crossed the +bridge. One company had been sent back to Chieveley for the purpose of +striking the camp, and with the transport rejoined the battalion about +7 a.m., after the latter had crossed the bridge and taken up a +position on the western side of the horseshoe ridge. + +Here it stayed the whole day, all ranks passing the time in examining +the Boer trenches, and picking up more or less worthless loot. Heavy +fighting was taking place in front, but only an occasional shell fell +near the ridge. + + + + +CHAPTER VIII. + +HART'S AND PIETER'S HILLS--THE RELIEF OF LADYSMITH. + + 'But since I knew + No rock so hard but that a little wave + May beat admission in a thousand years, + I re-commenced.' + + _Tennyson._ + + +Late on February 22nd, orders were issued for the brigade[5] to be +ready to move at an early hour next morning. Breakfasts were eaten +before 4 a.m., and the battalion fell in at about 4.15 on February +23rd. The brigade was to move from the left to the right of the army, +and it was probably the intention of the Headquarter Staff for the +march to take place during darkness. But there was a hitch in the +distribution of biscuits, and it was already broad daylight when we +started. + + [Footnote 5: The Borders had been left behind at Chieveley. + In their place General Hart received half a battalion of the + newly-raised Imperial Light Infantry.] + +General Hart moved his command in column of route, and the long line +soon attracted the notice of the enemy's artillery. It was somewhat +trying to the nerves to hear the whistle of a shell coming nearer and +nearer, until finally it struck the ground within a few yards of the +column. Luckily, the Boers were either using common shell or their +shrapnel did not burst, and the battalion had no casualties. Finally +the railway was reached, and the brigade turned to the left, each +battalion forming column of companies in succession. A halt was made +close to the railway line and a short distance to the south of the +viaduct over the Onderbrook Spruit. But as a few shells fell +dangerously near, and showed that the enemy could still see the +brigade, it was moved to the left behind a rocky ridge. The battalion +stayed here for the rest of the morning. The Boer gunners fired +frequently at the ridge, but the slope of the ground saved us from any +losses. Sir Redvers Buller and his staff rode up about mid-day in +order to explain to General Hart what was required of him. This was +the capture of the hill known as Inniskilling, or Hart's Hill. It +could be plainly seen from the summit of the ridge behind which we +lay, and all officers and section commanders were called up in order +to have a look at it. They were told that it formed the extreme left +of the Boer position, and that its capture meant the relief of +Ladysmith. General Hart desired all officers to inform their men of +the necessity for a resolute assault. Our heavy artillery on the right +bank of the Tugela now began to shell the hill, which was quickly +covered by the smoke and dust of the lyddite explosions. + +Meanwhile, the 2nd Brigade was preparing the way by an assault on a +ridge some 1000 yards to the front. They had a tough fight, and their +wounded were soon being brought down the railway in trucks and +stretchers. + +The afternoon was well advanced when the 5th Brigade moved to the +attack. The hill to be assaulted lay some 3000 yards to the north-east +of the ridge which had been sheltering us, and the nature of the +intervening ground forbade a direct advance, which would dangerously +expose the left flank. It was necessary to hug the river-bank until a +position from which a direct attack became possible was reached. + +The brigade at first moved along the railway line in file in the +following order: Royal Inniskilling Fusiliers, Connaught Rangers, +Royal Dublin Fusiliers, and Imperial Light Infantry. The battalion +moved with the left in front. A brigade in file takes up a +considerable space, and by the time the regiment could start, a heavy +outburst of firing showed that the Inniskilling Fusiliers were already +engaged. + +The advance along the railway line, through a cutting and over the +Onderbrook Spruit, was very slow, since checks were frequent. The Boer +artillery missed this favourable opportunity of shelling their foes, +luckily for the latter. After crossing Onderbrook Spruit, the column +turned to the right and crept along the river. The enemy were sweeping +the bank with pompoms and a heavy rifle-fire, but by crouching under +the bank the column obtained good cover for the greater part of the +way. But every now and then there came an exposed bit of ground over +which it was necessary to double, and so narrow was the track that men +had often to jump over the wounded or killed. + +The Langverwacht Spruit had to be crossed by the railway bridge. As +the latter was in full view of the enemy and was being raked by pompom +shells and bullets, it proved a great delay to the progress of the +column. It was only possible to cross at more or less long intervals. +Each man was forced to run the gauntlet by himself, and had to double +over as hard as he could. Beyond the bridge complete cover was +obtained except for a small stretch of ground by the Boer bridge. +Below the latter, the river ran between high hills, and the column was +therefore screened from view. + +By the time that the leading company of the battalion had cleared +'Pompom' bridge, the Inniskilling Fusiliers were advancing against the +Boer position on Hart's Hill. It was about 5 p.m., and the General +could not wait until his brigade had concentrated, but sent his troops +forward as they arrived. The left half-battalion of the Royal Dublin +Fusiliers formed up near a deserted Boer bivouac overlooking the +river, and then, without stopping for the right half, advanced to +where General Hart was standing. + +Lieutenant-Colonel Sitwell was in command of the left half-battalion, +and in a short time he was sent for by the General, who told him to +advance and help the Inniskilling Fusiliers to capture the hill. + +The leading company ('H') was directed to extend to six paces and move +forward, the remaining companies ('G,' 'F,' and 'E') following at a +distance of 100 yards. No sooner had 'H' company cleared the crest of +the hill on which General Hart was standing, than it came under a +heavy rifle-fire, principally from the direction of Railway Hill. +Lieutenant Lane fell badly wounded--shot clean through the head from +one side to another, a wound from which he made a marvellous +recovery--and three or four men were hit. The company received the +order to double, no easy task down a steep slope strewn with rocks and +boulders. The railway line at the bottom of the slope was crossed, and +the opposite side of the valley, which was dotted with small trees, +ascended. The company had now caught up the lines of the Connaught +Rangers, and all climbed up the hill, the crest of which had been +gained by the Inniskilling Fusiliers. Although the attacking infantry +could not be seen from the Boers on Hart's or Railway Hill, they were +still exposed to an enfilade fire from the left. + +On arriving with 'H' company at the top of the hill, +Lieutenant-Colonel Sitwell found the Inniskilling Fusiliers lying +along the crest-line and facing the Boer trenches, which ran at about +three hundred yards distance on the far side of the flat plateau. The +Inniskillings had already suffered serious casualties, but, on +Lieutenant-Colonel Sitwell stating that he had been ordered to charge, +claimed the right of leading the assault. To this Colonel Sitwell +agreed, but it was decided to wait until the remaining companies of +the left half-battalion of the Royal Dublin Fusiliers were up. +Meanwhile our guns and the cavalry maxims on the right bank of the +Tugela were directing against the enemy's trenches a stream of bullets +and shrapnel shells, the latter seeming to burst immediately over the +infantry. + +[Illustration: Casualties at Tugela Heights (_continued_). + + Capt. A. HENSLEY. _Killed at Venter's Spruit._ + Lieut.-colonel SITWELL. _Killed at Hart's Hill._ + Capt. MAITLAND. (_Gordon Highlanders, attached_) _Killed at + Hart's Hill._ + Major F. P. ENGLISH. _Wounded at Venter's Spruit and Zuikerbosch._ + Second Lieut. DENNIS. _Wounded at Hart's Hill. Died of Enteric at + Aliwal North._] + +The sun had set, and the light was already failing by the time that +the four companies of the left half-battalion had come up, principally +on the left of the Inniskilling Fusiliers. Then the signal to charge +was given, and the whole line rose up, and with a yell dashed forward. +But it was met by a murderous fire. In the gathering darkness the Boer +trenches quivered with the rifle-flashes, and the bullets struck out +sparks as they hit the rocks. At such a short range the enemy's +marksmen could hardly miss, and the line of charging infantry was +almost mowed down. The assault was checked, and the attackers flung +themselves on the ground and sought what little cover there was. + +[Illustration: After the Fight.] + +Luckily night intervened, and, although the Boers never for a moment +ceased their fire, the survivors of that charge managed to creep back +to the crest. Here Colonel Brooke, of the Connaught Rangers, and +Lieutenant-Colonel Sitwell collected them, and took steps to guard +against a counter-attack. A low stone wall was built below the crest, +and behind this the night was spent. + +It was very dark, and the ground, covered with boulders, most +difficult to move over. Wounded men lay all over the hill, but there +were no doctors, no stretcher-bearers, and no water. It was impossible +to help or to move them. Their groans, combined with the intermittent +rifle-fire, made sleep difficult. + +We had three officers wounded (Lieutenants Lane, Hill, and Dennis), +and some twenty casualties. Lieutenant Hill was again hit as he lay, +and subsequently lost his foot in consequence. + +The infantry crouching behind the stone wall were unable to +communicate with the rest of the army. At dawn, however, Major +McGrigor, the Brigade-Major, came up to the line and told Colonel +Brooke that General Hart wished him to hold on to his position, to +which reinforcements would be sent. Colonel Brooke explained that food +and water would have to be sent also, and, above all, that his left +must be protected. Having promised to do what he could, Major McGrigor +returned to his General. With daylight the battle recommenced. The +Boers, from their trenches on Hart's and Railway Hills, kept up a +vigorous rifle-fire, and were answered as far as possible by the men +of the 5th Brigade behind the wall. Our artillery shelled Hart's Hill, +and many of their shrapnel which burst short hit the unlucky wounded +who were still lying on the plateau. + +But the Boers were not content to remain on the defensive. Gradually +their skirmishers worked round the left of the hill, moving by the +dongas which ran down to the railway line, and were able to fire up +into the rear of the defenders of the wall. Part of the latter were +extended at right angles to the wall, and endeavoured to drive off the +enemy. But the Boers had excellent cover, whereas the infantry crowded +together on the hill presented an easy target. Casualties became +numerous. The morning wore on, and there were no signs of the promised +reinforcements or of the much-needed water and food. It seemed useless +to stay on the hill, and about 8 a.m. Colonel Brooke gave the order +to retire. As the men rose to their feet and ran down the hill, the +rattle of the Boer musketry increased in volume, and the bullets +whistled among the retreating soldiers. Lieut.-Colonel Sitwell was +killed as he descended the slope, and Captain Maitland, of the Gordon +Highlanders, who had been in command of 'G' company since November, +was mortally wounded almost at the same time. Luckily, the distance +was not very great, and once over the railway line the stream of +bullets ceased. + +[Illustration: The Grave of Colonel Sitwell and Captain Maitland, +Gordon Highlanders (attached), near Railway at Pieter's Hill.] + +Lieut.-Colonel Sitwell's loss was severely felt. Though he had only +recently joined us, he had given numerous proofs of his soldierly +ability. He had the benefit of considerable previous war service, and +had he lived would doubtless have risen to high rank. Captain +Maitland, Gordon Highlanders, had been unable to join his regiment in +Ladysmith, and had been attached to the battalion since Estcourt. Over +and over again he had proved himself to be a most gallant soldier, and +had endeared himself to all his temporary comrades (see Appendix). He +commanded 'G' company, which was most unfortunate in respect of its +commanders, having no less than six during the war. Colour-Sergeant +Connell, however, than whom no braver man lives, was with it +throughout. + +As the retiring infantry climbed up the slope of Hart's Hollow they +met the advancing lines of the 4th Brigade, who had been sent to +reinforce the 5th. The latter quickly re-formed--there were not many +of the Inniskilling Fusiliers left to re-form--and were able to obtain +food after a fast of nearly twenty-four hours. + +The casualties of the left half-battalion amounted to two officers +killed and three wounded, and eleven killed and fifty-six wounded of +the rank and file.[6] + + [Footnote 6: There were, of course, many narrow escapes, but + none narrower than that of Major Romer, whose modesty forbids + him to allude to it. His helmet was shot through by a bullet + which actually parted his hair in its passage, a feat never + before accomplished.--A. E. M.] + +The right half-battalion, under Major English, had, during the assault +of Hart's Hill, watched the right flank towards Pieter's Hill. General +Hart proposed that they should attack the Boers in that quarter, but +Colonel Cooper, who was with the right half-battalion, pointed out +that the day was too far advanced. The right half-battalion spent the +night of the 23rd-24th February among the rocks on the hill whence +General Hart had directed the attack. About 8 a.m. on February 24th, +'B' company was sent to drive off small parties of the enemy who had +crept down the dongas and reached the railway on the left. This +company came under a severe fire, and Lieutenant Brodhurst Hill was +wounded in the leg, but the Boers were driven back. The 24th was spent +in a ceaseless rifle-duel with the enemy, who had brought a gun to +bear on the hill. During the afternoon, preparations were made for a +fresh attack on Hart's Hill, to be undertaken by Colonel Cooper with +two battalions, while General Hart, with the remainder of the force +at hand, assaulted Railway Hill. The attack was, however, postponed. + +The enemy evidently feared another assault, for in the course of the +night of February 24th-25th, they opened a vigorous fire, which +disturbed the slumbers of General Hart's force, and created some +excitement. + +During all this time the unlucky wounded, who had been hit on the +23rd, had been left lying in front of the Boer trenches. It was +impossible to help them, since all attempts in that direction had been +frustrated by the enemy. But on the morning of Sunday, February 25th, +a partial armistice was agreed upon in order to bring in the wounded +and to bury the dead. The armistice ended at 6 p.m., and both sides +commenced firing immediately afterwards. + +[Illustration: Pieter's Hill. February 27th, 1900.] + +Meanwhile, Sir Redvers Buller had evolved a new plan of operations, +and decided to attack with his combined force the three +hills--Pieter's, Railway, and Hart's. For this purpose the greater +part of the artillery was brought from the left bank and concentrated +on the right bank, opposite the points to be assaulted. It was in +position by the 26th, and began a slow bombardment of the Boer +trenches. During the night, the pontoon bridge under Hlangwane was +dismantled, and carried down to a point below the Boer bridge, where +it was relaid, an operation which was not concluded until 10 a.m. on +the 27th. + +On the day before, the Dublin Fusiliers had been ordered to join +temporarily General Barton's Brigade. It left its position among the +rocks of Hart's Hollow about 7 a.m. on February 27th, and, moving down +the hill through the deserted Boer laager, halted by the pontoon +bridge. Here it was joined soon after 9 a.m. by the Irish and Scots +Fusiliers, and came under the command of General Barton. + +[Illustration: Pontoon Bridge, River Tugela. February 28th, 1900.] + +The battalion followed the Scots Fusiliers, and moved along the left +bank of the Tugela at the foot of a steep ridge, being covered by +infantry and maxim fire from the right bank. + +After a march of two miles, and at the point where the Klip River +joins the Tugela, the 6th Brigade turned to its left and prepared to +attack the Boer position, which, lying some two miles from the river, +stretched from the ridges north of Eagle's Nest to the various kopjes +constituting Pieter's Hill. General Barton directed the Royal Irish +Fusiliers to assault the western end of Pieter's Hill and the Scots +Fusiliers the eastern, while the 2nd Royal Dublin Fusiliers formed the +reserve. + +The assault was successful, and the greater part of Pieter's Hill fell +into our hands, but the Boers still held a kopje to the north of the +hill, and maintained a heavy fire. General Barton, anxious to complete +his victory, directed three companies of the battalion and one company +of the Scots Fusiliers to advance against the kopje. 'B,' 'C,' and 'H' +were the three companies selected, the first named being on the right +and the latter on the left, connecting with the Scots Fusiliers. +Guided by Captain MacBean, Royal Dublin Fusiliers, Brigade-Major 6th +Brigade, the detachment advanced about 2.30 p.m., and came at once +under a heavy rifle and pompom fire. The companies pushed forward, +however, by successive rushes until they reached a donga some three +hundred yards from the kopje. Here further progress was checked for a +time, and General Barton ordered forward three companies of the Royal +Irish Fusiliers. The latter came up about 5.30 p.m., and, supported by +the covering fire of 'B,' 'C,' and 'H' companies, rushed the left of +the hill, when the above-mentioned companies of the battalion, led by +Captain Venour, assaulted the right. The attack was successful, and +the kopje was captured. + +During the advance Lieutenants Haskard and Bradford, in command of 'C' +and 'H' companies, were wounded, and the engagement cost the regiment +nine killed and forty-three wounded. 'D' company, under Lieutenant +Ely, towards the close of the afternoon came up on the left of 'H' +company, in order to fill the gap between the latter and the Scots +Fusiliers. + +[Illustration: 2nd Royal Dublin Fusiliers, heading Relief Troops, +marching into Ladysmith, March, 1900.] + +The three companies which had made their attack on the kopje spent the +night on the captured position. Captain Venour, who was the senior +officer present, re-formed the men of the Irish and Dublin Fusiliers, +and constructed sangars, with a view of warding off a Boer +counter-attack. In the meantime 'A,' 'E,' 'F,' and 'G' companies--with +whom was Colonel Cooper--were directed to the right, in order to guard +the flank of the brigade against the Eagle's Nest position. These +companies gained about 2 p.m. a ridge opposite the Eagle's Nest, and +overlooking the extensive plain which stretches up to Bulwana +Mountain. The enemy opened a well-aimed fire on this ridge, and also +brought into action a gun which was placed on the shoulder to the +north of the Nest. As the right of the four companies was thrown back +towards the Tugela, this Boer gun could nearly enfilade part of the +line. Sangars were built, however, and there were not more than three +or four casualties in this part of the field. The firing ceased at +dusk, but otherwise the night was unpleasant, for it rained, and the +waggons could not get near the fighting line, so that the men had to +do without their great-coats. + +Before daybreak on February 28th the battalion collected its scattered +companies and was ready for action. There was no reliable news of what +had happened on other parts of the field during the 27th, and the full +extent of the victory was still unknown. When daylight came it was +evident that the Boers had evacuated the Eagle's Nest, and small +parties of them could be seen retiring, while the tents of their +laager under Bulwana were gradually diminishing. But even then few +could believe that the relief of Ladysmith was practically +accomplished. + +[Illustration: General Sir Redvers Buller, V.C., entering Ladysmith.] + +Before mid-day an order came, directing the Dublin Fusiliers to move +after dinner and join the 11th Brigade, the position of which was not +indicated. Major English rode on ahead in order to discover its +whereabouts, but by the time he found it, the battalion had gone two +miles out of its way. The 11th Brigade was joined about 4 p.m., and +the regiment bivouacked between Hart's and Railway Hills. A heavy +thunderstorm burst over the country soon after 8 p.m., and made +everybody somewhat miserable, although the officers had been cheered +by the arrival of the invaluable Corporal Tierney, who, as usual, +succeeded in giving them food. + +The services of this N.C.O. (now Mess-Sergeant) will never be +forgotten by the regiment, as long as an officer who was present with +it in South Africa remains in it. Over and over again he brought up +food to the officers under heavy fire, and through those desperate +thunderstorms. Always cheery, ever ready, there he was in his +shirt-sleeves, with a drink and a snack, just as one had resigned +oneself to going without anything. A word must also be said in praise +of our French _chef_, M. Burst, who cooked for the officer's mess +throughout, and proved himself on all occasions a brave man. + +[Illustration: The Dublins are coming--Ladysmith.] + +After breakfast on March 1st, the 11th Brigade advanced along the +railway towards Ladysmith. It was thought that the Boers would be +holding Bulwana, and the brigade had orders to attack the hill. But it +was soon learnt that the enemy had retired, and we eventually reached +Nelthorpe Station about mid-day and bivouacked. Major English and +Captain Venour took the opportunity of riding into Ladysmith. + +March 2nd was spent at Nelthorpe. On the 3rd, Sir Redvers Buller's +army entered Ladysmith, and the honour of leading the army fell to the +2nd Battalion Royal Dublin Fusiliers--an honour which nobody grudged +them, on account of the constant fighting they had taken part in since +the beginning of the war, and the heavy casualties they had suffered. +The route was by the railway bridge, and the streets of the little +town were lined by the garrison, who, emaciated but clean, presented a +startling contrast to their war-stained relievers. + +[Illustration: Sir George White watching Relief Force entering +Ladysmith.] + +The entry into Ladysmith, with its enthusiasm and meeting of old +friends, formed a fitting ending to the battalion's Natal campaign. +Hardly any other unit in the army had suffered such casualties. Only +five company officers marched through Ladysmith with it. The others +had been killed, wounded, or disabled. + + + + +CHAPTER IX. + +THE SIEGE OF LADYSMITH. + + 'I am shut up.'--_Ps._ lxxxviii. 8 and _Jer._ xxxvi. 5. + + +_Chronicle of the part taken by the detachment 2nd Battalion Royal +Dublin Fusiliers in the Siege of Ladysmith from November 1st, 1899, to +February 28th, 1900._ _By_ LIEUT. L. F. RENNY, _2nd Batt. Royal Dublin +Fusiliers_. + + +The detachment which was left behind in Ladysmith when the battalion +was ordered to Colenso consisted of two officers, three +non-commissioned officers and fifty-one men. The latter were made up +by a section of 'G' company which was left on piquet because they +could not be relieved in time, and the men of the regimental +transport, which had been left behind owing to there being no facility +for sending the waggons and animals by train with the battalion. + +The morning after the departure of the latter I was ordered by the +D.A.A.G. of the divisional troops to proceed to the various camps in +Section A, and find convenient space for the transport waggons. I +found the necessary ground in rear of the camp of the 1st Battalion +Gloucester Regiment, behind the railway cutting leading to the Orange +Free State Junction. Here we were joined in the afternoon by +Lieutenant H. W. Higginson, who took command, and the section of 'G' +company, when the Gloucesters helped us in every way, and made us as +comfortable as they possibly could. All that day we were left in +comparative peace, there being no firing on either side; but the next +morning about 5 a.m. the Boers opened with 'Long Tom' from Pepworth +Hill, and commenced a duel of some hour's duration with our naval 4·7, +which was placed on Junction Hill. They also kept up a continual +cannonade with their long-range twelve-pounders, but did little or no +damage, as they had not yet discovered the exact location of our +camps. + +For the next three or four days we remained in the Gloucester's camp +and aided in starting the trenches which eventually formed the fort +known as 'Tunnel Hill.' This was by no means pleasant work, as it was +carried out under fire, the enemy being very quick at spotting our +working parties and remarkably so at obtaining our range. We used to +watch with great interest the duel every morning between the two big +guns. Once the Boers hoisted a large white flag over their epaulement +and proceeded to repair some small damage to their gun--they have very +weird ideas about the white flag. + +On November 7th our detachment was suddenly ordered to proceed to +'Bell's Spruit,' and form the guard there. I was ordered to hand over +our transport to the Army Service Corps, so we took away the majority +of the men and brought the strength of our piquet up to thirty-one +men; the transport was sent to the railway station yard for the use of +the Army Service Corps, where it remained throughout the siege. We +were stationed at the mouth of the spruit just where it runs through +the ridge opposite the cemetery. Our fortifications consisted of a +thick wall with sandbag loopholes running right across the spruit; +about fifty yards in front were strips of high and low wire +entanglement, making it practically impossible for the enemy to rush +the post at night. By night we had to man two sangars placed on the +hills on each side of the spruit. I know nothing more productive of +bad language than visiting the sentries on those hills in the dark, +scrambling over the hugest boulders up a hill like the side of a +house. We were not very comfortable at first, there being absolutely +no shelter from sun or rain, but after about a week we managed to +obtain a couple of railway tarpaulins, and rigged up shelters on the +sides of the spruit. We were all very lucky in not getting hit, as +the enemy had a nasty habit of bursting shrapnel over the place and +sending common shell on to the crests, which produced a shower of +rocks, splinters and stones; but although we were in the spruit for +seven weeks with absolutely no cover, not a man in the detachment was +hit. During our stay in the spruit our rations were exceptionally +good, as we got extras in the way of bacon, jam, chocolate, &c. + +The night-work at this time was very hard, as everybody not actually +on outpost duty had to work at the trenches from 6.30 in the evening +till 3 a.m. the next morning. Sleep being impossible in the day-time +owing to the heat and a plague of flies, this continual night-work +told on the men severely. On November 9th the enemy made a feeble +attempt at capturing the place, and came on in considerable numbers +against Observation Hill, but were easily repulsed. On the night of +December 7th-8th an attack was made on Gun Hill, where the Boers had a +'Long Tom' and a five-inch howitzer, besides one or two small guns. +These guns had been annoying us very greatly for the past three weeks, +and we were all delighted in the early morning when we heard the +attack had been successful, and the guns blown up. We none of us knew +anything about this affair till it was over. I was visiting our posts +about 2.30 a.m. when I saw two large flashes on Gun Hill; on listening +I could not hear any shells travelling or bursting, so concluded the +enemy were amusing themselves by firing blank charges. It was not till +we saw our column returning at dawn that we solved the problem. We +found the spruit very unpleasant in wet weather, as the water used to +come down like a mountain torrent and wash away bits of our wall and +shelters; after wet nights we used to spend our time in digging our +belongings out of the sand, having spent the night sitting on the +rocks. + +About December 18th, after the failure of General Buller's first +attempt to relieve us, there was a general interchange of posts +amongst the troops of our section, and the detachment received orders +to proceed to the Newcastle Road examining guard. We were all heartily +sick of the spruit, and glad of the change. It was about this time +that our rations began to be diminished, and we had completely run out +of all extras. The post of the examining guard was on the road just +inside the ridge which formed our general line of defence, but by +night we moved out as a piquet about half a mile on to the veld into a +spruit which ran under the Harrismith line, whence we patrolled out to +Brooke's Farm, and the surrounding country. I think this was the worst +post we had throughout the siege, as we came in for a long spell of +wet weather, and night after night had to lie out on the open veld +from 8 p.m. till 4 a.m., wet to the skin and miserably cold. The +duties on this post came very hard on our men, as we had to find a +double and single sentry by day, so that they never got a night in +bed, and only about one day in three off duty. + +On Christmas Eve the men came into possession of a fine pig, so that +we all had pork for our Christmas dinner, a great change from eternal +'trek ox,' but unfortunately nothing stronger to drink than tea. I'm +sure it was the first Christmas any of us had spent in such an +uncongenial way. + +On January 6th the enemy made their desperate attack on Waggon Hill +and Caesar's Camp. They seem to have completely surprised our +outposts, as they succeeded in crawling up the hill in the dark, and +the fighting commenced at 3 a.m. The cannonade all day was something +tremendous, 'Long Tom' firing 125 rounds. They kept us pretty busy on +our side of the defences as well, but never developed any serious +attack. Whilst on this post we were subjected to a continuous and +daily course of sniping, the enemy getting on the kopjes behind +Brooke's Farm, and firing all day at a range of 2800 yards. At this +range the bullets used to whiz over the hill and drop amongst us, +although we were only a few yards behind the crest. Higginson and I +used to spend hours lying on the crest with rifles and glasses trying +to spot them, but never succeeded in doing so, as they used to take up +their position before dawn and never move all day. + +It was about this time that our men began to show the effects of +exposure and constant sentry-go, and several of them went down with +fever and rheumatism; but we were extremely lucky throughout the +siege, having only one casualty: Private Ward, 'G' company, a +reservist, who died of enteric at Intombi Camp. + +I forgot to mention that on January 6th our section had to be entirely +denuded of supports and reserves in order that they might be sent to +Waggon Hill, so that if the enemy had attacked us seriously we should +have had a hard job to keep them back. + +On January 25th the detachment was ordered to garrison Liverpool +Castle, a fort overlooking the Newcastle Road, but we had not been +there twelve hours before we were ordered to Tunnel Hill. This latter +post consisted of a large main fort capable of holding two hundred +men, and two small works about a quarter of a mile on each flank, in +all of which we had to find a guard. Our fighting strength was at this +time reduced to twenty-seven men, so that they did guard and patrol +alternate nights. We had to send out five of the latter during the +night about half a mile to the front and a mile laterally along the +valley. The confinement in this fort was rather trying, and the +eternal manning of the trenches at 4 a.m. very monotonous. After about +three weeks on this post I was suddenly seized with a 'go' of fever, +and was sent down to a room in one of the houses. When I rejoined the +detachment, after a fortnight on the sick list, they had moved to the +railway station as guard over the bridge across the Klip River. Here +we had to endure rather a severe dose of 'Long Tom'--this gun never +missed a day without dropping shells into and round the station, it +was one of its favourite spots, and all the tin buildings about bore +evidence of its attentions. One shell, pitching in the parcels office, +blew the roof off and the floor in, having first penetrated +half-a-dozen walls to get there. We had trenches on our side of the +river, which we manned, as usual, at 4 a.m. We also had to man them in +the afternoon about 5 o'clock, when the train from Intombi Camp was +due. This used to be rather a comic proceeding: a 'key' was made in +the line about half a mile outside the station, where the train was +brought to a standstill, then either Higginson or myself had to walk +out and inspect the train to see there were no Boers inside it. We +often used to wonder what would have been our lot if the train had +been full of them. On our reporting 'all correct' to the Railway Staff +Officer (Captain Young, R.E.), the train was allowed to proceed into +the station, and the little play was over till the next day. This was +undoubtedly the most comfortable job we had, as the men lived in a +shed, whilst Higginson and I had a railway carriage. + +On the afternoon of February 28th we heard the joyful tidings of +General Buller's victory at Pieter's Hill, and in the evening descried +Lord Dundonald and his men crossing the plain; our wild excitement may +be left to the imagination. I'm sure we all put on about seven pounds +of our lost weight at the mere thought of our being at last relieved. +Our troubles were not over yet, however, as the next morning we were +ordered back to Tunnel Hill, a spot we had learned to loathe with a +truly deep loathing. This move was due to our flying column going out +to hurry the enemy's retreat, most of the troops in our section taking +part in it. For some unknown reason we were kept four or five days in +that smelly fort, and it was not till March 7th that we received +orders to rejoin the battalion, which was encamped about two miles out +of Ladysmith. We all felt as though we had begun a new life; but it +was heartbreaking to see the havoc in our regiment; one had to look +about to find faces that one recognised. + +Our rations were pretty well reduced towards the end of the siege: one +biscuit, one pound of horseflesh, two teaspoonfuls of sugar, and a +pinch of tea is not much to keep body and soul together, and we were +all pretty feeble and pulled down. I think we must have done the +record piquet duty of any men in any service, as we were never +relieved throughout the whole siege; I suppose this was on account of +being left as a separate unit all through, but we certainly thought it +rather hard work. It is a wonder that our little detachment stuck out +four months' constant exposure with so little sickness, whilst our +luck in sitting under that constant shelling without a man being hit +was nothing short of providential. + +I have merely chronicled the chief moves and duties of the detachment +throughout the siege: it would take a small book to set down all our +little experiences, details, and troubles. + + + + +CHAPTER X. + +ALIWAL NORTH AND FOURTEEN STREAMS. + + 'But thus much is certain: that he that commands the + sea is at great liberty, and may take as much, + and as little of the war, as he wish.' + + _Bacon._ + + +After marching through Ladysmith, the battalion proceeded with the +11th Brigade to a camp about three miles to the north of the town and +on the left bank of the Klip River. It remained here until March 7th, +when it rejoined the 5th Brigade, which was encamped on the south side +of the Klip River, and about one mile nearer Ladysmith. On the same +date, Colonel Cooper was given the command of the 4th Brigade, and +accordingly handed over the battalion to Major Bird. + +[Illustration: Sergeant Davis in Meditation over 'Long Cecil' at +Kimberley. 'Shall I take it for the Officers?'] + +There was another change of camping-ground on March 12th, the brigade +moving to the north-east of Ladysmith, under Surprise Hill. It was an +uneventful time, although outpost duties were somewhat severe. + +In recognition of the gallantry displayed by the Irish regiments in +the Natal campaign, the Queen had directed that the shamrock should be +worn by all ranks on St. Patrick's Day. Accordingly, on March 17th, +every man wore a piece of green, since shamrock was unobtainable, and +the tents were decorated with boughs. A telegram was dispatched to the +Queen, who sent the following message in reply:-- + +'The Queen desires to thank her Dublin Fusiliers for their expression +of loyalty.' + +[Illustration: St. Patrick's Day in Camp. Private Monaghan, the regimental +Butcher, in foreground.] + +The battalion also received many congratulatory telegrams from Irish +associations and individuals in various parts of the world. + +The detachment of the 1st Battalion was sent back to Colenso on March +21st. It had been just over four months with the 2nd Battalion, and +had borne its full share of the casualties. Originally numbering +eight officers and 287 rank and file, it returned with only two +officers and 92 rank and file. + +The 5th Brigade moved on the 23rd to Modderspruit, and thence on the +next day to Elandslaagte, where it encamped a short distance to the +west of the battlefield. Here it stayed for ten days, and, as there +was little to do beyond outpost work, the battalion resumed ordinary +parades and route marching. + +On April 4th, General Warren's Division relieved General Hunter's at +Elandslaagte, and the brigade marched back to Modderspruit. The 10th +Division (General Hunter), which consisted of the 5th and 6th +Brigades, was to proceed to Cape Colony for the relief of Mafeking. + +On April 7th, Major Tempest Hicks, 1st Battalion Royal Dublin +Fusiliers, arrived from Colenso, and assumed command of the battalion. +The 5th Brigade began to move by train to Durban on the 9th, and we +were ordered to entrain at 1.45 p.m. on the 10th. But during the +morning, heavy firing broke out at Elandslaagte, and, as the enemy +seemed aggressive, the troops at Modderspruit were directed to be +ready to move to Elandslaagte. + +We had struck camp and packed all the baggage in the train, and had, +therefore, to lie out in the hot sun for several hours, and await with +patience the development of events. The Boers apparently contented +themselves by a demonstration, and at 6 p.m. the battalion was allowed +to depart. The train reached Colenso at 9 p.m., where the 1st +Battalion was encamped, and Maritzburg about 4 a.m. Here, in spite of +the early hour, a number of friends, together with a band, were on the +platform, and the regiment received a warm greeting. The men were +given cigarettes and tobacco. + +Durban was reached about 10 a.m. on April 11th, and the battalion at +once commenced to embark. The headquarters and about six companies +were carried by the _Cephalonia_, while the remaining two companies +went in the _Jamaica_. They were both slow ships, but the absolute +peace, the good food, the clean baths, and many other luxuries, made +everybody regret that they were not even slower. + +East London was reached on the 12th, and the battalion was ordered to +disembark, since the 5th Brigade was urgently required to relieve +Wepener, which was surrounded by the enemy. General Hart, with the +Border Regiment and Somersetshire Light Infantry[7] started for Aliwal +North at once, but the battalion remained on board during the whole of +the 13th, although 'H' company, under Captain Romer, disembarked in +the afternoon, and was at once dispatched by train. The other +companies landed on the 14th, and left East London in two trains, +starting at 4 and 6 p.m. + + [Footnote 7: This regiment had joined the 5th Brigade after + the relief of Ladysmith in place of the Inniskilling + Fusiliers.] + +Lieutenant Le Mesurier, who had been captured on October 20th, but +had, with Captain Haldane (Gordon Highlanders), effected a plucky +escape from Pretoria, rejoined us at East London. Unluckily he at once +developed typhoid fever, and had to be left behind. + +Aliwal North was not reached until 10.30 a.m. on April 16th. 'H' +company had arrived the previous afternoon, and was encamped near the +station, but the remainder of the battalion crossed the Orange River, +and pitched camp about 600 yards from the bridge, with its outpost +line pushed forward on the high ground to the north. + +Major Hicks became commandant of Aliwal North, and had no easy task. +The town was General Hart's base during the operations for the relief +of Wepener, and there was consequently much to be done. Moreover, the +surrounding country was disturbed, the Dutch population had to be +watched, and there were constant rumours of the approach of +commandoes. In the early hours of the 21st, a report reached the +commandant that a large body of Boers was marching on the town. He +therefore decided to bring the regiment back to the south side of the +river, only leaving the piquets on the north bank. We therefore at +once struck camp, and, crossing the river, bivouacked near the bridge. +But as the report proved to be misleading, camp was re-pitched on a +square in the middle of Aliwal North. The outskirts of the town were +put into a state of defence, and a series of trenches covered the +approaches to the bridge. Although this necessitated much labour, +everybody enjoyed their stay at Aliwal. It was a pretty place, with +trees and gardens full of roses, with plenty of water, including a hot +stream running through the camp, with a well-stocked library, and +lastly, but by no means leastly, with a hotel possessing excellent +lager beer. + +[Illustration: A Wash in hot Water. Aliwal North.] + +The time passed, in fact, too quickly, for on the 26th news was +received of the relief of Wepener, and orders were issued for our +movement to Kimberley. We started at once in two trains, the first +leaving at midnight the second at 1 a.m. on the 27th. It was a long +and monotonous journey, the only breaks in which were stops for the +purpose of cooking meals. Kimberley was reached at 10 p.m. on the +28th, and the train stopped the night in the station, going on at 6 +a.m. on the 29th to Doornfield, about eight miles north of Kimberley, +where the Connaught Rangers and the 6th Brigade were already encamped. +Since General Hart, with the Borders and Somersetshire Light Infantry +were still near Wepener, Colonel Brooke assumed the command of the +brigade. + +General Hunter's division had been ordered to relieve Mafeking, and +the General decided to cross the Vaal near Windsorton with the 6th +Brigade, and to advance up the right bank; while General Paget with +the Royal Munster Fusiliers, Connaught Rangers, and Royal Dublin +Fusiliers, faced the Boer position at Fourteen Streams. Colonel +Mahon's mounted column was to move by Barkley West, and reach Mafeking +by sweeping round the Boer flank. + +The battalion accordingly left Doornfield by train at 9 a.m. on May +2nd, and about mid-day reached Content, where it detrained and +encamped. The next day it marched with the Connaught Rangers to a +position about two miles south of Warrenton. The opposite bank of the +Vaal was held by the Boers, who were strongly entrenched and had +field-guns. On the south bank of the Vaal were the Munster Fusiliers, +a battery of field artillery, a six-inch gun mounted on a railway +truck, and a balloon, the whole detachment being under Major-General +Paget. + +[Illustration: Taking XIV STREAMS on 7th May 1900 at 9.30 a.m. very +bad ford. _From a sketch by Col. H. Tempest Hicks, C.B._] + +As all tents had been left at Content, the regiment bivouacked, and +remained more or less idle. The Munsters were holding Warrenton, and +there was constant sniping between their posts and the Boer trenches. +The balloon ascended daily, and the six-inch gun fired an occasional +shot, while the enemy's field-guns came into action at intervals. It +was a monotonous and unpleasant time for the Connaught Rangers and +ourselves, since there was nothing to do, while it was very hot by day +and cold by night. + +[Illustration: The regimental Maxim in Action at Fourteen Streams.] + +A little excitement was afforded on May 6th, when the Connaught +Rangers and half the battalion made a demonstration against a drift to +the east of Fourteen Streams. The object apparently was to draw the +Boers' attention from the 6th Brigade, who, after a victory at Rooi +Dam, were moving up the right bank. The movement caused a slight +amount of sniping, and the detachment returned to the bivouac soon +after 2 p.m. + +The approach of the 6th Brigade, aided, perhaps, by this +demonstration, caused the enemy to evacuate hurriedly their trenches +during the afternoon of the 6th. Early on the morning of the 7th, the +Connaught Rangers and the right half-battalion started to ford the +Vaal at Warrenton. + +The river at this point was broad and swift. The ford was a difficult +one, being beset by rocks and holes, and it took a considerable time +for the column to cross, since the water was up to the men's waists. +The left half-battalion under Major Bird moved one and a half miles up +the river near Fourteen Streams, where there was a ferry-boat. The +latter had been rendered useless by the Boers, but as they had left +the wire hawser, it was easy for the Royal Engineers to construct a +raft, on which the left half-battalion crossed comfortably and +quickly. + +The right half-battalion joined the left half at the ferry, and +breakfasts were cooked. Before leaving the river-bank everybody made +an inspection of the Boer trenches, which formed an exceedingly strong +position. They were very deep, and so well adapted to the ground, that +it was no easy matter to discover them from the opposite bank. +Evidences of the hurried Boer retreat were plentiful in the shape of +full ammunition-boxes, half-cooked food, blankets, and kettles. One +Boer, who was too ill to march, was captured in the trenches. + +After breakfasts, the battalion moved through a piece of ground +thickly covered with bush, and eventually bivouacked about one mile +from the Vaal, near the railway line. The 6th Brigade halted near the +same place, and the whole force was occupied for the next fortnight in +covering Fourteen Streams. The important railway bridge at this point +had been destroyed by the Boers, and the Royal Engineers, aided by +large working parties from the infantry, at once commenced to +construct a deviation bridge. This necessitated a great amount of +labour, and since, in addition, defensive works had to be made, we +were all kept very busy. + +The stay at Fourteen Streams was interrupted on May 15th by a movement +on Christiana, a town in the Transvaal, reported to be held by a +strong party of Boers. The whole of the 10th Division took part in the +operations, and were thus the first regular troops to enter the +Transvaal. The frontier was crossed at 9 a.m. The advance was through +an undulating country, at times thickly covered by bush. Towards the +afternoon the brigade halted, as news was received that the mounted +troops had entered Christiana. A bivouac was formed in a clearing +among the bush, and dinners were cooked. + +The next day the brigade marched back to Fourteen Streams, and reached +that place early on May 17th, having done some twenty-six miles in +nineteen hours. Work on the railway bridge was resumed, and, as the +6th Brigade had not returned, the battalion had to watch a more +extensive area. Each company was given a section, and constructed a +redoubt. + +[Illustration: Captain Jervis, General Fitzroy Hart, C.B., C.M.G., and +Captain Arthur Hart.] + +About May 24th, Second Lieutenant Bradford, with twenty-nine men, was +sent up the line to garrison Border Siding, where they were picked up +three days later. + +The deviation bridge over the Vaal having been completed, the +battalion was sent forward by train to Vryburg, travelling in two +trains. Camp was pitched just outside the station, and for the next +two days every one spent their time in buying _karosses_ and in +shooting partridges. + +The 10th Division, when Mafeking had been relieved by Colonel Mahon, +was ordered to march to Johannesburg viâ Lichtenburg. As the first +part of the route lay through a country very deficient in water, the +division marched in several columns, which followed each other at a +day's interval. The battalion left Vryburg on May 30th at 7.30 a.m., +and proceeded to Devondale, and on the next day made a march of +twenty-two miles to Dornbult, where Captain Mainwaring, with Second +Lieutenants Newton and Smith, joined. + +Their wanderings before they succeeded in doing so are sufficient +evidence how little was known, even to our own staff officers of the +whereabouts of the several columns. On arrival at Cape Town in the +s.s. _Oratava_, they were transhipped to the s.s. _Ranee_ and sent to +Port Elizabeth. On reporting themselves there they were entrained and +sent to Bloemfontein. No one there seemed to know where the regiment +was, but at that very time the report arrived of the march on +Christiana. Captain Mainwaring then met Captain Carington Smith of the +regiment, who was at that time serving in Roberts' Horse (which he +later on commanded), and as that officer was shortly going north with +some men of his corps, it seemed to both that the speediest way to get +to the Dublin Fusiliers was for Captain Mainwaring to be attached to +Roberts' Horse. An application to that effect was made to the staff +and granted, but shortly afterwards the news of the Christiana +column's return to the railway came to hand, so the three officers +once more entrained, and proceeded viâ De Aar to Kimberley. + +Although Captain Carington Smith did not serve with either battalion +during the war, it would not be out of place here to mention the great +part he took in it. He commenced by serving in Roberts' Horse, and was +with them throughout Lord Roberts' advance to Bloemfontein. In the +action at Sanna's Post he was shot through the knee, but resolutely +refused to be invalided home. His recovery from this severe wound was +little short of marvellous, and he actually managed to rejoin the +headquarters of his corps in time to share in the entry into +Pretoria. Shortly after this he was again shot at Heidelberg, this +time through the other knee, and again made a second and equally +marvellous recovery. Towards the end of the war he commanded Roberts' +Horse, and later on the South African Light Horse, and his trekking +during the campaign amounted to no less than 9000 miles. + +[Illustration: Issuing Queen Victoria's Chocolate. Colour-Sergeant +Connel, 'G' Company, on left.] + + + + +PART II. + +TREKKING. + + + + +CHAPTER I. + +VRYBURG TO HEIDELBERG. + + 'None of us put off our clothes.' + + _Neh._ iv. 23. + + +Now commenced a different phase of warfare. If, in the constant +fighting of the Natal campaign, the regiment had been called upon to +prove its fighting capabilities--a call to which their noble response +earned them encomiums wherever they went--they were now to be called +upon to prove another essential of the true soldier--their mobility. +And well they proved it. Day after day, week after week, the tired, +footsore, but stout-hearted column-of-route made its slow and +wearisome way over the apparently limitless expanse of the swelling +veld. And how monotonous that veld can be none can appreciate save +those who have experienced its deadly sameness. Ahead, behind, all +round, nothing but veld, veld, veld. No trees, no hills, no rivers, no +lakes, no houses, no inhabitants! Here and there, perhaps, a miserable +shanty of the sealed-pattern South African type: rough stone walls and +corrugated-iron roof, a room on each side of the door, a narrow +verandah--occasionally occupied by a quiet, peaceful-looking old +patriarch, with a grey beard, and an air savouring rather of the +pulpit than the sheltered side of a boulder--a scraggy tree or two, +and a lick of water in a 'pan'--or pond as we should call it--hard by; +a woman, some children, and a couple of goats; a few mealie cobs +yellowing on the roof, and a scared, indignant, and attenuated fowl. + +Alas! how those quiet-looking, quiet-spoken old gentlemen, open Bible +on knee, deceived us. Oh, no! they had never wished for war. Fight? +yes; they had fought, and surrendered, and taken the oath, and hoped +never to fight again. Peace? yes; they wanted peace, and urged us to +hasten on and conclude it. The same story everywhere: in the villages +as in the solitary hamlets. A vast, empty, forsaken wilderness, with +nothing more bellicose than a lean and hungry boar-hound or two. And +yet for two long years to come this very country, over which the +battalion trekked so peacefully, fifes and drums playing, officers out +on the flanks shooting, mess-president cantering miles away in quest +of eggs and their producers, was to be the scene of many a hard-fought +fight and many weary nights of outposts. Indeed, it never really +succumbed to the very end; the happy hunting-ground of the gallant De +la Rey, it was a thorn in the side of our leaders up to the day the +Delegates came in. + +One day's march varied little from another. Up at dawn, and off after +the scantiest of scrappy breakfasts. Good marching while the dew was +on the grass, and the sun a welcome ally after the clear, crisp, +frosty nights; soon, however, to get hot enough, until the welcome +mid-day halt and meal, after which tighten up belts once more and on, +and on, one horizon following another with wearisome regularity, and +never a sign of the long-looked-for water, till at last, as the sun +set behind our backs, its last rays would glint on the miserable 'pan' +by whose side we were to halt for the night. And then what bitter +feelings of depression and disgust when sometimes the fiat would go +forth 'Water for cooking purposes only,' and one had to turn into +one's blankets grimy, dusty, clammy, and miserable. + +On May 31st, the regiment, having arrived at the railway, was told +they would halt there next day. But on the morning of June 1st, the +order was given for the column[8] to march at 2 p.m. to Marigobo Pan, +a distance of eight miles only, but quite ten by the route taken. The +evenings soon close in at this time of year in South Africa, and it +was almost dark when the column arrived. As it was a fine mild night, +every one hoped to be allowed to bivouac, but tents were pitched after +all, and naturally enough pitched anyhow. + + [Footnote 8: Border Regiment, Royal Dublin Fusiliers, Bearer + Company, and Supply Detachment.] + +In this matter of pitching tents, the battalion particularly prided +itself. On arrival at the selected site of the camp the Sergeant-Major +blew a whistle, when all those whose duty it was to assist ran towards +him, the men to mark the tent-poles, bayonets in hand, and two others +with the mekometer, to ensure a true right-angle. Every one knew his +particular job, so no time was wasted, while the symmetrical lines +obtained by the use of the instrument were a joy to the General's +eye.[9] + + [Footnote 9: _Vide_ General Hart's letter in Appendix.] + +[Illustration: First Entry into Krugersdorp. Captain and Adjutant +Fetherstonhaugh in foreground.] + +In the same way, whenever a halt was ordered, it was the regiment's +custom to lay out their kits, mess-tins, belts, &c., in lines outside +their tents. Each Colour-Sergeant had a ball of string, which was +stretched between a couple of pegs; the kits were laid along it, the +string was rolled up and pitched into a tent, and neatness and +regularity prevailed without any extra trouble to any one. This +neatness in camp, in addition to its other soldierly qualities, +endeared the battalion in the eyes of General Hart, a soldier of the +old school, to whom order and regularity particularly appealed. + +On the 2nd the column made another short march to Greysdorp, where +there were two or three good wells, but where the water in the pan was +of a most peculiar green colour. + +The Mafeking relief column was met on the way, and very hard and +serviceable they looked, while several officers met old friends, +amongst others Prince Alexander of Teck, whom we had known at +Maritzburg before the war. + +A longish march of nineteen or twenty miles on the 3rd, with a halt +midway, brought us in the evening to a place called Barber's Pan, +somewhat superior to the generality of these places. There was a +certain amount of water in the pan, but brackish and unpleasant to +drink. Round it were scattered some half-dozen houses, but the most +remarkable thing in connection with it was the sunset. As the light +faded, a mist rose from the veld, which after a few minutes began to +change colour, until at last it settled down to a most beautiful shade +of light green. None of us had seen anything similar before, nor did +we ever see anything like it again. + +A march of about fourteen or fifteen miles on the 4th brought us to a +most uncomfortable camp. On the way, Captain Fetherstonhaugh (acting +Adjutant since Captain Lowndes was hit at Talana) rode off some +distance to a flank to try and get some supplies. He returned with a +great story of his reception by crowds of women and one or two men; +the latter stated they had been reluctantly compelled to fight against +us at Modder River, on pain of being shot, but that their sympathies +were entirely with us, &c. They even gave him a pound of butter. And +we believed this story at the time. + +But, for that matter, who would not have been taken in? Every one +coming up the line brought better and better news. Lord Roberts was +close to the capital, and, thought we in our simplicity, that of +course must end the war. No one guessed there was extra time--two +solid years extra time--to be played. So we enjoyed the butter, and +said they were sensible people after all, and hoped we'd be in time +for the siege of Pretoria. + +The next day's march was a pleasanter one than usual, the halts being +better arranged, with the result that the troops and transport got +into camp quite as early as they would have done under the ordinary +circumstances, but very much fresher and fitter. The fact is, staff +officers do not understand marching. They go tittuping gaily past long +straggling columns, passing the time of day cheerily to friends, and +momentarily halting to deliver some ironical knock to acquaintances on +the subject of their transport, or their sections of fours, or +something of the sort. But the regimental officer, who foots it +alongside his company, he understands marching right enough. He will +tell you when the going is good, and when it only looks good; he will +tell you the effects of five-minute halts, and how much benefit the +closing-up rear of the column derives from them; he will tell you when +a steady, swinging pace is being set that the men could keep up for +ever; and he will also tell you when some long-legged officer in front +is going four miles an hour, till some one suggests it is too fast, +and he sinks into a slow and tiring two and a half. Colonel Hicks +commanded the column on the 5th, and let us march our own way, with +the beneficial results already recorded. + +And that cheery rumour about Pretoria. French reported to be there, +and Mr. Kruger gone off with a couple of millions. What did we care +about the latter? We should not have got any of it. + +Another short march of a little over ten miles brought us to a camp +where there was actually a stream. Here the men got the chance of a +much-needed bathe, and how they enjoyed it! Every one, in fact, was in +excellent spirits, for the news about Pretoria turned out to be true, +and though some of us were disappointed at not being up in time to +share in the triumphant entry into the capital, the majority were all +for England, home, and beauty. + +On the 7th we arrived at Lichtenburg, a small town or village that was +to see some heavy fighting later on in the war. On the present +occasion all seemed most peaceful. The houses were of the stereotyped +South African pattern, with the invariable half-stoep, half-verandah +running half-way along their fronts. Clear streams of water ran coolly +and pleasingly by the sides of the streets, shaded by the ubiquitous +weeping-willow. There was nothing to be bought, and no one to be seen, +however, and those of us who went into the town next morning were very +soon satisfied, returning to camp minus the various articles we had +set forth to buy. It was interesting, however, to see the Boers +handing in their rifles and taking the oath of allegiance. + +Captain MacBean, who was now on General Hunter's staff, turned up +here, and dined with the regiment, and very glad we were to see him. +He gave us all sorts of news, too, which we were very deficient of, as +the system of daily bulletins had not then started. + +After having halted for the 8th and 9th, we resumed our desert march +on the 10th, but only made some ten miles. It was most bitterly cold +all the way. + +The next day proved far pleasanter, and another short, easy march of +about ten miles saw us in camp by 1.30 p.m. + +On the 12th we made a march of sixteen miles. We were then within +about thirty-three miles of the railway from Johannesburg to +Potchefstroom, and, when a wire came ordering us to do it in two days, +we thought a lot of the task, whereas a few months later we were doing +that distance in one day, and, curiously enough, almost in the same +neighbourhood. + +In consequence of this we marched right through Ventersdorp, to our +regret, as it looked quite a nice place, and there was a regular +trout-stream flowing past it, in which a bathe would have been most +welcome. We did eighteen miles before halting. + +As indicative of the curious state of the war even in these early +days, General Hunter's experience at Vryburg was a good example. He +had ridden on with only thirty cavalrymen to Ventersdorp, when +suddenly some two hundred and fifty of the enemy appeared on the +scene. Fortunately for the General, their only object was to give up +their arms and take the oath. + +Starting at 7.30 a.m. next day, we made short work of the march to the +railway, which we struck at Frederickstadt, a place that many of us +were destined to become very well acquainted with before we had done. +It is rather prettier than most Boer villages, being situated on the +pleasant little Mooi River, whose clear, rapid current reminded us of +our home streams. There are a few trees in the vicinity, whilst on the +further bank and beyond the railway rise the serrated, well-wooded, +and extremely picturesque Gatsrand Hills. + +There was only one man to be seen, peacefully hoeing his potato-patch. +But if the men were scarce and polite, the same could not be said for +the fair sex, who, despite the fact that their knowledge of English +was only to be compared with our ignorance of Dutch, did not fail to +let us know their opinions of things generally. Indeed, the +mess-president, who had gone on ahead on a pony in search of +farmyard products, had a battle-royal with an elderly Dutch lady who +asked six shillings a dozen for her eggs. + +We heard more detailed accounts here of the relief of Mafeking, and of +the gallant part Major Godley of ours had taken in its defence, while +Major Pilson and Captain Kinsman (also Royal Dublin Fusiliers) had +assisted in the relief. As Carington Smith had arrived in Kimberley +with the cavalry, we were able to claim representation in all three of +the great sieges and reliefs of the war. + +[Illustration: 'Speed Dead Slow.'] + +But a disappointment was in store for us all the same. The column did +not move next day (the 15th), but although engine after engine came +puffing up from Potchefstroom they all failed to bring the carriages +which our aching legs made us so anxiously look for. We heard of the +strike of forty engine-drivers at Potchefstroom, but as they had all +been cast into durance vile, and the engines still continued to +arrive, that could not have been the reason. However, any doubts we +entertained were soon set at rest by an order to continue our march to +Johannesburg next day. + +[Illustration: Miscellaneous Casualties. + + Lieut. ELY. _Died at sea of Enteric._ + Capt. H. CARINGTON SMITH. _Wounded at Sanna's Post and Heidelberg._ + Capt. WATSON. (_Attached to Scottish Horse_). _Killed at Moedwil._ + Capt. H. J. KINSMAN. _Wounded in Transvaal._ + Capt. J. A. MACBEAN. _Killed at Nooitgedacht._ + Lieut. ADRIAN TAYLOR. _Severely wounded when serving with M.I. near + Parys._] + +Starting on the 16th, an uneventful march of twelve miles brought us +to Wolverdiend, a place which had not then attained the importance it +afterwards assumed. + +It was another fifteen on to Blauw Bank Station next day. This march +was remarkable in that it was the first occasion since this trek +started that the column moved with any military precautions worth +mentioning. + +Leaving Bank, as it got to be called later on, we struck off from the +railway, left shoulders up, in a bee-line for Johannesburg, the city +of our dreams, which it was hard to believe was not paved with gold, +if one listened to the reports of those who had been there before the +war. After a short march of ten miles we halted at a farm called +Gemsbokfontein, and looked with longing eyes at the distant ridge, +peeping over which could plainly be seen the huge mine-chimneys, like +sentinels along the hills, duly noting our arrival. + +A fierce grass-fire broke out here, which necessitated the active +co-operation of all hands, and all blankets, to oppose it, one +too-adventurous officer getting rather scorched for his pains. + +As we sat at lunch we could see General Mahon's mounted column +ascending the long rise to Randfontein, on our left front, and heard +they had gone to Krugersdorp. + +'Krugersdorp! Where's that?' 'Let's look at your map,' and so on. +Well, we undoubtedly knew where it was a few weeks later. Moreover, +there must be Boers there, for had not a party on an engine come out +that very day, and after destroying a small bridge, and firing a +couple of shots, snorted their way back to the Dorp. + +The Royal Dublin Fusiliers supplied the advanced guard on the 19th, +and duly started for Johannesburg, but a message very shortly came +ordering a left incline, and nominating Krugersdorp as our objective. +It was disappointing, but General Mahon had reported the +Krugersdorpers 'truculent,' and we had to make a demonstration. This +we most certainly did, halting above the railway, just outside the +town, and then--producing drums and fifes--forming up and marching +through to 'St. Patrick's Day' and the 'British Grenadiers.' But, +unlike the peaceful and amiable agriculturist, these townsfolk had no +smiles of reciprocation to our advances, and we marched through long +lines of scowling male faces, with here and there one or two of the +fair sex, but also, alas! sombre to a degree. + +[Illustration: Hoisting The Union Jack at Krugersdorp.] + +After emerging on the far side of the town we passed the famous +Paardekraal Monument on our right, and finally camped about half a +mile further on. It appears it was a very close thing whether they +opposed us or not, and the peaceful solution that eventually took +place was largely due to the tactful intervention and determination of +an Englishman, Mr. W. Bruce Honman, who had considerable influence +amongst the Dutch. + +The troops halted at Krugersdorp next day, and the town was formally +taken over in the Queen's name, an impressive parade for that purpose +being held in the market square. Each regiment furnished a Guard of +Honour of 100 men. The Royal Dublin Fusilier Guard was under the +command of Major English, with Captain Higginson and Lieutenant +Haskard. It was extremely interesting for those of us who were not on +duty to watch the faces of the large numbers of Boers, male and +female, who watched this ceremony and the hoisting of the Union Jack. +On the whole they took it extremely well, and for the most part +behaved like brave men, who, having fought and lost, were content to +make the best of the situation. + +[Illustration: Johan Meyer's House, five Miles outside Johannesburg.] + +The trek commenced again on the 22nd, and this time we felt convinced +our destination must be Johannesburg, as we were marching along the +Witwaters Rand straight for it. A halt was made after some ten miles, +at Florida, rather a pleasant sort of Saturday-to-Monday resort of +Johannesburgers, with a nice lake and pleasant woods. + +At last we seemed about to receive our reward, only to have our hopes +dashed rudely to the ground. True, we marched to Johannesburg, and +even through it, but only through the most miserable of its slums, +seeing nothing of its fine buildings, nothing of the wealth and +magnificence we had confidently expected. But, indeed, even the +finest part of it was only a sorry spectacle in those days, and for +many a weary month afterwards. Skirting the racecourse, we marched on +to a spot some six miles from the town, near the house of Johan Meyer, +a brother of Lucas Meyer. Colonel Hicks and Captain Fetherstonhaugh +called on this gentleman, and got a lot of interesting information +from him. His house was one of the finest we saw in the whole +Transvaal, and from its site--at the head of a fine valley--commanded +a magnificent view of the country almost as far as Heidelberg. + +But, as some set-off to our disappointment and long, tiring march of +fifteen miles, Captain Sir Frederick Frankland, who had gone on to +Joh'burg, as it is universally called, to buy what stores he could, +turned up just before dinner, not only with a large amount of +provisions, but also with a case of excellent champagne, which he +presented to the mess, God bless him! We were very proud of our noble +Baronet that night, and he had to reply to the toast of his health +over and over again. + +[Illustration: Sergeant Davis, evidently with All we wanted.] + +Sergeant Davis, champion forager of the Army, also put in an +appearance here, having met with no end of adventures and +misadventures since the Colonel had sent him back to the +Kimberley-Mafeking Railway. As usual, he had a fine lot of stores, +and, also as usual, just what we wanted: baccy, chocolate, biscuits, +sjamboks, stamps, etc., etc. + +An uneventful march of fifteen miles, with a halt at Reitfontein, was +only noticeable for a particularly cold night and the final splitting +up of the Irish Brigade, the Connaughts and Borders being ordered to +Pretoria. + +On the 25th our long march came to an end with a twelve-mile step into +Heidelberg. The band of the Derbyshire Regiment played us in, while +our old friend, General Bruce Hamilton, rode out to meet us. We halted +on a slope about three-quarters of a mile outside the town, which in +its essential features is remarkably like Krugersdorp, the streets +being lined with tall blue-gum trees, and the plan of course +rectangular, with the usual market square in the centre. + +There had been a fight here, and we found Captain Carington Smith +again amongst the wounded; this time, as already mentioned, with a +bullet through his other knee, but as cheery as ever, and smiling away +at seeing us all again. Lieutenant Adrian Taylor, of the regiment, was +also here, and very glad we were to see him once more. Like Captain +Carington Smith he was detached from the regiment throughout the +campaign, serving with the M.I., and was about a month later very +severely wounded near Parys when De Wet crossed the Vaal with Lord +Kitchener at his heels. Still another Dublin Fusilier met us at +Heidelberg--Major Rutherford, Adjutant of the Ceylon Volunteers, who +had come over in command of a detachment of that corps. + +In addition to all these, General Cooper (our late C.O.) and his +A.D.C., Lieutenant Renny, R.D.F., were also coming up from the south, +while the 1st Battalion, who had helped to win Alleman's Nek, were not +far off. + +On arrival at Heidelberg we had marched just 300 miles in +twenty-seven days, and although we had not pressed in any way, we had +come along fairly well seeing that we were not bound on any specific +object, such as the relief of a town, or the participation in a siege +or battle. We averaged just over eleven miles a day, including halts +at Lichtenburg (two days), Frederickstadt and Krugersdorp (two days), +or just a shade under fourteen miles for each marching day. + +[Illustration: Paardekraal Monument, Krugersdorp.] + + + + +CHAPTER II. + +HEIDELBERG. + + 'Wherever a man's post is, whether he has chosen it of his own + will, or whether he has been placed at it by his commander, there + it is his duty to remain and face the danger, without thinking of + death, or of any other thing except dishonour.'--_Socrates._ + + 'Such officers do the King best service in the end.'--_Hamlet._ + + +A considerable force had now assembled at Heidelberg, but it was not +to remain there long. General Hunter took over command from General +Ian Hamilton, who had had a bad fall from his horse, and shortly moved +off to the Free State, where he and his men soon covered themselves +with distinction by the rounding-up of Prinsloo's commandoes near +Golden Gate, on the Basuto border. + +The 2nd Royal Dublin Fusiliers, a half-battalion Somersetshire Light +Infantry, and the 28th Field Battery Royal Artillery, with some +details, were left to garrison Heidelberg. + +The battalion was soon split up into a number of small detachments, +and posted at various places along the railway line, which had +suffered considerably at the hands of the Boers. Scarcely a bridge +remained intact, while the presence of wandering bodies of the enemy +in the neighbourhood necessitated the utmost caution and continual +vigilance on the part of the companies, half-companies, and even +sections, into which some of the companies were at length subdivided. + +Headquarters and those companies not on detachment in the meantime had +plenty of work cut out for them too. In order to defend the place two +hills to the west of the town were occupied, one by the Royal Dublin +Fusiliers, known as Dublin Hill, and the other by the Somersetshire +Light Infantry. Our hill was put into a most thorough state of +defence by many hours of hard labour and efficient work under the +direction of Colonel Hicks. Sangars were built on every spur and knoll +which afforded a good field of fire; traverses and shelters were +numerous; in case of a night attack whitened stones along well-made +tracks showed the nearest way to the various posts; while not only +every company, but every section, had its well-defined trench or wall +to rally on and hold. + +To some of us, indeed, all these precautions at the time seemed +somewhat excessive, and it is true that no attack was ever made; but +just as example is better than precept and practice better than +theory, so prevention is better than cure, and there is little doubt +that the fortification of that hill, in full view of many a Boer +field-glass in the town, whence our movements were of course fully +reported as frequently as possible to the enemy in the field, had a +deterrent effect on any designs our very active foes might otherwise +have contemplated. + +On the morning of the 26th the left half-battalion, under Major Bird, +was suddenly ordered off to Nigel Road Station, about three miles out +on the railway to Johannesburg. The Boers having blown up a bridge +between this station and Heidelberg, all stores, &c., arriving from +Johannesburg had to be dumped down on the veld here, and it was +necessary to have a force on the spot to load them into waggons, as +well as to guard them and the trains. These soon began to arrive in +large numbers, and as each came up the sides of the railway waggons +were opened, and their heterogeneous contents chucked out anyhow into +a huge mass. In the mean time R.E. construction trains also arrived, +and the quiet little siding was soon a scene of wild bustle and +excitement. The R.E. went to work on the broken bridge, and made a +most excellent job of it in a surprisingly short time, though a casual +inspection of the temporary structure they built for trains to +pass over gave the lay mind the impression that an extra strong puff +of wind would blow the whole thing over. However, it answered its +purpose very thoroughly, and reflected much credit on its +constructors. + +[Illustration: Colonel H. Tempest Hicks, C.B. Commanding 2nd Royal +Dublin Fusiliers March 1900 to March 1904.] + +In the meantime Major Bird soon produced law and order out of chaos. +The coolies were made to put mealie-bags in one place and +biscuit-boxes in another, while the soldiers built both up into a very +serviceable sort of fort for the time being, an example of soldierly +adaptability which was not lost on any one who saw it or took part in +its erection. + +We spent two or three very cheery days at Nigel Siding, the +stationmaster's house (two rooms) forming an ideal officers' mess, but +on the 28th 'E' and 'F' companies, under Captains Shewan and G. S. +Higginson, were recalled to headquarters, 'H' company, under Captain +Romer, was sent nine miles nearer Johannesburg to guard Reit Vlei +Bridge, while 'G' company remained at Nigel Road to watch over such +stores as had not yet been removed. This company was shortly further +subdivided by the left half-company, under Lieutenant E. St. G. Smith, +being sent to guard a culvert half-way to Reit Vlei Bridge. + +In the meantime Colonel Hicks never for a moment relaxed the soldierly +precautions which it was his custom to observe, whether the Boers were +reported in the neighbourhood or not; and several times rumours of +intended attacks did arrive, though they invariably proved false. + +The town of Heidelberg itself was very Dutch and seething with +malcontents and treachery. One could easily forgive them for not being +exactly content, but what one could not forgive was their slimness, +their plausible exterior, and their inner mass of falsehood. No class +were more bitter than the clergymen, and one of these gentry was +strongly suspected of being in constant communication with the Boers +in the field, though his oath of neutrality was taken and he was +availing himself of our hospitality. On one occasion Captain G. S. +Higginson spent the night in an empty house in the town in an attempt +to mark this fox to ground, but unfortunately his vigil was +unproductive of result. + +Lieutenant Haskard was now acting as Railway Staff Officer, and having +a very busy time of it, as in addition to hundreds of other duties he +had to send rations up and down the line to the various detachments. + +On the 9th, Sergeant-Major Burke rejoined the regiment, having been a +prisoner since he was wounded at Talana, and left at Dundee. During +this time his duties had been ably performed by Colour-Sergeant C. +Guilfoyle, now Sergeant-Major, 2nd Battalion Royal Dublin Fusiliers. +Lieutenants Marsh and Weldon also joined here, as Lieutenant Supple +had done a few days before. The two former had followed the regiment +up the line to Mafeking, and thence across the Western Transvaal in a +cape-cart, following very nearly in our tracks. They had an +adventuresome journey, and were delighted to reach us at last. Captain +Clarke, R.M.L.I., who was attached to the regiment, escorted an +important Boer commander, named Van Rensburg, to Johannesburg, on his +way to St. Helena. + +It is necessary to explain briefly here the situation of the three +companies, 'A,' 'E,' and 'F,' under Major English, Captain Shewan, and +Captain G. S. Higginson, which had been sent out to guard various +points on the line from Heidelberg to Standerton. + +'A' and 'E' companies had originally gone out, and were posted at +Botha's Kraal. Later on it became necessary to hold Zuikerbosch as +well. Major English, with Lieutenant Newton as his subaltern, was sent +to garrison it. Taking 'E' company with him and leaving Captain +Higginson at Botha's Kraal, Major English, with some 110 Royal +Engineers, occupied the post, and at once set about to put it into a +thorough state of defence. He fully recognised the inherent weaknesses +of his situation, and saw that unless well entrenched he was +practically at the mercy of an enemy armed with artillery, as he had +none to reply with, while the nearest reinforcements were miles away, +and liable themselves to be attacked in force at any moment. He +therefore spared no ingenuity in strengthening the position. Having +Royal Engineers and a considerable number of Kaffirs at his disposal, +he very soon effected his purpose and dug himself comfortably in. + +In the meantime signs were not wanting of approaching Boer activity. A +large commando, under Hans Botha, was known to be hovering about the +neighbourhood, and as it was also known that Botha was occasionally in +the habit of spending a night under his own roof--not three miles +away--Captain G. S. Higginson made two efforts to catch him napping. +But on neither occasion was the chieftain at home, and the unfortunate +Higginson, who had selected the darkest and wildest nights as most +suitable for his purpose, was foiled each time, and had to withdraw +somewhat crestfallen, under a fire of raillery from the ladies of the +establishment. He collected some valuable information, nevertheless, +and sent in reports of Boers in the vicinity, which, however, were not +sufficient to induce General Hart to take any extra precautions. + +Such was the situation of affairs when, on the misty morning of July +21st, we at Heidelberg heard the hoarse barking of the accursed +pompom, varied by the duller and more menacing note of heavier guns. +Anxiously we asked each other what it could be, and reluctantly we +came to the conclusion that our comrades were being submitted to +shell-fire with no possible chance of reprisal. As the sun rose, the +mist did the same, and very soon cheerful messages came twinkling over +'the misty mountain-tops,' announcing that a considerable force of +Boers were attacking them, but that they had little fear of not being +able to keep them off. + +General Hart hastily assembled a small column[10] and marched to Major +English's assistance, leaving Colonel Hicks in command of the camp, +and as it was quite possible the main attack might be intended for +Heidelberg, we took all necessary precautions for the safety of the +town. + + [Footnote 10: 130 Somersets, 2 guns, 1 pompom, 140 Marshall's + Horse.] + +Before General Hart's force arrived, the Boers had commenced to +withdraw, having discovered that on this occasion they had attacked a +veritable hornet's nest. + +The hill on which Major English had dug his entrenchments is situated +in the angle made by the Zuikerbosch River where it turns sharply to +the south, and was on the left bank of the stream. On the other side +of the river was the hill occupied by the Royal Engineers. Between +these two was the new deviation bridge then under construction. The +Kaffirs lived in the hollow between the hills, as did also the +Yeomanry, of whom there were about ten, under a very young officer. +Major English had given this officer orders that, on any attack taking +place, he should at once lead his horses down to the river, where +there was a kind of hollow place which would have afforded them +excellent cover. This order, however, probably from the suddenness of +the attack, was not complied with in time, and the horses were in +consequence stampeded almost immediately. The natives also were not +long in effecting a rapid southerly movement, for which, of course, +they cannot be blamed, and the Boers shelled them lustily as they +streamed away. + +The Royal Dublin Fusiliers' camp was on the southern slope of the +hill, the summit being occupied at night by alternate companies, who +stood to arms shortly before dawn. Captain Shewan was on the hill, and +on the point of letting the men fall out, when the attack commenced. +The trenches were at once manned without the slightest noise or +confusion, and the Boers' rifle-fire vigorously replied to. + +The two Boer guns were in position on the hills to the north, some +3400 yards off, while the pompom came into action near the Fortuna +coal-mine. Owing to the excellent disposition and construction of the +defences, the enemy's fire made little or no impression, until after a +time they began to move round to the flanks of the position. Their +rifle-fire then began to have some effect, but at the same time the +fire of the defence had a better target, and after a short time the +burghers commenced to withdraw from the rear face of the work. In the +meantime they had swung round to the west of the Engineers' hill, and +under cover of a grass fire, which was lighted by them and spread +right up to the trenches, endeavoured to attack this part of the +position, in which, however, they also failed. The enemy continued his +endeavours until mid-day, when he commenced to withdraw, his movement +being somewhat expedited by the arrival of the reinforcements under +the General. + +Considering the numbers of the attacking force, and the resolute +manner in which they had persevered, the casualties were +extraordinarily small, two officers and three men wounded, one of the +former being Major English himself; he was struck by a shell splinter +in the eye, but most fortunately did not lose the sight of it. + +This gallant defence called forth a most eulogistic order from the +Commander-in-Chief. The success had come at a time when it was badly +needed. The guarding of the railways necessitated the splitting-up of +forces, and in more than one recent instance a commander of less +foresight than Major English had failed to realise the responsibility +of his position, with the result that more additions were made to the +already-far-too-long list of 'regrettable incidents.' + +The following telegrams passed between General Hart and Major +English:-- + +Helio message received at Zuikerbosch Fort on July 22nd, 1900, from +General Hart: 'Received following wire from Lord Roberts. +Begins--"Please convey my congratulations to Major English, and all +concerned on the gallant manner in which they defended their post on +the Zuikerbosch."' + +Major English made the following reply:--'All in the Zuikerbosch +command thank our General for forwarding Lord Roberts' telegram, which +they consider a great honour.' + +The following is an extract from Army Orders in South Africa, dated +Pretoria, July 26th, 1900:-- + +'_Engagement._--The Field-Marshal Commanding-in-Chief desires that the +following account from Major-General A. Fitzroy Hart, C.B., Commanding +5th Brigade, of the successful defence of a post by a small force of +infantry against a determined attack of the enemy with guns, be +published as an example of what can be accomplished by a small body of +resolute men, well commanded and skilfully and judiciously +entrenched:-- + +'From General Hart, Zuikerbosch, to Lord Roberts, Pretoria, July 21st: +"Enemy made a determined attempt to destroy my advanced post at +Railhead, Zuikerbosch, to-day. Major English, Royal Dublin Fusiliers, +commands the post, with two companies of Dublins, ten Yeomanry, and +110 Royal Engineer reparation party, defending the new railway bridge +which replaces destroyed one. Boers began attack at daybreak with two +or three guns and a pompom, shelling the position hard. They then +advanced, and completely surrounded him with mauser fire, keeping it +up from 6.20 a.m. to 11.45 a.m., and it was hotly returned. English +signalled early to me at Heidelberg, thirteen miles off, that he was +surrounded, and holding his own confidently. I started from Heidelberg +with two guns, a pompom, 130 Somersets, and 140 Marshall's Horse and +Yeomanry, and, on approaching English's position, found he had already +beaten off the enemy, and saw them assembled on the heights N.E. of +his position, and beginning to ride off N.E. My guns opened fire, and +Boers broke into a gallop. The complete repulse of the Boer attack is +entirely due to the skill with which Major English had fortified his +position, his vigilant arrangements, and the good fighting of the +garrison. Casualties: wounded--Lieutenant Greig, severely; Privates +Mallon, Stanton, and O'Brien, slightly. The bridge and train not +injured. Line only injured to the extent of three rails taken up. +Numbers of enemy's casualties not known. Boers sent out an ambulance +for wounded, and were seen burying dead."' + +The following extracts from a letter from Sapper F. Adcock, published +in a home newspaper, are also of interest. After a brief description +of the situation, he continues:--'It was at this time that the +heliographers of the Dublin's showed their pluck, for, fixing up their +stand amidst shot and shell, they got their message through to +Heidelberg.... We could watch every move of the Dublins, as the ditch +ran in the line of their kopje.... Another bit of pluck well worth +seeing happened just as there was a lull in the firing. Two of the +Dublins ran from their entrenchments to their tents, quite a quarter +of a mile, and carried all their bread in a blanket between them to +the entrenchments. The Boers fired three shells at them when they were +going back, but two fell short, and the other was right between them.' + +The sapper was right, and it is pleasant to read letters like the +above when emanating from an entirely independent source. Major +English reported most favourably of the signalling, which was +necessarily conducted practically in the open, the enemy's projectiles +falling all round the operator and Major English, who stood close +beside him. For this service Private Farrelly, who sent the message, +was awarded the distinguished conduct medal. The two brave men who +went out for the bread were Privates Hayes ('A' company) and Townsell +('E' company). + +The remainder of our stay at Heidelberg was uneventful except for what +might very easily have been a most unpleasant accident. We were all +seated at lunch one day when there was a sudden and loud report close +at hand. Investigation proved that it came from Captain Pomeroy's +revolver (an officer belonging to a West Indian Regiment who was +attached to us). He had carelessly left it in his tent loaded, while +his servant had still more carelessly fired it off. The only sufferer +was an unfortunate animal, Major Bird's charger, which was shot in the +hoof. + +On our departure on the 27th, Major-General Cooper's Brigade took over +the defence of the town. + +[Illustration: The Officers' Mess.] + +[Illustration: Position at Zuikerbosch. 12 m. below Heidleburg; +attacked on 21st July by 1000 Boers with 4 guns. Defended by 180. 2 +R.D.F, 110 Engineers, 10 Yeomen, no guns. + +Under Major English 2 R.D.F. + +_From a sketch by Col. H. Tempest Hicks, C.B._] + + + + +CHAPTER III. + +AFTER DE WET. + + 'It is vain for you to rise up early.'--_Ps._ cxxvii. 2. + + +Having been for a month at Heidelberg, we had begun to quite make it +our own, and felt as if we should finish the war where we were. And +although there were still any amount of commandoes in the field, we +could scarcely be blamed for thinking that the back of the business +was broken, and that a few weeks, or at the outside months, must see +us returning to England. Well, we reckoned without our host, or rather +the hosts of Messrs. Botha, De Wet, De la Rey, & Co., and if we made a +mistake we made it in good company. + +The Colonel had never ceased fortifying and improving Dublin Hill, and +there is no doubt that at the end of July his efforts had resulted in +a very sound and efficient post. + +Everything pointed to peace and quiet when, late on the afternoon of +July 27th, the ominous 'order' call broke the stillness of the crisp +wintry evening. + +'Come for orders! Come for orders! Hurry up, hurry up; come for +orders!' + +Who, that soldiered through those long weary months, but must remember +that infernal call? For it was characteristic of the war, and owing, +doubtless, to the immense tract of country over which it was waged, +that not only the rank and file, but even the officers, with one or +two exceptions, knew little or nothing of what was going on. +Consequently one never knew what the next minute would bring forth, +and waited accordingly with ears at tension for the strains of the +bugle, whose notes might portend nothing or everything. + +On this occasion they were the prelude to one of the most stirring +periods in the history of the war--the first great De Wet hunt. It is +beside the purport of this volume to discuss the advantages of British +infantry pursuing mounted Boers. It has often been maintained that the +result of such an apparently hopeless hare-and-tortoise sort of +procedure would have been successful on this occasion but for the fact +of the unblocking of Olifant's Nek. On the other hand, there are not +wanting many who are equally prepared to argue that, although this +bolt-hole being open may have facilitated the guerilla's escape, that +astute leader would easily have found some other nook or cranny quite +sufficient for his purpose had it been shut; while, if the worst had +come to the worst, from his point of view, he could, at the sacrifice +of his waggons and guns, have dissolved his commando in the night, +only to unite again at some more suitable and less column-infected +time and place. + +At the time we knew nothing of all this; all we knew was that some big +move was in progress, for, as we neared the railway next day, train +after train steamed through, reminiscent of the vicinity of Epsom on a +Derby Day, but that was all. Where we were going, when we were going, +why we were going, were all questions quite beyond our ken--not to be +answered, indeed, until some days later, when an officer on General +Hunter's Staff told us what it was all about. + +Our march to the railway on the 28th was a long and trying one, +variously computed at from twenty-one to twenty-three miles. Whatever +its exact length may have been is immaterial; it was the method in +which it was conducted that was so desperately trying. After the usual +sketchy apology for a breakfast, the column moved off with the +Somersets as advance-guard, and 'F' and 'G' company of the Dublins as +rearguard. From a variety of causes the progress was uncommonly slow, +and, no halt being made of greater length than a few minutes, the men +of the rearguard had a trying time, for any one who has marched +behind a column of waggons, &c., miles in length, knows that one +practically gets no halt at all from these five-minute snatches, owing +to the necessity of continually closing up. It was quite dark when the +rearguard hove in sight of the passing trains, and then, to make +matters thoroughly uncomfortable, some half-dozen waggons stuck firmly +in a snipe-bog, scarcely a mile from their destination. + +[Illustration: Corporal Tierney and Chef Burst.] + +It looked uncommonly as if the unfortunate rearguard would have to +bivouac in that miserable marsh. As everybody was pouring with +perspiration from their endeavours with the waggons, and as it was +beginning to freeze, while there was no chance of getting at +great-coats, blankets, or food unless the waggons came out, out they +jolly well had to come--and came. It was ten o'clock before the men +got anything to eat, and 11.30 p.m. before our arrangements for the +night were completed. Our invaluable French 'chef' had kept some hot +soup for the rearguard, and seldom was soup more appreciated than by +those famished and frozen warriors. + +We now heard that we were going south, and going south by train, and +that at all events was something to look forward to. At least it was a +change--something to look forward to with anticipation; and certainly +it is something to look back upon with a certain amount of amusement, +but at the time that railway journey was certainly the reverse of +comfortable. + +We could not get off as early as we expected to on the 29th. The first +train started all right, but owing to the amount of work to be done in +getting kit over a small drift that lay between our bivouac of the +night before and the station, the second train did not follow it till +3.30 p.m. + +After this the difficulty of dispatch increased with each succeeding +train, until when it came to entraining reluctant horses and still +more reluctant mules practically in the dark, for there was no other +light but the dim glimmer of two candle-lamps, the task became +herculean, and required an infinity of patience and tact. The General +and his staff having gone by the first excursion, the task of bringing +along the remainder of the column devolved on Colonel Hicks, with +Captain Fetherstonhaugh as his staff officer. They did not complete +the entraining until the early hours of the 30th, and then only to +find the line blown up in front of them. The fact that no disaster +occurred here was owing to Colonel Hicks' determination not to try to +get through that night, as he clearly foresaw what actually took +place, and that there was nothing to prevent the enemy blowing up the +line. + +It is necessary now to turn our attention to the second train, which +conveyed most of the regiment, under command of Major Bird. Some forty +men with their arms and accoutrements were told off to each open +truck, necessitating the tightest packing, which, however, had a +beneficial effect in so far as it took off the worst part of the +constant succession of jerks and jolts which the journey consisted of. +But everybody was full of fun, and the men as merry as crickets at the +change from the long days of uninteresting 'foot-slogging' and the +prospect of a brush with the elusive De Wet. + +The officers--about twenty in number--travelled in the guard's van, on +the floor of which they made themselves as comfortable as possible +under the circumstances. + +[Illustration: Fourth Class on the Z.A.S.M.] + +After passing Vereeniging and duly admiring the excellent work of the +sappers, the mess-president proposed that they should sample the +hampers he had provided for them. This was carried unanimously, but at +that moment the train began to slow up, and, anxious to see every new +place, we determined to wait until the train started again, and then +enjoy our dinner in peace and comfort. + +The sudden explosion of a shell from 'Long Tom' in our midst could not +have had a more demoralising effect than the news which greeted us +when we came to a standstill. It arrived in the shape of a telegram +from the General, ordering the officers to ride in the trucks with the +men, and to keep a sharp look-out for attacks from both sides. So +there was no chance of any dinners after all, and all our visions of +chicken and tongue, whisky and sparklets, and a hot cup of tea or +chocolate resolved themselves into a lump of chocolate out of one's +haversack and a pull at one's water-bottle. The mess-president proved +himself a man of resource on this trying occasion. With hunger gnawing +at his vitals he saw a beautiful dinner laid out in a waiting-room for +some staff officers. Unable to satisfy his comrades he saw no reason +why he himself should go unsatisfied, and in the three or four minutes +occupied by the engine in watering he hastily bolted a fine plate of +roast beef and potatoes, not omitting a bottle of beer standing hard +by, and jumped into the train at the last moment, thanking his +astonished host and friend, Major Hickie of the 7th Fusiliers, as the +train moved off into the darkness. + +Anything more cheerless than the remainder of that night journey it +would be hard to conceive. In the first place, when there are forty +men in an open truck, it is very difficult to find room for two more. +In the second place, it was bitterly cold, and a pitch-dark night. In +the third place, the even-money chance of a slab or two of gun-cotton +on the line ahead was not a pleasing one to contemplate. In the fourth +place, the men were ordered to 'charge magazines,' and to spend +several hours jolting along with the cold barrel of a loaded rifle +poking one in the ribs, or insinuatingly tucking itself into the nape +of one's neck, could by no stretch of imagination or fire-eating +ambition be called comforting. However, there was one fine piece of +news at any rate to act as a compensation, the surrender of Commandant +Prinsloo and three or four thousand men to General Hunter. + +[Illustration: Fifth Class on the Z.A.S.M.] + +Once or twice ghostly forms on horseback loomed suddenly out of the +blackness of the veld, momentarily lit up by the glare from the +engine. On each occasion they shouted some warning, but what it was +nobody could make out. Our engine-driver fully expected to be blown +up, and had taken the bit between his teeth, cracking on at a pace +that stirred up the living contents of the trucks behind him, until +if any one of them had had a spare morsel of fat on him, he must +inevitably have been churned into butter. Carrying on at this rate, we +soon arrived at our destination, a small station called Kopjes. And +when very shortly after our arrival two or three dull explosions in +the direction whence we had come signified that the line had been +blown up right enough, our gratitude to the engine-driver was +considerably increased. Nor did his solicitude for our welfare end +even then, for having effected his object, he said we could have as +much boiling water out of the engine as we liked, and in less than +sixty seconds we were drinking steaming hot chocolate, and returning +grateful thanks to our host. If any one class more than another +deserved special recognition during this war, it was the railway +staff--the drivers, stokers, and guards. It is no exaggeration to say +that during the whole war no train was ever run at night but that +these men did not run the risk of being blown sky-high, in addition to +all the other incidental dangers of their hazardous calling. + +The break in the line necessitated our waiting some two or three days +at the station, until the remainder of the column got through. When it +was at last assembled, we marched off due west, towards the sound of +heavy firing in the distance. A march of fourteen miles brought us +within sight and almost within range of a long, low line of kopjes, +and here, we were informed on our arrival, was the famous guerilla +chief, surrounded--so we were informed--at last, and only awaiting the +arrival of our column to be finished off altogether. Without going so +far as some of the subalterns, who on hearing he was surrounded seemed +to anticipate the sight of De Wet in the middle of a sort of cock-pit, +with the British forces sitting round, there still seemed a +considerable number of sufficiently large gaps in the chain of columns +and brigades slowly and ponderously extending round either flank of +the Boer position. The firing we had heard had been from the Boer +guns, they having shelled the Derbyshire Regiment out of their camp, +which had been pitched imprudently close to the harmless-looking +kopjes. Needless to say, there was not a move of any sort to be seen, +and how on earth three or four thousand men managed to conceal +themselves so absolutely must ever remain a marvel. True, their camp +was beyond the crest-line, but it is certain they had outposts and +sentries on the look-out, and these must of necessity have been posted +where they could see us; but certain it was we could not see them, +carefully as telescopes and Zeiss glasses swept every inch of the +hills. + +Unfortunately we had to leave eighty-nine men behind at the railway, +as they had no boots, a serious matter with every probability of a +stiff fight on our hands: for General Hart's orders were to prevent De +Wet going south; to attack, if necessary, to make him go north, but +not to allow him to go in any other direction. This being so, our +object was effected, as will appear later on. + +Another and equally sudden interruption to a meal took place on +August 1st. Marshall's Horse, a Colonial corps of whom we saw a good +deal, had gone out on a reconnaissance in the morning, and had some +scrapping with the enemy's patrols, &c. But now word suddenly came +that they were surrounded, and in a tight corner. Hastily dropping +knives and forks, we fell in almost at the double, and, though +somewhat struck by the incongruity and apparent anomaly in the fact of +our cavalry being surrounded by the Boers when we had been distinctly +informed that it was we who were surrounding them, set off as hard as +we could lay legs to the ground. After marching between four and five +miles, well within the hour, we met the doctor of our mounted corps, +who said he had been taken prisoner and released, and that there was +no necessity for going any further, as our friends had beaten off our +enemies and were on their way back. So back we trudged too, meeting on +the way what most of us thought was a squadron of cavalry, but which +turned out to be Brigadier-General Little's cavalry brigade. The sight +of the attenuation of this force afforded us food for reflection, and +made some of us begin to understand a little how it was that, in spite +of our magnificent paper forces, we still found such difficulty in +rounding-up our foes. + +The next three or four days were uneventful. Lord Kitchener arrived +and took over the chief command of all the forces, which now really +seemed to be closing in on De Wet. The noose was being drawn tighter +and tighter daily, and the Boers' position became more and more +precarious. What would have happened but for Lord Kitchener's arrival +it is hard to say, as General Hart, ever impatient of passivity, a +very Ney for pertinacity of attack, personal bravery, and confidence +in his troops, was undoubtedly on the eve of launching an attack. But +in the light of the succeeding events, it is clear now that such an +attack would have been premature and ill-timed. In the event of its +non-success--and we had a very small force to carry it out with--the +general operations would have been completely ruined, for we being +the Southern force, there would have been nothing to prevent De Wet +going south. In the event of success it would merely have meant that +the Boers would have slipped away north two or three days sooner than +they did, when, seeing that our arrangements to intercept them were +not even then complete, an earlier start would have enabled them to +carry out their retreat with even greater ease. + +Major King, of General Hunter's staff, now arrived in camp with a Boer +prisoner, one of Prinsloo's staff. The latter was being sent through +with a message to De Wet, informing him of the full magnitude of the +Boer surrender at Golden Gate, and advocating his own relinquishment +of further operations. They went through to the Boers' position, and +were courteously received, but General De Wet declared it was +impossible for him to think of giving up now, as he had President +Steyn with him. Nobody believed in the excuse, and its purport is +somewhat difficult to understand, but it ended the conference, and +Major King and his prisoner returned to camp. + +Major English, whose eye had proved troublesome and kept him behind, +now rejoined the battalion, to everybody's gratification, for the +publication of Lord Roberts's army order, which took place at this +time, had made us all very proud of him and his men. + +On the 5th an order was given to send out a small force, consisting of +two companies of the regiment, a pompom, and a troop of Marshall's +Horse, to a point five miles N.N.E. of the camp, in order to fill up a +somewhat big gap between General Hart and the 3rd Cavalry Brigade. 'B' +and 'G' companies, under an officer of the regiment, with Captain +Nelson, R.M.L.I., and Lieutenants Smith and Molony as subalterns, and +Lieutenant Nek of Marshall's Horse, were selected, and started as soon +as the men's dinners were finished. General Hart rode out later on, +and, catching this force up, selected a site, and gave orders to the +officer commanding it to dig himself in, promising that the pompom, +which had not turned up, should be sent on. + +In the meantime the remainder of General Hart's force also started +digging, a very different state of affairs to his premeditated attack +a couple of days earlier. + +The detachment sent out patrols on the morning of the 6th to see if +they could draw the enemy's fire, with strict injunctions to content +themselves with doing so and then withdraw. This they soon succeeded +in doing. On their return they passed a farmhouse, and received +information that an important Boer General was in the habit of +sleeping there sometimes. Visions of a capture of De Wet inflamed the +minds of some of the younger officers, and on the night of the 6th-7th +Captain Nelson and Lieutenant Smith, with a few picked men, made a +raid on the house. However, they found nobody but womenfolk, and +returned empty-handed. + +Next day commenced our memorable pursuit. De Wet and his merry men had +slipped away over the ford bearing his own name as neatly as a +cherry-stone from between finger and thumb, and, with their heads +turned north, were to give us, and many another converging column like +us, the hunt of our lives. The regiment started at 11.30 and only +halted at dusk, some three miles from a range of hills on which rumour +said the Boers were going to stand and fight it out to the bitter end, +even if the whole British Army came against them. 'B' and 'G' +companies did not get in until 9 p.m., as, in addition to having an +extra five miles to march, they had some trouble with their waggons. + +We marched all day on the 8th in an easterly direction along the left +or southern bank of the Vaal River--a long, tiring, uneventful trek. +Expecting momentarily to see our prey delivered over to us, our +spirits sank lower and lower as the day dragged on with no sign of any +Boers. There was the usual aggravating little drift to be negotiated +at 6 p.m. only half a mile short of our camping-ground for the night, +but eventually we got all the waggons over, and men and officers +obtained something to eat. This proved one of the coldest nights of +the winter, and there was ice instead of water in most of the +water-bottles next morning when reveille went at 3.30 a.m. + +Starting at 5 a.m. we again went steadily on till 6 p.m., making well +over thirteen hours without food. We skirted round the south of Parys, +a name which appealed strongly to a good many of us, and suddenly +heard the welcome sound of heavy firing not very far ahead. The column +halted, and word soon came that this time our pains were really to be +rewarded; the Boers were only six miles ahead, and Lord Methuen was +engaged with their rearguard. All signs of hunger and fatigue at once +disappeared, the regiment started trekking off once more, +instinctively 'stepping out' as they went. The guns still thundered +invitingly just ahead, and as we topped each fresh horizon or rounded +the slope of the next kopje we all expected to see our prey close in +front. But it was not to be. As the afternoon wore on the sound of the +guns died away, until at last we came to a halt at dusk in a sort of +amphitheatre among the low hills. Too tired to want much food, the men +sank down with the delightful nightcap that reveille might again be +expected at 3.30 a.m. + +The 10th proved more or less a repetition of the preceding days. +Starting at 5 a.m., we did not halt till well after dark, the waggons, +kits, food, &c., not getting up to us till 10 p.m. Seeing that there +was no chance of any other food, some bullocks were commandeered, and +the men cooked them in little chunks in their mess-tins over the grass +fires. Tired out as they were it was too cold to get any sleep without +blankets, and long lines of melancholy soldiers could be seen standing +along the edges of the grass fires, against which their figures were +outlined in bold silhouette, and from whose scanty flames they +endeavoured to get what little warmth they could. Everybody was wet +through to the knee, a good many to the waist, while some were soused +all over, for in the course of our march we had turned due north, and +crossed the Vaal at Lindeque Drift. The river is very broad here, and +split up into numerous small streams, in the wading of which many +humorous incidents took place, owing to the slippery nature of the +rolling stones in the bottom of the river. A rolling stone may not +gather much moss, but it is undoubtedly capable of gathering a +considerable quantity of slimy weeds, and when concealed by two or +three feet of running water it offers about as precarious a footing as +it is possible to imagine. + +[Illustration: The Vaal River, Lindeque Drift.] + +Winding our way through the low hills on the Transvaal side of the +river, we at length emerged on to an enormous plain. The far horizon +was bounded by the Gatsrand hills, with which, as with another +detached clump of rounded kopjes on our left, known as the Losberg, we +were destined ere long to become closely acquainted. As we finally +turned in about 11 p.m. we heard reveille was not to sound till 4.30 +a.m., but when some subaltern attempted a feeble joke about a 'Europe +morning,' his effort met with nothing but silent contempt. + +There is little doubt that any one who shared in that next day's march +will never forget it. As we proceeded across the illimitable plain a +strong head-wind began to blow, increasing in strength as the day wore +on. De Wet had fired all the grass ahead of us, with the result that +the air was laden with millions and millions of particles of minute +ashes and sharp cinders. These soon filled eyes, ears, nostrils, +throats, and lungs, until breathing became well-nigh impossible, and +the agony caused by their penetration into our eyes almost +intolerable. But woe to him who endeavoured to alleviate his distress +by wiping his eyes with grimy hands. Such action merely had the effect +of 'rubbing it in,' and so accentuating the misery and discomfort. The +men very soon began to fall out in ever-increasing numbers. On one +occasion Captain Nelson, R.M.L.I., was seen straggling off right away +from the column. Lieutenant Bradford went after him and found that he +was temporarily quite blind. At last, after hours of torment, we +reached a pass in the Gatsrand, on the far side of which we halted, as +night fell. A big grass fire almost immediately broke out, and as the +grass was long and thick, and a strong wind still blew to fan it, +things looked very ugly. The flames swept right through the camp, but +luckily the tents were not up. But what would happen when they reached +the guns and ammunition? What, indeed, might have happened, but for +the gallantry of the gunners and naval detachment, it is hard to say. +As it was the ammunition-waggons caught fire and were sufficiently +charred to demonstrate the closeness of the danger. But, as ever, 'the +handy-man' was to the fore, and with promptitude and courage, that +could not have been excelled, managed to extinguish the flames. + +And now for a wash--what, no water! No water, which, hungry and +exhausted as they were, every one wanted even more than food. But, +alas! it was too true, and after contenting ourselves with some liquid +mud, flavoured with charcoal, called coffee, and some few mouthfuls +of tough old trek-ox, liberally peppered with burnt grass, we only +waited to hear that reveille was to be at 1.30 a.m. before sinking +down to snatch what rest was possible. This delightful spot rejoiced +in the refreshing name of Orange Grove. + +The 12th of August. Shade of St. Grouse! At 3 a.m. we were on the move +in bright moonlight and sharp frost, with a wind blowing which cut +like a knife. After doing some sixteen or seventeen miles we arrived +about 10 a.m. at Wolverdiend station--a large force of cavalry and +infantry assembled there, moving out as we moved in. Camp was pitched, +and a good meal cooked--our first respectable one for three days--and +then--then came the order to start off again in the afternoon. Wearily +we resumed that march, but even as we started the prospect was +brightened by the sound of heavy guns ahead, on our right front. We +finally bivouacked for the night on the most stony kopje in all South +Africa. It was impossible to find a spot anywhere that did not consist +of sharp, jagged rocks, rendering sleep, to any troops less tired than +we were, an utter impossibility. A rumour credited Lord Methuen with +again having brought De Wet to bay, and we were almost positively +assured that next day would end our laborious march. + +No less than ten mules were lost during the day, from utter +exhaustion. Many a heart, weary in itself, ached yet more deeply for +the sufferings entailed on the dumb animals. + +Reveille at 2, off at 3, was our time-table for the next day. After +proceeding some five or six miles, the force came to the pretty little +Mooi River. The Colonel found an excellent place for us to cross it, +compared to the spot where the Somersets were obliged to plunge in. A +halt was called on the far side, and a scratch meal taken. While thus +employed, some of our troops who had been De Wet's prisoners, amongst +them a couple of our own men, came in. They had been with De Wet's +rearguard, and told us that when Lord Methuen had shelled it the day +before, they had managed to escape; also that the fire of Lord +Methuen's guns had knocked over a Boer gun and exploded one of their +ammunition waggons. They added that De Wet was in command of a very +considerable force, and some distance ahead. + +[Illustration: The R.D.F. bathing in Mooi River, Potchefstroom.] + +We presently resumed the pursuit, finally camping in some very +desolate country, where the water was scarce and bad. Signs of +over-fatigue and want of sleep were now becoming very apparent, a +large number of men falling out and riding on the waggons. Poor +fellows! they stuck it out as long as ever they could, but their socks +gave out from the constant wettings, and they pitched them away, +marching on in their boots until the pain of the raw chafes became too +much to bear. There was never a grumble or complaint: a man simply +asked to see his Captain, and respectfully said his feet had given +way, and he must regretfully fall out. The officers knew it was true, +and felt for their comrades whose emaciated kits precluded the +possibility of a change. To such a state was the column now reduced +that the General, who had ordered reveille for 2 a.m. the following +morning, actually put it back till 6 o'clock. + +The regiment acted as rearguard on the 14th, and did not start till 9 +a.m., halting for a short time at mid-day near a blown-up Boer +ammunition waggon. Every conceivable sort and kind of small-arm +ammunition lay scattered around on the veld, and those who were keen +on curios of this description made quite a collection of full and +empty cases. + +The battalion lost eleven more mules, the poor brutes simply falling +to the ground from utter exhaustion, being perforce left where they +lay. We arrived in camp at 5.30 p.m., and then for the first time, in +at all events some of our lives, heard two reveilles in one day, the +hated call blaring in our ears at 10.30 p.m. Starting at 12, we pushed +on, belts tightened, teeth clenched, and simply determined _not_ to +give in. We were told that the cavalry brigades had De Wet at last at +the foot of the Magaliesberg, only sixteen miles ahead. So on we went +into the sheer and bitter night, more like ghostly shadows than +anything else, as the spectral column wound its way through sleeping +villages and over mile after mile of dark and silent veld. At last our +eyes were gladdened by the sight of twinkling watch-fires on the +slopes of some hills just ahead, and as the first signs of dawn began +to become manifest, we sank wearily down to enjoy a few minutes' +repose. But it was broad daylight when we woke, and alas! for all the +hopes of the past eight days, the hills ahead were only occupied by +our cavalry. Theirs had been the watch-fires of the dark hours of the +night. The game was up, and we were told the first great De Wet hunt +was over. Some one had failed to stop the earth; the fox had foiled +his pursuers, and the various Generals reluctantly whipped off their +hounds. + +It was a bitter disappointment. We had been so buoyed up by the +promises held out to us. Every one had so thoroughly entered into the +job, and plodded stolidly along; and all for nothing. Work which, if +successful, would have lived in history, but which, being +unsuccessful, was fated to be forgotten and ignored; and unsuccessful +through no fault of any of the troops engaged in it. There was no +General or Staff to blame: no regiment or department which could be +hauled over the coals. No; some one had blundered, that was all. The +point has never been exactly cleared up, and probably never will be, +and there the matter ended. + + 'Lay not your blame on me: if you have lost him, + Why, I have lost him too.'--_Othello._ + +So we turned over and fell asleep again, and woke up at 9 a.m. and had +some breakfast, and were about to fall asleep again when the word came +to fall in and march on to some other bivouac. The one we were in was +good enough for us, but of course there was nothing for it but to +obey, and we marched to a small village called Rietfontein. Here we +heard that Colonel Hore's column was surrounded, and in a bad way, +some eighty miles off, and that we were to form part of a small force, +and make a forced march to his relief. + +Accordingly the column marched at 8 a.m. next morning. After going +about two miles, an order arrived saying we were to go back; and back +we went--a somewhat profitless proceeding, but doubtless unavoidable. +The remainder of the day was spent resting, but it was known that +reveille was to sound at midnight, and that we were to make a big +effort next day. + +Starting at 1 a.m., and steadily tramping on till 9.30 a.m., we put +twenty miles behind us. A halt was then made for a meal in rather a +pretty spot, which actually boasted of some trees sufficiently large +to afford shade, and under the foot of some well-wooded kloofs on our +right. Resuming our march, we did some two or three miles more when +word came that Colonel Hore was all right, having made a most gallant +resistance and suffered many casualties, and that we were to go back +the way we had come and march to Pretoria. + +By the time we got back to our bivouac it was still early in the day, +and we had already marched twenty-five miles. Five more mules had +fallen dead, making a total of thirty-eight since we started on the +7th. + +On the 18th we resumed our return journey, if return journey it could +be called, since wherever we were going it was a hundred to one +against its being the place we had come from. After a short trek we +out-spanned for breakfasts, and an order was then given that we were +to stay where we were and bivouac there for the night. + +We moved to Vlakfontein next day, a distance of about sixteen miles, +and the march quite uneventful. Rumour, however, pointed to +Krugersdorp as our destination, and this must have been the exception +that proves the rule, for on this occasion rumour proved right. + +Another long and equally uninteresting march of eighteen or nineteen +miles, only relieved by the arrival in hot haste of an indignant +Marquis. It appeared he had been at a farm some two miles off on our +left front, and had been offered some tea, which he had refused, and +on leaving the house had been shot at by about a dozen Boers. What it +was all about, or what he had been doing alone at this farm, and why +the Boers should not shoot at him when he withdrew, none of us could +quite make out. However, there were some Boers there, so the Colonel +fired a few long-range volleys in the direction indicated, but +declined to make a deviation with a view to reprisals. + +Another eighteen miles on the 31st brought us to within about eight of +Krugersdorp. About time too, for the men's boots were giving way +badly, and scarcely one in ten had any socks. + +The eight miles proved to be very long ones, however--longer than even +Irish miles--and although we had made an early start, it was noon +before we at last reached Krugersdorp for the second time. On this +occasion we halted on a hillside just outside the north of the town, +and beside a sort of small suburb on the further side of the creek. + +Since leaving Heidelberg we had marched 289 miles. But of this +distance 123 had been covered in the week during which we pursued De +Wet, and 228 in the fortnight commencing August 7th. The longest +distance covered in any one day had been the 25 miles on the day we +turned. This marching was not done on roads it must be remembered, but +across country, over hills, and through rivers, with frequent troubles +with the unfortunate transport to overcome, and with very little food, +and that of an inferior quality. + +So ended our attempt on foot to catch De Wet on a thoroughbred. It was +hopeless from the first, and yet went within measurable distance of +succeeding, though even if we had rounded up some of his force at +Olifant's Nek, it is very doubtful if De Wet himself would have been +caught. + + + + +CHAPTER IV. + +SEPTEMBER IN THE GATSRAND. + + 'Why gaddest thou about so much?' + + _Jer._ ii. 36. + + +From August 23rd to 28th we obtained a very welcome week's rest, which +would have been more enjoyable had the weather not broken badly, +resulting in a succession of cold, high winds and heavy thunderstorms. +These latter were of the most abominable description and a severe +trial to those of us whose nervous systems were so constituted as to +be affected by them. Some declared that they liked them; others +frankly admitted that they detested them. They seemed to have a way of +coming along about 4 p.m., and as soon as they got into position, +immediately above our heads, opened fire. Needless to say, in the +course of the long campaign there were a good many very narrow shaves, +and one of our men was actually killed by lightning. The storms were +almost invariably accompanied by torrential rain, which, though adding +greatly to our discomfort, mitigated the danger, the local cognoscenti +assuring us that even they looked upon a dry thunderstorm as no joke. + +The regiment was a good deal split up at this time owing to the men we +had dropped behind us on our late trek; they had fallen out from a +variety of causes, but ninety per cent. of them on account of sore +feet or lack of boots. There were no less than 160 at Wolverdiend, 50 +at Rhenoster, 40 at Wolverhoek, and so on. The Colonel made many +attempts to gather up his chickens once more, but when we started on +our next trek we were still deficient of a good many. Major Bird left +us at this time to go to Natal, where he was to arrange about our +property, and organize orderly-room papers, etc. Major English was +unfortunately down with a severe attack of dysentery, and had it not +been for Major Rutherford's arrival on the morning of the 29th the +battalion would have been Majorless. Our padre, Father Mathews, +presented us with a very fine pair of koodoo horns which he picked up +at a store while we were here. He had originally been attached to the +Royal Irish Fusiliers, but had come to us after Nicholson's Nek. He +remained with us till the end of the war, and proved himself a brave +soldier and a welcome member of the mess. + +[Illustration: Father Mathews.] + +Orders were eventually issued for a start at 6 a.m. on the morning of +the 29th, but a night of heavy rain and succession of thunderstorms +put an early start out of the question, and we did not get off till 3 +p.m. The force was known as the Pochefstroom Column,[11] and our +mission, as far as we knew, was to lay waste the country between +Krugersdorp and that place, to fight the enemy whenever we met him, +to bring in women and children, to destroy anything in the way of +forage, &c., which might be useful to our enemies, if we could not +bring it along for our own use; to collect waggons, cape-carts, +animals, harness, &c.; and generally to carry fire and sword +throughout the land. + + [Footnote 11: South Wales Borderers, Royal Dublin Fusiliers, + half-battalion Somersetshire Light Infantry, 4·7 Naval Gun, + 28th Battery Royal Field Artillery, Marshall's Horse, and + Yeomanry.] + +Moving off in a southerly direction through the town, we came to what +should have been a harmless little drift, about two or three miles +out. The recent rains had, however, transformed it into a formidable +obstacle, and waggon after waggon stuck hopelessly in its miry +embrace. The General, therefore, determined to halt on a rising slope +on the far side, and as many waggons as possible were man-handled over +the bog. Tents were pitched, but scarcely were they up when a furious +storm burst overhead. In a minute everything and everybody was soused +through and through, the scene being vividly lit up by the almost +continuous flashes of vivid lightning, while the crashing, bellowing +boom of the thunder in our ears made voices inaudible and orders +perfectly useless. What sort of teas the regimental cooks prepared we +did not know, but the invaluable and ubiquitous Corporal Tierney +managed to bring each of us a cup of hot tea and a rasher or a steak +in our tents. The storm lasted till dawn, when the heavy clouds, as if +despoiled of their victims by the rising sun, reluctantly drew off +northwards. A glorious morning was the consequence, but, of course, +there was no chance of trekking for some hours to come. + +At 2 p.m. a start was again made, but as the tents and everything else +were soaked through, and weighed fifty per cent. more than they would +under ordinary circumstances, there was little hope that our transport +animals would be able to drag them through any bad drifts. We only +managed to do some seven miles before darkness came on, when we camped +for the night at the Madeline Gold-mine. It was jumpy work here, as +the whole place was honeycombed with prospecting-holes and ditches, +varying in depth from three feet to about three hundred. How on earth +no one fell in must ever remain a mystery, as, to add to the +delightful freshness of the situation, a large herd of bullocks took +command, and meandered through the camp, one of which moved the mess +president on some considerable distance, fortunately for him with a +horn on each side of him, instead of one through him, as was doubtless +intended. + +We marched from the Madeline at 7 a.m. on August 31st, and after +trekking some miles arrived at a large coal-mine, which seemed to be +in very good order. This country had been the scene of a goodish bit +of fighting. Not far off the ill-fated Jameson raid had come to its +inglorious conclusion; a little further on the Gordons had suffered +severely during the advance on Johannesburg; and here the Pochefstroom +column was to be 'blooded.' + +We did not know that anything interesting was on the tapis until we +saw the white cotton-wool puffs of our shrapnel bursting against a +range of kopjes in our front. Then the Colonel told us that there were +supposed to be a good many Boers on ahead, and that the General had +gone off with a portion of the column to attack them, while we were to +advance and seize and hold a nek, with a view to cutting off the +retreating Boers, or threatening their left flank, or reinforcing our +right, or some obscure purpose. It was the same in so many of our days +of scrapping and trekking. Talk about the fog of war: we who were +actually in the battle knew nothing about it. Doubtless the Commanding +Officer was in the know, but the Company Officer, the commander of +what is now recognised as the real fighting unit, he knew nothing. It +was a funny fight. We trekked along, unconcernedly watching the pretty +effect of our friends the gunners' practice; able with glasses to see +the stones and dust driven ahead when the shells burst low; but unable +to see any Boers. On reaching our destined spot we lay down and had +a smoke, and thought of all sorts of things other than fighting, until +at last news came from the General, and we heard we had fifteen +casualties. So it had been quite a battle after all, as fights were +going in those days, when any scrap that resulted in a casualty was +known as a hardly-contested engagement. + +On the 1st we moved to a rather pretty camp, close under the far side +of the hills, called Jakfontein. The General and the troops he had +with him on the 31st arrived at about 5.15 p.m., and camped alongside. +The General told the Colonel they had had quite a victory yesterday, +driving the Boers from their position, and occupying it at nightfall. +They also thought they had done a good deal of damage to them with our +guns, as they withdrew. + +The column did not march on the 2nd, but two companies ('E' and 'F') +under Captain Shewan proceeded to Bank Station as escort to the +wounded, while two more ('A' and 'B'), under Major Rutherford, were +sent off to commence the burning and looting, which, as far as we +could understand, was the _raison d'être_ of the column. However that +might be, there was a tremendous fuss on their return, and all sorts +of accusations made _re_ looting. There is no disguising the fact that +we were altogether too squeamish, and that the orders on these and +subsequent occasions were capable of more than one interpretation. +Here were we in an enemy's country, badly off for a cart, let us say, +for the officers' mess; the very thing is found in an unoccupied farm; +to bring it along and use it was to loot: to burn it was to obey +orders. At this length of time it is easy to write dispassionately, +and there can be no harm in saying that it was vexing to be found +fault with when under the impression that one was doing one's best for +the general good, and not in any way profiting oneself. A few days +later an officer searching a farm for concealed weapons, &c., came +across a heavy ebony stick--just the thing he wanted. The old Boer +lady made a great fuss about his taking it, saying it was all she had +to beat the Kaffirs with. That finally determined him, more especially +as he was not exactly standing on ceremony at the time, seeing the +next company was being sniped at, and his turn liable to come at any +moment. + +Captain G. S. Higginson was appointed Remount officer, and from this +moment we began to lose sight of him, to everybody's great regret. + +After spending another day in bringing in forage and supplies, the +column started at 9 p.m. on the 3rd on a night march. For the first +four or five miles all went well, and the advance-guard, under the +careful leading of Captain Romer, maintained the right direction. +Then, however, the road made a sharp turn, and although Captain +Romer's party followed the turn right enough, part of his +advance-guard, under a subaltern, went wandering off into the black +night. It took some time to retrieve them, and as the column +immediately afterwards came to a deep drift, it was considerably +delayed. 'G' company was sent up a high hill on the left to guard that +flank until the whole of the transport and rearguard was past, and the +cold on the top was a thing to remember. The main column got into +bivouac shortly after 1 a.m., but this unfortunate company was out +till 5, which, seeing the march was resumed at 6, was rather hard +luck. However, there was plenty of that going for everybody in those +days, and after the usual short 'grouse,' the sleepless night was +forgotten. + +After moving into the hills about eight miles further, and passing +through some beautiful farms, with every peachtree a mass of glorious +bloom, the column halted. The Imperial Yeomanry, who had been scouting +far ahead, now found themselves perilously involved with a small body +of the enemy. General Hart, with a portion of the column, including +the artillery and naval gun, moved out to extricate them, and very +soon we heard heavy fighting going on. He succeeded in his object, +however, at the expense of four of the Yeomanry wounded and one man +killed. In the meantime, Colonel Hicks had thrown out outposts on the +hills, 'G' company coming in for another sleepless night, probably +through some mistake in the roster. Captain Nelson, R.M.L.I. +(attached), had a somewhat peculiar experience. Having been detained +for some purpose when his company was going out, he gave Lieutenant +Marsh, his subaltern, orders where to go, and later on followed +himself. But then he couldn't find them. Nor could the other companies +on other hills see anything of them, though signals were flashed in +the direction they had taken. It was not until next morning that they +were discovered, quite close to the place they had been ordered to go +to. It was characteristic of the nature of the country in which we +were operating, and the excellent manner in which they hid themselves, +that Captain Nelson should have missed them, for at one time he must +have passed quite close to the piquet. + +Next morning Boers were reported in the vicinity. It is impossible to +say they were in our front, as our front coincided with the report of +the first visible Boer, and we simply went for anything we saw. Rumour +put this force at 700 strong, but most people considered that an +exaggerated estimate. We moved off in three columns: the South Wales +Borderers took the right, moving along the difficult, serrated tops of +the hills; the cavalry and yeomanry took the lower, more undulating, +easier hills to the left, while the rest of us with the guns moved +along in the centre; the General, conspicuous by a large red flag +which a trooper carried behind him, moving wherever any opposition +presented itself. It must be the unanimous opinion of all troops who +knew our General, that a braver man never fought in action, but at the +same time the man who carried that red flag deserved some honourable +distinction. Perhaps he got it; probably he did not. + +After moving some two or three miles, our further way was blocked by +mauser-fire from a very ominous, black-looking kopje which stretched +down into the valley from the high ground on our left. The guns came +into action against this hill at a range of about two thousand yards, +and it seemed as if a golden-crested wren could not have escaped if it +had been unlucky enough to be there. The shrapnel kept up an almost +incessant hail, covering the wooded sides of the kopje with jets of +round white balls of smoke, while every now and then the deeper note +of the 4·7 was followed by a huge cloud of dust and yellowish vapour +thrown up, and off, by the explosion of the lyddite in the huge +projectile. How many Boers held that hill will probably never be +known; only four were found. But a strange spectacle ensued. Emerging +from the cover on the far side, rode, _ventre-à-terre_, a solitary +horseman. Immediately two companies extended in our front opened fire +on him. How he escaped was a marvel, for in front, behind, on every +side of him could be seen 'the bullets kicking dust-spots on the +green.' But escape he did, and many a 'Good luck to you' went after +him, for he was a bold man to have stayed as long as he had, and fully +deserved to escape. Our bombardment had effected one useful purpose. +Amongst the killed was a Commandant called Theron, a brave, +enterprising young fellow of about twenty-five years of age, whose +exploits had already stamped him as a born leader of men. Our own +casualties amounted to four yeomen wounded. + +We camped a little further on, and buried our enemy, and one of our +own men who had died from his wounds, side by side, with all due +honour, ceremony, and respect. + +[Illustration: Funeral of Commandant Theron and a British Soldier. +September 6th, 1900.] + +September 6th was an unpleasant day. In the first place we made a very +early start, which, after the two previous nights' work, was rather +hard on the troops. Several had been without sleep for two nights, and +engaged with the enemy all day. As far as fighting went this +long-range scrapping was not of course worthy of the name, but as far +as discomfort and fatigue were concerned, the operations were entitled +to the most dignified and resonant title in the vocabulary. The 6th +was an example. In the first place there was no fighting; in the +second place, there was very little marching; in the third place, +there was no rest; in the fourth place, there was no food. In the +absence of definite orders the commanding officers delayed for a long +time ere venturing to outspan and cook: when they did do so orders +immediately arrived, scattering companies right, left, and centre, on +the burning and capturing expeditions. Finally, when orders were +published, they were for another night march, the object and +destination of which were concealed even from officers commanding +regiments. However, there was nothing for it but to make the best of +an unpleasant state of affairs, to snatch a few mouthfuls of food +whenever possible and a few minutes' sleep at any opportunity and once +more the long column wound its way through the night. It arrived on +the morning of the 7th at Wolverdiend station, where there was now a +considerable garrison, among them 140 of our own men, who had been +there since the De Wet trek. The day was passed in shifting camp and +fatigue work in the station, where there was much to do in the way of +loading and unloading trains. + +Captain Romer got three days' leave here to meet his father, the +famous judge, who had come out as President of the Royal Commission. + +At 9 p.m. the column started on another night march, the battalion +supplying the rearguard. It was weary work waiting on those occasions. +Tents were struck, and coats, blankets, &c., packed on the waggons an +hour before the advance-guard was due to march off, after which there +was nothing to do but lie down on the ground in the bitter cold, and +wait till all the transport had got away. Nor did the advance-guard +have very much the best of it, as they of course arrived hours before +the waggons, and had their shivering turn in the early morning, at the +other end of the march. + +By 10 a.m. the column arrived at Klerkskraal, a small and very widely +scattered village on the banks of the beautiful Mooi River, a stream +of the clearest and most delicious water. Companies were sent to clear +out the neighbouring farms as usual, and a good deal of information +was gathered about a considerable quantity of the enemy, who had been +trekking through for some time past in small groups. + +A dozen fine Indian tents, the gift of Rai Bahadur Boota Singh, of +Rawal Pindi, were handed over to us here for the use of the officers. +Very welcome they proved, as our old ones were nearly worn out. + +Sunday, September 9th, 1900, was a day that will live long in the +annals of the battalion. It was given out that in view of the hard +work done by the troops, the day would be treated as a day of rest, +almost immediately following which order came another, detailing two +companies of each corps to go out on the unpleasant foraging duties. +The roster declared that 'G' and 'H' companies were next in +succession, and these two companies started immediately, officers and +men snatching a hasty and very scratch breakfast before starting. They +were out all day, from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m., during which time they were +gathering in supplies of straw, fodder, &c., together with all carts, +waggons, and harness in a serviceable condition, burning such as they +could not carry away with them. At about 5 p.m. a heliograph message +recalled them to camp, in reaching which they had to cross a small +stream with a snipe-marsh on either side: the waggons of course stuck, +but the men set to with a will, impelled doubtless by a keen desire to +get back to their dinners in camp, and dragged them out one by one +with ropes. A dismal surprise was in store for them. For even as they +came in sight of the camp, it was struck, and in place of the dinners +they had so fondly anticipated, some tea alone awaited them. The +officers were even worse off, for as the mess president had been +employed with the two companies out foraging, no one else had thought +of keeping even a cup of tea for them, and, exhausted as they were by +ten hours' work without food, under a burning sun, they received the +pleasing intelligence that the column was starting at once to march to +Pochefstroom, a distance variously estimated at from thirty-five to +thirty-eight miles. + +[Illustration: Buffelsdoorn Camp, Gatsrand Hills.] + +The force marched in three parts. First, mounted men, guns, and 'A' +and 'E' companies Royal Dublin Fusiliers in waggons. Then the main +body of infantry, and lastly the transport with 'G' and 'H' companies +Royal Dublin Fusiliers as rearguard. There was a moon for most of the +way, but it only served to make the surroundings more weird. Parallel +to our right ran a low range of hills, whilst on the left was the Mooi +River, with a farm looming up out of the night every mile or so along +the way. There was one halt of half an hour towards midnight, but the +remainder of the halts were merely of the usual five minutes' +duration. And hard it was to resume the weary way at the end of even +those brief spells of rest. Every one was so fit that the actual +marching was nothing like so trying as the difficulty of keeping awake +through the long, dreary hours, and one would time after time drop +asleep as one walked mechanically along, only to wake in the very act +of falling. Frederickstadt was reached in the small hours of the +morning, and the stream crossed to its left bank. There was then a +halt of about an hour to close up the transport, and very welcome it +was, for we were still an ordinary day's march from our destination. +Turning to our right, we brought the Gatsrands on our left, and the +word went forth that the Boers were in them, a report which seemed to +be confirmed a moment later as a blaze of light suddenly appeared +above their summits. 'There they are!' 'That's their signal lamp!' +were the comments that greeted the glory of the morning star, whether +Jupiter or Venus, on that as on many a previous and subsequent +occasion. On straggled the column, many of the men completely worn +out, having been reluctantly compelled to avail themselves of the +permission to ride on the waggons; the remainder, with grim +determination to march till they dropped, trudging patiently and +silently on. At last came the welcome flush of dawn; no 'envious +streaks' these, but the first message from the longed-for day which +ended that abominable night. When Pochefstroom finally came in sight +it was still a good five miles off, and those last five miles were as +bad as any part of the march. For though in some mysterious way the +coming of day had dispelled to a great extent the deadly sleepiness +from which most of us suffered, our aching limbs now began to make +themselves manifest, and those far-off trees never seemed to get any +nearer. However, by ten o'clock the last man was in, but very nearly +done. It had been a remarkable march--very remarkable seeing the +conditions under which some of the troops performed it.[12] For to do +from thirty-five to thirty-eight miles, most of it by night, on an +empty stomach, after a hard ten hours' work under a hot sun, in +sixteen hours, is a performance of which any troops may be justly +proud. + + [Footnote 12: That minor operations such as these should + receive but scant recognition at the hands of historians is + not to be wondered at, but neither the official nor the + _Times_ histories in their accounts of this surprise of + Pochefstroom found space to mention the length of this march, + an omission which is very greatly to be wondered at.] + +Nor was it altogether without result, for our mounted and +waggon-carried troops had arrived much earlier, and, fairly taking the +place by surprise, had surrounded it, killed seven, and captured some +seventy or eighty prisoners, and put a good many more to ignominious +and hasty flight. + +We also obtained some draught beer. Beer! None of us had tasted it for +months. How it went down! Yet our memory of it is sad, for the +unfortunate manager of the brewery was afterwards shot by the Boers +for selling it to us. The column remained at Pochefstroom till the +12th, our stay being darkened by the melancholy death of the +signalling officer, Lieutenant Maddox, of the Somersetshire Light +Infantry, who was shot through the heart while going round his +stations. + +[Illustration: A Group of Boer Prisoners taken at the Surprise of +Pochefstroom.] + +On the 12th Colonel Hicks took command of a small force[13] which +moved out to occupy some kopjes overlooking two drifts over the Mooi +River. Starting at about 3 p.m., we did not reach our destination +(some five miles south of Frederickstadt) till dark. Somewhat to our +surprise, the hills were unoccupied, as Boers were known to be in the +vicinity, while there had been a certain amount of distant sniping +throughout the march. Putting piquets at the drifts, the infantry and +guns occupied one hill, and the mounted troops another hard by. We had +just turned in for the night when a sharp rifle-fire broke out all +along the front, to which our sentries were not slow to respond. We +immediately occupied the posts to which we had been assigned, but the +firing soon died away. No one was hit by the enemy, but an unfortunate +trooper in Marshall's Horse was shot by a comrade, and later on +succumbed to the wound. + + [Footnote 13: Royal Dublin Fusiliers, 100 cavalry, two + guns.] + +[Illustration: Colour-Sergeant Cossy issuing Beer.] + +At daybreak on the 13th, we located a Boer laager some five miles out +on the plain. One of our officers had a deer-stalking telescope, with +which it was possible to follow the movements of the Boers as they +woke up, a most interesting spectacle. They were of course far out of +range of our fifteen-pounders, but just as we were regretting our +inability to get at them, General Hart's force from Pochefstroom could +be seen trekking slowly in their direction from our left front. We, +from our elevated position, could see what the Boers could not, and to +watch our comrades creeping slowly nearer, while the Boers were +loitering about and stretching themselves, was a sight the opportunity +to view which was seldom afforded in the course of the war. But long +before the General got close enough to do any harm, the alarm went. +Any one who has ever seen a pebble cast into an ants' nest can realise +the proceedings of the next two minutes. Darting about in every +direction, the Boers caught their horses and inspanned their transport +with a celerity which fairly took our breath away, and in what seemed +an incredibly short space of time they were trekking away across our +right front, their movements still more hastened by a few rounds from +the naval guns. Moreover, they came within very long range of our +fifteen-pounders, so we were enabled to return them a 'quid' for their +'quo' of the previous night, with probably about the same result to +their skins, though one riderless horse could be seen careering about. + +A helio message from the General instructed us to march off and join +him at Frederickstadt, where we arrived that afternoon, spending the +morning in the usual domiciliary visits, getting a really handsome +waggon for the mess, and carefully searching a farmhouse belonging to +the Bezuidenhouts. + +On the 14th there was a considerable amount of firing in the +neighbourhood, but nobody seemed to take much interest in it. As, +however, it resulted in the loss of twelve mules and some waggons, and +one gunner wounded, it is hoped that we did some damage in return. + +On the 15th Colonel Hicks again took out a small force of all +arms,[14] for the purpose of getting in more stores, of burning +Bezuidenhout's farm (it being now clear he had murdered two +telegraphists), and to hold the kopjes we were on the 13th, while the +Somersetshire Light Infantry marched to join us from Pochefstroom. The +country was now thoroughly infested with Boers, who made some slight +effort to oppose Colonel Hicks. He very soon brushed them aside, +however, and, marching his force along two parallel ranges of low +hills, arrived at the place where we had bivouacked on the night of +the 12th-13th. Dinners were cooked on arrival before the companies +went out marauding. Whilst they were being prepared a cartridge went +off in one of the fires, and severely wounded one of the cooks, the +bullet penetrating his chest. This poor fellow was later on sent into +hospital at Krugersdorp, and, as the wound never improved, was +eventually invalided home. But the line was blown up just in front of +his train, and he was brought back to hospital. He soon began to +recover, and one day went wandering about without his hat, got +sunstroke, and died, one piece of bad luck on the top of another, and +a melancholy example of how 'when sorrows come, they come not single +spies, but in battalions.' + + [Footnote 14: Royal Dublin Fusiliers, two guns, twenty-five + Yeomanry.] + +A convoy under Captain H. W. Higginson, arrived at Frederickstadt at +this time, after having been considerably pestered by some Boers who +had shelled him with a nine-pounder Krupp, and severely wounded one of +our men. Luckily, the General had sent out a small force with two guns +to meet this convoy, or it might have had a very much worse time. + +Next day Bezuidenhout's farm was duly burnt, and at 3 p.m. the force +started to march back to Frederickstadt, the Somersetshire Light +Infantry (wing) under Major Williams, with eighty prisoners, a large +number of refugees and waggons, starting an hour earlier, having of +course further to go. The march was not interfered with, and the force +reached its old quarters once more before dark. + +The dreary monotony of these days and nights of trekking and foraging +suffered a variation on the 17th. In the morning 'A' company, under +Major Rutherford, took over the eighty odd prisoners from +Pochefstroom, and marched off with them to Wolverdiend. In the +afternoon a shell suddenly burst in the middle of the camp. The cheek +of these foes of ours. The first arrival was shortly followed by +several more in quick succession, some of which landed in camp, and +some of which went over our heads. We turned out, lowered the tents, +and then lay down in extended order, trying to locate the position of +the hostile gun. At last some one saw the flash, after which our naval +gun and fifteen-pounders picked up the range with admirable celerity, +immediately silencing the opposition. At a range of 3600 yards, the +second shot from the naval gun had burst within four feet of the +marks of the Krupp nine-pounder which had been shelling us. + +At the time the enemy opened fire a regimental court-martial for the +trial of twenty-one prisoners had just assembled, under the presidency +of Captain Shewan. On the arrival of the shells, the court, escort, +witnesses and prisoners dissolved themselves with one accord, and were +not afterwards reassembled. + + 'In such a time as this it is not meet + That every nice offence should bear his comment.' + + _Julius Cæsar._ + +The sun was in the enemy's eyes, and the village of Frederickstadt +almost immediately behind our camp, which may account in some measure +for the indifference of their fire, as we must have offered a +magnificent target to them. As it was, our only losses were four +horses, not a man being hit. But we were fairly caught napping. + +The General ordered the regiment to take possession of the hill, which +was done without any further fighting, two companies being left on +outpost duty on its summit. + +On the 18th some of the usual desultory sniping commenced on the other +side of the camp, but a demonstration by the inlying piquet ('G' +company, 2nd Royal Dublin Fusiliers) was sufficient to put a stop to +it. + +Major Bird arrived back from Maritzburg. Next day the trek commenced +once more. A small force[15] was left behind under command of Major +Bird to hold the hills from which we had been shelled, and to take +care of most of the transport. The remainder of the column marched at +11 p.m. on Ventersdorp, where some Boers were reported. After marching +all night and covering some twelve miles, the enemy opened fire in +front and on both flanks. Our guns came into action, and a sort of +running fight was maintained. Eventually the enemy took up a more +definite position, when General Hart ordered Colonel Hicks, with two +companies of the regiment, two guns and a pompom, to advance to a +small ridge on one flank, while he with the remainder of the force +marched round the enemy's rear. This resulted in the evacuation of +their position, when Colonel Hicks's small party got an opportunity to +deliver an effective fire on them. + + [Footnote 15: Half-battalion Royal Dublin Fusiliers, one + company Somerset Light Infantry, two guns 28th Battery Royal + Field Artillery, and twenty Marshall's Horse.] + +Next day sniping at the bivouac began at dawn, but the troops were +allowed a meal before resuming their march. Colonel Hicks was again +detailed to take a kopje from which a considerable but ineffectual +fire was coming. Moving steadily on, with his 200 men in +widely-extended order, he brought a maxim into action, which had the +effect of clearing the hill, but the long-range fighting went on +without a break till the evening. + +Having more or less broken up the Boers in this direction, orders were +issued for the return march to Frederickstadt. An early start was +made, and at 10 a.m. a halt and outspan ordered. At mid-day the +officers commanding units were sent for, when the General informed +them that a large force of Boers, under Steyn and De Wet, with women +and children, 3000 strong, was reported in the neighbourhood of +Klerksdorp. Rumour further said that they were so bewildered by our +apparently aimless midnight movements that they neither knew where to +go nor what to do. The General added that it was his intention to +march again in the afternoon in their direction, to have another +outspan at dusk, and then to march all night and surprise them next +morning. The commanding officers looked at one another in blank +amazement, for they knew better than the General could the effect +these constant nights without sleep and days of fighting without food +were having on their men, but there was nothing for it, and the +General called upon his troops for one more supreme effort. At the +same time he heliographed to Major Bird to march from Frederickstadt +and join him _en route_, which was done. + +Major Bird's force had not been left altogether unmolested during this +time. The company of Somersetshire Light Infantry were holding a small +knoll in prolongation of his left, and some 2000 yards off. Against +them the Boers brought up their Krupp gun which they had used against +us two or three days before. The range was considerable, but they +managed to reach their target; yet, though they fired twenty-three +shells into the camp of this company, the only damage they did was to +knock the top off a box of eggs _without breaking a single egg_. They +also managed to pitch a shell or two amongst the transport. Our +fifteen-pounders endeavoured to reply, but, in spite of digging deep +holes for the trails, were unable to reach the ridge from which the +Boers were firing. + +Major Bird's force having joined hands with the main column shortly +after dark, the long march was resumed at 10 p.m. It was a pitch-dark +night, and the difficulty of keeping in touch, and the still greater +difficulty of keeping the transport in touch, wore out tempers as well +as sinews. On one occasion the regiment as nearly as possible got +left. We were following the first-line transport of the corps +immediately in front of us, and keeping close up to it, but the +Colonel got anxious, and, after several times asking the adjutant if +he was certain we were in touch, told him to ride on and see. He came +back in a few minutes to say that there was nothing to be seen ahead. +The carts in front had lost touch, and they were all we had to guide +us. The adjutant at once cantered on, and had the good fortune to +shortly pick up the tail of the column, when everything was soon all +right again. The march continued the whole night, dawn being heralded +by the corncrake-like note of the pompom, which led us to hope we had +effected our object. But once again it was not to be, for the Boer +laager had moved off, and from the top of a small hill could be seen +trekking away about 7000 yards distant. Men and horses had been at it +since 6 a.m. the day before, and any further pursuit was out of the +question. Indeed, an extra two or three miles that had to be done to +reach a better camping-ground almost proved the last straw. The right +half-battalion had marched thirty-three miles in the twenty-four +hours, and only slept on one night out of the last three, while the +left half-battalion had done twenty-six miles in eighteen hours. + +Our enemy had slipped away once more at the critical moment, but our +spirits were raised all the same by the arrival of a dispatch, which +we understood called us back to Krugersdorp and hinted that the war +was over. + +After a day's rest at this rather pleasant camp, the force moved into +Pochefstroom (eighteen miles), and marched past the General in the +Market Square on the 25th, remaining there until the 27th. It had been +on the move for nearly a month with very little rest, during which +time men and horses had undoubtedly got very wiry and fit. But beyond +collecting a certain amount of stores, cattle, and forage, it is +doubtful whether all the forced marches and strenuous exertions had +been of much benefit, or whether they served to bring hostilities much +nearer to a conclusion. Although the enemy, in more or less force, had +been viewed practically every day, it had always been impossible to +bring him to close quarters, and the policy of wearing out +infantrymen's hearts, tempers, constitutions, and boots in abortive +pursuits of mounted enemies was, and in the light of all that we now +know still is, open to question, for a reference to the _Times_ +history of the war shows that all our wanderings and meanderings are +summed up in very few sentences, the most pregnant of which is to the +effect that word had gone out to the Boer Commandoes not to interfere +with us. + +On the 27th the column started on its march back to Krugersdorp, and +did the distance (sixty-two miles) in four easy stages. It marched by +the road south of the Gatsrand Hills, with the Losberg on its right, +and with the exception of one day (29th) without molestation from the +enemy. On that occasion they made a somewhat determined attack on the +rearguard, attempting to cut off some waggons, and the last few miles +of the march took the shape of a running fight. The General had ridden +on ahead with the cavalry to our next camp, so Colonel Hicks sent back +a couple of guns to the rearguard, who shook off the terrier-like +attentions of the enemy without very much trouble; but they had +delayed the march a good deal, and it was not till late in the evening +that every one got in, and heard that the war really was over at last. +An officer in the regiment who was considerably exhausted sank on to +his valise, too tired to care for anything. His servant said to him, +'We'll be in Krugersdorp to-morrow, sorr, and I'll be able to get yiz +some claning matherials,' to which his weary master replied, 'I don't +care a damn whether I'm clean or whether I'm dirty.' In answer his man +made the following cryptic remark: ''Tis no use talking like that, +sorr. Lord Roberts says the war is over, and we'll begin soldiering +now.' + +The following summary of the work done was published for +information:-- + + +'SUMMARY OF WORK OF POCHEFSTROOM COLUMN. + +'The Pochefstroom column started from Krugersdorp on the 29th August, +and returned on 30th September. The task of the column is to assist in +stamping out the resistance of the remaining scattered forces of the +enemy by hunting them, and depriving them of their supplies of food +and transport, with a view to bringing the war to an end. In the first +cruise of 33 days the column has marched 310 miles--the length of +England from Portsmouth to Scotland--and was in action with the enemy +on 29 days, putting them to flight on each occasion. The column's +casualties were only 3 killed, 24 wounded, and 3 missing. The Boers +lost considerably according to accounts of Kaffirs present; we found +some of their dead, including General Theron. In prisoners of war +and important arrests, the column took 96 of the enemy. Loyal +inhabitants, numbering 316 men, women, and children, were rescued from +Pochefstroom, and safely conveyed to Wolverdiend. General Liebenburg +ordered General Douthwaite to attack this convoy, but Douthwaite +thought it dangerous, and was arrested by Liebenburg for suggesting +that he, Liebenburg, "had better do it himself." The convoy was not +attacked. The column took from the enemy the following cattle: 2720 +sheep and 3281 goats; 1066 sacks of mealies, 104 sacks of meal, 2 +waggon-loads of mealie cobs, 12 sacks of wheat, 847 loaves of bread, +162 sacks of potatoes, 68 sacks of oats, 33 sacks of bran, 36,000 +bundles of oat-hay, 299 bales of chaff, 400 bundles of manna-hay, 90 +horses, 28 ponies, 11 mules, 36 waggons, 31 carts, and destroyed 45 +waggons and carts that could not be taken away. + + '(Signed) A. HART (Captain), + '_C.S.O. Pochefstroom Column._ + + '_Krugersdorp, 2nd October, 1900._' + +[Illustration: 'Come to the Cook-House Door, Boys!'] + + 'We looked for peace, but no good came.'--_Jer._ viii. 15. + + + + +CHAPTER V. + +FREDERICKSTADT--KLIP RIVER--THE LOSBERG. + + 'Have I not heard great ordnance in the field, + And Heaven's artillery thunder in the skies?' + + _Taming of the Shrew._ + + +Our camp, on this our third visit to Krugersdorp, was on the +south-west side of the town. The 6th Brigade (General Barton's) was +also in Krugersdorp, and had been for some time, so it was with +somewhat mixed feelings that we heard we were to set out on the trek +once more almost immediately. However, in the end the other brigade +went out, with what result will presently appear. Krugersdorp was now +surrounded by a large circle of forts and fortified houses. The +perimeter of these defences was very large, not far short of twelve +miles, but the positions themselves were well selected from a tactical +point of view. As they were continually being strengthened, improved, +and added to, in a few months' time it would have been very difficult +for the Boers to have taken the place, provided a sufficient garrison +remained in it. But this strength, or sometimes weakness, was a +constantly varying one--about the middle of December sinking as low as +300--which of course was risking a good deal. Moreover, it was not +until some time later, when the Officer Commanding Town Guards devised +an inner series of defences, that the town could be said to be in any +way safe from a midnight raid; and it was this, more than even the +capture of the place, which seemed so likely to occur, when the banks +and stores could have been cleared out in a few minutes, and the +raiding party gone before any force could have been assembled to +interfere with it. The town was, of course, full of spies and +friendly enemies, ever on the look-out for any chance of getting a bit +of their own back--and who could blame them?--but on the whole +remained very quiet and well-behaved throughout the occupation. + +The regiment's headquarters were destined to remain here for the rest +of the campaign, with the exception of the three treks which form the +subject of this chapter, and Krugersdorp will ever be identified with +our name in South Africa in consequence. As we got to know its +inhabitants better, and as they got to appreciate our men better, a +kindlier feeling was generated on both sides, with which improved +state of affairs the cricket and football we played with them had not +a little to do. + +General Barton moved off on October 5th, with much the same commission +that General Hart had carried, and immediately came into contact with +the enemy, the noise of the fight sounding loud in our ears, while +from Captain Nelson's piquet the bursting shells and even some of the +Boers could be plainly seen. The day before a flag of truce had come +in with a letter, saying that one of our men was lying wounded in a +farmhouse a little way outside the outposts; a waggon was sent out and +brought him in, when he proved to be one of our mounted infantry, who +had been wounded in Colonel Rochfort's dashing attack on a Boer laager +near Pretoria.[16] The Boers had looked after him as well as they +could, and dressed his wounds according to their homely lights, and +altogether played the game so far as he was concerned. + + [Footnote 16: The writer was recently dining with + Colonel--now Major-General--Rochfort, when that officer + particularly asked him to mention how splendidly the party of + Dublin Fusiliers under his command had behaved on this + occasion, and his admiration of their soldierly conduct at + all times while serving under him.] + +Next day still brought the sound of General Barton's artillery, and +the right half-battalion under Major Bird went out as escort to two +waggon-loads of ammunition for him. The General sent half-way to meet +him, and our men got back all right about 6 p.m. + +With the advent of summer the thunderstorms increased in frequency and +severity, and it was no joke to have to suddenly jump up and hang on +to the pole of one's tent to prevent it being blown away, with the +uncomfortable knowledge that lightning has a partiality for running +down tent-poles. We had one really bad experience in this way, to be +narrated later, but nothing to touch the blizzard that struck the camp +of the 5th Battalion Royal Dublin Fusiliers near Mafeking, when sheets +of corrugated iron flew about like packs of gigantic cards, and +Colonel Gernon and Captain Baker, the Quartermaster, together with +many others, sustained very serious injuries. Still, our share was bad +enough, and quite spoiled the summer for a good many of us. The +mornings would break clear, cloudless, and invigorating; but about 3 +p.m. on about three days of the week, a bunch of cotton-wool clouds +would appear from the south. As these rose higher and higher, they +swelled into enormous piles of grand, rolling cloud-masses, like +stupendous snow-clad mountains, whose bases grew black and ever +blacker, until they would suddenly be riven by blinding flashes of +flickering ribbons of lightning, and the air torn and rent by +reverberating booms of awe-inspiring thunder. + +Second Lieutenant Tredennick joined at this time. Second Lieutenant R. +F. B. Knox should have arrived with him, but had to remain behind in +Johannesburg, as he was seedy. The train they were in had been +attacked by Boers near Heidelberg. + +Rumour now began to be busy with General Barton's force, and on the +22nd an order came for General Hart to join him. We had just packed +up, when an order came countermanding the move. + +Next day, however, another order came to the same effect, but +detailing Colonel Hicks to command the column. Though small in point +of numbers,[17] it would have been hard to have picked a better one in +point of quality. A finer body of horsemen, or one more adapted to the +work in hand, than Strathcona's Horse it would be impossible to +conceive. Without making any invidious comparisons, it is only just to +say that these Canadian troops appeared to us to have no superiors, +while the truly magnificent way in which they literally brushed away +the opposition, on the morning we joined hands with General Barton, +was a sight to be remembered. + + [Footnote 17: 600 Strathcona's Horse, 160 Brabant's Horse, 2 + Elswick guns, 1 pompom, Essex Regiment, 1/2-battalion Royal + Dublin Fusiliers.] + +The regiment was entrained, but did not get off till about 5 p.m., our +departure being marked by a peal of thunder which made even those who +declared themselves fond of such phenomena nearly jump through the +roof of the guard's van. We only got as far as Bank Station, as the +line was reported infested with the enemy, and it was important that +we should not be blown up. Indeed, we had scarcely arrived there, when +a loud explosion--fortunately behind us--proved the activity of our +watchful foes. After making teas we bivouacked in the train. + +The regiment reached Wolverdiend next day, in the course of which the +remainder of the force assembled, preparations being made for an early +start next morning. + +Fearing that information would get through, the Colonel gave orders +that the column would start at 6 a.m., but at the same time issued +confidential orders to officers commanding units that he really +intended to start at 3.30 a.m. Unfortunately, however, it rained so +hard all night that it was impossible to start until 5 a.m. Colonel +Hicks sent Strathcona's Horse out to the front and left flank, while +Brabant's Horse took the right flank and front. The Essex Regiment +supplied the advance-guard, while one company of the Dublin Fusiliers +acted as rearguard and escort to the waggons. In this order the force +approached a low line of bush-covered hills, which separated them from +General Barton. These hills were occupied by two or three hundred +Boers, who had been detailed to check our advance. On arrival within +rifle-range of the hills, Strathcona's Horse made a dash right at +them, the effect of which was so imposing that the enemy immediately +resigned all idea of resistance, and bolted as hard as they could go. +With this range of kopjes in our possession, the rest was plain +sailing, and we marched on to the hill on which the larger part of +General Barton's force was posted. The column had barely arrived when +a fierce rifle-fire broke out in front. It was impossible to see what +was going on, as the hillside was covered with thick mimosa bush, but +that a fierce fight was raging in our close proximity was very evident +from the prolonged and heavy fire, in which the pompoms soon began to +take part, while the naval gun and smaller field-pieces joined in. +Colonel Hicks, accompanied by an officer of the Dublin Fusiliers, then +climbed some little way up the hill in the direction of the 4·7, and +there a sight met their eyes which was seldom seen in this war. The +plain at their feet, stretching from the railway west to the village +of Frederickstadt, was covered with flying Boers--Boers flying on +their feet, a most unusual occurrence with them. As they fled across +the open veld in full view, they were pursued by every variety of +missile. In one spot, seven Boers were running side by side. The +officer with Colonel Hicks had just drawn his attention to them, when +a shell from the naval gun burst in the air behind them, and a second +later tore up the ground all round. Five fell at once; the other two +staggered on a few paces and then fell also, all seven being +afterwards found stone-dead. It was all over in a very short time, and +then the stretcher-bearers began to come in with their patient, +gruesome burdens, and the prisoners arrived under escort, to be +handed over to the Royal Dublin Fusiliers for safe custody. + +[Illustration: Plan of Battle of Frederickstadt.] + +Then we heard the story of the fight. General Barton's position, which +he had occupied for some days, extended along a line of low hills, the +two main features of which were divided by a valley running back at +right angles to the railway into the Gatsrand, the general line of the +position being parallel with the railway. The station was held and +used as a hospital, while the hill on which General Barton's camp was +situated extended down to the railway, and was the nearest point to +the river. For some days the Boers, under De Wet, had been gathering +round this position, and the force had been subjected to a constant +shell-fire and the intermittent attentions of a particularly +aggressive and unlocatable pompom. Under the railway, about midway +between General Barton's two main positions, ran a small, dry donga. +Into this underfeature De Wet had ordered about 200 men on the night +of the 24th-25th. The first indication of their presence was a +somewhat foolish attempt made by them to capture some mules. Unaware +of their numbers--and truly the situation was such that any one could +be pardoned for not grasping it at once--a company or part of a +company was sent forward to dislodge them and clear up matters. The +Boers allowed them to approach quite close, and then annihilated them. +It was now very evident that the donga was held in force, and, as the +General was aware by this time of the arrival of Colonel Hicks' +column, he launched a vigorous attack. This was the heavy firing we +heard on our arrival. After offering a slight resistance, some of the +enemy surrendered, the remainder flying on foot as already stated to +their horses, which they had left amongst the trees near the river. It +is not often the Boer leaves his horse thus, and it offered strong +presumptive evidence of their confidence in their ability to rush the +position, in accordance with De Wet's intention. + +The battalion bivouacked on the hill, and threw out outposts. To them +was also assigned next morning the intensely unpleasant duty of +shooting three prisoners who had been tried and found guilty of +showing the white flag and afterwards resuming their fire. 'G' +company, being the nearest piquet to the place selected for the +execution, was detailed to carry it out. The casualties on our side +had been about forty-one killed and wounded, while twenty-four Boers +were killed, sixteen wounded, and twenty-six taken prisoner. + +[Illustration: Sergeant French and the Officers' Mess, Nachtmaal.] + +After remaining at Frederickstadt on the 26th, orders came for our +return to Krugersdorp on the 27th. We had an uneventful march to +Wolverdiend, and there entrained, reaching our destination late in the +evening. The officers, as usual, rode in the guard's van, and, as +these trains used to bump and jolt in the most unpleasant manner, we +made ourselves as comfortable as we could in a sort of 'zariba' +composed of our valises and a number of large packages sewn up in +sackcloth. Our feelings when we later on discovered that these +packages were corpses may be left to the imagination. + +We returned to our last camp, and set to work to make it more +comfortable, running up wood and corrugated-iron shelters for stores, +officers' mess, &c. We were also kept perpetually busy in building +more forts and improving those already in existence. Captain Romer +gave his name to a work which he erected and on which he expended much +time, pains, and ingenuity. Posts and piquets also had to be held on +all the principal roads into the town. Captain Nelson, R.M.L.I., in +command of one of these, one afternoon shouted to two men who were +driving through his posts to stop. Unfortunately for them, they paid +no attention and drove on, so he seized a rifle and fired, killing one +of the occupants stone-dead, an exemplary lesson to the inhabitants to +make them understand that outposts were not posted for amusement. + +General Clements' column was now stationed at Krugersdorp, and we saw +something of Captain MacBean, Royal Dublin Fusiliers, his +Brigade-Major. Alas! poor MacBean; he was killed a few days later, +standing close beside his General, at the battle of Nooitgedacht. A +universal favourite, and one of the most popular officers in the +regiment, he was also probably the ablest. Passing brilliantly into +and through the Staff College, he went on to the Egyptian Army, taking +part in all the principal actions up to and including the battle of +Omdurman, receiving a D.S.O. in recognition of his services. In the +present campaign he had commenced the war as a Brigade-Major, later on +serving on General Hunter's staff, and now transferred to General +Clements', who had the highest opinion of his capabilities. Amongst +many other accomplishments he was one of the best bridge-players in +the service. There is little doubt that if he had been spared he would +have risen to the highest rank. He was gazetted to a Brevet-Majority +after his death. + +On November 15th Lord Roberts inspected the regiment, and +congratulated them on the work they had done, afterwards speaking to +Major English and telling him how highly he had thought of the +Zuikerbosch affair. It is these little acts of kindness and +remembrance that make all the difference, and their effect is much +more far-reaching than those who confer them often imagine. One only +does one's duty, of course, but yet one is only human, and it is very +pleasant to feel that that duty has been appreciated. + +Captain Lowndes, the adjutant, who had been home after his severe +wound at Talana, now rejoined the regiment, and took over the +adjutancy from Captain Fetherstonhaugh. That officer had filled the +post with marked zeal and ability for over twelve months, and was the +only officer who was present with the Headquarters of the battalion +from the start of the war without being wounded. + +On November 16th the regiment formed part of a column,[18] ordered to +march off and scour the veld, though our destination was, as usual, +shrouded in mystery. The night of the 15th-16th however, precluded any +possibility of carrying out the intended early start, as the rain +descended in torrents, deluging kits and country. At about 2 p.m., +however, a start was effected, and all went well till a small drift +was reached, when the 'cow-gun,' which had taken the place of our old +and tried friend, the Naval gun, stuck hopelessly. Colonel Hicks fell +out 120 men and put them on to the drag-ropes. Their first pull was +too much for the rope, which broke, with the inevitable result that +the whole 120 were deposited on the veld, on the broad of their backs. +Another and a stouter rope was produced, which proved itself equal to +the strain, and with a long pull, a strong pull, and a pull all +together, the heavy weapon was dragged on to _terra firma_, and the +march resumed, a halt being made for the night about eight or nine +miles out, and almost on the historic site of Doornkop. + + [Footnote 18: South Wales Borderers, Royal Dublin Fusiliers, + 28th Battery, R.F.A., 4·7 inch gun, mounted details.] + +The trek was resumed next morning under more favourable auspices, but +these soon proved a delusion and a snare. The column was making for a +pass in the Gatsrand, not far from the waterworks, known to be in the +enemy's occupation, when at about 11 o'clock a violent thunderstorm +broke directly overhead. Marching along, soaked to the skin, with a +lightning-conductor in the shape of a rifle over one's shoulder, was +not conducive to steady nerves, but so dense was the rain that it had, +at all events, one beneficial effect, for the Boers holding the pass +left their positions and took shelter in some farmhouses, with the +result that they were very nearly captured by our cavalry, who, +indeed, succeeded in taking possession of the pass without opposition, +the enemy, taken completely by surprise, having only just time to jump +on their horses and gallop off. Getting the 'cow-gun' over the pass, +however, was no easy matter, but it was eventually accomplished, and +after a march of about sixteen miles, the force halted for the night +in rather a pretty camp, on a farm known as Hartebeestfontein. + +[Illustration: 4·7 Crossing a Drift, assisted by the Dublin +Fusiliers.] + +The column marched to Klip River, about seventeen miles, next day, +arriving there about 5 p.m. The rearguard was sniped at the whole way +by our friends of the day before, but without effecting much damage. +A cavalry brigade under Brigadier-General Gordon was here on our +arrival, and an exchange of troops took place, we receiving some Greys +and Carabineers in exchange for half a battalion of South Wales +Borderers. + +A halt was now made for a day, most of us taking the opportunity to +get a bathe in the river. + +Leaving Klip River on the morning of the 20th, we marched back in the +direction whence we had come two days before, and were soon engaged +with the enemy's snipers, of whom we captured one; but they had the +best of the argument, as they killed two of our column. One of these +poor fellows had very bad luck: he had received a letter at Klip River +only the day before, telling him he had come into a sum of money, +sufficient to enable him to retire and spend the remainder of his days +in peace and quiet. + +Nor was the day to prove uneventful for the rest of us. About 1 p.m. +it began to cloud over, and presently to rain; this soon turned into +hail, of the variety which one is accustomed to at home. This was at +first refreshing, and one would pick up the cool hailstones--they were +about as big as peas--and eat them, and the rattle they made on the +helmets was quite musical. When they grew to the size of gooseberries, +and began to sting, they provided less amusement, shoulders being +shrugged up and necks arched to obtain as much protection as possible. +The unfortunate dogs, of which a variety invariably turned up with +every column, howled with pain, and the cattle and horses grew very +restive. But soon the stones, driven by a gale of wind, increased to +the size of cherries and strawberries, with occasional jagged lumps of +ice an inch in diameter. As there seemed no particular reason why they +should not run through the whole gamut of the orchard, and rival +plums, peaches, and melons, and as there was no earthly chance of +obtaining a vestige of shelter of any kind, men began to wonder what +was going to happen next, with an occasional sharper-than-usual belt +between the shoulders or on the boot to quicken their fancy. It was +only with the greatest difficulty that the horses were controlled, but +the stones providentially grew no larger, though the storm continued. +The entire country-side was a rolling mass of ice nearly over the tops +of boots. Runnels and rivulets became roaring torrents, roads became +rivers. When the storm eventually subsided the transport of course +could not go another yard, and camp was pitched where we were. The +carpet of hailstones in the tents slowly melted into mud, and we made +ourselves as comfortable as possible under the circumstances. Several +kids and lambs we had with us were killed by the stones. Not one of us +had ever been out in such a storm before, but, as those who had not +been on 'the Natal side' confidently predicted, those who had been +declared that this was mere child's play to the hailstones they had +seen there. + +What became of the Boers we never knew: up to the commencement of the +storm we had been merrily sniping away at each other at extreme +ranges, but during and after it they entirely disappeared, so entirely +that even next day we never got a sign of them, and concluded they had +all been drowned. + +There was, however, nothing to complain of on this score the day +after, as sniping was carried on all the time. Though this form of +fighting resulted in few casualties, it was destructive to peace and +comfort and enjoyment of the scenery. It was interesting to notice +what officers recognised when we arrived at places we had visited on +previous treks, and instructive to note that it was almost always +those who were addicted to sport and field-pursuits who were the first +to pick up their bearings and the lie of the land. The force +eventually encamped at the foot of the hill on which 'G' company had +spent such a cold and miserable night when waiting for the transport +to pass, two months before. + +On the 23rd, the march took us up again through Orange Grove and on +past Leeuwport Nek, moving along the south side of the main ridge of +the Gatsrand, with three companies making the best of their way along +their jagged peaks. Two of Roberts' Horse were hit on this march, one +being killed. + +The column reached Buffelsdoorn Pass on the 24th, after a spirited +rearguard action, the brunt of which fell on the South Wales +Borderers, who had several men and one officer hit. We remained in +this pass for some days, sending out small expeditions among the +adjacent hills, and erecting fortifications to cover the defile. It +was in its way an important place, being within a few miles of +Wolverdiend Station, and providing an excellent door through the +rocky, serrated peaks of the Gatsrand into the broad plain which lay +between them and the Vaal. Our camp was situated just on the north +side of the pass, in a picturesque place, with easy access to the +railway, and from a tactical point of view an excellent position. + +Next day a convoy with nearly ten thousand cattle, sheep, &c., was +dispatched to Wolverdiend, without seeing any signs of the enemy. + +The night of the 25th-26th could scarcely have been worse; heavy rain, +howling wind, and vivid and frequent lightning with its sonorous +accompaniment, put sleep out of the question; indeed, at one period it +became necessary to get up and hold on to the tents to prevent them +being blown away. With the advent of dawn the forces of nature gave us +a rest, our friends the enemy immediately filling their place. They +opened fire from some kopjes to the east of the camp, and endeavoured +to round up some of our cattle. The South Wales Borderers undertook to +dislodge them, and speedily did so, the 'Cow-gun' joining in at long +range as soon as the Boers evacuated their positions. Having disposed +of man for the time being, Nature again rolled up in dense masses of +magnificent clouds to the attack. The storm which followed was also +one to be remembered; the lightning could be seen striking the ground +in the close vicinity of the camp, and though no one was hit, we heard +that two men of the regiment at Kaalfontein were not so fortunate, one +poor fellow being killed and the other severely wounded. 'C' company, +2nd Royal Dublin Fusiliers, was on piquet through both these night and +day storms, and had, as may be imagined, an unenviable experience. + +On the 27th, General Hart rode down to Wolverdiend to see Sir John +French. While he was away, word arrived that a party of Roberts' Horse +who were out scouting had been held up. Colonel Wilson--the senior +officer in camp--detailed 100 Carabineers to go to their assistance, +but they found the opposition still too great, so two companies of the +regiment were sent out to reinforce them, while the guns opened fire +from the summits of the hills. In the middle of the operations a +thunderstorm joined in to swell the general din, under cover of which +the Boers crept in round three sides of the force. There was never any +question of their succeeding in cutting it off, but the boldness of +their tactics was characteristic of the phase the war had now begun to +assume. There was a good deal of rifle-fire on both sides, and the +28th Battery R.F.A., under its new commander, who had replaced our +esteemed friend, Major Stokes, D.S.O., promoted to R.H.A., fired +nearly one hundred rounds. What casualties the enemy suffered was not +ascertained, but on our side there was only one, a man in Roberts' +Horse being badly hit. Those of us who were not engaged sat among the +rocks on the tops of the hills, whence a fine panoramic view of the +skirmish was obtainable by the aid of telescopes and binoculars. + +The 28th and 29th passed uneventfully, Captain Romer occupying the +time in again demonstrating his architectural capabilities in the +erection of a fort near the pass. + +[Illustration: Boy Fitzpatrick waiting at Lunch.] + +On the 30th a reconnaissance in force was made along the Gatsrand in a +westerly direction, the left half-battalion of the Royal Dublin +Fusiliers acting as the infantry of the force. Moving along the +summits of the hills in four lines of widely extended companies, they +marched to within sight of Frederickstadt before they returned. +Imagine exaggerated Pyramids of Cheops; imagine each block of stone +carved by stress of weather into a thousand needle-points and +ankle-twisting crevices; plant a dense growth of mimosa and other +thorny scrub in every cranny and interstice. Take a dozen such +pyramids, and do your morning constitutional over them, after the +scrappiest of breakfasts at 5 a.m., and you will find twelve or +fourteen miles quite as much as you care about. But the march was not +devoid of interest, though we met with no Boers. Small buck, hares, +and partridges were there in sufficient number to afford a good day's +sport under other circumstances, while a profusion of various kinds of +flowers afforded satisfaction to the eye, in strong contrast to the +bare and barkless trunks of trees riven by the frequent storms that +devastate these hills. In one place a most gruesome sight was met +with. Under a small tree beside a tiny stream stood a three-legged +cooking-pot, and round it lay three skeletons, with a scattering of +shrapnel bullets to silently tell the story of the tragedy. Beside one +body lay a Rifleman's haversack, an eloquent if speechless travesty on +the fortunes of war, for undoubtedly they were the remains of Boers, +over whose head a chance shrapnel must have burst months before. + +A similar reconnaissance, but in the opposite direction, was made next +day, resulting in one man being wounded. Convoys were also passing to +and fro, and on the 2nd, Captain Fetherstonhaugh took over the duties +of provost-marshal, temporarily, from Captain Thompson, of the +Somersetshire Light Infantry, who had hurt his knee. Rumours of an +early move also began to circulate, with the Losberg, the grim and +solitary hill rising out of the plain to the south of the Gatsrand, as +our probable destination. For some time past the Boers had used it as +a sort of headquarters and rallying-place for their frequent raiding +parties. Columns were now converging on it from all points of the +compass, but as they could be plainly seen from its summit, the high +hopes entertained in some quarters of rounding up a large number of +the enemy were not shared by everybody. + +Yet the start at 9 p.m. on the 3rd was sufficiently impressive. The +officers were assembled, and had their several duties clearly pointed +out to them, one peak of the hill being assigned to the South Wales +Borderers and the other to the Dublin Fusiliers. To 'A' company of the +latter regiment, under Major English, was given the honour of leading +the attack, which was to be made at dawn next morning. Silently and +with all due precautions the column slowly wound its way down the +pass, like some gigantic boa-constrictor, and out on to the plain +below. Whenever a farm was reached it was entered, and steps taken to +prevent lights being shown or signals flashed: three Boers, booted and +spurred, being taken in one. It was a perfect night for marching, all +Nature hushed in deep repose save the loud-mouthed bull-frog; the moon +set an hour before dawn, reminding one of Whyte-Melville's line: + + 'The darkest hour of all the night is that which brings the day.' + +But dark as it was our objective could be seen ominously looming up--a +lamp-black mass against the velvet softness of starlit sky. The +movement had been admirably timed, and as day broke the two regiments +advanced to the attack, the South Wales Borderers on the right, the +Dublins on the left, while the artillery opened fire against the +hillside between the two summits. But that was all. Not a shot was +fired in return. Not a Boer was even seen. Nothing. Except, indeed, +large quantities of most delicious and most acceptable oranges, after +eating which the tired troops lay in the rain, which commenced to pour +down, and slept peacefully till the transport came up. + +Before we started next morning, a huge herd of blesbok suddenly +appeared on the scene, wildly galloping about in every direction, +being continually brought up by the barbed wire fences of the farms. A +good many were shot, but it was cruel to kill them, or try to, with +hard bullets, and many and many a beast must have got away badly +wounded, whilst the indiscriminate manner in which the sportsmen fired +in all directions was a source of danger, not only to themselves and +the buck, but to the camp as well. One fine old fellow, with a good +head, charged right through the camp, altogether eluding one regiment, +in spite of every variety of missile, from cooking-pots to helmets, to +finally fall a victim in another regiment's lines to a tent-pole. +After which interlude the force marched to Modderfontein. + +Next day a helio from Bank directed the column to make its way to that +station, a party of the South Wales Borderers being left behind to +watch the pass at Modderfontein, where they were to have a rough +experience later on. The remainder of the force moved to Bank on the +7th, and marched again the same night for Krugersdorp, making a total +distance of thirty-three miles in the twenty-four hours, a good +wind-up to the three weeks' trek. An enormous number of cattle and +sheep were brought in, but it was the end of the Pochefstroom column, +which was now finally broken up into a number of small posts. + +[Illustration: 'The Latest Shave.' Captain G. S. Higginson (mounted) +and Major Bird.] + +The regiment camped once more on the same site it had last occupied. + + + + +CHAPTER VI. + +BURIED TREASURE--THE EASTERN TRANSVAAL--THE KRUGERSDORP DEFENCES. + + 'They are wet with the showers of the mountains, and embrace the + rock for want of a shelter.'--_Job_, xxiv. 8. + + +By this time we had begun to regard Krugersdorp as our base, and to +look upon our returns to it as more or less getting home. But on this +occasion there was to be no rest of any length. From the plum-bloom +blue of the far Magaliesberg, General Clements' heliograph was +twinkling and blinking for the remainder of his force and more mounted +men. In addition to this Colonel Hicks took out a column. These and +other deductions left Krugersdorp with a garrison of 300 men to man a +perimeter of some ten or twelve miles, or, roughly speaking, just over +fifty yards for each rifle. 'C' company, under Captain Pomeroy, W.I.R. +(attached), and Lieutenant Molony, occupied Fort Craig; 'D' company, +under Captain Clarke, R.M.L.I. (attached), and Lieutenant Marsh, held +Fort Kilmarnock; and 'G' company, under its Captain and Lieutenant +Smith, took over Fort Harlech. Major Rutherford took over this fort +next day, as the captain of 'G' company had been appointed commander +of the town guards and piquets and interior defences. Colonel Hicks +had been ordered to Johannesburg to see General French, who informed +him that he was to take command of a mixed force[19] and march to the +Losberg, there to dig up a large sum of gold, reputed to amount to +nearly 100,000_l._; after which he was to proceed south to the Vaal, +and hold the drifts between Vereeniging and Rensburg. + + [Footnote 19: 400 Royal Dublin Fusiliers, 200 cavalry, two + guns.] + +Starting at midnight on the 10th-11th, the column marched till 6 a.m., +covering fifteen or sixteen miles. The men then had breakfasts; and, +after resting till mid-day, when they had dinners, started again for +Orange Grove, the pass in the Gatsrand with which we were by this time +so familiar. It was occupied by Boers, estimated at about one hundred +in number, who offered considerable resistance, but who were finally +shelled out of it, without loss on our side, though charged by a +squadron of Carabineers with great dash. Having done about twenty-six +miles, the camp was pitched at 6 p.m., outposts being, of course, +thrown out on the adjacent hills. + +Reveille sounded at 4.30 a.m., and by 5.30 the small column was on the +way again. Their destination was plain enough this time, and very grim +and formidable it looked in the broad light of day, considering the +very small force which was about to attack it. Moreover, on this +occasion it held something besides oranges. Advancing from the north +in the direction of the spot from which we had advanced to the attack +a few days before, Colonel Hicks made a demonstration as though about +to attack the eastern peak, then, suddenly opening a heavy shell fire +on the nek between the two, he launched his real attack against the +other summit. Although the hill was held by a considerable number of +the enemy, estimated at 500, these tactics proved eminently +successful, for when they discovered the direction of the main attack +shrapnel was bursting all over the nek along which they would have had +to gallop to meet it, and they gave up the idea and evacuated the +position, which fell into Colonel Hicks' hand with a loss of one man, +who had the misfortune to be hit in no less than five places. A guide +had been sent with the column who knew where the gold was, and a party +was told off to dig it up and bring it in. The guide may or may not +have known where the gold _was_, but he certainly did not know where +it was _then_, and the search proved entirely abortive. He was a +murderer under sentence of death, and was to save his life by showing +the gold and ten buried guns. + +The force started at 5 a.m. next morning for Lindeque Drift. There was +a certain amount of sniping all the way, principally at the cavalry, +who were riding wide on either flank, collecting cattle and burning +straw and hay, in addition to guarding the flanks. Lindeque was +reached at 5.30 p.m., a camp of our people being in view on the far +bank of the river, with whom communication was opened by signal. The +drift was very deep, but an orderly managed to get across with a +letter. Orders also arrived from General French giving Colonel Hicks +thirty miles of river to watch, which seemed a good deal, considering +the paucity of the numbers at his disposal. + +At 6.30 a.m. a helio message was received calling the column at once +back to Krugersdorp, and a start was made for the return journey at 8 +a.m. The Boers endeavoured all day to cut off the rearguard, but met +with no success, the gunners shelling them whenever they got close +enough to be unpleasant. + +[Illustration: KILMARNOCK. From a sketch by Col. H. Tempest Hicks, C.B.] + +The 15th proved to be almost a repetition of the day before, the enemy +hanging persistently on the flanks and rear of the little column, but +showing no signs of any desire to make their closer acquaintance. +Indeed, that morning Colonel Hicks had prepared a small surprise for +them which fully realised his anticipations. Whenever columns were +moving about it was the invariable custom of the enemy to at once +occupy the vacated camping-ground in search of any odds-and-ends that +might have been left about, but more especially ammunition, which used +to drop out of our men's pouches in surprising quantities, in spite of +the most stringent orders on the subject. On this occasion the Colonel +left a small party in ambush when he moved off, with the result that +when half-a-dozen Boers began rummaging about in the camp they were +suddenly invited to hold their hands up, a request which they had +of necessity to comply with, one of them being a Field-Cornet and a +man of some local importance. A halt was made in sight of Randfontein, +on the slopes of which a column, under Colonel the Hon. Ulick Roche, +could be seen proceeding in the direction of Krugersdorp. Next day was +Dingaan's Day, and rumour stated that the Boers under De la Rey, +flushed with their victory over Clements, were going to attack +Krugersdorp. + +The column marched the remaining fifteen miles by 2.30 p.m. next day +without seeing any sign of the enemy. During the six days they had +been away they had marched 102 miles, skirmished with the enemy nearly +every day, taken a strong position by a fine example of tactics, +captured a good many prisoners, and brought in a large quantity of +cattle, sheep, &c.: a very fine six days' work. + +Since May 30th the headquarters of the battalion had marched well over +1200 miles. On three occasions it had exceeded thirty miles in +twenty-four hours--the record, of course, being the thirty-eight miles +in sixteen hours from Klerkskraal to Pochefstroom in September. But +the most wonderful part of its work was the strange immunity it +experienced from any of the determined attacks which were so +constantly being made on other columns. Whether it was good or bad +luck, good or bad scouting, whatever it was, the fact remained that +with the exception of the almost daily scrapping and sniping, which +constant use had made to appear as part of the day's work, no action +of any importance came our way in spite of the countless marches and +counter-marches we made to bring one on. With the solitary exception +of the afternoon at Frederickstadt, when the Boers dropped a few +shells into our camp, and the two following days, when General +Liebenburg paid a similar attention to the detachment left behind on +the hill, we had not been under shell-fire. + +In the meantime, the disaster to General Clements at Nooitgedacht had +drawn all eyes to the state of Krugersdorp, which with its small +garrison seemed to offer a tempting bait to De la Rey, and column +after column arrived to assist in repelling the assault which was +threatened for Dingaan's Day. Before the reinforcements arrived the +General had taken every sort of precaution; amongst others, arresting +most of the principal inhabitants of the town, and holding them as +hostages. The festival, however, passed without incident, and the tide +of men and horses, guns and waggons, which had reached a record height +in the history of the town, soon began to ebb once more, and then +everything settled down to the quiet, peaceful state of affairs which +almost always characterised Krugersdorp. The band played in the market +square, and concerts were arranged in the town hall, while the General +set a fine example to his troops for their guidance in his treatment +of those of our late enemies who had observed their oaths of +neutrality, as a large number of them most religiously did. Ever +foremost in aggressive tactics in the field until the enemy was +overcome, the General adopted a policy of conciliation at other times +which undoubtedly had far-reaching effects as regarded the conduct of +the inhabitants of Krugersdorp. + +On December 19th, 400 men of the regiment, under Major Bird, started +off to join the force under General French which was going to sweep +the Eastern Transvaal, very much on the same lines that the various +columns had been sweeping the Western Transvaal. Their special duty +was to act as a baggage-guard to the various mounted corps, a duty +which they shared with a battalion of Guards. Their lives for the next +two or three months were very much the same as they had been for the +previous two or three months, though they covered an even greater +number of miles, and, owing to the rains and thunderstorms of the +South African summer, experienced an even harder time. It is the +custom to speak in terms of high praise of the climate of South +Africa, but if the British Army had been consulted on the subject +after some of these treks, it is doubtful if their vocabulary would +have been large enough to enable them to thoroughly ventilate their +opinions. The fact is that the spring, summer, and autumn are ruined +by the desperate storms which are of such common occurrence at those +times of year. There are, it is true, four winter months of glorious +weather: fine, frosty, starlit nights, and clear days of brilliant +sunshine when the heat is never unpleasant. But of these four months, +two are completely ruined by the high winds which sweep the broad +veld, and which, in the vicinity of the mines, fill the air with +minute particles of gritty dust from the waste-heaps, penetrating eyes +and nostrils, throats and lungs. + +The first portion of the trek was, however, spent in the country that +General Hart had been operating in. The following account of some of +their hardships and privations is given by Lieutenant and +Quartermaster Burke:-- + +_With General Knox's Brigade in the sweeping movement by General +French on the eastern side of the Transvaal. Detail of a few orders as +showing the hardships the troops suffered through bad weather and +scarcity of food._ + +Brigade Orders. 'Witcomb, 8.2.01. Owing to the late arrival of the +convoy, the force will go on 2/3 biscuits.' + +This all the time we were marching daily and fighting. + +16.2.01. Our force reached Piet Retief. + +Brigade Orders. '20.2.01. The following will be the scale of rations +until further orders:--2 ozs. rice, 4 ozs. jam, 1/2 lb. mealie meal, +1-1/2 lb. meat. No coffee, tea, biscuits, vegetables, or salt.' + +Orders received from General French:--'Convoy under General +Burn-Murdoch is terribly delayed by swollen rivers and bad roads. The +Pongola is fifty yards and the Intombi 300 yards wide. You must use +your utmost resources to economise food, and so meet this unfortunate +state of affairs, which will assuredly last till the weather +improves. No forage for horses and mules. Send parties for food to +search out as far as ten miles. Kaffirs to receive 1_l._ in gold for a +bag of mealies, or a heifer for five bags.' + +21, 22, 23.2.01. 1 oz. jam, 1/2 lb. mealie meal, 1-1/2 lb. meat, +nothing else. + +24, 25. Same. + +26. No jam, 1/2 lb. mealie meal, 1-1/2 lb. meat, nothing else. I paid +a shopkeeper at Piet Retief 2_s._ 6_d._ for a quarter-handful of salt. + +Brigade Orders. 27.2.01. By General French: 'O.C. units will take +steps to let the troops know how highly their spirits and bearing +under the privations they are suffering from bad weather and short +rations are appreciated by the Lieutenant-General Commanding.' + +27.2.01. Burnt mealie cobs issued for coffee. + +Telegram from Lord Kitchener to General French, Piet Retief, +28.2.01:--'Explain to the troops under your command my admiration of +the excellent work they have performed, and the difficulties they have +overcome.' + +8.3.01. Full rations, first issue since 14.2.01. + +To show that the troops, besides suffering from frightful bad weather +(constant rain for a month), had to work hard, the following results +are shown. + +General Orders. The following results of our operations since 27.1.01, +is published for officers and men:-- + +_Boers_, killed, wounded, and captured, 393; surrendered, 353. Total +accounted for, 746. + +_Cannon_ taken, excluding a maxim, 4. + +_Rifles_, 606. _Ammunition_, 161,630. + +_Horses and mules_, 6504. _Trek oxen_, 362. + +_Other cattle_, 20,986. _Sheep_, 158,130. + +_Waggons and carts_, 1604. + +_Mealies and oat hay_, over 4,000,000 lbs. + + H. BURKE, LT. + +Colonel Hicks now set every one to work improving the various posts +round Krugersdorp, setting a fine example to all by the interest he +took in the work, and showing his thoroughness by the attention he +devoted to even the most trivial details. He also took infinite pains +to make Christmas as pleasant as he could for every one. The regiment +was, of course, very much split up in the various forts and fortified +houses, but headquarters still remained till the end of the year in +our old camping-ground. + +On the very last day of the year an escort of forty men returning to +Krugersdorp had a near shave of being cut off; they lost four men +captured, and would assuredly have lost more but for the prompt action +of Major English, who went out from Kilmarnock with twenty men to help +them in. + +So ended 1900. It had been a hard year for every one, but one and all +had done their best, and no sign of failing spirits was visible +anywhere. It was difficult to see anything like an end to the +campaign, however, for the process of attrition, which now seemed the +sole solution, was necessarily a slow one, and considerably interfered +with by the various 'regrettable incidents' that occurred from time to +time in the huge theatre of the war. These not only assisted our +indomitable foes with extra supplies of clothing, arms, ammunition, +&c., but also had the effect of keeping up their _morale_. + +On January 4th, 1901, the 400 men under Major Bird passed through on +their way to Elandsfontein, but nobody knew about the move in time to +go up to the station and see them. + +Large bodies of the enemy were now known to be in the neighbourhood, +and a spy came in saying that it was an open secret among the Boers +that Krugersdorp was De la Rey's objective as soon as a favourable +opportunity should present itself. In spite of this it was difficult +to make the danger of going beyond the outposts appreciated, and this +resulted in the death of one of our men, Private Hyland, servant to +one of the clergymen. It was supposed that the poor fellow had gone +out in a cape-cart with the object of getting some flowers for the +church; his body was found on the 8th simply riddled with bullets, as +was also that of the Cape-boy who had driven him. + +On the 10th, Major Pilson, Royal Dublin Fusiliers, one of the first +officers selected to proceed to South Africa on special service before +the war, arrived--not, unfortunately, to join the regiment, but the +South African Constabulary. + +On the 11th the enemy blew up the railway just beyond Roodeport, the +first station out of Krugersdorp on the way to Pochefstroom. +Lieutenant Marsh and twenty men of the regiment were sent out as +escort to guard the Engineers who repaired it. + +The storms continued to be very severe. Kilmarnock House was struck by +lightning, and the sentry on guard at the Court House in the town sent +spinning, fortunately only receiving a severe shaking. + +On the 23rd the sad news of the death of Her Majesty Queen Victoria +was made known to the troops, by whom it was received in deep and +impressive silence. + +A salute was fired by the Artillery on the 24th with plugged shell, to +celebrate the Accession of King Edward VII. + +At the end of the month General Hart left us. The regiment had been +continuously under his command since the formation of the Irish +Brigade; officers and men alike had learned to entertain a deep +respect and admiration for their General, than whom no braver man ever +went into action. He on his part loved the regiment, and fully +appreciated the _esprit de corps_ which permeated it, from the Colonel +to the last-joined recruit. His farewell letter to Colonel Hicks, +another on the subject of our camping arrangements, and his farewell +order to his brigade, may all be found in the Appendix, and afford +proof of his regard for his troops and the spirit which he breathed +into them. + +Colonel Groves took over command of Krugersdorp and its defences, and +gave Colonel Hicks a free hand: he also rode round the inner defences +with the commander of the town-guards and piquets, and arranged for +their being made stronger also. + +In spite of the presence of a good many of our columns, the enemy was +very active all over the Magaliesberg and the Gatsrand at this time. +It will be remembered that on the return from the Klip River trek, a +party of the South Wales Borderers had been left to watch the +Modderfontein Pass. + +This small force was now surrounded and being fiercely attacked, and +offering as determined a resistance. A force was hastily organized to +proceed to their relief, under command of Colonel the Hon. U. Roche, +of the South Wales Borderers. With half or more of the battalion away +under Major Bird, we could only supply 180 men, under command of +Captain Shewan, for this column. + +They marched that night, and the following morning found all the hills +for ten miles held by the enemy, Colonel Roche wiring in that the +Boers were in too great force for his column to proceed. Indeed, the +column had to fight hard enough to maintain its position and to save +itself from being surrounded. General Conyngham, hastily gathering +together another 500 men and a battery, marched off to reinforce +Colonel Roche, but before they could get to the unfortunate post at +Modderfontein, it had fallen to superior numbers. The Boers, who were +under the command of General Smuts, sent in a flag of truce, giving +notice of the capture of the post, stating that there were many +British wounded, and suggesting that an ambulance and doctors should +be sent out to them. This incident was very hard lines on a most +gallant regiment, and in no way reflects adversely on them for one +instant. They defended their position splendidly as long as defence +was possible, and suffered greatly from want of water as well as from +the enemy's fire. Colonel Roche reported that Captain Shewan and his +men had done very well, and had held a hill on the left of his +position, until he recalled them. + +Colonel Hicks never for a moment remitted his exertions in the +fortifying of the various posts and houses in the section of the +command for which he was responsible, with the result that he very +soon had them in a most efficient state. Ammunition, food, and water, +in sufficient quantities to withstand a regular siege, were stored in +each post, while the wire entanglements would have effectually +precluded any attempt on the part of the enemy to rush them. Indeed, +no precautions were omitted, and one began to enjoy one's sleep +considerably more than had been the case for some months past. + +On the 7th, the headquarters of the regiment at last moved into +Kilmarnock, a house which had belonged to a Mr. Burger, a brother of +Mr. Schalk Burger, the acting President. Here they remained until the +regiment left for Aden in January 1902. + +[Illustration: The Hairdresser's Shop.] + + + + +CHAPTER VII. + +THE LAST TWELVE MONTHS. + + 'In the morning thou shalt say, Would God it were even! and at + even thou shalt say, Would God it were morning!'--_Deut._ xxviii. + 67. + + +[Illustration: Kilmarnock, Krugersdorp.] + +With the occupation of Kilmarnock by the headquarters of the regiment +arrived the third and last phase of the war. It had begun with four +months' hard fighting, continued with twelve months' hard marching, +and was to end with twelve months of weary escorts to convoys, +occupation of blockhouses, and garrison work generally. It was, +perhaps, in its way, the most trying period of the three, for in +addition to unceasing vigilance there was added the dead monotony of +week after week in the same place, surrounded by the same faces, and +feeding on the same indifferent food. One was buoyed up by the reports +published from time to time of the hauls of prisoners made by the +various columns, but there was always some pessimist handy to discount +one's hopes, and even though the result proved their dismal croakings +more or less correct, they might have had the grace, even if they had +not the common sense, to keep their miserable opinions to themselves. +Thank goodness there were not many of these gentlemen in the regiment. +Throughout the war I only heard one man grumble sulkily, and only +heard of one man who paid too great a regard to the use of cover. The +high tone with which the war had been entered upon was maintained to +the very end, and if the regimental officer came out of it with +credit, the N.C.O. and private soldier did every bit as well. +Hardship, fatigue, stress of weather--everything was accepted as part +of the general day's work, and as such cheerfully met and thoroughly +done. + +Lieutenants B. Maclear and J. P. B. Robinson joined about this time, +the former a brother of Percy Maclear, Adjutant of the 1st Battalion. + +In spite of all the work, however, time was yet found for a certain +amount of play, the exercise of which was very beneficial. Cricket +matches were played against the town, the S.A.C., and amongst ourselves, +and later on football matches against the town and other regiments. We +proved more successful at the latter game than the former: not to be +wondered at, seeing that two of our officers--Lieutenants Maclear and +Newton--were later on to become International three-quarter backs, the +former playing for Ireland and the latter for England. + +Lieutenant Knox joined on March 23rd, having been detained nine months +through illness on the way up. + +In March, Major-General Mildmay Willson, a Guardsman, took over from +Colonel Groves the command, which now became 'the District West of +Johannesburg.' + +On April 17th, Major English proceeded to Bank in command of a small +mixed force (one hundred Royal Dublin Fusiliers) to try and catch a +Boer force who had been for some time hovering round that station. He +returned on the 19th, having seen no Boers. + +On the 21st, Captain Watson, formerly in the regiment, came to see us. +He was then Adjutant of the Scottish Horse, and was shortly afterwards +killed at Moedwil. He had distinguished himself on many occasions, and +had received special promotion into the Lancashire Fusiliers. + +On the 30th, Major Bird and his half-battalion at last got back. They +had done a lot of marching and good work in the Eastern Transvaal with +General French's columns, but had not had much fighting. They all +seemed glad to be back; it is always satisfactory to have the regiment +together, as we have a feeling of dependence on one another that one +cannot have when working with other troops, however good they may be. + +On May 3rd Captain Kinsman, Royal Dublin Fusiliers, came to see the +battalion. He was then in the S.A.C. He had been badly wounded some +time ago, having been with the force under General Plumer since the +beginning of the war, and present at the relief of Mafeking, and had +seen a deal of fighting. + +On May 7th Lieutenant Seymour joined the regiment, in which his father +had also served. + +On May 25th a force[20] went out to escort the S.A.C. to a fort they +were to build. The column was under command of Colonel Hicks, and +almost immediately met with opposition, the Scottish Horse, on the +left, coming in for a good deal of sniping. Sending out his mounted +men well ahead, and occupying a ridge in front with the Worcesters, +the Colonel then rode on with Colonel Edwardes, S.A.C., to select a +spot for the erection of the work. The only casualties were two men +wounded and five horses killed, and the force then bivouacked on the +positions they held. Next day building was commenced on a small fort +and three blockhouses, the building parties being sniped for some time +until a detachment of the regiment under Captain Fetherstonhaugh and +Lieutenant Maclear went out and drove the Boers away. By the 27th the +fort and posts were nearly completed, the enemy still hovering round +the neighbourhood, and next day the column returned to Krugersdorp, +meeting and dispersing a few Boers on the way back. + + [Footnote 20: 400 Royal Dublin Fusiliers, 100 Worcestershire + Regiment, 200 S.A.C., 220 Scottish Horse, two guns.] + +[Illustration: A Blockhouse.] + +On June 3rd Colonel Hicks took over command of the Krugersdorp +sub-district, as Colonel Groves was down with measles, as was also +Lieutenant Bradford--an extraordinary disease for a man of the +Colonel's time of life. + +On the 15th of June Colonel Groves handed over the Krugersdorp +sub-district to Brigadier-General Barker, R.E. Before leaving he said +some very nice things about the regiment, and we on our part were +sorry to lose him, as he had always had a good opinion of the +battalion, and had assisted the Colonel in his endeavours to put +Krugersdorp in a thorough state of defence. + +On the 27th Lieutenant Frankland, 2nd Royal Dublin Fusiliers, came to +see us. It will be remembered that he was taken prisoner at the very +beginning of the war in the armoured-train disaster. Since the capture +of Pretoria he had been occupied on the line of communications. He +told us that Lieutenant Le Mesurier had probably never got over the +exposure to which he was subjected during his escape from Pretoria and +on his long march to Delagoa Bay, as he no sooner got over one attack +of fever than he was down with another. He also gave us an account of +the escape, which was a most gallant affair, and in the light of what +has since happened to the only other officers who escaped--Captain +Haldane and Mr. Winston Churchill--it seems hard luck that Le Mesurier +should have received nothing. He added that Lieutenant Grimshaw had +been attached to the Mounted Infantry since the relief, and that +Captain Lonsdale had got into the Staff College. + +On July 1st two convoys went out, one under Major English and the +other under Captain Fetherstonhaugh, not returning until the 6th. The +remainder of the month brought forth nothing novel, however, and was +spent in strengthening posts and escorting convoys. + +August also passed uneventfully, but on September 16th Colonel Hicks +was given command of a mixed force some 1000 strong, 170 of whom +belonged to the regiment, with orders to move along through the same +old Gatsrand country, visit posts, burn farms, collect cattle, &c., +&c. He marched accordingly, but met with little opposition until well +inside the hilly country, where some sniping took place. After a +fortnight's trek he arrived in Pochefstroom, where he found General +Willson, who informed him that he was to succeed General Barker in +command of the Krugersdorp sub-district. He returned to that place on +the 30th, only to find a wire ordering him to go back for the present +to his column and to move to a place on the Vaal south of Pochefstroom +and turn out a Boer force which was occasioning considerable trouble. +Colonel Hicks by a rapid march anticipated the Boers at a pass leading +into this valley, their commander, George Hall, afterwards declaring +that this step saved us a hundred men, as he had determined to hold +the pass till the last. + +On October 5th he encountered a force of Boers who were prepared to +dispute the ownership of some cattle with him, but he had little +difficulty in convincing them that under the circumstances might was +undoubtedly right. On the 6th the seven-pounder gun lost by the S.A.C. +was recovered, and George Hall, a prominent Boer leader, captured. The +Colonel induced him to send a letter out to his commando advising them +to give in, which resulted in twenty-two of them surrendering at +Pochefstroom a few days later. In addition to this the column captured +about fifteen prisoners and brought or sent in very large quantities +of stock, mealies, cattle, &c. The Colonel got back to Krugersdorp on +the 12th, having returned by train to take over his command. + +Lieutenants Frankland and Weldon of ours were present at the fight at +Bakenlaagte, when Colonel Benson was killed, and had a hot time of it. +Our mounted infantry lost two killed and six wounded. The following +description is supplied by Lieutenant Weldon:-- + + +THE ROYAL DUBLIN FUSILIERS MOUNTED INFANTRY AT BAKENLAAGTE. + +On the afternoon preceding the move from Zwakfontein, where Colonel +Benson's column was camped, I was ordered to escort Lieutenant Biggs, +R.E., to a drift some miles away on the road to Bakenlaagte: this we +accomplished, bringing back one prisoner, whom we took near the drift. +At daybreak on the following morning our outposts were attacked before +the column had moved out of camp, and the rearguard action commenced. +Our mounted infantry formed the right and left flank guards to the +light transport, the right under Lieutenant Grimshaw, and the left +under Lieutenants Frankland and Weldon. The enemy did not pay much +attention to us at first, but after going a little way I galloped with +my section to take possession of a small kopje which commanded the +route. The Boers made a simultaneous dash for it, resulting in a +spirited race, in which we proved victors, having been expedited on +the way by two 'belts' from our own pompom. On gaining the hill we at +once poured a heavy fire into our opponents, who withdrew. In the +meantime considerable difficulty was experienced in getting the +transport over the drift, which gave the Boers time to get round us. +Eventually, however, most of it was got across and the march resumed. +On nearing camp our mounted infantry closed in a bit, when we were +suddenly fired on from a farmhouse flying the Red Cross flag, and +sustained five or six casualties. We were detailed to a section of the +defence of Bakenlaagte, which was practically surrounded. We lay down +on the slopes with our heads downhill, and kept the enemy well away, +taking the opportunity to improvise some sort of head-cover whenever +their fire slackened. Although we fully expected an attack in the +night, or at dawn, none was made, there being no sign of the enemy +next day. + + KENNETH WELDON. + +On December 6th Captain Romer took over the appointment of C.S.O., +Krugersdorp Sub-District, from our old friend, Captain Hart, who was +appointed to General Knox's staff. We were very sorry to lose him, as +from first to last he had done his best to oblige all, and during his +term of office made friends with everybody. + +On the 9th Lieutenant Britton and fifty men of the regiment proceeded +to Middelvlei to relieve a party of the Border regiment. + +On the 17th Lieutenant Robinson had to perform the +unpleasant duty of carrying out the sentence of death on a Boer +prisoner, who had been tried and condemned for shooting three of our +men after having surrendered. + +General Cooper arrived on the 19th, to say good-bye to the regiment, +as he was on his way home. He brought the very welcome intelligence +that we were shortly to be relieved, but of course this was only made +known to the Colonel at the time. + +Lieutenant Renny, who had been A.D.C. to General Cooper, rejoined on +the 27th, and brought further rumours to the effect that the regiment +was shortly to leave the country, and as orders had come to get in all +our employed men, and men from forts, blockhouses, and stations all +over the country, it began to look as if there was some truth in the +rumours. + +On the very last day of 1901 a severe thunderstorm passed right over +headquarters, two of our men being struck by lightning. + + +1902. + +On the first day of the New Year the order for the battalion to leave +South Africa arrived at the brigade office, its destination being +Gibraltar, the best of the Mediterranean stations; but next day a wire +arrived cancelling the move. + +On the 5th, however, Lord Kitchener passed through Krugersdorp, when +the Colonel saw him and ascertained that the regiment was to go to +Aden. + +At 8.30 p.m. on the 11th, part of the 1st Battalion Royal Dublin +Fusiliers, under Majors Shadforth and Gordon, Captains Swift and +Maclear, and Lieutenant Le Mesurier, with some other officers, arrived +to take over the defences from the 2nd Battalion. + +On the 14th, 300 of the 1st Battalion, under Major Gordon, proceeded +down the Pochefstroom line to take over the posts at present held by +us. + +[Illustration: KRUGERSDORP from Kilmarnock House. Shewing the Gold +mines Monument, Camps &c. From a sketch by Col. H. Tempest Hicks, +C.B.] + +On the 20th, Captains Kinsman and Rowlands (now serving in the S.A.C.) +arrived to say good-bye, and on the 23rd, Colonel Mills and Major +Bromilow, 1st Battalion, arrived. + +[Illustration: The 'Blue Caps' relieving the 'Old Toughs.'] + +On January 26th the regiment fell in for the last time at Kilmarnock, +and marched through Krugersdorp to the station. They had made many +friends during their stay, and the entire town, Boers as well as +Britons, turned out and enthusiastically cheered the corps as it +marched out of the town it had first marched into on June 19th, 1900. +The night was spent at the railway station, and a start made at 4 a.m. +on the 27th. A good view of Talana, from a distance of about five +miles, was obtained on the morning of the 28th, and it may easily be +imagined with what mixed feelings our thoughts flew back to that grey +morning of October 20th, 1899, and our well-loved comrades who had +given their lives to gain that gallant victory. Ladysmith was reached +about 1 p.m., and Maritzburg in the small hours of the 29th, which was +unfortunate, as the regiment had so many friends there. In spite of +the hour, however, a large number of the inhabitants were on the +platform with various small presents of cigarettes, &c., for the men. +Durban was reached a few hours later, when an illuminated address was +presented to the regiment, as well as refreshments to officers and +men, after which the battalion embarked on board the S.S. _Sicilian_ +for conveyance to Aden. + + + + +PART III. + + + + +CHAPTER I. + +THE ADEN HINTERLAND + + 'For this relief much thanks.' + + _Hamlet._ + + +The voyage from Durban to Aden was a welcome change, but quite +uneventful, with the exception of one sad event, the death of Sergeant +Pearson, who had embarked in a state of collapse, with little or no +prospect of recovery. He was a most promising N.C.O., and his father +had served in the regiment before him. Aden was reached on February +11th, 1902, and the battalion disembarked that afternoon. + +The year passed without any incident calling for remark, and on +October 1st the following notice appeared in battalion orders:--'It is +notified for general information that the battalion will leave Aden +for home in H.M.T. _Syria_, on or about the 11th of February, arriving +home on 24th February, 1903.' 'There is many a slip 'twixt the cup and +the lip,' however, and the old adage was once more to be exemplified. + +For some time past rumours of approaching trouble with regard to the +delimitation of the Turkish frontier in the Hinterland had been rife. +A force of Turkish troops was encamped near Dthala, about one hundred +and ten miles from Aden, and the Sultan of Dthala finally appealed to +the British for support. The result was that instead of going home, a +column was organized under the command of Brevet-Lieutenant-Colonel F. +P. English, 2nd Royal Dublin Fusiliers, to watch the frontier. + +The following is an extract from the Aden District Orders:-- + + +DISTRICT ORDERS BY LIEUTENANT-COLONEL H. T. HICKS, C.B., 2ND ROYAL +DUBLIN FUSILIERS, COMMANDING ADEN DISTRICT. + + No. 450. _Aden, Friday, December 12th, 1902._ + +In supersession of previous instructions, a column composed as under +will be held in readiness to proceed, on field-service scale, from +Aden into the interior of Arabia:-- + +In Command: Lieutenant-Colonel F. P. English, 2nd Royal Dublin +Fusiliers. + + Staff Officer: Major S. M. Edwards, D.S.O., 2nd Bombay Grenadiers. + + Supply and Transport Officer: Captain W. C. W. Harrison, Supply and + Transport Corps. + + Staff Medical Officer: Captain I. A. O. MacCarthy, Royal Army Medical + Corps. + + 2nd Royal Dublin Fusiliers (including section of maxim gun and twelve + signallers) 225 N.C.O.'s and men. + + No. 45 company, Royal Garrison Artillery + (with two seven-pounder + mountain guns and four nine-pounders) 80 " + + {25 horsemen. + Aden Troop {12 camelmen. + + 2nd Bombay Grenadiers A double company. + + Section A. No. 16 British Field Hospital. + " " 68 Native " " + +If the column is required to move out, they will be joined _en route_ +(if necessary) by a detachment of No. 3 company Bombay Sappers and +Miners. + + (By Order) C. H. U. PRICE, _Major_, + _D.A.A.G. Aden District_. + +The following officers of the regiment accompanied the +column:--Lieutenant Haskard, Lieutenant Wheeler, Lieutenant Smith, +Second Lieutenant Tredennick, Second Lieutenant W. F. Higginson. + +The following standing orders are quoted in full, as they give a good +idea of the scope of the operations, the difficulties likely to be met +with, and the precautions taken to overcome those difficulties:-- + + +COLUMN STANDING ORDERS BY LIEUTENANT-COLONEL F. P. ENGLISH, COMMANDING +ADEN COLUMN. + + _December 24th, 1902._ + +1. _Water._--It is anticipated that in all probability it will be +difficult to obtain good drinking water in sufficient quantities on +some of the marches into the interior. All ranks are therefore +cautioned to husband their drinking water as much as possible. Troops +and followers should be forbidden to draw water from the camel tanks +without permission from the officer in charge, and be cautioned +against drinking water from any but authorised sources, as some of the +water on the route is brackish and liable to bring on diarrhoea. + +Each unit will detail an officer or selected N.C. officer to be in +charge of the water camels, who will see that their supply is only +drawn on by order of the officer commanding, and that great care is +taken to prevent wastage. Whenever possible, water tanks and bottles +should be replenished; halts will be made for this purpose. +Water-bottles will be filled overnight. On arrival in camp, the +sources of water supply will be pointed out by the staff officer, and +sentries posted to see that the right people draw from the right +source. + +2. _Country and Inhabitants._--It should be remembered that the +country through which the column will march to Dthala is in the +British Protectorate, and that the inhabitants and their property must +not be interfered with. All supplies must be paid for, and foraging is +strictly forbidden. + +3. _Camps._--On arrival at the camping-places, the staff officer will +point out the sites for the camps of the different units to N.C.O.'s +detailed for that purpose. Officers commanding units will see that +their respective camping-grounds are cleared up before departure. + +4. _Transport._--On arrival in camp the transport in charge of each +unit will be picketed near its camp. + +5. _Order of March and Baggage._--Each unit will be complete in +itself, being followed by first line transport, viz:-- + +1. Signalling equipment. 2. First reserve ammunition. 3. Entrenching +tools. 4. Water camels. 5. Stretchers. 6. Great-coat camels. + +All followers not required with the above are to accompany the baggage +of their corps. The transport officer will act as baggage-master, and +all baggage-followers and baggage-guards will be under his orders. He +will see that the baggage moves off the ground in the following order, +viz:--Field hospital with its baggage in rear of fighting portion of +column; ammunition second reserve and ordnance park; staff baggage, +including supplies; regimental baggage with supplies in regimental +charge in order of march of unit; supply go-down; spare animals in +transport charge; rearguard. + + (By order) S. M. EDWARDS, _Major_, + _S.O. Aden Column_. + +_January 2nd, 1903, Sheikh Othman._--On January 2nd, 1903, the column +assembled at its rendezvous, Sheikh Othman, some ten miles from Aden. + +_January 3rd, Bir Sayed Ali Wells_ (2-1/2 _miles north of +Firush_.)--An early start was made, though as it was the first day's +march as a column it was not intended to go very far. The going, +moreover, was bad. It takes time to accustom oneself to marching +through deep sand, just as it takes time to acquire the 'heather-step' +in August. However, every one did well, the water was good and fairly +plentiful, though somewhat scattered, and the spirits of the little +force rose high at the possibilities of the prospect before them. + +_January 4th, Bir Salim._--The water at this camp was good, but +insufficient in quantity, necessitating the watering of the animals +some mile away. + +_January 5th, Shaika._--Another good march, the only incident of which +was the breaking down of the treasure-camel, an important item of the +force. + +_January 6th._--Owing to the necessity of making very early starts, +long before daybreak, Lieut.-Colonel English gave orders for bonfires +to be built overnight. These proved a great success, and enabled the +packing-up in the morning to be accomplished with facility and +dispatch. + +_January 7th, Alhaja._--This place was reached after a long and trying +march, but the water proved bad in quality and small in quantity. +Captain Harrison, however, luckily joined the force here with a good +supply from Aden, so all was well. + +_January 8th, Hadaba._--Another tiring march, but a spring in the +river-bed provided a plentiful supply of good water. As there were +1300 human beings and animals to provide for, it can easily be +understood that the problem of the water-supply was a never-ceasing +care to the staff. Its solution would have been still more difficult +had not the O.C. column arranged that the Bombay Grenadiers and native +hospital should march a day behind the rest of the force. + +_January 9th, Arrado._--A short march, and more water than was +expected. + +_January 10th, Dthala._--There was a difficult pass to ascend before +the column reached its objective; three camels were in consequence +lost _en route_, one falling over a precipice and two dying from +exhaustion. By 1 p.m., however, all difficulties had been overcome, +and the camping-ground was reached without opposition. + +_January 11th._--The remainder of the column arrived safely. + +[Illustration: Dthala Camp.] + +The rest of the month was occupied in putting the camp in a state of +defence, and the usual camp life. A force of 400 Turkish troops, with +four guns and twenty-five mounted men, was encamped only two miles off +at Jelala, and, as the condition of affairs, according to the +political officer, Colonel Wahab, was very acute, it was necessary to +observe the strictest precautions at all times. On January 30th the +detachment of the Royal Dublin Fusiliers was relieved by one from the +Hampshire Regiment, and marched off on their way back to Aden, under +command of Lieutenant Haskard. Colonel English did not return, having +received orders from Lord Kitchener to remain in command of the field +force, whose total strength now consisted of 818 officers and men, and +735 animals. + +[Illustration: Dthala Village from Camp.] + +_February 1st._--The situation now, however, became more serious. +Colonel English received a wire at 2.30 p.m. directing him to stop +Haskard's return march at Nobat-Dakim, and another at 6 p.m. informing +him that the whole of the Dublin Fusiliers were coming up, and also +half the 23rd Bombay Rifles. On February 10th instructions were +received to recall Haskard, who marched on the 12th, arriving at +Dthala on the 14th. On the 18th, headquarters and the remainder of the +Dublin Fusiliers left Aden, reaching Dthala on the 26th, when Colonel +Hicks took over command of the column, Lieut.-Colonel English assuming +command of the battalion. + +On March 22nd the Turks, however, evacuated Jelala, retiring behind +Kataba. Jelala was at once occupied by two companies of the Bombay +Rifles. Captain Rooth, Brevet-Major Carington Smith, Captains +Garvice, Grimshaw, and Taylor arrived on the same day. + +On April 27th a detachment, consisting of 100 Royal Dublin Fusiliers, +two guns 6th Mountain Battery, and 100 Bombay Rifles, with supply and +transport, the whole under the command of Lieutenant-Colonel English, +occupied Sanah, where they remained until July 11th, when they +returned to Dthala. + +On May 18th a detachment of 100 men of the Royal Dublin Fusiliers, +under Brevet-Major Smith, joined a column under command of Colonel +Scallon, C.I.E., D.S.O., 23rd Bombay Rifles, which proceeded on a +punitive expedition to Hardaba. They met with some slight opposition, +in which No. 7274 Private Martin, Royal Dublin Fusiliers, was slightly +wounded. The column returned to Dthala on May 25th, after suffering +considerably from heat. + +On August 31st a small flying column, under Major Delamain, left for +the Bunna River. Lieutenant Wheeler, Royal Dublin Fusiliers, acted as +Staff Officer to this force. On September 4th, Lieutenant Haskard, +Royal Dublin Fusiliers, with thirty-five men, went out to Delamain +with a convoy, returning on September 6th. + +Considerable trouble had for some time been caused by the depredations +of the Arab tribes, who had been killing camelmen, and generally +making themselves obnoxious on the line of communications. Information +was now received that these Arabs were beginning to get very excited, +and that they contemplated an attack on a post under Captain Shewell, +at Awabil. A force was immediately got together, and placed under the +command of Colonel English. He marched on September 13th, only to +find, however, on arrival that Shewell had beaten off the attack by +himself, with a loss of one man killed and five wounded. Colonel +English then returned to Dthala, which place he reached on September +19th. + +On October 5th the same officer took command of another column, to +punish the Dthanbari tribe and destroy their chief town, Naklain. The +column consisted of Royal Dublin Fusiliers, 4 companies; 6th Mountain +Battery, Royal Artillery, 1 section; Camel Battery, 2 guns; Aden +Troop, 17 sowars; Bombay Grenadiers, 1 double company; 23rd Bombay +Rifles, 23 men. + +[Illustration: A Frontier Tower. Abdali Country.] + +Colonel English arrived before Naklain at 8.25 a.m. on October 7th, +after pushing back the enemy, who disputed the passage of a difficult +gorge for some time. He then proceeded to destroy the place, and at +11.15 a.m. started on his return march. The enemy clung to his flanks, +and kept up a long-range fire until 2.30 p.m., when he repassed the +gorge mentioned above. His casualties consisted of one killed (No. +5710 Private Andrew Keegan), and six wounded, while there were in +addition six cases of sunstroke. The column did not return to Dthala, +but marched straight to Aden, where it arrived on October 14th. + +The remainder of the battalion left Dthala on October 10th, reaching +Aden on the 16th, where, on October 24th, it embarked on the transport +_Soudan_ for home. + +For his services in the Aden Hinterland, Lieutenant-Colonel English +was awarded the D.S.O. It was never better earned. But no medal was +issued to the regiment, in spite of the fact that for ten months they +had been living under active service conditions, which necessitated +unceasing vigilance by day and night. It is true they had not suffered +many casualties, or seen much fighting, but as this was undoubtedly +due to the excellent manner in which the operations were conducted, +and to the precautions taken, it seemed a little hard that the coveted +distinction of a medal should be withheld, although the little +campaign is ranked in war services as active service. + +However, the experience and the knowledge of the country gained will +doubtless prove beneficial to all concerned, who still look back upon +Dthala with affection, and speak of it with regret. On the night after +Colonel English had dealt with the Dthanbari tribe, Major Carington +Smith, who was in command of a small detachment, after posting his +outposts was just thinking of retiring when he heard the sentries +challenge; this was immediately followed by a rush of horsemen, headed +by a most gorgeously dressed officer. Reining up almost at Smith's +feet he informed him that his master, a neighbouring potentate, +friendly to the English, had sent him and his men to assist in the +repulse of the bloodthirsty Dthanbari tribe, who might be expected to +attempt to rush the camp that night. Although not anticipating +anything of the kind, Major Smith was far too polite to say so, and +after thanking his allies, suggested that they should take up a line +of cossack posts in front of his outpost line. To this they +consented, but before leaving declared their earnest conviction that +an assault would be delivered. Shortly after midnight Smith was +awakened by a fiendish din. Grasping his sword with one hand and his +pistol with the other, he rushed out to meet the crisis. From every +direction his allies came galloping in as fast as their horses could +lay legs to the ground, while the detachment sprang to arms in a +second, fully expecting to be attacked by every Arab in the +Hinterland. Reining up his horse as before, the leader of the cavalry +once more saluted Smith, and made the following report: 'Sah, I have +honour to salute you, and inform your Honour that Dthanbari tribe have +not yet arrived.' + +The following description of the action at Naklain appeared in the +home press:-- + + +'AN ARAB DRIVE.' + +'HOT FIGHTING IN THE ADEN HINTERLAND. + +'The expedition, under Brevet-Lieutenant-Colonel English, was sent out +to destroy the chief village and crops of the tribe Naklain, as +punishment for the shooting of Government camels and the looting of +his Majesty's mails. The tribe is very warlike, and their country had +never hitherto been penetrated. + +'After leaving As Suk camp, the British column began to wind among the +mountains, which rise very abruptly from the plain, and, as they met +with no opposition for a considerable time, they began to think there +would be no resistance. Suddenly, without warning of any sort, a +ragged volley was opened on the advance-guard, apparently from some +very broken ground, fifty to a hundred yards in front. + +'This seemed to be a prearranged signal, for from the hills on both +flanks the firing was taken up, the enemy constantly changing their +positions after firing. The guns were brought into action almost at +once, and the infantry, extending at the double, soon covered a wide +front and swept along the hills parallel to the advance. + + +'MOVING FORWARD. + +'After the surrounding hills had been shelled, the whole column moved +forward, the infantry pushing the enemy back step by step until the +village of Naklain was reached. While parties of men were told off to +keep down the enemy's fire from points of vantage, others proceeded to +blow up the houses with gun-cotton, and the more inaccessible houses +were shelled. + +'The crops were then destroyed by the men with their bayonets and +swords. There was a fierce fire while this was proceeding, the enemy +evidently not having expected such a reprisal. The work having been +completed, the arduous retirement commenced, the enemy following the +force up step by step the whole way back, at one time coming to +comparatively close quarters and necessitating a most careful +management of the rearguard. + +'As Suk was reached after a trying march of twenty miles, the troops +being under fire most of the time, with scarcely any water and exposed +to a burning sun. The British casualties were seven men of the Dublin +Fusiliers wounded (one since dead) and one native and one gunner +slightly wounded.' + +[Illustration: 2nd Lieut. H. St. G. S. Scott; 2nd Lieut. B. Maclear; +2nd Lieut. E. St. G. Smith; 2nd Lieut. J. P. Tredennick. + +Bt.-Major E. Fetherstonhaugh; Lieut. A. H. D. Britton; Lieut. and +Qr.-mr. Burke; Major S. G. Bird, D.S.O.; Lieut. Haskard; Lieut. +Wheeler; 2nd Lieut. R. F. B. Knox; 2nd Lieut. J. P. B. Robinson; 2nd +Lieut. A. W. Newton. + +Lieut. C. Garvice, D.S.O.; Capt. G. N. Cory, D.S.O.; Capt. M. Lowndes; +Lieut.-Col. H. T. Hicks, C.B.; Lieut. L. F. Renny; Capt. H. W. +Higginson; 2nd Lieut. E. F. E. Seymour; Lieut. A. de B. W. W. Bradford +(absent). + +Officers of the 2nd Battalion Royal Dublin Fusiliers who embarked for +Aden.] + + + + +CHAPTER II. + +THE RETURN HOME AND RECEPTION. + + 'I must to England. + I pray you give me leave.' + + _Hamlet._ + + +Early in October, 1903, the 2nd Battalion at length heard the good +news that the date of their departure from Aden had been definitely +fixed, and on the 23rd of the month it sailed in the s.s. _Soudan_, +arriving at Queenstown late in the evening of November 9th. The tour +of foreign service had lasted for twenty years all but two months, and +only one man in the whole battalion had seen it through from start to +finish without coming home, the present quartermaster, Lieutenant J. +Burke. + +The 2nd Battalion Royal Dublin Fusiliers left England for Gibraltar on +January 9th, 1884, and in February, 1885, proceeded to Egypt, where it +was quartered first at Ramleh, and later on at Cairo. Early in 1886 +the battalion went to India, headquarters being stationed successively +at Poona, Nasirabad, Karachi, Quetta, and Bombay. + +In May, 1897, it was suddenly ordered to South Africa, and quartered +at Maritzburg, as already stated in the opening chapter. + +The details were at Buttevant, County Cork, and thither the battalion +proceeded on their arrival in Ireland. + +Just two days prior to the arrival home of the 2nd Battalion the +regiment had been honoured by having appointed as its Colonel-in-Chief +Field-Marshal H.R.H. A. W. S. A. Duke of Connaught and Strathearn, +K.G., K.P., K.T., G.C.B., G.C.M.G., G.C.I.E., G.C.V.O. + +On November 13th, 1903, the battalion proceeded to Dublin to attend a +public reception and also to receive their medals at the hands of +H.R.H. the Duke of Connaught. The following is the account of the +proceedings as published in the _Irish Times_ of November 14th, 1903, +to whom the thanks of the regiment are due for their kindness in +permitting its reproduction:-- + + +(_Extract from 'Irish Times,' Saturday, November 14th, 1903._) + +HOME-COMING OF THE ROYAL DUBLIN FUSILIERS. + +The officers, non-commissioned officers, and men of the 2nd Battalion +of the Royal Dublin Fusiliers may well feel proud of the reception +accorded them on their return to their native land and city after a +long and arduous service under the British flag in foreign lands. +There was quite a contest for places on the gallery in the great +Central Hall of the Royal Dublin Society's buildings at Ballsbridge to +see the heroes of a regiment which had gained undying laurels in +Burmah, India, and South Africa. Exceptional arrangements had been +made for the entertainment of the battalion at Ballsbridge, and the +reception committee, which had for its chairman the Earl of Meath, +must be congratulated on the manner in which they carried out the +entertainment and provided for the enjoyment of such a large number of +guests. The arrangement of the hall was admirable in every respect. At +the further end a slightly-raised daïs was placed and profusely +decorated with palms and evergreens, and immediately behind the chair +subsequently occupied by H.R.H. the Duke of Connaught was the +regimental emblem introducing the figures of an elephant and a tiger; +the former bringing to mind the doughty deeds of the Dublin Fusiliers +in Burmah and the latter their equally splendid record on the historic +field of Plassey. At the back was the regimental motto, _Spectamur +Agendo_, and the roof and gallery railings were handsomely draped with +red, green, and blue muslin, while the names of the various +engagements in which the men took part were prominently displayed. On +the right-hand side of the hall four long rows of tables were placed, +handsomely prepared for the dinner, while the centre of the building +facing the daïs was kept clear for the men to be drawn up in proper +formation to receive H.R.H. the Duke of Connaught. The spacious +galleries reserved for ticket-holders were crowded long before the +hour fixed for the ceremony, 12.30 o'clock. Shortly before 10 o'clock +a large number of reservists of the battalion, about 250, and some +reservists from other battalions of the regiment assembled at the +Marshalsea Barracks, and under the command of Captain Perreau, Royal +Dublin Fusiliers, Adjutant 5th Battalion, and Major Baker, D.S.O., +marched viâ Thomas Street, Cork Hill, Dame Street, Nassau Street, +Merrion Square North, Lower Mount Street, and Northumberland Road to +Ballsbridge. The men were dressed in civilian clothes, but wore their +medals and other decorations, and many showed by their appearance that +they, too, had played no insignificant part in the recent campaign. +They were accompanied by the massed bands of the 3rd, 4th, and 5th +Battalions Royal Dublin Fusiliers. The 2nd Battalion of the regiment +arrived from Buttevant by train at the Ballsbridge siding at 11.30 +a.m., and marched across the roadway into the Royal Dublin Society's +premises. A great crowd of people watched the men detraining, and +several hearty rounds of cheering greeted their appearance. The men +looked in splendid form as they defiled into the main hall and took up +the positions allotted to them. It was at first stated that the +strength comprised 25 officers, 2 warrant officers, 8 staff sergeants, +54 sergeants, and 528 rank and file; but the figures given yesterday +were 18 officers and 523 rank and file. Be the numbers as they may, +the appearance of the men thoroughly maintained the regimental +nickname of 'The Old Toughs.' Hardy, wiry warriors they +looked--thoroughly capable of accomplishing the daring and courageous +deeds which have covered the Dublin Fusiliers with special glory. It +is worthy of note that the majority of the non-commissioned officers +served through the South African campaign from the Battle of Dundee, +and that Lieutenant and Quartermaster Burke is the only remaining one +who left England with the battalion nineteen years ago. The officers +and men of the battalion were dressed in general service (khaki) +uniform, and carried their rifles and bayonets. They also wore Indian +helmets with puggarees, while the mounted company were attired in the +clothing suited to this, particular branch of the Service. They were +under the command of Colonel Tempest Hicks, C.B., Colonel English, and +Major Fetherstonhaugh, and when they marched into the hall and took up +position on either side, in line of half-battalions, they were greeted +with loud cheering, and when the order 'stand at ease' was made a +number of reservists and other friends rushed forward to exchange +greetings with former acquaintances. There was nearly a half-hour's +wait for the arrival of the Duke of Connaught, and in the interval the +bands of the Fusiliers and Warwickshire Regiment played some +selections. At a quarter-past twelve precisely, H.R.H. the Commander +of the Forces in Ireland arrived in an open carriage, accompanied by +H.R.H. the Duchess of Connaught and Princesses Margaret and Patricia +of Connaught, and attended by the following staff: Major-General Sir +William Knox, Major-General Sir John Maxwell, Colonel Hammersley, +Colonel Davidson, Colonel Dickinson, Colonel Congreve, V.C., and Major +Murray, A.D.C. + +[Illustration: Homeward bound at last after twenty Years' Foreign +Service.] + +The Duke, who wore the uniform of a Field-Marshal, was received by the +following members of the reception committee: Major Domville, D.L. +(vice-chairman), Mr. Justice Ross, Sir Wm. Thompson, Sir Charles +Cameron, C.B., Major Davidson Houston, Colonel Finlay, Colonel +Davidson, Major-General Sir Gerald Morton, K.C.B., Colonel Paterson, +Colonel G. T. Plunkett, C.B., Captain Lewis Riall, D.L., Colonel +Vernon, D.L., and Alderman Harris. + +Major-General Vetch, commanding the Dublin District, was accompanied +by Major Lowndes, A.D.C., Major Gilles (Brigade-Major), and Captain +Fox Strangways (Garrison Adjutant). A guard of honour of the Royal +Irish Rifles was drawn up outside the Show Buildings, and the band of +the regiment played the National Anthem when the Duke and Duchess of +Connaught drove up. + +Their Royal Highnesses having taken seats on the daïs, the Duke of +Connaught, who spoke in a tone which was easily heard in all parts of +the building, said, 'Colonel Hicks, officers and non-commissioned +officers, and men of the 2nd Battalion Royal Dublin Fusiliers, allow me +to welcome you most warmly home again to old Ireland after your very +arduous four years' service. I am sure I am only the mouthpiece, not +only of the General Officer Commanding this Army Corps, but also of +every loyal Irishman, when I assure you how warm and how hearty is the +greeting that is given you on your return to your native country, and +especially in this capital of Ireland. You are an old and distinguished +regiment; raised originally for service in India as the Royal Madras and +Royal Bombay Fusiliers. During the time that you bore this name and the +numbers 102 and 103, you took a very honourable part in all those great +battles that assured us the conquest of India. Now, since the year 1881, +you have become closely associated not only with Ireland, but with its +capital. Your first service since you became the Royal Dublin Fusiliers +was in South Africa, and through the arduous services in that country +you, men, whom I have now the honour of addressing, nobly maintained the +traditions of those fine soldiers who went before you. When you were +sent from India amongst the first reinforcements of the troops in South +Africa in 1897--soon afterwards the war broke out--you took a leading +part in the Battle of Talana. You then went back to Ladysmith, and after +falling back across the Tugela, you were attached to the army of Sir +Redvers Buller, in the Irish Brigade under General Hart. During all +those weary months on the Tugela, you took a leading part in every +action that took place, and you distinguished yourselves so much at +Pieter's Hill that when the relief force of Ladysmith marched in, the +general officer commanding gave you the post of honour, and you led the +troops that marched into Ladysmith. (Cheers.) Men of the Royal Dublin +Fusiliers, this occasion is one of especial pleasure and satisfaction to +myself, as His Majesty has done me the great honour of appointing me +your Colonel-in-Chief--(cheers)--and I hope that in this you will +recognise not only His Majesty's high appreciation of the distinguished +services you have rendered to his throne and his empire, but also that +you will see in it his wish that you will have some special mark of +distinction when he has made me, his only brother, Colonel-in-Chief of +the regiment. I hope I shall long have the honour to be your +Colonel-in-Chief, and to have a connection with a regiment of which +every Irishman feels so proud.' (Cheers.) + +Colonel G. T. Plunkett, C.B., read the following letter, received from +the Earl of Meath, H.M.L. for the County and City of Dublin:-- + + + '_Ottershaw, Chertsey._ + +'MY DEAR PLUNKETT,--Owing to absence from Ireland, I shall be unable +to be present in person with you on the 13th, when you and the +Reception Committee entertain the 2nd Battalion Royal Dublin Fusiliers +on their return home from foreign service, but I shall be with you in +spirit, and I hope you will let the officers and men know how sorry I +am that I cannot personally welcome them on their return to Ireland, +and to Dublin, after so many years spent abroad in the service of +their Sovereign. + +'The fame which the regiment has acquired by daring deeds of valour +performed during the late war has travelled far beyond the shores of +Ireland. Military men the world over, and all who have studied the +South African War, have heard of the famous deeds of the Dublin +Fusiliers. The citizens of the Metropolitan county and City are proud +of the men who, mindful of their origin, have known how to make the +name of Dublin to be honoured in all lands. Both officers and men have +done their duty to King and country, and we, their Irish brothers, +accord them a hearty welcome on their return to the dear land of their +birth. + +'Believe me, yours sincerely, + + 'MEATH, + + '_H.M.L. for County and City of Dublin_.' + +The Duke of Connaught then said: 'I have been particularly requested +by His Excellency the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland to assure you of his +warm welcome. He is away in England at present, but he has sent his +military secretary and senior A.D.C. to represent him, and to give you +his warmest wishes.' (Applause.) + +His Royal Highness then distributed the medals and other distinctions +to the officers and rank-and-file of the battalion who were entitled +to them. The following officers were decorated, the Duke cordially +shaking hands with each recipient:--Colonel Hicks, C.B., Colonel +English, Major Fetherstonhaugh, Major Carington Smith, Captain H. W. +Higginson, Captain Cory, D.S.O., Captain Garvice, D.S.O., Lieutenants +Grimshaw, D.S.O., Haskard, Britton, Wheeler, St. George Smith, Knox, +Tredennick, Seymour, Robinson, and Maclear, and Lieutenant and +Quartermaster J. Burke and Sergeant-Major Sheridan. His Royal Highness +pinned distinguished-conduct medals on the breasts of Lieutenant and +Quartermaster J. Burke, Corporal Connell, and Privates C. N. Wallace, +M. Farrelly, and M. Kavanagh, each recipient being loudly cheered. + +The following officers who had served with the battalion during the +war, but who had previously come home through wounds or sickness, +availed themselves of the opportunity to have their medals presented +to them by the Duke:--Captain Downing, Captain Dibley, Lieutenants +Renny, Supple, Newton, Weldon, Molony, Armstrong, and Cooper. The +distribution of the medals occupied over half an hour. + +When this important portion of the programme had been completed, the +order to 'stack arms' was given, and the men filed into their seats at +the four long rows of tables which had been admirably prepared for the +dinner by the caterers, Messrs. Mills & Co., of Merrion Row. Messrs. +Mills & Co. had a picked staff of forty-two persons to carve the +various dishes and wait at table. Dinner consisted of several courses, +with selected fruit; while in addition to liberal supplies of ale, +stout, and mineral waters, 300 bottles of champagne were placed +before the honoured guests. This last-mentioned luxury was the +generous gift of Messrs. Perrier-Jouet & Co., of Epernay, the famous +wine shippers, who kindly and thoughtfully presented this supply of +their extra-quality wine through their Irish representatives, Messrs. +James McCullagh, Son & Co., 34 Lower Abbey Street. When the guests +were seated, H.R.H. the Duke of Connaught, the Duchess of Connaught, +and the Princesses Margaret and Patricia of Connaught, with the +Reception Committee, a number of ladies, and a resplendent military +_entourage_, walked slowly down between the rows of tables, stopping +to speak a few gracious words to the non-commissioned officers and men +who had made themselves conspicuous even amongst their comrades for +valorous deeds and unflinching devotion to duty. Many of the +reservists who sat beside former 'chums' at table, and on whose less +warlike garb, the ordinary civilian clothes, medals and clasps shone +out in high relief, also received kindly congratulations from the +Commander-in-Chief in Ireland. Meanwhile the string band of the 21st +Lancers, who occupied a good position on the gallery, played a +beautiful selection of airs, principally Irish, not the least being +'The Wearin' of the Green.' The Royal party on walking down the centre +of the hall was enthusiastically cheered, and the Duchess and her +daughters left the building at about half-past one. + +The Duke remained for lunch with his staff and the officers of the +battalion. The health of His Majesty the King was drunk amidst much +enthusiasm. After dinner, cigars and cigarettes and tobacco were +liberally distributed, officers of the regiment performing most of +this agreeable duty, and each man was presented with a nice briar pipe +before leaving, the gift of Messrs. Lalor & Co., of Nassau Street. + +In the interval between dinner and leaving the premises at +Ballsbridge, many friends and relatives of the members of the +battalion were afforded an opportunity for a pleasant chat, and most +of these accompanied the men in their subsequent march through the +city. One figure attracted much attention during the afternoon--a +sturdy soldier who formerly belonged to the Royal Dublins, and who +appeared in the quaint, and, in this country, unusual uniform of a +West African regiment. It would be certainly less than unwarranted to +refer to the general appearance and behaviour of the men. Clean, +smart, soldierly fellows, they all appeared to be impressed with the +one idea--that they belonged to a crack corps with unrivalled +traditions to maintain. + +The departure from Ballsbridge occasioned unbounded enthusiasm on the +part of thousands of eager spectators, who, unaware of the exact time +at which the entertainment would finish, had patiently waited for a +couple of hours to catch a glimpse of the 'Old Toughs.' The main +thoroughfare from the Show-grounds to Pembroke Road was lined by +detachments of the Warwickshire, East Lancashire (with band), and +Middlesex Regiments, while a guard of honour of the Royal Irish Rifles +(with their band) was stationed opposite the main entrance. About 3.15 +o'clock H.R.H. the Duke of Connaught, preceded by two mounted +policemen and an escort of the 21st Lancers, drove out, and passed +over the route to be traversed immediately afterwards by the +Fusiliers. The Field-Marshal was loudly cheered as he proceeded to the +Royal Hospital, and repeatedly returned the cordial salutations of the +large crowds who were assembled at different points. The appearance of +the fêted warriors was the signal for an astonishing ovation at +Ballsbridge. + +The scene was a striking one. A splendid body of the 21st Lancers, +numbering fifty, occupied first place in the procession, and these +were followed by four or five bands and the heroes of the day. +Another detachment of fifty Lancers brought up the rear, and a number +of men of the same dashing cavalry regiment marched on either side of +the advancing column. Many relatives and friends of the Fusiliers had +now an opportunity to exchange greetings, and strict army discipline +was at an end. There was nothing reprehensible, however, and the +progress to Kingsbridge was of the most orderly and praiseworthy +description. + +The route followed was the main road from Ballsbridge--Pembroke Road, +Upper Baggot Street, Lower Baggot Street, Merrion Row, Stephen's +Green, North Grafton Street, College Green, Dame Street, Parliament +Street, and the south lines of quays to Kingsbridge. At different +points, like Baggot Street Bridge, Stephen's Green, and Grafton +Street, the reception was of a most cordial nature, while an immense +crowd in College Green raised deafening cheers as the sturdy warriors +marched past. Enthusiasm reached its height when the tattered colours +of the battalion, borne by two stalwart young ensigns, came into view. +The officers and men appeared delighted with the cordial reception +extended to them on all sides. At Grattan Bridge the band of the +Seaforth Highlanders, which had already delighted a large concourse of +people with some choice selections, struck up a lively air as Dublin's +guests moved past, while a splendid send-off characterised the +entrainment of the battalion at Kingsbridge for Buttevant, co. Cork. + +The Railway Company made excellent arrangements for the men, who, +considering their long day and its happy experiences, went through the +ordeal in first-class style. After all, one could scarcely expect less +from soldiers who carry six or seven, or even nine clasps, on their +medal ribbons. + +It is right to mention that a number of members of the Army Veterans +Association, decorated with their medals and other distinctions, +visited Ballsbridge, and cordially congratulated the Fusiliers on +their return from foreign service. + +On reaching Buttevant, the men will be supplied with new clothing and +granted a general furlough. + + * * * * * + +Shortly after the reception the battalion was once again supplied with +their home service full-dress head-gear--the busby, and it was with +much gratification that the men wore their new busby hackle for the +first time. This distinction was granted in 1902, when by Army Order +57 it was directed that the Royal Dublin Fusiliers should wear a blue +and green hackle in their busbies: that for the officers to be blue +and green, eight inches long, and that for the non-commissioned +officers and men a similar but shorter one, in recognition of their +services during the war in South Africa. In explanation of the colours +of the hackle it may be stated that blue is the distinguishing colour +of the 1st Battalion ('Blue Caps'), and green that of the 2nd +Battalion ('Old Toughs'). + +On November 27th, 1903, the regiment was honoured by having appointed +as its Colonel Major-General W. F. Vetch, C.V.O., commanding Dublin +Garrison, _vice_ Lieut.-General Sir John Blick Spurgin, K.C.B., +G.C.S.I., deceased. + +General Vetch joined the 102nd Foot on March 8th, 1864, was promoted +Lieutenant, July 1st, 1869; Captain, May 22nd, 1875; Major, June 18th, +1881; Lieut.-Colonel, June 7th, 1884; Colonel, June 7th, 1888; and +Major-General, April 1st, 1900. + +After a quiet and uneventful stay at Buttevant for nearly three years +the battalion proceeded to Fermoy on September 14th, 1906, and took up +quarters in the New Barracks at that station. + + + + +CHAPTER III. + +THE MEMORIAL ARCH. + + 'Even so great men great losses should endure.' + + _Julius Cæsar._ + + +On August 19th, 1907, the memorial arch to the officers and men who +fell in South Africa was opened by H.R.H. the Duke of Connaught, +Colonel-in-Chief the Royal Dublin Fusiliers. The 2nd Battalion was +marching from Kilworth Camp to Ballyvonaire Camp on that day, but the +authorities very kindly did everything in their power to make the +ceremony a success, and Colonel English, Major Bromilow, and every one +of any importance who had taken part in the war proceeded to Dublin by +special train on the morning of the 19th, while the Depôt and Militia +officers also assembled in good force. + +The officers and men of the regiment were very sensible of the honour +shown to them by H.R.H. the Duke of Connaught in personally opening +the arch, and so identifying himself with it and them, while every +Dublin Fusilier present felt an added pride in himself and his uniform +as he saw it worn by His Royal Highness the brother of His Majesty the +King. + +The following account of the ceremony is taken from the Dublin _Daily +Express_, to whose proprietors our thanks are due for permission to +reproduce it:-- + + + 'ROYAL DUBLIN FUSILIERS' MEMORIAL IN STEPHEN'S GREEN + INAUGURATED BY THE DUKE OF CONNAUGHT. + LUNCHEON AT SHELBOURNE HOTEL. + +'To-day the Royal Dublin Fusiliers' Memorial to the officers and men +of the regiment who fell in South Africa was formally inaugurated by +the Duke of Connaught, Inspector-General of the British Army. His +Royal Highness arrived at Amiens Street terminus by the early morning +train from Belfast, and was received by the Viceroy's Military +Secretary. The Duke of Connaught at once drove to the Shelbourne +Hotel, where he was received by the following members of the Memorial +Committee:--The Earl of Meath, President; the Earl of Drogheda, Mr. +Justice Ross, Colonel Vernon, Sir Frederick Shaw, Bart., D.S.O., Sir +Maurice Dockrell, Mr. Richard Dowse, Colonel Gore-Lindsay, Colonel +Finlay, Sir Thomas Drew, R.H.A., Sir Charles Cameron, C.B., &c. + +'Lunch was served immediately afterwards, and was presided over by the +Earl of Meath, K.P., who was supported on his right by H.R.H. the Duke +of Connaught, K.P., the Earl of Drogheda, Major-General Vetch, C.V.O., +and Mr. Justice Ross, P.C.; and on his left by Lord Grenfell, G.C.B., +Commander-in-Chief of the Forces in Ireland; Viscount Iveagh, K.P.; +Major-General Sir Herbert Plumer, K.C.B.; Lieut.-Colonel Sir F. Shaw, +D.S.O., 5th Royal Dublin Fusiliers. There were also present:-- + +'Sir G. Holmes, K.C.V.O.; Col. Vernon, D.L.; Brig.-Gen. Hammersley, +Col. Lindsay, D.L.; Brig.-Gen. Monro, C.B.; Col. R. St. L. Moore, +C.B.; Lieut.-Col. Hackett, 4th R.D.F.; Sir Daniel Hegarty, Captain +Seymour, A.D.C.; Sir T. Myles, Major D. C. Courtney, Alderman Cotton, +D.L.; Mr. Gerald M'Guinness, Col. Doyly Battley, Capt. Cameron, Dr. +Wheeler, Mr. G. S. Dockrell, Capt. Halahan, Col. Chapman, 1st R.D.F.; +Sir Horace Plunkett, P.C.; Col. Finlay, Sir John Arnott, Brig.-Gen. +Cooper, C.B.; Mr. G. A. Stevenson, M.O.; Col. Hutcheson Poe, D.L.; Mr. +P. Hanson, Sir John Moore, Major Carington Smith, Major Domville, +D.L.; Col. Lyster Smythe, D.L., A.D.C.; Major Skeet, Capt. Garvice, +Capt. Thompson, Mr. H. M. Dockrell, Mr. Wm. Graham, Mr. John Laverty, +Col. F. P. English, D.S.O., 2nd R.D.F.; Mr. R. Dowse, B.L.; Major-Gen. +Sir John Maxwell, K.C.B.; T. A. O'Farrell, J.P.; Surg.-Gen. Edge, +C.B.; Col. the Hon. E. Lawless, Col. O'Neill, 3rd R.D.F.; Sir W. +Watson, D.L.; Col. Colville Frankland, Major Lowndes, Mr. James F. +Darcy, D.L.; Mr. J. H. Pentland, R.H.A.; Mr. Key, A.D.C.; Mr. J. A. +Pigott, Mr. Robert Mitchell, Mr. R. H. A. M'Comas, Mr. Major Gorman, +Mr. George Healy, Mr. R. Tyson, Mr. R. A. Falconer, Major-Gen. +Bunbury, C.B.; Sir Maurice Dockrell, Brig.-Gen. Mills, C.B.; Sir John +Ross of Bladensburg, K.C.B.; Sir T. Drew, R.H.A.; Sir G. Moyers, D.L.; +the Hon. M. Ponsonby, A.D.C.; Sir William Thomson, Sir C. Cameron, +C.B.; Sir L. Ormsby, Col. D. Browne, Mr. R. H. Jephson, Major Knight, +Mr. A. E. Kennedy, Mr. W. A. Shea, Mr. Milward Jones, Mr. F. J. Usher, +Mr. J. H. Reid, Mr. Henry L. Barnardo, Mr. R. P. Jephson. + +'After lunch, which was admirably served, + +'The Earl of Meath arose, amidst applause, and said:--"The toast list +to-day is short, and contains but one toast, that of The King +(applause). His Majesty King Edward occupies a position amongst rulers +which is absolutely unique. He not only rules over twelve million +square miles, one-sixth of the earth's surface, and governs four +hundred millions of subjects of all races, colours, creeds, and +conditions of civilisation, from the most advanced to the most +backward, but he is a Monarch whose personal qualities are of so +distinguished an order that he has come to be regarded as a statesman +of the first rank (applause). The world watches His Majesty's +movements with breathless interest. Under his masterful touch +international difficulties which seem insuperable are solved, +political sores are healed. His presence seems to breathe the spirit +of peace and of goodwill, so that when he undertakes a journey it +needs no strong imagination to picture to oneself the Angel of Peace +hovering over his footsteps with healing in her wings (applause). King +Edward is no stranger to Ireland; certainly not to Dublin (renewed +applause). We knew him and loved him as Prince of Wales, and our +affection for him has only increased since he became King, and since +we recognised that Ireland and the Irish are as dear to him as he is +to us (applause). We are an open-hearted race, and on each occasion +that he has visited these shores, his kindly, sympathetic, and genial +nature has captivated our hearts. He is just such a monarch as we love +(applause). May he be long spared to reign over us and may he often +grace this island with his genial and captivating presence." (Loud +applause.) + +'The toast was duly honoured, and the festive proceedings terminated. + + + 'INAUGURATION CEREMONY BY THE DUKE OF CONNAUGHT. + BRILLIANT FUNCTION. + +'Brilliant and strikingly picturesque was the ceremony of unveiling +the Royal Dublin Fusiliers' war memorial in St. Stephen's Green, which +took place at four o'clock this afternoon. The weather was, +fortunately, bright, although inclined to be showery, and no heavy +rain fell at any stage to mar the success of the interesting +proceedings, which were attended by a very large and distinguished +gathering. Long before the ceremony commenced, a great crowd had +assembled in the Green and its vicinity. + +[Illustration: The Memorial Arch, Dublin. + +Erected to the Memory of the Officers, N.C.O.'s. and Men of The Royal +Dublin Fusiliers. + +Opened by H.R.H. The Duke of Connaught, K.G., etc., Colonel-in-Chief + +The Royal Dublin Fusiliers, August 19th, 1907.] + +'The military arrangements were of a most elaborate nature, and +thoroughly in keeping with the occasion. The troops of the Dublin +Garrison and representative detachments of the Line and Militia +battalions of the Royal Dublin Fusiliers were drawn up in the vicinity +of the Memorial Arch, and presented a very imposing appearance. There +was also a representative gathering of ex-soldiers who had served in +the Royal Dublin Fusiliers during the South African war and of members +of the Veterans' Club, who were accommodated in special places +reserved for them on the outside of the arch. After the troops had +been drawn up, the massed bands of the 13th Infantry Brigade played +a number of pleasing selections whilst awaiting the arrival of H.R.H. +the Duke of Connaught. + +'The magnificent monument, which takes the form of a triumphal arch +spanning the north-west corner of St. Stephen's Green, was greatly +admired by the crowd. The noble archway is undoubtedly a most +beautiful and artistic ornament to the city. Twelve feet in width, it +springs from rusticated piers, each intersected by a pedestal and a +pair of pilasters supporting a Doric entablature. The frieze bears on +its four elevations the names in gold of the principal actions in the +South African War in which the regiment took part. The entablature is +surmounted by an Attic storey broken over the pilasters, and bearing +two inscription panels. The front keystone supports a bronze +cartouche, flanked by branches of bay bearing the arms of the +regiment. Within the arch appear the names of the gallant 212 who +perished in the war. + +'Loud cheers were raised when, at a quarter to four o'clock, +Field-Marshal H.R.H. the Duke of Connaught arrived on the scene and +was received with a Royal salute. He was accompanied by the Right Hon. +the Earl of Meath, President of the Memorial Committee; General the +Lord Grenfell, K.C.B.; Sir George Holmes, K.C.V.O.; the members of the +committee, and others who had attended the luncheon at the Shelbourne +Hotel. More cheers rose from the expectant gathering when, a few +minutes later, their Excellencies the Lord Lieutenant and the Countess +of Aberdeen arrived, and were received with a Royal salute. The flag +on the Memorial Arch was then half-masted, and the order was given for +the troops to "reverse arms" and "rest on their arms reversed." The +massed bands of the 13th Infantry Brigade played the "Dead March in +Saul," after which "Oft in the Stilly Night" was played by the band of +the 2nd Battalion Royal Dublin Fusiliers. The massed bugles of the +13th Infantry Brigade then sounded "The Last Post," and the flag on +the Memorial Arch was mast-headed. + +'His Excellency the Lord Lieutenant extended a hearty welcome to the +Duke of Connaught, and congratulated the Memorial Committee, and every +one connected with the undertaking, upon the successful manner in +which it had been carried out. + +'The Earl of Meath, in requesting his Royal Highness the Duke of +Connaught to open the gates of the archway, said:--"Your Royal +Highness, we meet to-day for the purpose of honouring the memory of +the gallant men belonging to the Royal Dublin Fusiliers who sacrificed +their lives for King and country in the late South African war. By the +aid of subscriptions raised throughout the city and county of Dublin +and its neighbourhood, a large sum of money has been collected, and I +trust that your Royal Highness will agree with the general opinion +that a very handsome and satisfactory memorial has been raised, worthy +of the heroes whose fame it is destined to perpetuate. As the only +surviving brother of the gracious and mighty Sovereign whose uniform +these heroes wore when they died in the defence of their country's +interests, and as Colonel of the regiment in which they so faithfully +served, it is fit and proper that you, Sir, should have been invited +to perform the ceremony of opening the gates of the arch erected to +their memory. We who have been actively concerned with the erection of +the memorial most sincerely and gratefully thank your Royal Highness +for the honour you have done the regiment by thus personally +identifying yourself with the effort to keep fresh in the minds of +their fellow-countrymen the gallant deeds performed by those heroes +whom to-day we delight to honour. Irish gallantry and Irish fidelity +to King and country are well known. Wherever British arms have +penetrated, there the record of Irish valour need not be sought in +brass or stone, but in the soil itself, which has been made +sacred to Erin's sons by the knowledge that it holds the mortal +remains of hearts which have been faithful to duty and to high ideals +of Irish valour even to the gates of death. But, sir, it may safely be +said that not in the Peninsula, nor in India--where this regiment +under its old title, in a hundred fights never knew the meaning of the +word defeat--did Irish soldiers ever cover themselves with greater +glory than did the Dublin Fusiliers in the battles of South +Africa--Talana, Colenso, Tugela Heights, Hart's Hill, Ladysmith, and +Laing's Nek. These glorious contests are commemorated on the memorial +arch which your Royal Highness will shortly declare open. Situated in +the centre of the Irish capital this memorial, recording the gallant +deeds of brave men, will be an ever-present reminder to coming +generations of the citizens of Dublin of the obligations of loyalty, +of faithfulness to duty and to honour which Ireland demands of all her +sons. I have the honour, sir, on behalf of the Dublin Fusilier +Memorial Committee, to ask your Royal Highness to declare the gates of +the archway to be open." + +'As his Royal Highness formally opened the gate, the massed bands +played the National Anthem. + +'Headed by H.R.H. the Duke of Connaught, the troops then marched +through the arch with bayonets fixed, the Royal Dublin Fusiliers +leading, and the other battalions following in regimental seniority, +headed by their bands. Loud cheers were raised as the soldiers passed +out into Grafton Street, and proceeded down that thoroughfare, which +was thickly lined on either side with spectators. At College Green the +troops separated, and marched off to their respective quarters. + + * * * * * + +'The memorial which was inaugurated to-day forms a handsome addition +to the ornamental architecture of the city. It stands in one of the +most prominent and most beautiful parts of the city, and is a striking +adornment to the main entrance to Stephen's Green Park. The luxuriant +trees and foliage of the park form a capital background to the fine +imposing arch, the design for which was suggested by Sir Thomas Drew, +composed entirely of Irish granite; the height of the memorial is +thirty-two feet six inches, and the breadth twenty-seven feet three +inches. The ornamental iron gates leading into the principal +carriage-drive of the park are cast out of metal taken from guns +captured by the British Army from enemies in the past, and suspended +over the keystone there will be an interesting trophy consisting of +the Crest and Arms of the regiment. In front a large millstone will +bear the inscription:-- + + FORTISSIMIS SUIS MILITIBUS + HOC MONUMENTUM + EBLANA DEDICAVIT. MCMVI.[21] + + [Footnote 21: 'To her brave soldiers Dublin has dedicated + this Monument. 1906.'] + +'In big letters in the frieze appear the names of the important +battles in which the battalions of the regiment took part, and on the +back of the arch the inscription:--"In memory of the officers, +non-commissioned officers, and men of the Royal Dublin Fusiliers who +died in the service of the country during the South African War, +1899-1902." + +'The Earl of Meath, H.M.L., President of the Memorial Committee, and +his colleagues, including the Earl of Drogheda, Sir Maurice Dockrell, +Sir Thomas Drew, Colonel Gore Lindsay, and Colonel Vernon, are to be +congratulated upon the successful result of their indefatigable +efforts. When the project was first mooted, it met with enthusiastic +support, and the necessary sum of 1800_l._ was quickly raised to cover +the cost of erection. + +'The plans were designed by Mr. Howard Pentland, of the Board of +Works, in consultation with Sir Thomas Drew, and Messrs. Laverty & +Son, Belfast, carried out the contract. + +'The losses of the 1st and 2nd Battalions of this famous regiment in +the Boer war totalled 31 officers and 655 non-commissioned officers +and men. The glorious and inspiring deeds performed by these two +battalions during the terrible engagements which led to the relief of +Ladysmith are still fresh in the memory of their proud countrymen. +Throughout the whole of the arduous campaign, indeed, the regiment +nobly upheld the finest tradition of the Irish soldier, and gained the +admiration and respect of friend and foe alike. The 5th Battalion +lost, in several minor engagements, two officers and ten men killed, +and eight wounded.' + + + + +EPILOGUE. + + +With the opening of the Memorial the curtain drops on the last scene +of the drama of the South African war, and the regiment's share in it. +To the large majority of those present the ceremony was probably +merely a spectacular entertainment, but its real significance was +borne fully home to us, even without the sight of more than one poor +woman, silently weeping from the re-opening of the never-healed wound +in her heart. For there is nothing truer than that a victory is only +less terrible than a defeat, and as the sad strains of the wailing +music fell on our ears, our thoughts flew back through the many happy +years of good-comradeship we had spent with the gallant friends whom +we have never ceased to mourn, and whose names will be treasured +memories as long as the regiment endures. + +But with the opening of the gates by our Colonel-in-Chief a fresh +chapter in the history of the regiment commenced, and all that remains +for us who share in the triumph of the present is to emulate in the +future the noble deeds of those who gave their lives in willing, +cheerful sacrifice for their sovereign, their country, and their +regiment. + + + + +THE END. + +[Illustration: The South African Memorial, Natal.] + + + + +APPENDIX + + +I. + +ROLL OF DEATH CASUALTIES. + +KILLED IN ACTION. + + No. Rank and Name. Place of Cause. Date. Remarks. + Death. + ----+-----------------+---------------+------------+--------+-------- + Capt. Weldon Talana Hill Killed in + action 20/10/99 + 5103 Pte. Cahill " " " + 5794 " Merrill " " " + 5933 " Crotty " " " + 5918 " Callaghan " " " + 5795 " Balfe Chieveley " 15/11/99 Armoured + Train + 5031 " Birney " " " " + 5546 " O'Shea Colenso " 1/11/99 While on + patrol, M.I. + Lieut. Henry " " 15/12/99 + 3441 Sgt. Hayes " " " + 4488 Pte. Smith " " " + 5930 " Sinnott " " " + 5123 " Broderick " " " + 5319 L.-Cpl. Coyne " " " + 5833 Pte. Dillon " " " + 4795 " Murphy " " " + 4380 " Doolan " " " + 4299 " McAlpine " " " + 5044 " Moore " " " + 4560 " Clifford " " " + 4838 " Flood " " " + 6287 L.-Cpl. Gibson " " " + 6134 Pte. Pearse " " " + 6044 L.-Cpl. Cathcart " " " + 4462 Pte. Murphy " " " + 6165 " Bennett " " " + 6297 " Campion " " " + 4679 " Bowen Potgieter's Drift " 8/2/00 + Capt. Hensley Venter's Spruit " 20/1/00 + 5668 L.-Sgt. Taylor " " " + Lt.-Col. Sitwell Hart's Hill " 24/2/00 + Capt. Maitland " " " + 4261 Cpl. Seymour " " " + 4871 Pte. White " " " + 5359 " Galbraith " " " + 6296 " Allen Pieter's Hill " 27/2/00 + 3303 " Timmins Hart's Hill " 24/2/00 Militia + 4th R.D.F. + 4012 " Armstrong " " " Militia + 5th R.D.F. + 2037 " Whelan " " " " + 2872 " Wade " " " " + 5073 " Kinsella Pieter's Hill " 27/2/00 + 5618 " Purcell " " " + 1769 Sgt. Brennan " " " Section 'D' + 1717 Pte. Shirwin " " " Militia + 5th R.D.F. + 2327 " Grimes " " " " + 5573 " Tyrrell Near Talana " 20/10/99 + 5987 Pte. Mahoney Near Talana " 20/10/99 + 4864 " Byrne " " " + 5861 " McGuire Chieveley " 15/11/99 Armoured train + 2112 " Kelly Hart's Hill " 23/2/00 Section 'D' + 6171 " Kavanagh Colenso " 15/12/99 + 6011 Cpl. Sinnot Steelkoolspruit " 25/10/01 + 4621 Pte. Hyland Nr. Krugersdorp Murdered by + Boers 6/1/01 Found riddled + with bullets + + +II. + +DIED OF WOUNDS. + + No. Rank and Name. Place of Cause. Date. Remarks. + Death. + ----+-----------------+--------------+---------+--------+-------- + 2nd-Lt. Genge Talana Hill Of wounds 21/10/99 + 1166 C.-Sgt. Anderson " " " + 5263 Pte. Johnston Maritzburg " 27/11/99 Arm. train + disaster + 3467 Clr.-Sgt. Gage " " 20/12/99 Battle of Colenso + 6293 Pte. Crosbie Spearman's Cmp " 26/1/00 " Venter's Spruit + 1823 " Finnegan Hart's Hill " 25/2/00 Section 'D' + 219 " Oldham Chieveley " 3/3/00 Battle of Hart's + Hill + 3648 " Norton Maritzburg " 2/3/00 Battle of Hart's + Hill + 5745 " Brady Colenso " " Battle of Pieter's + Hill + 6299 " Kelly Maritzburg " 8/3/00 Battle of Pieter's + Hill + 5349 " Bracken " " 16/3/00 Battle of Hart's + Hill + 3094 Sgt. Broughton Dundee " 22/10/99 Battle of Talana + 2753 Pte. Frahill " " 28/11/99 " " + 4029 " Quirke Colenso " 1/3/00 " Colenso + 5706 " McEvoy Johannesburg " 11/11/01 + 6347 " Nugent Bakenlaagte " 31/10/01 + 5710 " Keegan Dthala " 8/10/03 + + +III. + +DEATHS BY DISEASE. + + No. Rank and Name. Place of Cause. Date. Remarks. + Death. + ----+-----------------+---------------+------------+--------+-------- + + 5102 Pte. Phelan Frere Enteric 24/12/99 + 642 Q.M.S. Hynes Maritzburg Pneumonia 7/1/00 + 2865 Sgt. Linehan Pretoria Dysentery 16/12/99 + 5519 Pte. Brennan Maritzburg Abscess liver 7/1/00 + 3498 " Dunphy " Dysentery 19/1/00 + 6129 " Homan Mooi River Enteric 22/2/00 + 4593 " Keating " " 15/2/00 + 5368 " Walsh Cape Town Tumour brain 26/11/99 + 2775 " Ward Ladysmith Enteric 7/2/00 + 5317 " Maher Estcourt " 8/3/00 + 6510 " Tobin Ladysmith Dysentery 22/3/00 + 5909 " Dixon " " 25/3/00 + 5801 " Martin Chieveley " 24/4/00 + 5790 Pte. Greene Mooi River Enteric 15/4/00 + 2nd Lt. Dennis Aliwal North " 2/5/00 + 1600 Pte. O'Brien " " " 3rd R.D. Fus. + 4791 " O'Connor Mooi River " 3/5/00 + 5200 " Hart " Fractured thigh + 1/5/00 + 3380 " Cummings Aliwal North Enteric pneumonia + 5/5/00 3rd R.D. Fus. + 3760 " Keogh Chieveley Enteric " + 4012 " Mack Aliwal North " 12/5/00 + 5847 " O'Carroll " Enteric phthisis + 15/5/00 + 4566 " Gray Kimberley Enteric 17/5/00 + 5622 " Corr Maritzburg Ague 28/2/00 + 4131 Cpl. Looney Woolwich Dysentery 24/3/00 + Lieut. Ely At sea Enteric 15/4/00 + 6049 Pte. Neill Kimberley " 23/5/00 + 6309 L.-Cpl. McGinley " " 8/6/00 + 6608 Pte. Behan " " 19/6/00 + 4686 " Ears Wynberg " 25/6/00 + 7049 " Roach Heidelberg Pneumonia 14/7/00 + 5881 " Pooley " Enteric 18/7/00 + 4499 O.R.S. Hanrahan Maritzburg g.s. skull 2/7/00 Suicide + 5873 Pte. Hunt At sea Enteric 26/4/00 + 3998 " Kenny Krugersdorp Pneumonia 12/9/00 + 1741 " Burke Johannesburg " 11/9/00 Section 'D' + 4737 Cpl. Wilson Maritzburg " 27/10/00 + 5741 Pte. Dwyer Germiston Enteric 31/10/00 + 5697 " Davis Pretoria 29/11/00 Died in + hospital, + prisoner + of war + 5181 " Clark Kaalfontein Lightning 24/11/00 + 6800 " Connor Johannesburg Enteric 25/11/00 + 5967 " Sutton Krugersdorp Jaundice 18/1/00 + 2961 " Ambrose Johannesburg Enteric 3/2/01 + 6770 " Cassidy Bloemfontein " 22/3/01 + 1346 " Hanlon Maritzburg " 5/4/00 + 6109 " Buckley Cork Insane + 3910 L.-Cpl. Stewart Gaskraal " 28/8/01 + 6491 Pte. O'Connor " " " + 5532 " Peel Krugersdorp Enteric 14/8/01 + 4657 " Mooney " " 22/12/01 + 5397 " Melia Kroonstad " 27/12/01 + 5540 " Quinn Krugersdorp Drowned 14/1/02 + 6028 Sgt. Pearson At sea Enteric 7/2/02 + 5303 Pte. Furlong Aden Heat apoplexy 29/5/02 + 4938 " Moore " Heart disease 9/8/02 + 4921 Sgt. Smith " Syncope 13/9/02 + 4565 Pte. Dunne " Multiple neuritis + 10/10/02 + 5686 " Gray Diseased liver + 11/10/02 + 3661 " Mooney Krugersdorp Enteric 6/7/01 4th R.D. Fus. + 6332 " Merrigan Aden " 8/11/02 + 7547 Boy Roberts Dthala Pneumonia 8/3/03 + 7182 Pte. Dempsey " Enteric 13/10/03 + 5944 " Wynne Aden Consumption 2/3/04 + + +IV. + +LIST OF WOUNDED. + + Reg. + No. Rank and Name. Date. Place. Nature of Wound. Remarks. + ----+-----------------+---------+------------+----------------+--------- + Capt. M. Lowndes 20/10/99 Talana g.s. leg + " Dibley " " g.s. head + Lieut. Perreau " " g.s. shoulder + 5686 Pte. Gray " " + 2753 " Frahill " " + 5310 " Black " " + 4815 " Doyle " " + 4700 " Leonard " " + 4894 Sgt. Grace " " + 5430 Pte. Babester " " + 5317 " Maher " " + 4790 " O'Brien " " + 5047 " Greer " " + 4359 " Smith " " + 4699 " Callaghan " " + 4931 " Righton " " + 5947 " Dwyer " " + 43 Sgt.-Maj. Burke " " + 3770 Col.-Sgt McNeice " " + 5426 Sgt. Walton " " + 3139 " McKenna " " + 6264 Pte. Carroll " " + 6125 " Dempsey " " + 5038 " Richardson " " + 5523 " Ryan " " + 4620 " Summerville " " + 5635 " Tracey " " + 6084 " Brady " " + 4910 Dmr. Brudnell " " + 5078 Pte. Gorman " " + 5643 " Cullen " " + 5011 " Brennan " " + 4382 " Jordan " " + 4766 " Murphy " " + 4592 " Cullen " " + 6096 " Gilhooley " " + 3704 " Kearns " " + 4857 " Butler " " + 4767 " Byrne " " + 6022 " Cassin " " + 5156 " Fitzpatrick " " + 5118 " Magee " " + 5142 " Murray " " + 5063 " Kelly " " + 5595 " Reynolds " " + 4948 " Wilby " " + 2156 Cpl. Hogan " " + 5634 L.-Cpl. Keenan " " + 4593 Pte. Flood " " + 5137 " McGrath " " + 4785 " Hopkins " " + 5531 " Hatt " " + 4444 " Creegan " " + 4347 " Lahey " " + 5914 " Coyle 15/11/99 Armr. Train shell, arm + Capt. Shewan 15/12/99 Colenso g.s. thigh + 4341 Sgt. Doherty " " g.s. shoulders + 4986 L.-Sgt. Gibbons " " g.s. arm + 5668 " Taylor " " g.s. shoulder + 3150 Sgt. Towey " " g.s. hand and foot + 501 " Hamilton " " g.s. foot + 5108 " Bodkin " " g.s. leg + 5628 L.-Sgt. Church " " g.s. leg + 5374 Cpl. Loughran " " g.s. thigh + 6684 Pte. O'Brien " " g.s. hand + 5117 " Lillis " " g.s. foot + 4589 " Whelan " " g.s. hand + 5637 " Taylor " " g.s. thigh + 4898 " Walker " " g.s. head + 5687 " Enright " " g.s. hand + 5869 " Mackey " " g.s. knee + 5584 " Carr " " g.s. hip + 6145 " Byrne " " g.s. elbow + 6103 " Cooney " " g.s. foot + 4997 " Ludlow " " g.s. arm + 4201 Dmr. Webb " " g.s. thigh + 5970 L.-Cpl. Cooper " " g.s. leg + 6094 " Hanley " " g.s. leg + 5760 Pte. Brown " " g.s. leg + 5765 " Welsh " " g.s. foot + 4545 " Flood " " g.s. thigh + 4959 " Smith " " g.s. hand + 5672 " Sanders " " g.s. leg + 5661 " Murphy " " g.s. foot + 4582 " McCarthy " " g.s. head + 4395 " Ellis " " g.s. arm + 4290 Sgt. Hunt " " g.s. wrist and thigh + 4987 Pte. Reilly " " + 4552 " Kelly " " g.s. thigh + 3362 Dmr. Murphy " " + 4411 Pte. Murray " " + 5716 " Lahey " " + 6038 " Kelly " " + 3013 Sgt. Healey " " + 4726 Pte. O'Brien " " + 5848 " Townsend " " + 5834 Pte. McBride " " g.s. hip + 5520 " Hackett " " + 4441 L.-Sgt. Merry " " g.s. thigh + 5023 L.-Cpl. Hayes " " g.s. feet + 4543 Pte. Keating " " g.s. foot + 6123 " Kelly " " + 4800 " Walsh " " + 4226 " Reilly " " g.s. hand + 6137 " O'Brien " " g.s. thigh + 2442 " Leary " " + 5151 " Clark " " + Maj. English 20/1/00 Vent. Spruit g.s. leg + 6105 L.-Cpl. Kidd " " g.s. neck + 6796 Pte. Burke " " g.s. foot + 6285 " Healey " " g.s. back + 3141 " Rooney " " g.s. arm + 4644 " Burke " " g.s. hip, thigh + 5997 " Davis " " g.s. thigh, leg + 5458 " Burke " " g.s. neck + 5873 " Hunt " " g.s. head + 5659 " Walsh " " g.s. leg + 5069 " Lee " " g.s. hand + 6121 " Brien " " g.s. thigh + 2892 L.-Sgt. Ryan 21/1/00 " g.s. foot + 3548 Sgt. Cragg " " g.s. hand + 6047 Pte. Cole " " g.s. arm + 6391 " Richardson " " g.s. foot + 4898 L.-Cpl. Walker " " + 6366 Pte. Molloy " " g.s. right leg + 6310 " Gibney " " g.s. leg + 5883 " Marshall " " g.s. hand + 5283 " Shaughnessey " " g.s. left leg + 5904 " Edwards " " g.s. right hand + 4636 Cpl. Reynolds " " g.s. chin + 4368 Pte. Githens " " g.s. arm + 5056 " Lordan 22/1/00 " g.s. thigh + 4794 " Murray 23/1/00 " g.s. right forearm + 4689 L.-Sgt. O'Higgins " " g.s. chest + 4384 Pte. Ring " " g.s. head, shoulder + 5888 " Kenny " " g.s. head, shoulder + 6484 " Duffy " " g.s. hip + 5882 Sgt.-Dmr. Smith 25/1/00 " + 5900 Pte. Mason " " g.s. hand + 6569 " Conroy " " g.s. foot + 2nd Lieut. Lane 23/2/00 Hart's Hill g.s. head + " Dennis " " g.s. left leg + 2872 Pte. Wade " " 5th R.D. Fus. + 4012 " Armstrong " " + 3303 " Timmins " " + 5167 Pte. McDonnell " " + 5928 " Pender " " g.s. right hand + 4791 " Connor " " g.s. chest + 4817 " Iliffe " " + 4559 " McCabe " " + 2426 " O'Beirne " " + 6522 " Ryan " " g.s. right hip 1st Battalion + 5461 L.-Cpl. Dennehy " " + 5387 Pte. Brannagan " " g.s. chest + 4771 " Johnston " " g.s. left thigh + 5765 " Ward " " g.s. arm and knee + 4557 " McCarthy " " g.s. back + 5811 " Ryan " " g.s. arm + 2921 " Thompson " " + 6355 " Fagan " " + 148 " Metcalf " " g.s. right arm 5th R.D. Fus. + 2096 " Farrell " " + 1557 " Kinsella " " + 4530 " Brown " " g.s. groin + 5684 " Hetherston " " g.s. chest + 6333 " Newsome " " g.s. left arm + 3631 " McDonald " " g.s. left shoulder + 1997 " Brady " " 5th R.D. Fus. + 6110 " Kelly " " + 2387 " Strain " " g.s. buttock + 3068 " Adams " " + 5069 " Lee " " + 4424 " Mulvaney " " + 4621 " Hyland " " g.s. left thigh + 5836 " Cullen " " g.s. right wrist + 3313 " Concannon " " g.s. right shoulder + 6498 " Flannagan " " g.s. chest + 1741 " Burke " " g.s. left arm + 2422 " Morgan " " + 2787 " Brien " " g.s. left knee + 4325 " Curran " " g.s. left leg + 6108 " Bernes " " + 5908 " McDonald " " + 1881 " Reynolds " " 4th R.D. Fus. + 4015 " Lynch " " + 2348 " Maddox " " g.s. left shoulder + 4029 " Quirk " " + 6217 " Valentine " " + 3881 " Talbot " " + 6314 " Early " " + 5224 " McNeill " " + 4277 " Mack " " + 4994 " Knoctor " " g.s. right leg + 3441 " O'Grady " " g.s. left hand 4th R.D. Fus. + 5982 " Tighe " " g.s. head + 347 " Doyle " " g.s. left hand + 6130 " Mason " " 3rd R.D. Fus. + 5141 " Kirwan " " g.s. right foot + 4569 " Gorman 27/2/00 Pieter's Hill + g.s. shoulder + 5399 " Connor " " + 5828 " Kegney " " + 847 " Mangan " " 3rd R.D. Fus. + 1716 " Quinn " " " + 5716 " Leahy " " + 5981 " Broad " " + 5698 " Toomey " " + 350 " Murphy " " 3rd R.D. Fus. + 1846 " Kealey " " " + 4741 " Moore " " + 4903 Cpl. Marshall " " + 5379 Pte. Pryor " " + 2368 " Byrne " " + 4878 " Clark " " + 6524 " Quaid " " + 1554 " Brennan " " 5th R.D. Fus. + 5757 " Kelly " " + 5284 " Farrell " " 5th R.D. Fus. + 3361 " Brady " " " + 1765 " Fagan " " + 6429 " Fox " " + 4777 " Mullane " " + 3253 " Mellington " " 5th R.D. Fus. + 5280 " Daly " " + 639 " Whelan " " 5th R.D. Fus. + 6139 " Dignam " " + 2917 " Ferris " " 5th R.D. Fus. + 3242 " McHale " " " + 3266 " Evans " " + 1377 " Farrell " " + 4474 " McLoughlin " " + 6113 " McCormack " " + 1651 " Kinsella " " 5th R.D. Fus. + 3639 " Brien " " " + 3282 " O'Brien " " g.s. hand + 1846 " Gradwell " " 5th R.D. Fus. + 174 " Lawless " " g.s. foot, right hand " + 1284 " Molloy " " " + 1508 " Donnelly " " + 5704 " Kennedy " " + 2236 " Tuite " " g.s. right heel 5th R.D. Fus. + 4317 " Carpenter " " + 3231 " Mallon 21/7/00 Zuikerbosch g.s. right thigh 4th R.D. Fus. + 2853 " O'Brien " " g.s. left thigh " + 1143 Pte. Stanton " " 4th R.D. Fus. + 2961 Col.-Sgt. Cossey " " + Maj. English " " slight shell splinter, eye + 6786 Pte. Reilly 15/9/00 Nr. Frdkstdt. On convoy duty + 2392 Sgt. James 21/9/00 " very slight g.s. leg + 6070 Pte. Angleton 2/10/00 Near Irene g.s. foot With M.I. + Lieut. Haskard 27/2/00 Pieter's Hill + right elbow + 2nd Lieut. Bradford " " shoulder + 2692 Pte. Doyle 31/12/00 Nr. Krugersdorp + g.s. buttock + 5767 " Lang " Nooitgedacht + 2052 " Armstrong 2/2/01 Gatsrand g.s. left arm, very slight + 6265 " Roach " " g.s. right leg, slight + 4981 " Sheehan " Nr. Carolina g.s. neck + 5718 " Kavanagh " " g.s. left knee + 4365 " Moran " " g.s. left shoulder + 4680 " Fitzgerald " " g.s. left arm + 6057 " Goff " " g.s. chest + 5433 " Holmes 28/8/01 Gaskraal + 4840 " Nolan " " + 4858 " Butler 27/7/01 Nr. Wonderfontein + 4680 " Fitzgerald 25/10/01 Swartzfontein + g.s. hand, severe + 5706 " McEvoy " " g.s. buttock, groin + 3761 Sgt. Carroll 30/10/01 Bakenlaagte g.s. leg, very slight + 4473 Pte. Hand " " g.s. knee, severe + 4448 " Murphy " " g.s. foot, slight + 4513 " Connor " " g.s. hip, severe + 5706 " Moran " " g.s. hand, severe + 6347 " Nugent " " g.s. abdomen + 4686 Cpl. Curtis 15/12/99 Colenso g.s. hand + 5548 Pte. Metcalf " " g.s. left leg + 4453 " White " " g.s. both legs + 6330 L.-Cpl. Matthews 21/1/00 Vent. Spruit g.s. leg + 5330 Pte. Holohan 27/2/00 Pieter's Hill + 5973 Cpl. Gaffney 7/10/03 Aden Hntlnd. g.s. severe, foot + 6367 Pte. Daly " " g.s. very slight + 5584 " Carr " " g.s. severe, chest + + +V. + +BATTLE OF TALANA. + +REPORTED MISSING SINCE OCTOBER 21ST, 1899. + + Reg. No. Rank and Name. + ---------+----------------- + 2615 Clr.-Sgt. Gage + 2078 Sgt. Martin + 4388 " Guilfoyle + 3761 " Carroll + 5328 L.-Sgt. Payne + 5178 " Crean + 5094 Cpl. Corrigan + 5544 " Richards + 6028 " Pearson + 5004 " Kiernan + 5601 L.-Cpl. Lee + 5143 " Flynn + 5304 " Whelan + 4812 " Lyons + 4868 " Green + 5033 " Byrne + 4947 " Harper + 4638 Pte. Mahon + 4966 " Murphy + 4359 " Hall + 4655 " Cullen + 5175 " Reddy + 5143 " Flynn + 5759 " Dowling + 5070 " Angleton + 5402 " Rourke + 5209 " Dunne + 5793 " Murphy + 4513 " Connor + 5055 " Reidy + 5609 " Connor + 5162 " Macken + 5929 " Carroll + 5956 " Rourke + 4498 " Watts + 4884 " Kenny + 5876 " Molloy + 5647 " Harrison + 6087 " Tyrrell + 4788 " Toomey + 4366 " Doyle + 5931 " Bracken + 3752 " Travers + 5733 " Kavanagh + 6055 " Gough + 5266 " Bigley + 5479 " Brien + 5489 " Geoghegan + 6019 " Curran + 5918 " Callaghan + 4411 " Cooney + 5706 " McEvoy + 5600 " Gleeson + 5000 " Nulty + 4974 " Costello + 5889 " Keogh + 5501 " Mannix + 5127 " Battersby + 5352 " White + 4864 " Byrne + 5390 " Doyle + 5126 " Farrell + 5714 " Finnigan + 5055 " Reidy + 5345 " Dunne + 5789 " Flood + 4964 " Gibney + 5987 " Mahoney + 5030 " Callaghan + 5126 " Delaney + 4692 " McGuinness + 6018 " McDonagh + 5693 " Keating + 4532 " Kirwan + 6866 " Molloy + 5427 " Carr + 4142 " Lyons + 6120 " Cullen + 4927 " Kane + 5545 " Reilly + 5702 " Byrne + 5724 " Dempsey + 5218 " Reilly + 5880 " Carroll + 5144 " Williams + 5027 " Doody + 4473 " Hand + 4566 " Glynn + 5184 " Dowler + 5551 " Finn + 5912 " Kavanagh + 5182 " Cavanagh + 5350 " Farrell + 4692 " McGann + + +VI. + +REPORTED MISSING SINCE OCTOBER 22ND, 1899. + + Reg. No. Rank and Name. + --------+----------------- + 5022 Pte. Rourke + 4998 " Hawthorn + 5246 " McGuinness + 4327 " Neill + 5321 " Moran + + +VII. + +REPORTED MISSING SINCE OCTOBER 30TH, 1899. + + Reg. No. Rank and Name. + --------+---------------- + 5524 Pte. Wall + 5503 Pte. Hennessey + + +VIII. + +REPORTED MISSING SINCE NOVEMBER 15TH, 1899 + +(ARMOURED TRAIN DISASTER). + + Reg. No. Rank and Name. + --------+------------------ + 3672 Sgt. Hassett + 5114 Cpl. Hallahan + 5800 Pte. Buckley + 6293 " Kempster + 5499 " Byrne + 4497 " Barry + 5755 " Collins + 6140 " Dunphy + 5741 " Dwyer + 5256 " Kavanagh + 5691 " O'Rourke + 5626 " Buckley + 5968 " Glynn + 5057 " Kirwan + 5017 " Pakenham + 5239 " Herbert + 6283 " Cragg + 5790 " Murray + 5210 " Rice + 5329 " Stanton + 4680 " Fitzgerald + 5548 " Metcalf + 3715 Sgt. Osborne + 5795 Pte. Balfe + 5316 " Daly + 5516 " Scully + 4443 " Hoey + 5031 " Bierney + 5697 " Davis + 5297 " Drew + 5841 " Hoy + 5287 " Lynch + 5908 " Murphy + 6308 " Connell + 6116 " Harty + 6228 " Meehan + 5297 " Doogan + 6319 " Burke + 4676 " Driscoll + 4865 " Reynolds + 6354 " Sheridan + 5861 " McGuire + 4542 " Flannagan + + +IX. + +LIST OF OFFICERS IN NATAL CAMPAIGN. + + Rank and Name. Remarks. + ---------------------------------------------------------------------- + Col. Cooper Commanding 2nd Royal Dublin Fusiliers. + Maj. Bird 2nd in command. + " English, A Company Wounded at Venter's Spruit and Zuikerbosch. + Capt. Hensley, G Company Killed at Venter's Spruit. + " Weldon, E Company Killed at Talana. + " Fetherstonhaugh, D Coy. Acted as Adjutant after Capt. Lowndes + was wounded. + " Dibley, B Company Wounded at Talana, and sent into Intombi + Hospital. + " Lonsdale, M.I. Company Captured at Talana. + Lieut. Shewan, H Company Wounded at Colenso. + " Perreau Wounded at Talana, and sent into Intombi + Hospital. + " Le Mesurier Captured at Talana. Escaped from Pretoria. + " Grimshaw Captured at Talana. + " Cory Was sent with M.I. Section to Dundonald's + Brigade. + " Renny Transport Officer. Left in Ladysmith. + 2nd Lieut. Haskard Wounded at Pieter's Hill. + " Henry Killed at Colenso. + " Frankland Captured in Armoured Train. + " Genge Killed at Talana. + Capt. Lowndes (Adjutant) Wounded at Talana, and sent into Intombi + Hospital. + Lieut. and Qtmr. Rowland Went to S. A. C. + Lieut. Garvice Joined battalion at Dundee; captured + at Talana. + 2nd Lieut. Ely Joined battalion at Dundee, and died + of enteric, 1900. + Lieut. H. W. Higginson Joined on posting, and shared in siege + of Ladysmith. + Capt. Romer Joined from Staff College on Oct. 30th. + Capt. Haldane and Lieut. The former was captured in the Armoured + Maitland (of Gordon Train, and escaped from + Highlanders) Pretoria with Lieut. Le Mesurier; + the latter killed at Hart's Hill. + 2nd Lieut. Britton Joined on November 5th. After Colenso + he acted as Transport Officer. + Brevet-Lieut.-Col. Sitwell Joined on November 8th, and commanded + C Company. He was killed + at Hart's Hill. + 2nd Lieut. Lane Joined on December 6th. He was + wounded at Hart's Hill. + + +X. + +_The following Officers of the 1st Battalion and other corps joined on +December 7th and subsequent dates:--_ + + Rank and Name. Remarks. + ---------------------------------------------------------------------- + Maj. Hicks Returned to 1st Battalion after Colenso. + Succeeded Col. Cooper in command + of 2nd Battalion, March 1900. + " Gordon Wounded at Colenso. + Capt. Bacon Killed at Colenso. + 2nd Lieut. De Salis Promoted into another regiment. + " Brodhurst Hill Wounded at Hart's Hill. + " Halahan + " Macleod Wounded at Colenso. + " Winnington (Worcestershire Regiment). Attached. + " Wheeler Joined December 23rd. + " Dennis Joined December 27th, and died of enteric + at Aliwal North. + Capt. Venour Joined on January 30th. + Lieut. Hill Joined on January 30th. Wounded at + Hart's Hill. + 2nd Lieut. Bradford Joined on January 30th. Wounded at + Pieter's Hill. + Capt. Sir Frederick Frankland, (3rd Bedford Regiment). Joined on + Bart. March 2nd. + Lieut. G. S. Higginson Joined on March 11th. + Lieut. Nelson, R.M.L.I. Joined on March 29th. + Capt. Clark, " Joined on April 1st. + +Col. C. D. Cooper took over a brigade, with Lieut. Renny as his +A.D.C., early in 1900. It will thus be seen that Capt. Fetherstonhaugh +was the only officer who was with the regiment from start to finish +who was not hit. + + +XI. + +TOTAL CASUALTIES OF OFFICERS OF THE 1st AND 2nd BATTALION ROYAL +DUBLIN FUSILIERS. + + Name. Nature of Place. + Casualty. + ----------------------------+-----------------+-------------------- + Capt. Weldon Killed Talana. + Lieut. Genge " " + Capt. Bacon " Colenso. + Lieut. Henry " " + Capt. Hensley " Venter's Spruit. + Lt.-Col. Sitwell " Hart's Hill. + Capt. Maitland (Gordon " " + Highlanders, attached) + Capt. Macbean " Nooitgedacht. + " Watson " Western Transvaal. + Lieut. Ely Died of disease + " Dennis " " + Capt. Dibley Wounded Talana. + " Lowndes " " + Lieut. Perreau " " + Maj. Gordon " Colenso. + Capt. Shewan " " + Lieut. Macleod " " + Maj. English " Venter's Spruit + and Zuikerbosch. + Capt. Hill " Pieter's Hill. + Lieut. Brodhurst Hill " " + " Lane " Hart's Hill. + " Dennis " " + " Bradford. " Pieter's Hill. + " Haskard " " + Capt. Carington Smith " Sanna's Post and + Heidelberg. + Lt.-Col. Mills " Alleman's Nek. + Lieut. Seppings " " + " Taylor " Parys. + Capt. Kinsman " Near Mafeking. + " Chapman " Itala. + Lieut. Lefroy " " + + +XII. + +HONOURS AND REWARDS OF OFFICERS OF THE 2ND ROYAL DUBLIN FUSILIERS. + + C.B. + + Colonel C. D. Cooper. + " G. A. Mills. + " H. T. Hicks. + + + D.S.O. + + Major S. G. Bird. + " W. H. O. Neill. + Brevet-Major A. F. Pilson. + " W. J. Venour. + Captain H. M. Shewan. + " G. N. Cory. + Lieutenant E. A. A. De Salis. + " C. Garvice. + " Lefroy. + " W. F. Stirling. + " C. T. W. Grimshaw. + " A. Moore. + Captain-Quartermaster R. Baker. + + + BREVETS. + + Major F. P. English. + Brevet-Major Godley. + Captain McBean. + Major A. W. Gordon. + Captain E. Fetherstonhaugh. + " C. F. Romer. + " P. Maclear. + " H. Carington Smith. + Major A. J. Chapman. + Captain M. Lowndes. + + + SPECIAL PROMOTIONS. + + Lieutenant Watson. + " E. A. A. De Salis. + " Lefroy. + + +XIII. + +N.C.O.'S AND MEN OF 2ND ROYAL DUBLIN FUSILIERS AWARDED DISTINGUISHED +CONDUCT MEDAL. + + Reg. Rank and Name. + No. + ------+-------------------------------- + 3423 Sgt. M. Connor } + 4290 " Hunt } + 1664 " Sheridan } A.O. + L.-Cpl. J. Kelly } 163 of + Pte. W. Holmes } 1901 + " P. Kelly } + " E. Reid } + + Sgt.-Mj. F. A. Whalen } + 5th R.D. Fus. } + Qmr.-Sgt. B. T. Bruen } + 5th R.D. Fus. } + Col.-Sgt. F. Gage } + Arm.-Sgt. T. H. Ford, } + attached R.D. Fus. } + Sgt. W. Brown } + 2892 " J. Ryan } A.O. + Cpl. G. F. Frost, 1st } 15 of + Batt. R.D. Fus. } 1902 + L.-Cpl. Melia } + Pte. W. Connell } + " W. Cullen } + " A. Dowling } + " M. Farrelly } + " M. Kavanagh } + " J. McCormack } + 6642 " C. N. Wallace } + + 43 Sgt.-Maj. J. Burke } + 4637 Col.-Sgt. J. Ambrose } A.O. + 5178 " T. Crean } 10 of + " M. Dunne } 1903 + Cpl. P. Flannery } + Pte. P. Furlong } + + Col.-Sgt. J. H. } A.O. + Robinson, 1st Batt. } 172 of + R.D. Fus. } 1903 + + +XIV. + +AN ADDRESS PRESENTED BY THE NATAL UNITED IRISH ASSOCIATION. + +_The Officers, Non-commissioned Officers, and Men of the 2nd Battalion +Royal Dublin Fusiliers._ + +The recent war, from which we welcome you back, marks another epoch of +glory in the annals of your distinguished battalion. It was our +privilege on several occasions to be favoured at social functions with +the presence of officers and men of the DUBLIN FUSILIERS, and we felt +assured that the goodness of character and disposition which shed +their radiance at those gatherings, would shine with added lustre when +in the face of danger and death. The popularity of your regiment in +Natal has only been exceeded by your distinguished gallantry in the +field, and as we followed your fortunes with feelings of deepest +interest throughout the campaign, our hearts thrilled with pride as we +read of your gallant and heroic deeds. As you held the position of +honour at the march to Lucknow, so were you by the unanimous consent +of the army awarded a similar position in the entry to Ladysmith. The +marvellous bravery displayed by your regiment in the terrible fighting +between Talana Hill and Tugela, forms a fitting sequel to your +magnificent record in the Indian Peninsula; and we as Irishmen can +take a legitimate pride in the fact that your muster-roll of glory is +replete with familiar names which abound throughout the hills and +valleys of our far-off motherland. The name and fame of your regiment +are world-wide; and whether on frozen shores or in tropical climes, a +light-heartedness, an uncomplaining endurance of hardship and fatigue, +and a ready adaptability to circumstances, afford abundant proof that +the best traditions of our race have been maintained by the DUBLIN +FUSILIERS. In the vast territories of Hindustan as in South Africa, +you have shown the world the material of which an Irish soldier is +made. In the many engagements in which you have taken part, you have +seen your enemies fall thick around you, and seen, too, the crimson +tide ebb from the heart of many a brave comrade, whose last good-bye +will remain for ever hallowed in your memory. You have returned +triumphant from this WAR, and though, alas! your numbers are fewer, +your hearts are as stout and your spirits as intrepid as ever. The +land which claims you as her sons has in proportion to her +capabilities given more hostages to glory than any land beneath the +sun, and well and nobly have you upheld that national renown. You have +won a name and _éclat_ that will go down through the ages, and with +the hope that countless honours are yet in store to further illumine +the aureole of your prestige, + +We are yours faithfully, + + CHAS. DONNELLY, _President_. + JAMES P. DONNELLY, _Hon. Treasurer_. + E. G. O'FLAHERTY, _Hon. Secretary_. + + _Vice-Presidents_: + + CRAWFORD LINDSAY. THOS. KELLY. + A. TRIMBLE. J. F. E. BARNES. + + _Committee_: + + W. P. BOWEN. C. W. KAY EVANS. + W. J. LYONS. R. S. W. BARNES. + P. O'NEILL. J. J. O'NEILL. + E. BUTLER. D. LANE. + N. F. BLACK. + + +XV. + +ADDRESS FROM THE EUROPEAN INHABITANTS OF ADEN TO THE MEMBERS OF THE +SERGEANTS' MESS, 2ND ROYAL DUBLIN FUSILIERS. + +_To the Members of the Sergeants' Mess, 2nd Battalion Royal Dublin +Fusiliers._ + +We, the undersigned, take advantage of this occasion, the eve of your +departure from among us, to place on record our very high esteem of +the many sociable qualities displayed by you since your battalion +arrived in this station from South Africa in February, 1902. + +Coming to Aden at a time when, after the brilliant services you had +rendered to your Sovereign and country in that uncertain field of the +reputation of battalions as well as individuals--South Africa, you +had every reason to expect a far better station, a union with those +near and dear to you, and therefore every reason to be despondent. +Instead, you threw yourselves into the social life of this place in +such a way that, before you were here many weeks, it was felt that +you, who had displayed the brilliant qualities so characteristic of +your race on many a hard-fought field in South Africa, were not +lacking in those social qualities which tend to enhance the popularity +of His Majesty's forces, and make life a little less irksome in what +all must admit is not a pleasant spot. + +Words fail to express what we all feel at being compelled to say +good-bye to you, who have been more than friends to so many of us, and +in leaving Aden for return to your homeland, we assure you that you +carry with you the sincerest good wishes of all. + +We shall always have a kindly feeling for you, and watch your future +with great interest, and, above all, we trust that you will find those +from whom you have so long been separated in the best of health, and +that a long life and prosperity is before you. + + W. SMITH. F. WISEMAN. + C. ELLIOTT. G. C. KENNEDY. + W. WILLOWS. R. THORLIN. + E. B. BATCHELOR. H. M. HANLEY. + T. GRAVES. E. B. OWEN. + R. GRIFFITHS. J. A. RUPERT JONES. + A. HANDY. J. R. DEANE. + C. A. HOLLAND. T. W. TWADDLE. + C. J. HOCKING. C. O. CRAVEN. + J. M. GILTINAN. J. MALLIA. + F. C. BREWIN. J. INGLOTT. + F. WELLS. G. NOEL. + E. HALL. J. F. FIELD. + F. J. CLAY. E. HESSLETON. + G. R. CHAMARETT. F. PENHA. + P. C. KELLY. + + +XVI. + +EXTRACT FROM BATTALION ORDERS ISSUED AT LADYSMITH, 27/10/99. + +Para. 2. Strength.--The following officers and men, killed in action +on the 20th inst. at the Battle of Talana, are struck off the +strength:-- + + Capt. G. A. Weldon. + + No. 5103 Pte. P. Cahill, A Coy. + " 5794 " A. Merrill, E Coy. + No. 5931 Pte. P. Crotty, E Coy. + " 5918 " P. Callaghan, H Coy. + +Died of wounds received in action on 21st:-- + + 2nd Lieut. C. J. Genge. + No. 1166 Col.-Sgt. F. Anderson, F Coy. + +The Commanding Officer, while expressing his deep regret at these +casualties, can fully testify to the gallant manner in which each and +all met their death, fighting for their Queen and upholding the +regimental honour. + + +XVII. + +EXTRACT FROM BATTALION ORDERS, DATED FRERE, 18/12/99. + +Para. 3. Strength.--The following officers, N.C.O.'s, and men, having +been killed in action at Colenso on the 15th inst., are struck off the +strength of the battalion from that date:-- + +2ND BATTALION. + + Lieut. Robert Clive Bolton Henry. + + Reg. No. Rank and Name. + 3441 Sgt. Hayes. + 6287 L.-Cpl. Gibson. + 6044 " Cathcart. + 5123 Pte. Broderick. + 4488 " Smith. + 5930 " Sinnott. + 5833 Pte. Dillon. + 4795 " Murphy. + 4380 " Doolan. + 4299 " McAlpine. + 5044 " Moore. + 4462 " Murphy. + 6134 Pte. Pearse. + 4560 " Clifford. + 4838 " Flood. + 5319 L.-Cpl. Coyne. + 6165 Pte. Bennett. + +1ST BATTALION. + + Capt. Arthur Henry Bacon. + + Reg. No. Rank and Name. + 3993 Col.-Sgt. Magee. + 3514 Sgt. Flynn. + 4869 " Callan. + 5505 Pte. Cole. + 4301 " Carroway. + 2943 " O'Keefe. + ? " O'Keefe. + 6472 Pte. Hayes. + 4192 " Neill. + 3906 " Walsh. + 4273 " Nolan. + 3273 " Costello. + 2504 " Bissett. + 4193 " Deevey. + 4095 Pte. Usher. + 3108 " Connell. + 6002 " Wisdom. + 4387 " Toole. + 4242 " Joyce. + 4672 " Maddox. + +The Commanding Officer, whilst deeply regretting, in common with all +ranks, the severe loss the regiment has sustained in the deaths of +Captain Bacon and Lieutenant Henry and the N.C.O.'s and men killed in +action at Colenso on Friday last, desires to place on record his high +appreciation of the admirable spirit displayed by all ranks in +unflinching pressing forward under a very heavy fire to the attack of +a practically impregnable position. + +The names of the officers, N.C.O.'s, and men who fell will, he feels +sure, be honoured in the annals of the regiment, as having set a noble +example of fearless courage and devotion to duty. + + +XVIII. + + _Colenso, 18/12/99_ (5). + +TELEGRAM RE DECEASE SERGEANT LINEHAN. + + '_From Censor to G.O.C. L. of Comn._ + +'No. 5514 Cable from Lorenzo Marquez says that Sergeant Linehan, +Fusiliers, died Racecourse, Pretoria, of Dysentery, Friday last. +Buried Catholic Cemetery.' + + +XIX. + + _Frere, 25/12/99_ (3). + +THE QUEEN'S MESSAGE, CHRISTMAS, 1899. + +'I wish you and all my brave soldiers a happy Christmas. God protect +and bless you all.--V.R.I.' + + +XX. + + _Spearman's Camp, 29/1/00_ (6). + +CAPTAIN C. A. HENSLEY DIED OF WOUNDS 21/1/00; STRUCK OFF STRENGTH; +ORDER REGRETTING HIS LOSS. + +The following Officer and N.C.O. having been killed in action and died +of wounds on the dates opposite their names, are struck off the +strength of battalion accordingly:-- + + Captain C. A. Hensley, died of wounds 21/1/00. + No. 5668 Lance-Sergeant Taylor, D company, killed in action 20/1/00. + +Whilst in common with all ranks deeply deploring the severe loss the +battalion has sustained by the death of Captain Hensley, the +Commanding Officer desires to place on record his great appreciation +of the services rendered on all occasions by the late Captain Hensley, +whose zeal, devotion to duty, and gallantry in action was ever +conspicuous since the present war began. He feels sure he is but +expressing the sentiments of all ranks in saying that his name will +always be handed down in honour to future generations of the regiment +as one of those who have nobly striven to shed additional lustre on +the regiment's reputation. + + +XXI. + + _Spearman's Camp, 31/1/00_ (3) + +PRESENT OF TOBACCO FROM PAST OFFICERS, AND LETTER, &C. + +The following letter, accompanying a present of 400 pounds of tobacco +sent to the N.C.O.'s and men of the battalion by some former officers +of the battalion, has been received to-day:-- + +'From the old Officers of the 2nd Battalion Royal Dublin Fusiliers to +the N.C.O.'s, rank and file of the 2nd Royal Dublin Fusiliers, in +token of their high appreciation of the conspicuous gallantry +displayed by the battalion during the campaign, now in progress in +South Africa, in which they have so brilliantly maintained the ancient +traditions of the "Old Toughs."' + +The following names are appended to the above:--Colonel R. Taylor, +Colonel Colville Frankland, Colonel C. E. Glasse, Colonel W. Holmes, +Colonel F. Taylor, Colonel W. C. Riddell, Lieut.-Colonel Reeves, +Lieut.-Colonel F. W. Graham, Lieut.-Colonel A. A. Godwin, +Lieut.-Colonel R. H. Mansel, Lieut.-Colonel M. J. Hickley, +Lieut.-Colonel J. R. Povah, Major the Hon. H. M. Hobart Hampden, Major +R. L. Shaw, Major S. J. Wynne, Major E. Pearse, Captain A. M. +Horrocks, Captain R. D. Vincent, Captain H. J. Guyon, Lieutenant W. S. +Burmester. + +REPLY. + +'Colonel Cooper, the Officers, N.C.O.'s and men of the 2nd Battalion +the Royal Dublin Fusiliers desire to return their very heartfelt +thanks to Colonel Frankland and the old Officers of the battalion for +their kind thoughtfulness in providing the men with tobacco. + +'They beg to assure the old Officers that their gift is most +thoroughly appreciated, as also the expression of goodwill and +admiration of the battalion's services in the present campaign which +accompanies it. + +'To know that the old Officers still continue to follow with interest +and admiration the fortunes and doings of the "Old Toughs" will ever +be an incentive to all ranks to do all that lies in their power to +maintain the reputation which the old Officers helped to win for the +corps in days gone by.' + + +XXII. + + _Spearman's Camp, 1/2/00_ (5). + +LANCE-SERGEANT MERRY PROMOTED FOR GALLANTRY. + +The Commanding Officer has been pleased to specially promote the +undermentioned N.C.O. to the rank of Sergeant from January 12th for +meritorious service in the field:-- + + No. 4441 Lance-Sergeant J. Merry, H company. + + +XXIII. + + _Ladysmith, 5/3/00_ (2). + +LOSSES IN ACTION, INCLUDING COLONEL SITWELL AND CAPTAIN MAITLAND, +NOTED AND DEPLORED. + +The following Officers, N.C.O.'s and men having been killed in action +on the dates opposite their names, are struck off the strength of the +battalion, or cease to be attached to it as the case may be, from +those dates accordingly:-- + + Major and Brevet-Lieut.-Colonel C. H. G. Sitwell, D.S.O., 24/2/00. + Captain S. C. Maitland, 2nd Gordon Highlanders (attached), 24/2/00. + + No. 4871 Pte. J. White. + " 4262 Cpl. J. Seymour. + " 5359 Pte. Galbraith. + " 2872 " Wade. + " 4012 " J. Armstrong. + " 2037 " Whelan. + " 3303 " Timmins. + No. 4743 Pte. T. Reid (attached). 24.2.00 + " 5073 " Kinsella. + " 6296 " Allen. + " 5618 " T. Purcell. + " 1717 " Sherwin. + " 2327 " Grimes. + " 1749 Sgt. T. Brennan. + +Died of wounds 2/3/00:-- + + No. 5745 Pte. Brady. + +Whilst in common with the rest of the battalion deeply deploring the +loss of so many brave Officers, N.C.O.'s and men, and sympathising +with those who have been wounded, the Commanding Officer wishes to +place on record his high appreciation of the services rendered to the +battalion on all occasions by the late Major and Brevet-Lieut.-Colonel +Sitwell, whose distinguished career hitherto tended to the honour and +reputation of the regiment. All ranks of the battalion join with him, +he is sure, in lamenting the loss of such a distinguished soldier and +comrade, and a brilliant career thus suddenly though gloriously cut +short. + +To the late Captain Maitland's sterling qualities as an officer and +comrade he would also wish to bear testimony. His services to the +battalion during a very trying and critical time were most valuable. +On behalf of the battalion he offers the late Captain Maitland's +relatives and brother-officers his deepest sympathy. + + +XXIV. + + 5/3/00 (4). + +THE QUEEN'S MESSAGE RE RELIEF OF LADYSMITH. + +The following telegram, received by the Commander-in-Chief on the +relief of Ladysmith from Her Most Gracious Majesty the Queen, is +published for information of all ranks:-- + +'Thank God for news you have telegraphed to me. Congratulate you with +all my heart.--V.R.I.' + + +XXV. + + _Ladysmith, 5/3/00_ (3). + +THE QUEEN'S MESSAGE--'MY BRAVE IRISH.' + +The Commanding Officer has much pleasure in publishing for the +information of all ranks, the following message from Her Majesty the +Queen, to the 5th Brigade, which was recently received by the G.O.C. +in Chief in Natal. + +_'To General Buller, Natal._ + +'I have heard with the deepest concern of the heavy losses sustained +by my brave Irish soldiers. I desire to express my admiration of the +splendid fighting qualities which they have exhibited throughout these +trying operations.--V.R.I.' + +THE FOLLOWING REPLY WAS SENT BY SIR REDVERS BULLER:-- + +'Sir Redvers Buller has, on the part of the Irish Brigade, to thank +the Queen for her gracious telegram of sympathy and encouragement.' + + +XXVI. + + 5/3/00 (5). + +LETTER TO GORDON HIGHLANDERS, RE CAPTAIN MAITLAND. + +The Commanding Officer has, on behalf of the battalion, forwarded the +following letter to the Officer Commanding the 2nd Gordon Highlanders. + + '_Ladysmith, 5/3/00._ + +'DEAR MAJOR SCOTT,-- + +'On behalf of myself and the officers of the battalion, I write to +offer you all our very deepest sympathy in the severe loss your +battalion has sustained by the death of Captain Maitland. + +'I find it hard to adequately express to you how very deeply the whole +of my battalion laments his loss, and I know I am only expressing the +sentiments of all ranks when I assure you that his memory will ever be +cherished in the battalion. + +'A better or more conscientious officer I have never had under my +command. We would all esteem it a very great favour if you could send +us a photograph of our late dear comrade, and might I also so far +trespass on your kindness, as to ask for one for his company (G) as +well, which I need hardly say will be highly prized by them. + + 'Yours, &c. + (Signed) C. D. COOPER.' + + +XXVII. + + _Ladysmith, 14/3/00_ (3). + +NATAL ARMY ORDERS. THE WEARING OF SHAMROCK ON ST. PATRICK'S DAY. + +The following extracts from Natal Army Orders are published for +information:-- + +'(1) The General Commanding has to communicate to the troops the +following telegram he has received from the C. in C. viz. + +'Her Majesty the Queen is pleased to order that in future on St. +Patrick's Day all ranks in Her Majesty's Irish regiments shall wear as +a distinction a sprig of shamrock in their head-dress to commemorate +the gallantry of Her Irish soldiers during the recent battles in South +Africa. + + 'WOLSELEY.' + + +XXVIII. + + _Ladysmith, 18/3/00._ + +WINSTON CHURCHILL'S TELEGRAM TO REGIMENT. + +The following telegrams received yesterday, and replies thereto, are +published for information:-- + + '_To Colonel, Dublin Fusiliers, Ladysmith._ + +'My earnest congratulations on the honour the Dublin Fusiliers more +than any other regiment have won for the land of their birth. We are +all wearing the shamrock here. + + '(Signed) + WINSTON CHURCHILL.' + +REPLY. + +'_To Winston Churchill, Lord Dundonald's Brigade._ + +'Many thanks for your kind message received yesterday, all ranks +appreciate your kind expressions. + + '(Signed) + COLONEL, DUBLIN FUSILIERS.' + + +XXIX. + + 18/3/00 (1). + +COLENSO RAILWAYMEN'S TELEGRAM TO REGIMENT. + +'_To Brigadier-General Cooper, Commanding Irish Brigade, Ladysmith._ + +'On St. Patrick's Day the railway men of Colenso respectfully wish to +convey to the officers and men of Her Majesty's Dublin Fusiliers their +best wishes for a speedy termination of the present war, in which the +Dublins have borne so glorious a part. The whole of South Africa rings +with praise of the gallant Irish Brigade. We mourn with you the loss +of so many gallant men of your command. They have fallen in their +defence of a united South Africa, over which, please God, Her Most +Gracious Majesty's flag will fly from Cape Town to the Zambesi. + + '(Signed) + INSPECTOR CAMPBELL.' + +REPLY. + + 18/3/00 (1). + +_'To Inspector Campbell, Colenso._ + +'On behalf of the officers and men under my command, please accept our +heartfelt thanks for your kind message and expressions of sympathy. + + (Signed) + COLONEL COOPER.' + + +XXX. + + _5th Brigade Orders, 18/3/00_ (1). + +CAPE TOWN IRISHMEN SEND TELEGRAM. + +The following telegram has been received by General Sir Redvers +Buller:-- + +'Cape Town Irishmen wish the gallant Irish officers and men under your +command many returns of St. Patrick's Day, and would express their +heartfelt admiration for the way in which they have maintained +unsullied the splendid military traditions of Ireland and the Empire +under your gallant leadership.' + + +XXXI. + + _Ladysmith, 20/3/00_ (2). + +THE QUEEN SENDS TELEGRAM OF THANKS. + +The following reply to telegram sent by Colonel Cooper on behalf of +the battalion to Her Majesty the Queen on Shamrock Day was received +yesterday:-- + +'The Queen thanks her Dublin Fusiliers for loyal message. Windsor +Castle, 18th.' + + +XXXII. + + _Elandslaagte, 3/4/00_ (7). + +COLONEL SAUNDERSON'S LETTER. + +The following letter was received to-day by the Commanding Officer +from Colonel Saunderson, M.P.:-- + + _'Castle Saunderson, Belturbet, 1/3/00._ + +'DEAR SIR, + +'I cannot help writing to you to express on my part, and on the part +of every loyal Irishman, the pride and sympathy we take in the heroic +deeds of the Dublin Fusiliers in South Africa. Your gallant regiment +has shed a lustre on the army to which they belong and on the country +from which they come. + +'No words of mine can express the admiration we feel for their +loyalty, their courage, and their indomitable determination. I hope +they realise how our hearts are with them.' + +A reply thanking Colonel Saunderson has been sent by the Commanding +Officer. + + +XXXIII. + + _Fourteen Streams, 12/5_ (3). + +DEATH OF SECOND LIEUTENANT J. T. DENNIS AT ALIWAL NORTH, MAY 2ND. +ENTERIC. + +The Commanding Officer deeply regrets to announce the death of Second +Lieutenant J. T. Dennis, which occurred at Aliwal North on May 2nd of +enteric. + + +XXXIV. + + 17/5/00 (4). + +GENERAL HART CONGRATULATES 1ST BORDERS AND 2ND ROYAL DUBLIN FUSILIERS +ON THEIR MARCHING. + +Major-General Hart congratulates the 1st Border Regiment and 2nd Royal +Dublin Fusiliers upon the recent instance of their marching powers. +For military reasons it was needful after the march forward yesterday +to march back at once to Fourteen Streams. As far as he can arrive at +a tolerably accurate estimate of the ground gone over, these two +battalions in the course of yesterday and last night marched +twenty-six miles in the space of nineteen hours. And the strong point +is that they arrived at the end of it in compact formation, still +going a good pace, and without any straggling or falling out. The +Major-General accordingly puts this event on record. + + +XXXV. + + _Heidelberg, 2/7/00_ (5). + +COLONEL COOPER'S FAREWELL ORDER. + +The following farewell order by Major-General C. D. Cooper is +published for information. The Commanding Officer regrets that its +publication has been unavoidably postponed till now:-- + +'In bidding farewell to the battalion in which I have served for so +many years, I wish to thank all ranks from the bottom of my heart for +the kind and efficient support accorded to me during the period of my +command--close on five years. It was always my ambition to command the +battalion, and on active service, and I feel very thankful that my +wish was granted. We have fought together and worked hard for our +noble Queen and country, and all ranks have shown that good spirit and +bravery that has made the battalion what it is. You may rest assured +that I will always take the greatest interest in the doings of the +battalion, and I shall never forget the happy days spent amongst you. +I much regret that I was unable to wish you Godspeed in person, but I +sincerely hope I shall soon see you all again. My very sincere +sympathy and regret at our very heavy losses. May God bless you all. + + '(Signed) + C. D. COOPER, _Major-General + Commanding 4th Brigade_.' + + +XXXVI. + + _Heidelberg, 24/7/00_ (6). + +GENERAL BULLER'S TELEGRAM RE ZUIKERBOSCH. + +The following telegram received by the G.O.C. is published for +information:-- + +'_from Sir Redvers Buller._ + +'So glad to hear of your fight. Good old Dublins, and tell them so +from me, and well done you.' + + +XXXVII. + + _Krugersdorp, 4/10/00_ (8). + +A PATROL UNDER LIEUTENANT GARVICE, &c. + +A patrol under Lieutenant Garvice, Commanding Virginia Railway +Station, came in contact with some Boers on the 1st. We had one man +wounded, Boers three, whom they had to leave on the ground. The +casualties in the 2nd Coldstream Guards near Pan were caused by the +enemy's fire, the majority of the wounds were caused by explosive +bullets: the men behaved very well, and everybody kept their heads, +otherwise the loss would have been greater, as the Boers opened fire +at sixty yards range. + + +XXXVIII. + + _Krugersdorp, 4/10/00_ (8). + +COLONEL ROCHFORD'S ATTACK. + +Colonel Rochford attacked a small Boer laager between Pretoria and +Johannesburg before dawn yesterday, with Royal Dublin Fusiliers and +M.I. Fusiliers. He rushed the position with the bayonet. Nine +prisoners were captured, most of them men of importance, who have been +troubling the district for some time. A small party of Boers made +their way to Dewetsdorp and Wepener. General Kelly Kenny has sent +troops to occupy both these places. + + +XXXIX. + + _Krugersdorp, 16/12/00_ (8). + +COMMANDING OFFICER'S REMARKS ON TREK. + +The Commanding Officer is very well pleased with the way the men +marched in this trip, doing 102 miles in six days, an average of +seventeen miles a day; also with their excellent conduct and the +cheerful way in which all difficulties were met. The results of the +trip were over 1000 head of sheep and cattle and seven waggons +captured, thirty barns of forage burnt, and innumerable stocks of oat +hay, some of which concealed ammunition. + + +XL. + +LETTER FROM GENERAL HART. + +_Lieut.-Colonel Hicks, Commanding 2nd Battalion Royal Dublin +Fusiliers._ + +The manner in which the encampment of your battalion is arranged +deserves my special commendation. On very bad camping-ground, beset +with rocks and bush, and afflicted with dust between, I find your +companies excellently established by ingenious and industrious +adaptation to circumstances. The regularity and tidiness are +conspicuous, and have been noted by me with great satisfaction. I need +not say how much neatness of arrangements must conduce to quickness +and good quality of soldier work. + + (Signed) + A. FITZROY HART, + _Major-General Commanding Irish Brigade_. + +_Fourteen Streams, May 20th 1900._ + + +XLI. + + _Krugersdorp, 25/1/01_ (4). + +GENERAL HART'S FAREWELL. + +The following Farewell Order by Major-General A. Fitzroy Hart, C.B., +is published for information:-- + +'In leaving to take another command, I wish you, my brother soldiers +of my force, farewell. + +'It is an article of my faith, that you would go anywhere and do +anything required in battle. + +'I leave you with deep regret, and of course I must feel this +particularly for the last of my old Irish brigade with which I began +the war. + +'In departing, I give you this scrap of advice: Be individually, +whenever opportunity offers personally, not only kind but generous to +the inhabitants of this country which we have taken from them, and +among whom so many of our countrymen and countrywomen will have to +dwell. It will not diminish your soldierly strength, and it will +hasten a welcome for the pleasant government of peace.' + + +XLII. + + _Fort Kilmarnock, 25/9/01_ (6). + +LETTER FROM CAPTAIN ANLEY. + +The following extracts from a letter received from Brevet-Major Anley, +Commanding 3rd M.I., are published for information:-- + +'The behaviour of your M.I. company continues to be very good. +Lieutenant Garvice and thirty men of the company did excellent service +the other day, when acting as rearguard to a convoy which was leaving +Carolina. It was reported that it was due to the steadiness of the men +of the Royal Dublin Fusiliers, and the able manner they were handled +by Lieutenant Garvice, that the convoy got in without loss. + +'The Inspector-General M.I. wrote and asked me to congratulate +Lieutenant Garvice on the behaviour of his men. No. 4701, Private +Kelly, R.D.F., was recommended for gallantry on this occasion. + + '(Signed) + F. GORE ANLEY, + +_Brevet-Major Commanding 3rd Battalion M.I._' + + +XLIII. + +CONSPICUOUS GALLANTRY AT GASKRAAL ON AUGUST 28TH, &C. + +The following extract from Army Order No. 418, dated Pretoria, +September 28th, 1901, is published for information:-- + +'No. 1. The following have been brought to notice of the General +Officer Commanding-in-Chief, for gallantry and good service: + + 2nd Royal Dublin Fusiliers: No. 6491, Lce.-Cpl. T. O'Connor + (killed). + +For great and conspicuous gallantry when very closely engaged with +enemy at Gaskraal on 28th Aug. 1901.' + + +XLIV. + +LORD KITCHENER'S WIRE. + +'I know I am speaking for the whole army in South Africa, when I wish +the Dublin Fusiliers Godspeed, and congratulate them on the fine +record they have established during their services in the country.' + +ANSWER. + +'I beg to thank your Lordship in the name of the regiment for your +very kind and congratulatory telegram, which is much appreciated by +all ranks.' + + +XLV. + +ROLL OF OFFICERS, 2ND ROYAL DUBLIN FUSILIERS, WHO EMBARKED AT DURBAN +ON S.S. 'SICILIA,' ON THE 29/1/02, EN ROUTE FOR ADEN. + + Rank and Name. + + Col. H. T. Hicks, C.B. + Maj. S. G. Bird, D.S.O. + Capt. and Bt.-Maj. E. Fetherstonhaugh. + Capt. and Bt.-Maj. M. Lowndes. + Capt. H. W. Higginson. + " G. N. Cory, D.S.O. + Lieut. C. Garvice, D.S.O. + " L. F. Renny. + " J. McD. Haskard. + " A. H. D. Britton. + Lieut. A. de B. W. W. Bradford. + " S. G. De C. Wheeler. + 2nd Lieut. A. W. Newton. + " E. St. G. Smith + " R. F. B. Knox. + " J. P. Tredennick. + " B. Maclear. + " J. P. B. Robinson. + " E. F. E. Seymour. + " H. St. G. M. S. Scott. + Lieut. J. Burke (Quartermaster). + + +_Printed by Strangeways & Sons, Tower Street, + +Cambridge Circus, London, W.C._ + + + +***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE SECOND BATTALION ROYAL DUBLIN +FUSILIERS IN THE SOUTH AFRICAN WAR*** + + +******* This file should be named 25618-8.txt or 25618-8.zip ******* + + +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: +https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/2/5/6/1/25618 + + + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules, +set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to +copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to +protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project +Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you +charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you +do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the +rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose +such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and +research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do +practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is +subject to the trademark license, especially commercial +redistribution. + + + +*** START: FULL LICENSE *** + +THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE +PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK + +To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free +distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work +(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project +Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project +Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at +https://www.gutenberg.org/license). + + +Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm +electronic works + +1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm +electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to +and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property +(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all +the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy +all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession. +If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project +Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the +terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or +entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8. + +1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be +used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who +agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few +things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works +even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See +paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project +Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement +and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic +works. See paragraph 1.E below. + +1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation" +or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project +Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the +collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an +individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are +located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from +copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative +works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg +are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project +Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by +freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of +this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with +the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by +keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project +Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others. + +1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern +what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in +a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check +the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement +before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or +creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project +Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning +the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United +States. + +1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg: + +1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate +access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently +whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the +phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project +Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed, +copied or distributed: + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + +1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived +from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is +posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied +and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees +or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work +with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the +work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 +through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the +Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or +1.E.9. + +1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted +with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution +must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional +terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked +to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the +permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work. + +1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm +License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this +work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm. + +1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this +electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without +prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with +active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project +Gutenberg-tm License. + +1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary, +compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any +word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or +distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than +"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version +posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org), +you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a +copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon +request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other +form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm +License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1. + +1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying, +performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works +unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9. + +1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing +access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided +that + +- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from + the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method + you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is + owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he + has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the + Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments + must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you + prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax + returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and + sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the + address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to + the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation." + +- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies + you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he + does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm + License. You must require such a user to return or + destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium + and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of + Project Gutenberg-tm works. + +- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any + money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the + electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days + of receipt of the work. + +- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free + distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works. + +1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm +electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set +forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from +both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael +Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the +Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below. + +1.F. + +1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable +effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread +public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm +collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic +works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain +"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or +corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual +property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a +computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by +your equipment. + +1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right +of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project +Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project +Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project +Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all +liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal +fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT +LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE +PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH F3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE +TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE +LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR +INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH +DAMAGE. + +1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a +defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can +receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a +written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you +received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with +your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with +the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a +refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity +providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to +receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy +is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further +opportunities to fix the problem. + +1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth +in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO OTHER +WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO +WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE. + +1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied +warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages. +If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the +law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be +interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by +the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any +provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions. + +1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the +trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone +providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance +with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production, +promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works, +harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees, +that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do +or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm +work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any +Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause. + + +Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm + +Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of +electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers +including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists +because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from +people in all walks of life. + +Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the +assistance they need, is critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's +goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will +remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project +Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure +and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations. +To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation +and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4 +and the Foundation web page at https://www.gutenberg.org/fundraising/pglaf. + + +Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive +Foundation + +The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit +501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the +state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal +Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification +number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg +Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent +permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws. + +The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S. +Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered +throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at +809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email +business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact +information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official +page at https://www.gutenberg.org/about/contact + +For additional contact information: + Dr. Gregory B. Newby + Chief Executive and Director + gbnewby@pglaf.org + +Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg +Literary Archive Foundation + +Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide +spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of +increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be +freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest +array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations +($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt +status with the IRS. + +The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating +charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United +States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a +considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up +with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations +where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To +SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any +particular state visit https://www.gutenberg.org/fundraising/donate + +While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we +have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition +against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who +approach us with offers to donate. + +International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make +any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from +outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff. + +Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation +methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other +ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations. +To donate, please visit: +https://www.gutenberg.org/fundraising/donate + + +Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic +works. + +Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm +concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared +with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project +Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support. + +Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed +editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S. +unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily +keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition. + +Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility: + + https://www.gutenberg.org + +This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm, +including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary +Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to +subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks. + diff --git a/25618-8.zip b/25618-8.zip Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..e34dd34 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-8.zip diff --git a/25618-h.zip b/25618-h.zip Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..3640479 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h.zip diff --git a/25618-h/25618-h.htm b/25618-h/25618-h.htm new file mode 100644 index 0000000..1e0f526 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/25618-h.htm @@ -0,0 +1,14128 @@ +<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN"> +<html> +<head> +<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=ISO-8859-1"> +<title>The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Second Battalion Royal Dublin Fusiliers in the South African War, by Cecil Francis Romer and Arthur Edward Mainwaring</title> +<style type="text/css"> +<!-- + +body {font-size: 1em; text-align: justify; margin-left: 5%; margin-right: 5%;} + +h1 {font-size: 125%; text-align: center; margin-top: 2em; margin-bottom: 2em;} +h1.pg {font-size: 190%; text-align: center; margin-top: 0em; margin-bottom: 0em;} +h2 {font-size: 120%; text-align: center; margin-top: 4em; margin-bottom: 2em; letter-spacing: 0.1em;} + +a:focus, a:active { outline:#ffee66 solid 2px; background-color:#ffee66;} +a:focus img, a:active img {outline: #ffee66 solid 2px; } + +hr {width: 20%; text-align: center;} + +p {text-indent: 1em;} +p.tn {margin-left: 10%; width: 80%; text-indent: 0em; font-size: 80%;} + +ul.none {list-style-type: none;} +ul.roman {list-style-type: upper-roman;} + +div.toc {margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; text-align: left;} +div.illo {margin-left: 5%; margin-right: 10%; text-align: left;} + +sup {line-height: 0em;} + +div.figcenter {margin-top: 1.5em; margin-bottom: 1.5em;} + +table {border-collapse: collapse; table-layout: fixed; font-size: 97%; + width: 90%; margin-left: 5%;} + +.pagenum {visibility: hidden; + position: absolute; right:0; text-align: right; + font-size: 10px; + font-weight: normal; font-variant: normal; + font-style: normal; letter-spacing: normal; + color: #C0C0C0; background-color: inherit;} + +.smcap {font-variant: small-caps; font-size: 90%; font-style: normal;} +.smaller {font-size: smaller;} +.small {font-size: 70%;} +.italic {font-style: italic;} +.bold {font-weight: bold;} + +.p2 {margin-top: 2em; margin-bottom: 1em;} +.p4 {margin-top: 4em; margin-bottom: 1em;} + +.left30 {margin-left: 30%;} +.left40 {margin-left: 40%;} +.left50 {margin-left: 50%;} +.center {text-align: center; text-indent: 0em;} +.right {text-align: right;} +.left {text-align: left;} + +.add1em {margin-left: 1em;} +.add2em {margin-left: 2em;} +.add3em {margin-left: 3em;} +.add4em {margin-left: 4em;} +.spaced2 {word-spacing: 2em;} +.indent05 {text-indent: 0.5em; word-spacing: 0.5em;} +.indent1 {text-indent: 1em;} +.indent2 {text-indent: 2em;} + +.illo li {margin-bottom: 1.3em;} + +.chapter {margin-top: 4em; margin-bottom: 1em; font-size: 105%; + text-align: center; text-indent: 0em; line-height: 1.8em;} +.chapter:first-line {font-size: 115%; font-weight: bold;} +.quotechapter {margin-top: 1em; margin-bottom: 2em; font-size: 95%; + text-indent: 0em; margin-left: 10%;} + +.title {margin-left: 3%; margin-right: 3%; font-style: italic; text-indent: 0em;} +.poem {margin-left: 10%; font-size: 95%; text-indent: 0em;} +.section {margin-top: 2em; margin-bottom: 1em; + text-indent: 0em; text-align: center; + line-height: 1.5em;} + +.figcenter {margin: auto; text-align: center;} + +.floatright {float: right; clear: right; text-align: center; + padding: 5px; margin: 0 15% 0 7px;} + +.floatleft {float: left; clear: left; text-align: center; + padding: 5px; margin: 0 7px 0 15%;} +.figcenter p {text-indent: 0em;} +.floatright p {text-indent: 0em;} +.floatleft p {text-indent: 0em;} + +.cleared {clear: both;} + +.ralign {position: absolute; right: 5%; top: auto;} + + hr.full { width: 100%; + height: 5px; } + pre {font-size: 85%; } +--> +</style> +</head> +<body> +<h1 class="pg">The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Second Battalion Royal Dublin Fusiliers +in the South African War, by Cecil Francis Romer and Arthur Edward +Mainwaring</h1> +<pre> +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at <a href = "http://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a></pre> +<p>Title: The Second Battalion Royal Dublin Fusiliers in the South African War</p> +<p> With a Description of the Operations in the Aden Hinterland</p> +<p>Author: Cecil Francis Romer and Arthur Edward Mainwaring</p> +<p>Release Date: May 26, 2008 [eBook #25618]</p> +<p>Language: English</p> +<p>Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1</p> +<p>***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE SECOND BATTALION ROYAL DUBLIN FUSILIERS IN THE SOUTH AFRICAN WAR***</p> +<br><br><center><h3>E-text prepared by Jonathan Ingram, Christine P. Travers,<br> + and the Project Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team<br> + (http://www.pgdp.net)</h3></center><br><br> +<p> </p> +<p class="tn">Transcriber's note:<br> +<br> +Obvious printer's errors have been corrected. +All other inconsistencies are as in the original. The author's spelling has been +maintained.</p> +<p> </p> +<hr class="full" noshade> +<p> </p> + +<a id="img001" name="img001"></a> +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/img001.jpg" width="400" height="537" alt="" title=""> +<p class="left50 small italic">W. & D. Downey.</p> +<p class="smcap">H.R.H. THE DUKE OF CONNAUGHT AND STRATHEARN, K.G.,</p> +<p>Commander-in-Chief of The Mediterranean Forces, and Colonel-in-Chief +of The Royal Dublin Fusiliers.</p> +</div> + +<h1>THE SECOND BATTALION<br> + ROYAL DUBLIN FUSILIERS<br> + IN THE SOUTH AFRICAN WAR</h1> + +<p class="center p2">WITH A DESCRIPTION OF THE OPERATIONS<br> + IN THE ADEN HINTERLAND</p> + +<h2>By <span class="smcap">Majors</span> C. F. ROMER & A. E. MAINWARING</h2> + +<a id="img002" name="img002"></a> +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/img002.jpg" width="300" height="379" alt="E libris." title=""> +</div> + +<p class="center smaller p4">LONDON: A. L. HUMPHREYS, 187 PICCADILLY, W.<br> + 1908</p> + +<h2><span class="pagenum"><a id="pagev" name="pagev"></a>(p. v)</span> PREFACE</h2> + +<p>The 2nd Battalion Royal Dublin Fusiliers is one of the oldest +regiments in the service. It was raised in February and March, 1661, +to form the garrison of Bombay, which had been ceded to the Crown as +part of the dowry of the Infanta of Portugal, on her marriage with +King Charles II. It then consisted of four companies, the +establishment of each being one captain, one lieutenant, one ensign, +two sergeants, three corporals, two drummers, and 100 privates, and +arrived at Bombay on September 18th, 1662, under the command of Sir +Abraham Shipman. Under various titles it took part in nearly all the +continuous fighting of which the history of India of those days is +principally composed, being generally known as the Bombay European +Regiment, until in March, 1843, it was granted the title of 1st Bombay +Fusiliers. In 1862 the regiment was transferred to the Crown, when the +word 'Royal' was added to its title, and it became known as the 103rd +Regiment, The Royal Bombay Fusiliers. In 1873 the regiment was linked +to the Royal Madras Fusiliers, whose history up to that time had been +very similar to its own. By General Order 41, of 1881, the titles of +the two regiments underwent yet another change, when they became known +by their present names, the 1st and 2nd Battalions Royal Dublin +Fusiliers.</p> + +<p>The 2nd Battalion first left India for home service on January 2nd, +1871, when it embarked on H.M.S. <span class="italic">Malabar</span>, arriving at Portsmouth +Harbour about 8 a.m. on February 4th, and was stationed at Parkhurst. +Its home service lasted until 1884, when it embarked for Gibraltar. In +1885 it <span class="pagenum"><a id="pagevi" name="pagevi"></a>(p. vi)</span> moved to Egypt, and in 1886 to India, where it was +quartered until 1897, when it was suddenly ordered to South Africa, on +account of our strained relations with the Transvaal Republic. On +arrival at Durban, however, the difficulties had been settled for the +time being, and the regiment was quartered at Pietermaritzburg until +it moved up to Dundee in 1899, just previous to the outbreak of war.</p> + +<p>The late Major-General Penn-Symons assumed command of the Natal force +in 1897, and from that date commenced the firm friendship and mutual +regard between him and the regiment, which lasted without a break +until the day when he met his death at Talana. The interest he took in +the battalion and his zeal resulted in a stiff training, but a +training for which we must always feel grateful, and remember with +kind, if sad, recollections. It was his custom to see a great deal of +the regiments under his command, and he very frequently lunched with +us, by which means he not only made himself personally acquainted with +the characters of the officers of the regiment, but also had an +opportunity of seeing for himself the deep <span class="italic">esprit de corps</span> which +existed in it, and without which no regiment can ever hope to +successfully overcome the perils and hardships incidental to active +service.</p> + +<p>As the shadow of the coming war grew dark and ever darker on the +Northern horizon, the disposition of the Natal troops underwent some +change, and General Penn-Symons' brigade, of which the regiment formed +part, was moved up to Dundee, and was there stationed at the time of +the outbreak of hostilities. In spite of the long roll of battle +honours, of which both battalions are so justly proud, the South +African Campaign was the first active service either had seen under +their present titles, and the first opportunity afforded them of +making those new titles as celebrated as the old ones which had done +so much towards the acquisition of our Indian Empire. Imbued with +these feelings the regiment lay camped within full view of Talana +Hill, waiting the oncoming <span class="pagenum"><a id="pagevii" name="pagevii"></a>(p. vii)</span> of the huge wave of invasion +which was so shortly to sweep over the borders, engulf Ladysmith, and +threaten to reach Maritzburg itself. But that was not to be. Its force +was spent long ere it reached the capital, and a few horsemen near the +banks of the Mooi River marked the line of its utmost limit in this +direction.</p> + +<p>The present work only claims to be a plain soldier's narrative of the +part taken by the 2nd Battalion Royal Dublin Fusiliers in stemming +this rush, and its subsequent efforts, its grim fights on the hills +which fringe the borders of the River Tugela, its long and weary +marches across the rolling uplands of the Transvaal, and its +subsequent monotonous life of constant vigil in fort and blockhouse, +and on escort duty.</p> + +<p>All five battalions took part in the war. The 1st sailed from Ireland +on November 10th, 1899, and sent three companies under Major Hicks to +strengthen the 2nd Battalion. They arrived in time to share in the +action at Colenso on December 15th, and all the subsequent fighting +which finally resulted in the relief of Ladysmith, after which they +returned to the headquarters of the 1st Battalion, which formed part +of the Natal army under General Sir Redvers Buller, and later on +advanced through Laing's Nek and Alleman's Nek into the Transvaal. The +3rd Battalion sent a very strong draft of its reserve, and the 4th and +5th Battalions volunteered and came out to the front, where they +rendered most excellent service. In addition to the battalions there +were a good many officers of one or other battalion employed in +various ways in the huge theatre of operations. Major Godley and Major +Pilson had been selected for special service before the war, and the +former served in Mafeking during the siege, while the latter served +under General Plumer in his endeavours to raise it. Captain Kinsman +also served with the latter force. Major Rutherford, Adjutant of the +Ceylon Volunteers, arrived in command of the contingent <span class="pagenum"><a id="pageviii" name="pageviii"></a>(p. viii)</span> +from that corps. Lieutenants Cory and Taylor served with the Mounted +Infantry most of the time, as did Lieutenants Garvice, Grimshaw, and +Frankland, after the capture of Pretoria, while Captain Carington +Smith's share in the war is briefly stated later on. Captain MacBean +was on the staff until he was killed at Nooitgedacht. The M.I. of the +regiment served with great distinction, and it is regretted that it is +impossible to include an account of the many actions and marches in +which they took part, but the present volume deals almost exclusively +with the battalion as a battalion.</p> + +<p>The authors are desirous of expressing their most hearty and cordial +thanks to all those who have assisted them in the preparation of this +volume. They are especially indebted to Colonel H. Tempest Hicks, +C.B., without whose co-operation the work could not have been carried +out, for the loan of his diary, and for the sketches and many of the +photographs. To Colonel F. P. English, D.S.O., for the extracts from +his diary containing an account of the operations in the Aden +Hinterland and photographs. To Captain L. F. Renny for his Ladysmith +notes. Also to Sergeant-Major C. V. Brumby, Quartermaster-Sergeant +Purcell, and Mr. French (late Quartermaster-Sergeant), for assistance +in collecting data, compiling the <a href="#appendix">appendix</a>, and for photographs, +respectively.</p> + +<p class="left50">C. F. ROMER.</p> + +<p class="left50">A. E. MAINWARING.</p> + +<h2><span class="pagenum"><a id="pageix" name="pageix"></a>(p. ix)</span> CONTENTS</h2> + +<div class="toc"> +<a id="toc" name="toc"></a> +<p class="center">PART I.—FIGHTING.</p> + +<p class="smcap">CHAP. <span class="ralign">PAGE</span></p> + +<ul class="roman smcap"> +<li>TALANA <span class="ralign"><a href="#page003">3</a></span></li> +<li>THE RETREAT FROM DUNDEE <span class="ralign"><a href="#page016">16</a></span></li> +<li>FROM COLENSO TO ESTCOURT <span class="ralign"><a href="#page022">22</a></span></li> +<li>ESTCOURT AND FRERE <span class="ralign"><a href="#page028">28</a></span></li> +<li>THE BATTLE OF COLENSO <span class="ralign"><a href="#page034">34</a></span></li> +<li>VENTER'S SPRUIT <span class="ralign"><a href="#page042">42</a></span></li> +<li>VAAL KRANTZ <span class="ralign"><a href="#page055">55</a></span></li> +<li>HART'S AND PIETER'S HILLS—THE RELIEF OF LADYSMITH <span class="ralign"><a href="#page061">61</a></span></li> +<li>THE SIEGE OF LADYSMITH <span class="ralign"><a href="#page076">76</a></span></li> +<li>ALIWAL NORTH AND FOURTEEN STREAMS <span class="ralign"><a href="#page083">83</a></span></li> +</ul> + +<p class="p2 center">PART II.—TREKKING.</p> + +<ul class="roman smcap"> +<li>FROM VRYBURG TO HEIDELBERG <span class="ralign"><a href="#page097">97</a></span></li> +<li>HEIDELBERG <span class="ralign"><a href="#page111">111</a></span></li> +<li>AFTER DE WET <span class="ralign"><a href="#page121">121</a></span></li> +<li>SEPTEMBER IN THE GATSRAND <span class="ralign"><a href="#page141">141</a></span></li> +<li>FREDERICKSTADT—KLIP RIVER—THE LOSBERG <span class="ralign"><a href="#page164">164</a></span></li> +<li>BURIED TREASURE—THE EASTERN TRANSVAAL—THE + KRUGERSDORP DEFENCES <span class="ralign"><a href="#page182">182</a></span></li> +<li>THE LAST TWELVE MONTHS <span class="ralign"><a href="#page193">193</a></span></li> +</ul> + +<p class="p2 center">PART III.</p> + +<ul class="roman smcap"> +<li>THE ADEN HINTERLAND <span class="ralign"><a href="#page205">205</a></span></li> +<li>THE RETURN HOME AND RECEPTION <span class="ralign"><a href="#page217">217</a></span></li> +<li>THE MEMORIAL ARCH <span class="ralign"><a href="#page229">229</a></span></li> +</ul> + +<p class="p2 smcap">APPENDIX <span class="ralign"><a href="#page239">239</a></span></p> +</div> + +<h2><span class="pagenum"><a id="pagexi" name="pagexi"></a>(p. xi)</span> ILLUSTRATIONS</h2> + +<p class="center">FULL-PAGE PLATES.</p> + +<div class="illo"> +<ul class="none smcap"> +<li>H.R.H. THE DUKE OF CONNAUGHT AND STRATHEARN, + K.G., COMMANDER-IN-CHIEF OF THE + MEDITERRANEAN FORCES, AND COLONEL-IN-CHIEF + OF THE ROYAL DUBLIN FUSILIERS <span class="ralign"><a href="#img001"><span class="italic">Frontispiece</span></a></span></li> + +<li>REGIMENTAL BOOK-PLATE <span class="ralign"><a href="#img002"><span class="italic">Title-page</span></a></span></li> + +<li>CASUALTIES AT TALANA <span class="ralign"><a href="#img003">8</a></span></li> + +<li>MAJOR-GENERAL C. D. COOPER, C.B., COMMANDING + 2ND ROYAL DUBLIN FUSILIERS IN NATAL <span class="ralign"><a href="#img007">24</a></span></li> + +<li>CAPTAIN C. F. ROMER AND CAPTAIN E. FETHERSTONHAUGH <span class="ralign"><a href="#img008">32</a></span></li> + +<li>GENERAL HART'S FLANK ATTACK FROM THE + BOERS' POINT OF VIEW (PLAN) <span class="ralign"><a href="#img009">34</a></span></li> + +<li>CASUALTIES AT COLENSO <span class="ralign"><a href="#img011">36</a></span></li> + +<li>GROUP OF TWENTY SERGEANTS TAKEN AFTER THE + BATTLE OF COLENSO, ALL THAT REMAINED + OF FORTY-EIGHT WHO LEFT MARITZBURG <span class="ralign"><a href="#img012">40</a></span></li> + +<li>CASUALTIES AT TUGELA HEIGHTS <span class="ralign"><a href="#img014">56</a>, <a href="#img015">64</a></span></li> + +<li>TAKING FOURTEEN STREAMS (PLAN) <span class="ralign"><a href="#img027">88</a></span></li> + +<li>MISCELLANEOUS CASUALTIES <span class="ralign"><a href="#img033">104</a></span></li> + +<li><span class="pagenum"><a id="pagexii" name="pagexii"></a>(p. xii)</span> +COLONEL H. TEMPEST HICKS, C.B., COMMANDING + 2ND ROYAL DUBLIN FUSILIERS, MARCH, 1900—MARCH, + 1904 <span class="ralign"><a href="#img038">112</a></span></li> + +<li>PLAN OF POSITION AT ZUIKERBOSCH <span class="ralign"><a href="#img040">120</a></span></li> + +<li>PLAN OF BATTLE OF FREDERICKSTADT <span class="ralign"><a href="#img052">168</a></span></li> + +<li>SKETCH PLAN OF KILMARNOCK HOUSE AND FORTIFICATIONS <span class="ralign"><a href="#img057">184</a></span></li> + +<li>KRUGERSDORP FROM KILMARNOCK HOUSE <span class="ralign"><a href="#img061">200</a></span></li> + +<li>OFFICERS OF THE 2ND BATTALION ROYAL DUBLIN + FUSILIERS WHO EMBARKED FOR ADEN <span class="ralign"><a href="#img066">216</a></span></li> + +<li>THE MEMORIAL ARCH, DUBLIN <span class="ralign"><a href="#img068">232</a></span></li> + +<li>THE SOUTH AFRICAN MEMORIAL, NATAL <span class="ralign"><a href="#img069">238</a></span></li> +</ul> +</div> + +<h2>ILLUSTRATIONS IN TEXT.</h2> + +<div class="illo"> +<ul class="none smcap"> +<li> <span class="ralign">PAGE</span></li> +<li>THE LAST RITES <span class="ralign"><a href="#img004">10</a></span></li> + +<li>ARMOURER-SERGEANT WAITE—'DELENDA EST CARTHAGO' <span class="ralign"><a href="#img005">18</a></span></li> + +<li>RAILWAY BRIDGE AT COLENSO <span class="ralign"><a href="#img006">23</a></span></li> + +<li>BOER TRENCHES, COLENSO <span class="ralign"><a href="#img010">36</a></span></li> + +<li>BRINGING DOWN THE WOUNDED <span class="ralign"><a href="#img013">41</a></span></li> + +<li>AFTER THE FIGHT <span class="ralign"><a href="#img016">65</a></span></li> + +<li>THE GRAVE OF COLONEL SITWELL AND CAPTAIN MAITLAND, + GORDON HIGHLANDERS (ATTACHED), NEAR RAILWAY + AT PIETER'S HILL <span class="ralign"><a href="#img017">67</a></span></li> + +<li>PIETER'S HILL, FEB. 27TH, 1900 <span class="ralign"><a href="#img018">69</a></span></li> + +<li>PONTOON BRIDGE, RIVER TUGELA, FEB. 28TH, 1900 <span class="ralign"><a href="#img019">70</a></span></li> + +<li><span class="pagenum"><a id="pagexiii" name="pagexiii"></a>(p. xiii)</span> + 2ND ROYAL, DUBLIN FUSILIERS, HEADING RELIEF TROOPS, + MARCHING INTO LADYSMITH, MARCH, 1900, <span class="ralign"><a href="#img020">72</a></span></li> + +<li>GENERAL SIR REDVERS BULLER, V.C., ENTERING LADYSMITH <span class="ralign"><a href="#img021">73</a></span></li> + +<li>THE DUBLINS ARE COMING—LADYSMITH <span class="ralign"><a href="#img022">74</a></span></li> + +<li>SIR GEORGE WHITE WATCHING RELIEF FORCE ENTERING + LADYSMITH <span class="ralign"><a href="#img023">75</a></span></li> + +<li>SERGEANT DAVIS IN MEDITATION OVER 'LONG CECIL' AT + KIMBERLEY. 'SHALL I TAKE IT FOR THE OFFICERS?' <span class="ralign"><a href="#img024">83</a></span></li> + +<li>ST. PATRICK'S DAY IN CAMP. PRIVATE MONAGHAN, THE + REGIMENTAL BUTCHER, IN FOREGROUND <span class="ralign"><a href="#img025">84</a></span></li> + +<li>A WASH IN HOT WATER—ALIWAL NORTH <span class="ralign"><a href="#img026">87</a></span></li> + +<li>THE REGIMENTAL MAXIM IN ACTION AT FOURTEEN + STREAMS <span class="ralign"><a href="#img028">89</a></span></li> + +<li>CAPTAIN JERVIS, GENERAL FITZROY HART, C.B., C.M.G., + AND CAPTAIN ARTHUR HART <span class="ralign"><a href="#img029">91</a></span></li> + +<li>ISSUING QUEEN VICTORIA'S CHOCOLATE. COLOUR-SERGEANT + CONNELL, 'G' COMPANY, ON LEFT <span class="ralign"><a href="#img030">93</a></span></li> + +<li>FIRST ENTRY INTO KRUGERSDORP. CAPTAIN AND ADJUTANT + FETHERSTONHAUGH IN FOREGROUND <span class="ralign"><a href="#img031">99</a></span></li> + +<li>'SPEED, DEAD SLOW' <span class="ralign"><a href="#img032">104</a></span></li> + +<li>HOISTING THE UNION JACK AT KRUGERSDORP <span class="ralign"><a href="#img034">106</a></span></li> + +<li>JOHAN MEYER'S HOUSE, FIVE MILES OUTSIDE JOHANNESBURG <span class="ralign"><a href="#img035">107</a></span></li> + +<li>SERGEANT DAVIS, EVIDENTLY WITH ALL WE WANTED <span class="ralign"><a href="#img036">108</a></span></li> + +<li>PAARDEKRAAL MONUMENT, KRUGERSDORP <span class="ralign"><a href="#img037">110</a></span></li> + +<li>THE OFFICERS' MESS <span class="ralign"><a href="#img039">120</a></span></li> + +<li>CORPORAL TIERNEY AND CHEF BURST <span class="ralign"><a href="#img041">123</a></span></li> + +<li><span class="pagenum"><a id="pagexiv" name="pagexiv"></a>(p. xiv)</span> + FOURTH CLASS ON THE Z.A.S.M. <span class="ralign"><a href="#img042">125</a></span></li> + +<li>FIFTH CLASS ON THE Z.A.S.M. <span class="ralign"><a href="#img043">127</a></span></li> + +<li>THE VAAL RIVER, LINDEQUE DRIFT <span class="ralign"><a href="#img044">133</a></span></li> + +<li>THE R.D.F. BATHING IN MOOI RIVER, POtCHEFSTROOM <span class="ralign"><a href="#img045">136</a></span></li> + +<li>FATHER MATHEWS <span class="ralign"><a href="#img046">142</a></span></li> + +<li>FUNERAL OF COMMANDANT THERON AND A BRITISH + SOLDIER, SEPT. 6TH, 1900 <span class="ralign"><a href="#img047">149</a></span></li> + +<li>BUFFELSDOORN CAMP, GATSRAND HILLS <span class="ralign"><a href="#img048">152</a></span></li> + +<li>A GROUP OF BOER PRISONERS TAKEN AT THE SURPRISE + OF POCHEFSTROOM <span class="ralign"><a href="#img049">153</a></span></li> + +<li>COLOUR-SERGEANT COSSY ISSUING BEER <span class="ralign"><a href="#img050">154</a></span></li> + +<li>'COME TO THE COOK-HOUSE DOOR, BOYS!' <span class="ralign"><a href="#img051">163</a></span></li> + +<li>SERGEANT FRENCH AND THE OFFICERS' MESS, NACHTMAAL <span class="ralign"><a href="#img053">170</a></span></li> + +<li>4·7 CROSSING A DRIFT, ASSISTED BY THE DUBLIN FUSILIERS <span class="ralign"><a href="#img054">172</a></span></li> + +<li>BOY FITZPATRICK WAITING AT LUNCH <span class="ralign"><a href="#img055">178</a></span></li> + +<li>'THE LATEST SHAVE.' CAPTAIN G. S. HIGGINSON (MOUNTED) + AND MAJOR BIRD <span class="ralign"><a href="#img056">181</a></span></li> + +<li>THE HAIRDRESSER'S SHOP <span class="ralign"><a href="#img058">192</a></span></li> + +<li>KILMARNOCK, KRUGERSDORP <span class="ralign"><a href="#img059">193</a></span></li> + +<li>A BLOCKHOUSE <span class="ralign"><a href="#img060">196</a></span></li> + +<li>THE 'BLUE CAPS' RELIEVING THE 'OLD TOUGHS' <span class="ralign"><a href="#img062">201</a></span></li> + +<li>DTHALA CAMP <span class="ralign"><a href="#img063">210</a></span></li> + +<li>DTHALA VILLAGE, FROM CAMP <span class="ralign"><a href="#img064">211</a></span></li> + +<li>A FRONTIER TOWER—ABDALI COUNTRY <span class="ralign"><a href="#img065">213</a></span></li> + +<li>HOMEWARD BOUND AT LAST, AFTER TWENTY YEARS' + FOREIGN SERVICE <span class="ralign"><a href="#img067">219</a></span></li> +</ul> +</div> + +<h2><span class="pagenum"><a id="page001" name="page001"></a>(p. 001)</span> PART I.<br> + +FIGHTING.</h2> + +<h2><span class="pagenum"><a id="page003" name="page003"></a>(p. 003)</span> THE 2ND BATTALION<br> + +ROYAL DUBLIN FUSILIERS</h2> + +<p class="chapter">CHAPTER I.<br> + +TALANA.</p> + +<p class="quotechapter"> + 'The midnight brought the signal sound of strife,<br> + The morn the marshalling in arms, the day—<br> + Battle's magnificently stern array.'<br> +<span class="left50 italic">Byron.</span></p> + +<p>The 2nd Battalion of the Royal Dublin Fusiliers left India for +Maritzburg, Natal, in 1897, and therefore, on the outbreak of the war +between Great Britain and the South African Republics, had the +advantage of possessing some acquaintance with the topography of the +colony, and of a two years' training and preparation for the long +struggle which was to ensue.</p> + +<p>The political situation had become so threatening by July, 1899, that +the military authorities began to take precautionary measures, and the +battalion was ordered to effect a partial mobilisation and to collect +its transport. On September 20th it moved by train to Ladysmith,<a id="footnotetag1" name="footnotetag1"></a><a href="#footnote1" title="Go to footnote 1"><span class="small">[1]</span></a> +and four days later proceeded to Dundee. Here Major-General Sir W. +Penn-Symons assumed the command of a small force, consisting of 18th +Hussars, 13th, 67th, and 69th Batteries R.F.A., 1st Leicestershire +Regiment, 1st King's Royal <span class="pagenum"><a id="page004" name="page004"></a>(p. 004)</span> Rifles, and 2nd Royal Dublin +Fusiliers. Each infantry battalion had a mounted infantry company. The +brigade was reinforced on October 16th by the 1st Royal Irish +Fusiliers.</p> + +<p>The country was still nominally at peace, but the Dundee force held +itself ready for emergencies, and sent out mounted patrols by day and +infantry piquets by night, while the important railway junction at +Glencoe was held by a company. The General utilised this period of +waiting in carrying out field-firing and practising various forms of +attack. As he was a practical and experienced soldier, he succeeded in +bringing his command to a high state of efficiency, and the battalion +owed much to his careful preparation. It was due largely to his +teaching that the men knew how to advance from cover to cover and +displayed such ready 'initiative' in the various battles of the Natal +Campaign. The opportunity of putting into practice this teaching soon +presented itself, for on October 12th news was received that the South +African Republics had declared war on the previous day.</p> + +<p>Consideration of the advisability of pushing forward a small force to +Dundee, and of the reasons for such a movement, does not fall within +the scope of this work; but a glance at the map will show that Sir W. +Penn-Symons had a wide front to watch, since he could be attacked from +three sides. Although precise information regarding the Boer forces +was lacking, it was known that commandoes were assembling at +Volksrust, along the left bank of the Buffalo River, and on the far +side of Van Reenan's Pass.</p> + +<p>Early in the morning of October 13th a telegram was received from Sir +G. White, asking General Penn-Symons to send a battalion to Ladysmith +at once, as the Boers were reported to be advancing on that town. The +General paid the 2nd Royal Dublin Fusiliers the compliment of +selecting them for this duty, and they entrained accordingly, about +4.30 a.m., reaching Ladysmith some four hours later. <span class="pagenum"><a id="page005" name="page005"></a>(p. 005)</span> They +detrained with the utmost haste and marched at once towards Dewdrop, +whither the Ladysmith garrison had been sent; but the report of a Boer +advance was discovered to be without foundation, and the battalion was +halted five miles outside Ladysmith, and ordered to return. It did not +reach the camp at Dundee until 11 p.m.</p> + +<p>On the following day Sir W. Penn-Symons moved his detachment closer to +the town of Dundee, and placed his camp three or four hundred yards +north of the road to Glencoe Junction. It soon became clear that the +Boers meant to invade Natal, and Newcastle was occupied by them on the +15th, while the mounted patrols of the Dundee force were already in +touch with the commandoes on the left bank of the Buffalo. The +detached company at Glencoe was withdrawn on the 18th, and on the 19th +three companies of the regiment, under Major English, were sent to the +Navigation Colliery in order to bring away large quantities of mealie +bags stored there.</p> + +<p>Colonel Cooper, commanding the 2nd Battalion Royal Dublin Fusiliers, +had been given an extension of his command, and was hurrying back from +a short period of leave in England, so the battalion was at this time +under the command of Major S. G. Bird.</p> + +<p>It was now evident to every one that we were on the eve of +hostilities, and a spirit of keen excitement and anticipation ran +through all ranks. After a long tour of foreign service, during which +the regiment had not had the good fortune to see active service, +though on three occasions they had been within measurable distance of +it, they were now to have the long-wished-for chance of showing that, +in spite of altered denominations and other changes, they were +prepared to keep their gallant and historical reputation untarnished. +Our advanced patrols had already seen the first signs of the coming +torrent of invasion, and one and all were seized with that feeling, +common to all mankind, of longing to get the <span class="pagenum"><a id="page006" name="page006"></a>(p. 006)</span> waiting and the +preparation over, and to commence the real business for which they had +been so carefully and so thoroughly prepared. Full of the most +implicit confidence in their brave leader, the regiment knew to a man +that they would soon be at hand-grips, and their two years' residence +in the country and knowledge of the history of the last Boer War, and +the stain to be rubbed out, made every pulse tingle with the desire to +show that the past had been but an unfortunate blunder, and that the +British soldier of the present day was no whit inferior to his +predecessors of Indian, Peninsular, Waterloo, and Crimean fame.</p> + +<p>On the night of the 19-20th October, Lieutenant Grimshaw was sent with +a patrol of the Mounted Infantry company of the battalion to watch the +road to Vant's and Landsman's Drifts, ten miles east of Dundee. About +2 a.m. on October 20th this officer reported that a Boer commando was +advancing on the town. At a later hour he forwarded a second message +to the effect that he was retiring before superior numbers, one man of +his party having been wounded, and that the enemy were in occupation +of the hills to the east of the town. On the receipt of this message +General Penn-Symons ordered two companies of the Dublin Fusiliers to +support Lieutenant Grimshaw. 'B' and 'E' companies, under Captains +Dibley and Weldon, accordingly left camp at 4 a.m., and, moving +through the town, took up a position in Sand Spruit, which runs along +the eastern edge of Dundee. The whole brigade stood to arms, as usual, +at 5 a.m., but was dismissed at 5.15 a.m. At about 5.30 a.m. the mist +lifted, and everybody's gaze was directed on Talana Hill, where +numbers of men in black mackintoshes could be seen. The general +impression was that they were members of the town guard, but the +arrival of the first shell soon dispelled this illusion.</p> + +<p>Soon after 5.30 a.m. the Boer artillery opened fire on the camp. Their +fire was accurate enough, considering that the <span class="pagenum"><a id="page007" name="page007"></a>(p. 007)</span> range was +near 5400 yards, but the damage done was practically nothing, as very +few shells burst, and these only on impact. Our own artillery (13th +and 69th Field Batteries, with 'D' company of the battalion as escort) +did not immediately respond, as they were at the time engaged in +watering their horses; but as soon as possible they were in position +to the east of the camp, and began to shell the crest of Talana Hill. +They obtained the range almost immediately, and in a short time +overpowered the hostile guns, which were thus prevented from playing +an important part in the day's battle.</p> + +<p>As soon as the Boers started shelling the camp, the battalion fell in +on its parade-ground in quarter-column and waited for orders. But when +a shell fell just behind the ranks, Major Bird moved it at the double +through the camp to a donga which afforded good cover. The men then +removed their great-coats, and stayed for some minutes watching the +Boer shells passing over their heads. Eventually the King's Royal +Rifles, Royal Irish Fusiliers, and the battalion were ordered by the +General to move in extended order through the town, and to concentrate +in the spruit already occupied by 'B' and 'E' companies. The +Leicesters and 67th Battery were left near the camp to watch Impati +Mountain, since it was probable that the Boer force which had occupied +Newcastle would appear from that direction. The mounted troops (18th +Hussars and the Mounted Infantry company of the Dublin Fusiliers, +under Captain Lonsdale, less Lieutenant Cory's section, which, +fortunately for it, was sent off in another direction), under the +command of Colonel Möller, were sent to turn the right flank of the +Boers' position on Talana Hill and so threaten their rear.</p> + +<p>As the extended lines of the infantry moved through the town they were +greeted by pompom fire, which, however, did no damage. It was their +first introduction to this hated <span class="pagenum"><a id="page008" name="page008"></a>(p. 008)</span> and under-rated weapon, +whose moral effect is so great that, even if the casualties it +inflicts are small in number, it is always likely to exercise a marked +influence, more especially on young troops and at the commencement of +a campaign. Men heard it in wonder, asking each other what it was, and +why had we nothing like it, and similar questions. By 6.30 a.m. the +three battalions were assembled in the bed of the spruit, and the +General rode up with the Staff in order to give his orders for the +attack. The 2nd Royal Dublin Fusiliers were to form the firing line, +with the 60th Rifles in support and the Royal Irish Fusiliers in +reserve. Under Talana Hill is a wood surrounding a small house known +as Smith's Farm. Between this wood and Sand Spruit is a long stretch +of veld, which on the day of the battle was intersected by several +wire fences. The battalion received orders to cross this open ground +by successive companies, 'H' company, under Lieutenant Shewan, formed +the right of the line, and was the first company to leave the shelter +of the spruit. It made for the south-east corner of the wood, where it +was afterwards joined by the maxims, and at once opened fire on Talana +and Dundee Hills. 'B' company under Captain Dibley, 'A' company under +Major English, and 'E' company under Captain Weldon extended to ten +paces, and followed in succession. The enemy had by this time +developed a vigorous fire, but the range was long and the casualties +small. The advancing companies moved on steadily, reached the edge of +the wood, and entered it. They now became somewhat separated. 'A,' 'G' +(Captain Perreau), and 'F' inclined to the left, 'C' and 'E' remained +in the centre with 'B' on their right, while 'H' was held back at the +corner of the wood. The latter was bounded on the far side by a stone +wall, beyond which stretched an open piece of ground until, further up +the hill, there was a second wall. At this point there was a sudden +change in the slope of the ground, which rose almost precipitously to +the crest. <span class="pagenum"><a id="page009" name="page009"></a>(p. 009)</span> Immediately opposite the point where 'B' +company issued from the wood a third wall ran up the hill, connecting +the two already mentioned. When the attackers reached the far end of +the wood, they came under such a well-directed and heavy fire that +their progress was at first checked, in spite of the support afforded +by our artillery, which rained shrapnel on the hostile position. The +Boers, lying behind the boulders on the crest of Talana Hill, found +excellent cover; while from Dundee Hill they could bring an effective +enfilade fire on the open space between the two parallel walls. +Opposite 'A' company a donga ran up the hill, and at first sight +seemed to offer an excellent line of approach for an attacking force. +Major English, in command of the company, rushed forward and, in spite +of a heavy fire, succeeded in cutting a wire fence which closed the +mouth of the donga. He then, at about 8 a.m., led his company into the +latter, and was followed by 'G' and 'F' (Captain Hensley) companies; +but the donga proved almost a death-trap, since it was swept by the +rifles of some picked marksmen on the right of the Boer position.</p> + +<a id="img003" name="img003"></a> +<div class="cleared"> +<div class="floatleft"> +<img src="images/img003a.jpg" width="200" height="197" alt="" title=""> +<p><span class="smcap">Capt. G. A. Weldon.</span><br> +<span class="italic">Killed.</span></p> +</div> +<div class="floatright"> +<img src="images/img003b.jpg" width="200" height="198" alt="" title=""> +<p><span class="smcap">Second Lieut. Genge.</span><br> +<span class="italic">Died of Wounds.</span></p> +</div> +</div> + +<div class="cleared"> +<div class="floatleft"> +<img src="images/img003c.jpg" width="200" height="198" alt="" title=""> +<p><span class="smcap">Capt. A. Dibley.</span><br> +<span class="italic">Wounded.</span></p> +</div> +<div class="floatright"> +<img src="images/img003d.jpg" width="200" height="197" alt="" title=""> +<p><span class="smcap">Major Lowndes.</span><br> +<span class="italic">Wounded.</span></p> +</div> +</div> + +<div class="cleared"> +<div class="floatleft"> +<img src="images/img003e.jpg" width="200" height="198" alt="" title=""> +<p><span class="smcap">Lieut. C. N. Perreau.</span><br> +<span class="italic">Wounded.</span></p> +</div> +<div class="floatright"> +<img src="images/img003f.jpg" width="200" height="197" alt="" title=""> +<p><span class="smcap">Ser.-Maj. (now Qr.-mr) Burke.</span><br> +<span class="italic">Wounded.</span></p> +</div> +</div> +<p class="center cleared smcap">Casualties at Talana.</p> + +<p>It was impossible for these three companies to advance any further, +and they were therefore forced to limit their efforts to an attempt to +keep down the Boer fire. Meanwhile, General Penn-Symons had, about +9.15 a.m., come up to the far edge of the wood, and crying, 'Dublin +Fusiliers, we must take the hill!' crossed the wall. Shortly +afterwards he received a mortal wound. Captain Weldon was also killed +near the same spot in a gallant effort to help a wounded comrade, No. +5078 Private Gorman. Captain Weldon, together with several men of his +company, had surmounted the wall in face of a heavy fire, and had +taken cover in a small depression on its further side. Private Gorman +was hit in the very act of surmounting the obstacle, and was falling +backwards, when Captain Weldon, rushing out from his cover, seized him +by the arm, and <span class="pagenum"><a id="page010" name="page010"></a>(p. 010)</span> was pulling him into safety when he himself +was mortally wounded. Privates Brady and Smith dragged him in under +cover, but he only lived a few minutes. His dog, a fox-terrier named +Rose, had accompanied him through the fight, and when his body was +later on recovered, the faithful little animal was found beside it, +and was afterwards taken care of by the men of 'E' company. There was +no more popular officer in the regiment than George Weldon, and his +loss was deeply felt by all ranks. He was the first officer of the +Dublin Fusiliers to fall in the war, which thus early asserted its +claim to seize the best. He was buried that same afternoon in the +small cemetery, facing the hill on which he had met his death.</p> + +<a id="img004" name="img004"></a> +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/img004.jpg" width="600" height="415" alt="" title=""> +<p class="smcap">The Last Rites.</p> +</div> + +<p>By this time, 9.30 a.m., the Rifles and Irish Fusiliers had closed up +and become merged in the firing line. Slowly, and by the advances of +small parties at a time, the attackers gained ground, principally by +creeping along the transverse wall which afforded cover from the enemy +on Dundee Hill, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page011" name="page011"></a>(p. 011)</span> Helped by the incessant fire of the +artillery, which at 11.30 a.m. moved up to the coalfields railway, the +infantry gradually collected behind the second wall. They were now +within 150 yards of the crest, and the roar of battle grew in +intensity. About 11.30 a.m. Colonel Yule came up and ordered the hill +to be assaulted, directing the battalion to charge the right flank of +the hill, and the Rifles the centre. Captain Lowndes, who was with the +companies on the right, led them across the wall and over an open +piece of ground. He gave the command 'Right incline,' and so well were +the men in hand that the order was promptly obeyed, shortly after +which he was badly wounded. Meanwhile, in the centre, men of all three +regiments, led by the Staff and regimental officers, dashed over the +wall and began to clamber up the steep and rocky slope. The artillery +quickened its fire and covered the crest with shrapnel. But the Boers +still remained firm. Many of them stood up, their mackintoshes waving +in the wind, and poured a deadly fire on the assaulting infantry. +Though most of these brave burghers paid for their daring with their +lives, they repulsed this first gallant charge. The Dublin Fusiliers +suffered many casualties in this first assault. Captain Lowndes, the +Adjutant, had his leg practically shattered, as he, with the other +officers, ran ahead to lead the charge. Captain Perreau was shot +through the chest; Captain Dibley was almost on the top of the hill +when hit. He had a dim recollection of the gallant Adjutant of the +Royal Irish Fusiliers racing up almost alongside him and within a few +paces of the summit, when he suddenly saw an aged and grey-bearded +burgher drawing a bead upon him at a distance of a few paces only. He +snapped his revolver at him, but only to fall senseless next moment +with a bullet through his head. Marvellous though it seems he made a +comparatively speedy recovery, and was able to ride into Ladysmith, at +the head of his company, in the following February, having been in the +hospital in the besieged town <span class="pagenum"><a id="page012" name="page012"></a>(p. 012)</span> in the interval. Evidence of +the temporary nature of the discomfort caused by a bullet through the +head is afforded by the fact that he is to-day one of the best +bridge-players in the regiment. Poor young Genge, who had only +recently joined, was mortally wounded, and died shortly after the +battle, killed in his first fight and in the springtime of life.</p> + +<p>Sergeant-Major Burke's (now Quartermaster) experiences may be best +told in his own words: 'It must have been shortly after poor Weldon +was killed that I came across "E" company; finding no officer with +them I assumed command, and on arrival at the donga handed them over +to Major Bird, and accompanied Colonel Yule, who had just arrived, and +was ascending the hill. We had only gone a few yards, and were about +six paces from the top wall, when I was bowled over, hit in the leg. +It was a hot place, for as I lay there another bullet hit me in the +shoulder. I crawled as well as I could to a rock, and sitting up +underneath it lit a pipe. Scarcely had I got it to draw when a bullet +dashed it out of my hand, taking a small piece of the top of my thumb +with it. Two men were shot dead so close that they fell across my +legs, effectually pinning me to the ground, while two more were +wounded and fell alongside of me. At this juncture Colour-Sergeants +Guilfoyle (now Sergeant-Major) and James dashed out of cover, and, +picking me up, carried me to a more sheltered position, whence I could +see what was going on all round, without myself being seen.' He was +left at Dundee with the wounded, and subsequently taken to Pretoria +with other prisoners of war.</p> + +<p>Whilst the men and officers were thus recovering their breath for a +renewed attack, a large number were undoubtedly hit by our own +shrapnel, as they clung closely to the hillside to avoid coming under +fire from the enemy, who still held the top. It was imperative to draw +our gunners' attention to their situation, to effect which purpose, an +intrepid signaller, Private Flynn, Royal Dublin Fusiliers, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page013" name="page013"></a>(p. 013)</span> +jumped up, and at the imminent risk of his own life freely exposed +himself in his endeavour to 'call up' the guns. Finding, after +repeated attempts, that he could not attract their attention, he +boldly walked back down the hillside, torn as it was by mauser fire, +and personally delivered his message, a glorious and courageous +example of that devotion to duty which proved so strongly marked a +characteristic of our N.C.O.'s and privates throughout the war.</p> + +<p>Major English now extricated his company from the donga and managed to +reach the second wall, where he collected all available men, including +'F' and 'G' companies, and maintained an incessant fire on Dundee and +Talana Hills. The artillery behind had never slackened in their +efforts to support the infantry, and their shrapnel searched the whole +length of the crest line. This combined fire began at last to tell. +The rattle of the enemy's musketry, which had lasted since 6.30 a.m., +gradually grew feebler, until about 1 p.m. our infantry made a second +dash across the wall and this time reached the top of the hill. Below +them they saw the stream of flying Boers hurrying across the veld. It +was the moment for a vigorous outburst of musketry, but 'some one +blundered,' and the fleeting moment sped without being taken advantage +of. It is true that those men who first arrived on the summit were +firing away, and were joined in doing so by every other man who +breathlessly arrived. The company officers had just got their men well +in hand, and were directing the fire, when to every one's disgust, and +sheer, blank amazement, the 'Cease fire' sounded clear above the din +of the fight. There was nothing for it but to stop, but the sight of +the enemy streaming away in dense masses just below them, that enemy +who had up to now been pouring a relentless hail of bullets on them +for hours, was too much. Captain Hensley rushed up to Major English, +and after a brief conference, feeling certain the call must have been +blown in error, the latter gave the command to re-open fire. Barely +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page014" name="page014"></a>(p. 014)</span> was it obeyed when the imperative bugle once more blared +forth its interference, and the company officers, the commanders of +the recognised battle-units, had nothing left them but compliance.</p> + +<p>The guns with 'D' company as escort had come to the neck between +Talana and Dundee Hills, but did not fire. The fight was over and +Major English formed up the battalion. It then marched back as a +rearguard to the brigade, through Dundee to the camp, much as if after +a field-day, halting half-way to receive an issue of rations sent out +by the A.S.C. It had lost two officers and six men killed, and three +officers and fifty-two men wounded. As the troops passed through the +town they were warmly cheered by the inhabitants. Late in the +afternoon news reached the camp that the Mounted Infantry company, +together with a squadron of the 18th Hussars, had been captured, but +this was kept from the rank and file of the battalion. As already +stated above, Colonel Möller had been sent with the mounted troops +round the right flank of the Boers. He succeeded in his task, but +proceeded too far, and when the enemy retreated from Talana Hill he +found himself with some 200 rifles attempting to stop a force of 4000 +Boers. He was roughly handled, but managed to get clear. Then, +unluckily misled by the mist, he lost his way, and, instead of +returning to camp, moved towards Impati Mountain, where he stumbled +into the Boer main commando advancing from Newcastle. He took up a +defensive position, placing the cavalry in a kraal and the mounted +infantry on some rising ground near. The enemy brought up artillery +and soon surrounded him, finally forcing him to surrender.</p> + +<p>Talana Hill, in point of numbers, may not rank as a great battle, but +its moral effect can scarcely be exaggerated. It was the first +conflict of the war. It was Majuba reversed, and the issue had +far-reaching consequences. The news of the victory spread quickly +through South Africa, and had <span class="pagenum"><a id="page015" name="page015"></a>(p. 015)</span> considerable influence on the +Dutch Colonists, who were, to use an expressive colloquialism, +'sitting on the fence,' and kept them sitting there, at a time when +had they descended on the wrong side their action could not have +failed to be extremely prejudicial to the interests of the Empire; but +over and above all else it showed to the world that the British +infantry could still attack and carry a position in face of modern +rifle-fire, a lesson which was never forgotten by Boer or Briton, in +spite of after events. Moreover, Talana must ever be a memorable name +in the annals of the Royal Dublin Fusiliers, since it was the first +battle in which they had fought under their new title, which was from +that day on to become as well known as that of any regiment in the +army.</p> + +<p>The other regiments engaged had also suffered very severely, the 60th +Rifles losing, amongst other officers, their gallant chief, Colonel +Gunning. It was curious that on the last occasion the 2nd Royal Dublin +Fusiliers had seen active service—the siege and capture of +Mooltan—they should then have fought alongside the 60th, as they did +in the present instance.<a href="#toc"><span class="small">[Back to Contents]</span></a></p> + +<p class="chapter"><span class="pagenum"><a id="page016" name="page016"></a>(p. 016)</span> CHAPTER II.<br> + +THE RETREAT FROM DUNDEE.</p> + +<p class="quotechapter">'I am ready to halt.'—<span class="italic">Ps.</span> xxxviii. 17.</p> + +<p>On the morning of October 21st, Colonel Yule, who, as senior officer, +had taken over command of the brigade, received the news that a Boer +commando, under General Joubert, was advancing by the Newcastle road. +As the camp was within long-range artillery fire from Impati Mountain, +the brigade moved off at a moment's notice to the south and took up a +defensive position. The tents were left standing, but each man carried +a waterproof sheet, a blanket, and great-coat, while the waggons, +massed in rear, had three to four days' supplies. Soon after 4:30 p.m. +the enemy appeared on Impati, and at once opened fire with a big gun, +probably a forty-pounder. The shells at first fell in the vacated +camp, but the Boer artillerymen quickly discovered the brigade, and +made good practice, although they caused but slight damage. Our +batteries attempted to reply, but were outranged, their shells falling +far short. Luckily for us a mist came on, and the Boer gun ceased +firing.</p> + +<p>As soon as night fell the troops began to entrench themselves, for the +situation of the brigade was sufficiently unpleasant. In front was an +enemy with superior numbers and heavier artillery, and in rear, +between Dundee and Ladysmith, another hostile force of unknown +strength. To make matters worse, it rained persistently and the night +was cold. About 3 a.m. the brigade retreated to Indumana Kopje, some +one and a half miles to the south-east of the camp. Here a new +position was taken up before dawn, the guns and transport being massed +behind the hill in order to be out of sight from Impati.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page017" name="page017"></a>(p. 017)</span> Early in the morning of the 22nd, the spirits of the small +force were raised by the news of the victory at Elandslaagte. This +caused great delight among the men: they were proud of their own +victory at Talana, and this further success roused them to a still +higher pitch of enthusiasm. The strategic side of the situation seldom +appeals to the rank and file, and the consequence was that when the +retreat was commenced they were under the impression that they were +being led to yet another victory. When they were undeceived, they were +undoubtedly very savage, especially so at, what seemed to them, the +callous desertion of their wounded comrades in Dundee.</p> + +<p>Since it was possible that some of the defeated Boers might be +retreating through the Biggarsberg, a demonstration towards Glencoe +Junction was ordered, the troops detailed being the 2nd Royal Dublin +Fusiliers, the 60th Rifles, one battery, and some cavalry. No time was +given for breakfasts, but the detachment moved off at 8 a.m. with the +battalion as advance guard. On arriving within 1500 yards of the +Junction, the battery shelled a party of the enemy on a hill to the +west of the railway, a proceeding which promptly provoked an answer +from the Boer gun on Impati, but another timely mist and rain saved +the detachment from this unwelcome attention. No Boers were seen in +the pass, so the force, with the battalion as rearguard, returned to +Indumana Kopje at 12.30 p.m., when they were able to obtain dinners, +the majority of the men having been without food for twenty-four +hours.</p> + +<p>At 9 p.m. that evening orders were issued for the reoccupation of +Talana Hill by the whole force, but the various commanding officers +were informed confidentially that Colonel Yule's real intention was a +retreat to Ladysmith by the Helpmakaar road. It was an extremely dark +night, and the battalion occupied nearly two hours in collecting the +companies and reaching the place of assembly at <span class="pagenum"><a id="page018" name="page018"></a>(p. 018)</span> the foot of +the kopje. It was not until after 11 p.m. that the brigade actually +started on the retreat in the following order: 1st 60th Rifles +(advance-guard), 1st Royal Irish Fusiliers, 13th Battery, Mounted +Infantry, Transport, 67th and 69th Batteries, 2nd Royal Dublin +Fusiliers, 18th Hussars, 1st Leicestershire Regiment (rearguard). The +force occupied about four miles of road. The route was through Dundee, +over Sand Spruit, and down the Helpmakaar road through the Coalfields +village. It was impossible to find an opportunity for a return to the +camp, which was left standing. All the tents, stores, and baggage, +together with the wounded, were left to the enemy. The battalion thus +lost its band instruments and camp equipment, while the officers had +to sacrifice all their personal kit, and many articles belonging to +the mess. The waggons carried nothing but supplies, and no one in the +force was able to take away anything beyond what he carried on his +person.</p> + +<a id="img005" name="img005"></a> +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/img005.jpg" width="600" height="385" alt="" title=""> +<p class="smcap">Armourer-Sergeant Waite.<br> +'Delenda Est Carthago.'</p> +</div> + +<p>The column marched throughout the night, and far into the morning of +the 23rd, only halting at 10 a.m., when <span class="pagenum"><a id="page019" name="page019"></a>(p. 019)</span> dinners were eaten +on the high ground south of Blesbok Pass, about fifteen miles from +Dundee. That the Boers were watching the retreat was proved by one of +their heliographs trying to 'pick up' the column. The march was +resumed after a two hours' rest, and continued to Beith (twenty-one +miles from Dundee), where, at 3 p.m., another halt was made. The men +cooked their teas, and had a chance of a brief sleep, but at 11 p.m. +they had to start again. The road, a very bad one, lay through the +pass leading to the Waschbank River. The battalion formed the +advance-guard, with two Natal mounted policemen as guides. It was a +weary tramp, for, owing to the wretched road, long halts were +necessary in order to allow the waggons to close up. At dawn, the 18th +Hussars took over the duties of advance-guard, and were supported by +'F' company, under Captain Hensley.</p> + +<p>During the night a mysterious heliograph was seen twinkling and +blinking away on the left flank. After some difficulty it was +ascertained that it was communicating with the farm of a man named +Potgieter, professedly a British subject. He was, in fact, caught <span class="italic">in +flagrante delicto</span> in full communication with the unknown Boer +signaller, and paid for his crime with his life.</p> + +<p>At 10 a.m. on the 24th, the head of the column reached the Waschbank +(thirty-six miles), crossed, and halted on the south side of the +river. The waggons were not over until 12.30 p.m. A welcome meal and a +bathe in the stream refreshed the men, some of whom had had no proper +sleep for three nights. Heavy firing was heard from the direction of +Ladysmith, and the mounted troops, with the artillery, were sent off +to reconnoitre and see if they could render any assistance to Sir +George White. They met with nothing, however, and returned before 5 +p.m. Meanwhile the infantry had also been disturbed, for at 2 p.m. +they recrossed the river in order to occupy a better position to +oppose a <span class="pagenum"><a id="page020" name="page020"></a>(p. 020)</span> rumoured pursuit of the Boers. As the latter did +not appear, the river was again forded at 4 p.m., and only just in +time. A violent thunderstorm burst, and the water rose ten feet in two +hours. 'H' company, under Lieutenant Shewan, and a patrol of the 18th +Hussars were left on the north bank, and were thus cut off from the +main body for several hours.</p> + +<p>It rained in torrents until 11 p.m., and the battalion, formed in +quarter-column, had to lie down in pools of water, and get what sleep +it could. At 5 a.m. on the 25th, in bright sunshine, the retreat was +resumed. 'H' company crossed to the south bank a few minutes before +the column moved off, although the water was still up to the men's +waists. The Dublin Fusiliers formed the rearguard, and marched till +mid-day, when Sunday's River (forty-eight miles) was reached. 'A' +company remained on the north bank to cover the crossing of the +waggons, and at 2.30 p.m. the column went on, only halting at 4.30 for +tea. Everybody hoped to have a long rest here, but at 6.30 p.m. Major +Bird was sent for, and informed that, as the Boers were in close +pursuit, a night march was necessary.</p> + +<p>The brigade accordingly started at 7 p.m., at the same moment that +heavy rain began to fall. The road quickly became inches deep in mud, +every one was soon wet to the skin, and the night was so dark that a +man in each section of fours had to hold on to the canteen strap of +the man in front in order to keep the proper direction. As an +additional evil, the battalion was still rearguard, which is generally +the most tiring position in a column. Halts were frequent, and the men +were so exhausted that many of them, when they stopped for a moment, +fell down in the mud and slept. Soon after midnight the 18th Hussars, +who were keeping connection between the Irish Fusiliers and the +rearguard, disappeared. It was so dark that the latter could have no +certainty of being on the right road, but was obliged to <span class="pagenum"><a id="page021" name="page021"></a>(p. 021)</span> +struggle on blindly. Majors Bird and English established a code of +signals by whistle, in order to keep the companies closed up. Dawn +still found the battalion marching, dead tired, but luckily in its +proper place behind the column, and without a man missing. It was not +until 8 a.m. on the 26th that this wearisome march ended. Then +Modderspruit, seven miles north of Ladysmith, and sixty-five from +Dundee, was reached, and the men sank down, too weary to care about +anything. After a brief interval, however, they recovered sufficiently +to eat their bully beef and biscuits. It had been a trying march for +all, although the column had accomplished only twelve miles in eleven +hours. As an instance of the general weariness, it is recorded that a +subaltern, during the meal, was asked to pass the mustard, and fell +asleep with his arm outstretched and the mustard-pot in his hand.</p> + +<p>But the brigade was still not allowed to rest. At 11 a.m. it was on +the 'trek' again, and marched till 2 p.m., when the long retreat came +to an end, and Ladysmith was entered. Here the Devonshire and +Gloucestershire Regiments earned the undying gratitude of the regiment +by providing officers and men with a meal, as well as by pitching a +camp for them.</p> + +<p>On arriving at Ladysmith, tents, equipment, mules, and, in fact, all +that had been lost at Dundee, were issued, and the battalion went into +camp near the cemetery.</p> + +<p>The column was fortunate in having Colonel (now General) Dartnell with +it. This officer, after serving with distinction for many years in the +regular army, had, on retirement, settled down in Natal, where he was, +previous to the war, in command of the Natal Police. A great hunter +and fisherman, he knew every inch of the country, knowledge which +proved of invaluable assistance in the trying march.<a href="#toc"><span class="small">[Back to Contents]</span></a></p> + + +<p class="chapter"><span class="pagenum"><a id="page022" name="page022"></a>(p. 022)</span> CHAPTER III.<br> + +FROM COLENSO TO ESTCOURT.</p> + +<p class="quotechapter">'If thou hope to please all, thy hopes are vaine;<br> + If thou feare to displease some, thy feares are idle.'<br> +<span class="left50 italic">Francis Quarles.</span></p> + +<p>On October 28th Colonel Cooper arrived at Ladysmith from England and +took over the command from Major Bird. The battalion was able to rest +from the 27th to the 29th, and recover from the fatigue of the retreat +to Ladysmith.</p> + +<p>The Headquarter Staff issued orders on the 29th for a general +movement, to take place the next day, against the enemy, who were +closing in on the town. The Dublin Fusiliers formed part of Colonel +Grimwood's brigade, which also included the 1st and 2nd King's Royal +Rifles, the Leicesters, and the Liverpools. The task assigned to +Colonel Grimwood was the capture of Long Hill.</p> + +<p>In order to be in position for the assault by dawn, it was necessary +for the brigade to make a night march, and the battalion paraded about +9.30 p.m. on Sunday evening, the 29th October. It formed the rear of +the brigade, to which was attached a brigade of artillery. 'F' and 'B' +companies were left behind on piquet duty.</p> + +<p>Owing to the difficulties inherent in a night march, and, perhaps, +also to faulty staff management, the artillery, the Dublin Fusiliers, +and Liverpool Regiment diverged from the route followed by the rest of +the brigade. As a result of this mistake the battalion took +practically no part in the battle of the 30th, but, after a vain +endeavour to find Colonel Grim wood's force, spent the morning lying +on the crest of a small ridge near Lombard's Kop. It came under shell +and <span class="pagenum"><a id="page023" name="page023"></a>(p. 023)</span> long-range rifle fire, but lost no men. The attempt to +drive back the Boers was a failure, and the army fell back on +Ladysmith about mid-day. The battalion reached camp at 2 p.m. and was +dismissed. All ranks were somewhat tired, for the sun had been hot, +and after dinner sleep reigned supreme.</p> + +<a id="img006" name="img006"></a> +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/img006.jpg" width="600" height="402" alt="" title=""> +<p class="smcap">Railway Bridge at Colenso.</p> +</div> + +<p>But about 4 p.m. Colonel Cooper received from Headquarters an order to +proceed by train to Colenso, with the object of protecting the +important railway bridge which crosses the Tugela at that place. The +Natal Field Artillery, in addition to his own unit, was placed under +his command. On the receipt of this order, camp was struck, and the +tents and baggage sent down to the station. The piquets found by the +Dublin Fusiliers were ordered to be relieved by other corps, but +although 'F' company, under Captain Hensley, came in, Lieutenant H. W. +Higginson's piquet, on the ridge to the east of the cemetery, could +not rejoin in time, principally owing to the fact that the greater +part of the Gloucestershire Regiment, which had been detailed to find +the relief, had been captured at Nicholson's Nek. Lieutenant Higginson +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page024" name="page024"></a>(p. 024)</span> and his men were thus left to share in the siege of +Ladysmith. The battalion transport, under Lieutenant Renny, also had +to remain behind. An account of their experiences during the siege is +given by Lieutenant Renny in Chapter IX.</p> + +<p>With these exceptions the whole battalion marched down to the station +soon after 11 p.m., and was dispatched in two trains. As Boers had +been reported on Bulwana Hill during the afternoon, a certain amount +of risk seemed to attend the journey. There was nothing to prevent the +enemy from cutting the line at any point in the hilly country between +Ladysmith and Pieter's Station, while even a small hostile force could +have played havoc with the crowded trucks.</p> + +<p>However, the enemy had luckily not penetrated to the railway line, and +after an uneventful, though unpleasant, journey, Colenso was reached +at 4.30 a.m. on the 31st.</p> + +<p>The two railway bridges over the Tugela and Onderbrook Spruit were +already protected by a small force, consisting of the Durban Light +Infantry, a squadron of the Imperial Light Horse, and a detachment of +the Natal Naval Volunteers, with a gun. These units had made good +defensive works, notably Forts Wylie and Molyneux, guarding the +railway bridges over the Tugela and Onderbrook Spruit respectively.</p> + +<p>We encamped some 300 yards south-west of Colenso, and the day (October +31st) was spent in making further defences, and dividing the garrison +into sections. Colenso was not, however, an easy place to defend. It +was commanded by the lofty hills on the left bank of the Tugela, and +by Hlangwane Hill on the right bank to the east of the village. The +garrison, moreover, was lacking in artillery, having only some +muzzle-loading guns with a very limited range. Colonel Cooper +telegraphed to Maritzburg asking for a naval twelve-pounder, which, +however, could not be obtained.</p> + +<a id="img007" name="img007"></a> +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/img007.jpg" width="400" height="592" alt="" title=""> +<p><span class="smcap">Major-General C. D. Cooper, C.B.</span><br> +Commanding 2nd Royal Dublin Fusiliers in Natal.</p> +</div> + +<p>The necessity for such an addition soon arose. At 8.15 a.m. on +November 1st, the staff at Ladysmith sent a wire to <span class="pagenum"><a id="page025" name="page025"></a>(p. 025)</span> say +that a Boer force had moved at daybreak towards Colenso. On receipt of +this news the garrison was warned to be ready, and patrols of the +Imperial Light Horse and the Mounted Infantry section of the battalion +were dispatched towards Ladysmith, Springfield, and the country beyond +Hlangwane. These patrols returned soon after 1 p.m., and the party +which had reconnoitred towards Ladysmith reported that it had come +into touch and exchanged shots with the enemy. Later on in the +afternoon, Lieutenant Cory, commanding the Mounted Infantry section, +went out again and reported that he had seen a hostile force, +estimated at 2000 men, which was off-saddled near the main Ladysmith +road, some six miles out. He had skirmished with the scouts of this +commando and had lost one man. Another wire came from Ladysmith at the +same time announcing that the enemy had guns. Our piquets were, in +consequence of these events, pushed forward to the horseshoe ridge on +the left bank of the Tugela, while the parties guarding the two +bridges (road and railway) over this river were reinforced. The night, +however, passed quietly.</p> + +<p>Mounted patrols were sent out at dawn of the 2nd, and Lieutenant Cory +was able to report, at 6.45 a.m., that the Boers were still in the +same position. But two hours later he forwarded another message to the +effect that the enemy was advancing on Grobelaar's Kloof. Soon +afterwards distant rifle-shots were heard, and the Mounted Infantry +retired into camp. About 10 a.m. parties of the enemy appeared on the +top of Grobelaar's Mountain, and by the aid of a good telescope it +could be seen that they were busily engaged in digging. Their +intention was not long in doubt, for a thin cloud became visible on +the sky-line, and the next moment a shell buried itself in the +river-bank.</p> + +<p>Colonel Cooper at once ordered the tents to be lowered and the +trenches to be manned. But the enemy made no signs of attacking +Colenso, and contented themselves by <span class="pagenum"><a id="page026" name="page026"></a>(p. 026)</span> occasionally firing +shells which invariably fell short. The interruption of telegraphic +communication with Ladysmith soon after 3 p.m. proved, however, that +the enemy was not being idle. Groups of Boers could be seen on the +hills overhanging the railway, and a train carrying General French was +shelled after leaving Pieters. The activity of our foes assumed a more +aggressive character when, about 5 p.m., they began to bombard Fort +Molyneux. From Colenso the shrapnel could be plainly seen bursting +over the work, and the piquets on the left bank of the Tugela reported +that heavy rifle-fire was in progress. As the garrison of the fort +consisted only of eighty men of the Durban Light Infantry, some +anxiety was felt regarding their safety, and this uneasiness was +intensified by the arrival of one of the defenders, who announced that +the redoubt was hard pressed. Lieutenant Shewan, with one hundred men +mostly from 'E' company, was promptly dispatched to reinforce them in +the armoured train. He found that the fort had been evacuated, but +managed to pick up several of the garrison in spite of the enemy's +rifle and shrapnel fire. Captain Hensley, who was holding the +horseshoe ridge, also advanced with 'F' company, and, by firing +long-range volleys, helped to cover the retirement of the remainder of +the garrison, the whole of which reached Colenso in the night. Colonel +Cooper telegraphed an account of these events to Brigadier-General +Wolfe-Murray at Maritzburg, who replied at nightfall that, since the +safety of Colenso bridge was very important, he would send the Border +Regiment next day to reinforce the garrison. But no mention was made +of any artillery.</p> + +<p>Colonel Cooper had now a difficult decision to arrive at. In front of +him lay a superior force of the enemy with guns far outranging his own +obsolete muzzle-loaders, and during the afternoon disquieting rumours, +which might be true, of another commando at Springfield had reached +him. Ladysmith was invested, and the small garrisons of Colenso and +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page027" name="page027"></a>(p. 027)</span> Estcourt alone stood between the Boers and Maritzburg. +Having consulted the senior officers of the garrison, Colonel Cooper +sent another wire to General Wolfe-Murray explaining the situation, +and in reply was authorised to fall back to Estcourt if he could not +hold Colenso. About 10 p.m. he reluctantly determined to retire.</p> + +<p>The mounted troops and the Natal Field Artillery went by road, +starting at midnight. It was decided to send the rest of the garrison +by railway, and the stationmaster at Colenso, with great energy, +succeeded in obtaining three trains which arrived in the early hours +of November 3rd.</p> + +<p>The operation of entraining was at once commenced. The night was dark, +and the packing of all the tents, supplies, and equipment in the +trucks proceeded but slowly. The Natal Naval Volunteers had to bring +their nine-pounder gun down the steep slope of Fort Wylie, a task +requiring great care and time; the piquets on the left bank of the +river had to be withdrawn, and the two bridges guarded up to the very +last moment. Although everything was done in the utmost possible +silence, it yet seemed that the necessary shunting of the trains must +warn the Boers of the evacuation, and bring on an attack. But there +was no interruption, and the last train steamed out of Colenso station +half an hour before dawn.</p> + +<p>Estcourt was reached two hours later. The little town was already +occupied by a detachment of the Imperial Light Horse and Natal Mounted +Rifles. During the morning there also arrived from Maritzburg the 2nd +Border Regiment,<a id="footnotetag2" name="footnotetag2"></a><a href="#footnote2" title="Go to footnote 2"><span class="small">[2]</span></a> afterwards to be the comrades of the battalion in +the 5th Brigade.</p> + +<p>Colonel Cooper took over the command of the garrison and immediately +set to work on the arrangement of the defences. The next day, however, +General Wolfe-Murray and his staff appeared on the scene. Estcourt had +thus the honour of having three different commandants in two days.<a href="#toc"><span class="small">[Back to Contents]</span></a></p> + +<p class="chapter"><span class="pagenum"><a id="page028" name="page028"></a>(p. 028)</span> CHAPTER IV.<br> + +ESTCOURT AND FRERE.</p> + +<p class="quotechapter">'Great men are not always wise: neither do the aged understand + judgment.'—<span class="italic">Job</span>, xxxii. 9.</p> + +<p>The stay at Estcourt (November 3rd to 26th) was a period of great +anxiety and hard work. That there was cause for anxiety may be easily +understood when the state of affairs is remembered. The Army Corps had +not yet arrived from England, nor could any fresh troops be expected +before the 10th. The Boers had invaded Natal, had shut up in Ladysmith +the only British army in the field, and could still afford to send +five or six thousand men against Maritzburg. The Estcourt garrison +alone stood in their way.</p> + +<p>There were necessarily many outposts, and tours were long and +frequent. Thunderstorms, Natal thunderstorms, visited the town with +painful regularity, and rendered piquet work even more uncomfortable +than usual. It was a period of strained waiting, when every one +wondered whether a Boer commando or a British brigade would be the +first arrival. Reliable news was scarce, though rumours of every kind +were rife.</p> + +<p>The battalion was encamped in the market square, while the officers +inhabited a small room encumbered with planks. Trenches covered the +town to the north and north-east, and were pushed forward some two +miles on the Weenen road. The citadel, so to speak, was the sugar-loaf +hill, on which Lieutenant James, R.N., constructed, towards the middle +of the month, emplacements for his two naval twelve-pounders. These +guns arrived on November 14th, a welcome addition to the garrison, +which had been strengthened on the 13th by the <span class="pagenum"><a id="page029" name="page029"></a>(p. 029)</span> West +Yorkshire Regiment. These reinforcements came at an opportune moment, +for the Boers had at last moved forward and on November 14th their +patrols were close to Estcourt. Their approach caused a certain amount +of alarm, and at first the evacuation of the town was proposed. The +camp was even struck, and a great part of the baggage was put on to +trains which were kept ready in the station. Later on other counsels +prevailed, and tents were raised again. It had rained most of the day, +and a general wetting was the chief result of this 'scare.' The Boers +quickly made their presence felt, and the next day inflicted a severe +blow on the garrison.</p> + +<p>Our mounted troops had been busily engaged in reconnaissance work, and +in an evil hour it occurred to the authorities that the armoured train +was also an excellent means of gaining news. Captain Hensley had taken +it to Colenso on the 5th and 6th, and on the latter day surprised a +party of Boers engaged in looting the village. The dispatch of the +train, unsupported by any mounted troops, soon became almost a matter +of daily routine. This defiance of common sense could have only one +result. On November 15th, Captain Haldane,<a id="footnotetag3" name="footnotetag3"></a><a href="#footnote3" title="Go to footnote 3"><span class="small">[3]</span></a> of the Gordon +Highlanders, went out in the train with 'A' company and some men of +the Durban Light Infantry. He reached Frere and, learning from a Natal +policeman that the front was clear, pushed on to Chieveley. Here he +saw in the distance a small body of the enemy moving southwards, and, +having telegraphed the information to Estcourt, turned back. But as +the train was running down a steep gradient the Boers suddenly opened +fire with two guns from a ridge to the west of the line. Almost +immediately afterwards the train was derailed by stones placed on the +line, and the leading truck upset, thus stopping the engine.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page030" name="page030"></a>(p. 030)</span> It was a predicament trying to the nerves of even the +bravest. The Boer shells were well aimed, and came in quick +succession. But Captain Haldane and his men did all that could be +done. Lieutenant Frankland directed from the rear truck a vigorous +fire, which kept the enemy at a respectful distance, and even made +them shift their gun. Meanwhile Mr. Winston Churchill, who had +accompanied the expedition as a Press correspondent, collected some +men and set to work to push the derailed truck off the line. They were +exposed to a heavy fire, but eventually succeeded in their task. The +train began to move again; luck did not, however, favour them, for the +coupling between the engine and rear truck was broken by a shell. Then +Captain Haldane ordered the engine to return to Estcourt with as many +wounded men as possible, while he attempted with the remainder of the +force to reach Frere station. The engine reached Estcourt, but Captain +Haldane was not so fortunate. The men left the trucks and started to +run along the line. No sooner did our rifle-fire cease than the Boers +galloped down the hill and, before Captain Haldane could realise the +danger, they were among the men, and he had no course open but to +surrender. The casualties of 'A' company were three men killed, four +or five wounded, and forty-two prisoners. Private Kavanagh afterwards +received the Distinguished Conduct Medal for his gallantry on this +occasion. The sound of the Boer guns could be distinctly heard at +Estcourt, and great anxiety was felt. A little group of officers +assembled in the trenches to the west of the station, and eagerly +scanned the country through their glasses. Nothing could be seen, and +the firing had ceased. Suddenly through the air rang the shrill +whistle of an engine, and at the sound every one gave a sigh of +relief. It was the armoured train, and all was well. Another whistle, +and round a sharp curve steamed the engine—but, alas! without the +trucks. It was evident that a disaster had occurred, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page031" name="page031"></a>(p. 031)</span> +although particulars were not received until late in the afternoon; +while it was weeks later before the list of casualties could be +ascertained. Luckily this mishap occurred when the situation had in +other respects improved. The Army Corps was landing, and troops were +being pushed forward as quickly as possible. On the 16th, Estcourt was +reinforced by the 2nd Queen's and 2nd East Surreys of General +Hildyard's brigade, and General Barton's Fusilier brigade was +assembling at Mooi River.</p> + +<p>The Boers were thus too late, and so lost the opportunity of capturing +Maritzburg. Although they doubtless knew of the arrival of fresh +troops, they still advanced, and, moving round Estcourt, appeared on +the hills to the north-west of Mooi River station. A detachment +reconnoitred Estcourt on the 18th, but a couple of shells from +Lieutenant James's naval guns induced them to stay at a distance.</p> + +<p>The telegraph line south of the town was interrupted on the 22nd, and +for a brief period the garrison was cut off from the rest of the +world. But the action of Willow Grange, in which the battalion took no +part, caused a retirement of the enemy, who retreated through Weenen +on the 24th.</p> + +<p>Their retreat was in no degree molested by our troops; but on November +26th the long-desired advance took place. It was an exhilarating +feeling to leave Estcourt, and lose sight of those hills and trenches, +the scene of so many weary vigils. The army did not, however, make a +big stride forward. The advance was only to Frere, some ten miles +nearer the Tugela.</p> + +<p>As the column started at 8 a.m. there seemed every prospect of an easy +day. But on active service it is never safe to assume anything. +Although no opposition was met with, and the mounted troops hardly saw +a Boer, the progress was very slow, and sunset found the rear of the +column still three miles distant from Frere. The battalion had the +ill-luck <span class="pagenum"><a id="page032" name="page032"></a>(p. 032)</span> to be in the rearguard, behind a seemingly +interminable line of transport. Then the inevitable drift intervened, +and waggon after waggon broke down. Finally, part of the transport +decided to halt till the morning, and the unfortunate rearguard was +obliged to form a line of outposts. As the battalion transport was +some distance in front, this meant no blankets, no food, nothing save +a limited amount of Natal water. The men were not allowed to consume +the emergency rations, and therefore had to suffer from cold and +hunger. The night passed somehow, however, and with the break of day +we marched into Frere, to find our waggons and obtain food.</p> + +<p>Another monotonous fortnight was spent at Frere, the only excitement +being the arrival of fresh troops and the building of a temporary +railway bridge over the Blaukranz. The arrival of Sir Redvers Buller +and his staff gave hopes of an early advance, and everybody discussed +what our General ought to do, strategical plans becoming as numerous +as sandstorms.</p> + +<p>Since leaving Ladysmith, the 2nd Dublin Fusiliers had not been +attached to a brigade, and now that the Army Corps had come there were +not wanting pessimists who foretold that as the battalion was nobody's +child it would be sent to guard the lines of communication. Early in +December, however, it was assigned to General Hart's 5th, or Irish, +Brigade, in place of the 1st Battalion. The latter was ordered to send +three companies, with a total strength of 287 men, to make up for the +wastage of six weeks' operations. These companies, which were +commanded by Major Tempest Hicks, arrived on December 7th, and were +allowed at first to maintain a separate organization, so that the 2nd +Battalion had eleven companies.</p> + +<a id="img008" name="img008"></a> +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/img008.jpg" width="400" height="532" alt="" title=""> +<p><span class="smcap">Capt. C. F. ROMER</span><br> +(standing) and<br> +<span class="smcap">Capt. E. FETHERSTONHAUGH.</span></p> +</div> + +<p>The 5th Brigade was encamped close behind the ridge which lies to the +north-west of the railway station. General Hart utilised the fortnight +at Frere in making his battalions <span class="pagenum"><a id="page033" name="page033"></a>(p. 033)</span> accustomed to his +methods. Every day the whole brigade stood to arms an hour before +dawn, and advanced up the slope of the ridge, where it stayed until +scouts had reported the front all clear. The General was also very +particular about the cleanliness of the camp, and made it a rule to go +through the lines every morning.<a href="#toc"><span class="small">[Back to Contents]</span></a></p> + +<p class="chapter"><span class="pagenum"><a id="page034" name="page034"></a>(p. 034)</span> CHAPTER V<br> +THE BATTLE OF COLENSO.</p> + +<p class="quotechapter">'Never shame to hear what you have nobly done.'—<span class="italic">Coriolanus.</span></p> + +<p>On December 12th, the 6th and Naval Brigades marched from Frere to +Chieveley, and the rest of the army followed the next day. The +battalion happened to be finding the outposts, and could not march +with the 5th Brigade. Some delay in collecting the companies was +experienced, so it was not until 1 p.m. that a start was made, and +darkness came on before Chieveley was reached. It was, however, a +glorious moonlight night, and marching across the veld had a charm +which even the dust could not quite destroy. But romance soon gave way +to more worldly feelings when, on arriving at Chieveley about 8 p.m., +it became necessary to find the brigade camp among the hundreds of +tents already pitched.</p> + +<p>On the evening of the 14th, it was known that the army was to advance +next day, and attempt the passage of the Tugela. Colonel Cooper +assembled his officers in order to explain the Divisional and Brigade +orders. He stated that the 5th Brigade would cross the river at a +drift two miles west of Colenso, then move down the left bank so as to +take in rear the Boers defending Colenso bridge, which would be +attacked by the 2nd Brigade. The Brigade orders detailed the Dublin +Fusiliers to lead the advance to the river, and afterwards to cover +the rear of the brigade when it moved down the left bank. General Hart +urged in addition the necessity of keeping the men well in hand. They +were to cheer in the event of a charge, but were not to be allowed to +make a wild rush.</p> + +<a id="img009" name="img009"></a> +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/img009.jpg" width="600" height="361" alt="" title=""> +<p>2 miles West of Colenso.</p> +<p>Gen<sup>l.</sup> Hart's flank attack from the Boer Point of View. 15th Dec/99.<br> +<span class="smaller">From a sketch by Col. H. Tempest Hicks, C.B.</span></p> +</div> + +<p>Every one was early astir on December 15th. Breakfasts were at 3 a.m., +but before that hour tents had been struck and <span class="pagenum"><a id="page035" name="page035"></a>(p. 035)</span> packed in +the waggons, on which great-coats, blankets, and mess-tins were also +placed, so that the men only carried their haversacks, water-bottles, +rifles, and 150 rounds. The brigade fell in at 3.30 a.m. It was still +quite dark, and the Brigadier spent the ensuing half-hour in drilling +his command. The advance was commenced just as the eastern horizon +grew grey with the dawn.</p> + +<p>The battalion, which led the brigade, deployed into line to the right, +and then advanced by fours from the right of companies. In front rode +the General with his staff and a Kaffir guide; behind came the other +three battalions of the brigade in mass. The deployment of the +battalion had brought 'A' on the left, and 'H' and the three companies +of the 1st Battalion on the right.</p> + +<p>In this order the brigade moved across the broad expanse of veld, +leading to the banks of the Tugela. In front, beyond the river, rose +tier on tier of ridges and kopjes, backed by the towering mass of +Grobelaar's Kloof. In the morning light they looked strangely quiet +and deserted. Only on a spur to the left front could be seen a few +black specks, the figures of watching Boers.</p> + +<p>Soon the naval guns in front of Chieveley opened fire, dropping their +shells on the horseshoe ridge to the north of Colenso, and into a +kraal further to the west. But no answer came. The brigade moved on, +tramping through the long grass, wet with the dew. There was a +momentary halt in order to cross a spruit running diagonally across +the line of march. The ridges in front grew nearer and plainer. They +still seemed deserted, although the eyes of many foes might be +watching the advancing khaki-clad troops. Behind came the thunder of +the big guns, and the shells screamed in the air overhead. It was past +6 a.m. Suddenly the hiss of a shell sounded marvellously close, there +was a metallic clang, and a cloud of dust arose some hundred yards in +front. It was a Boer shrapnel, and the battle had begun.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page036" name="page036"></a>(p. 036)</span> Each company of the battalion, without waiting for orders, +'front-formed,' and doubled forward. The mounted officers at once +dismounted, Major Hicks' horse being shot under him as he was in the +very act of getting off its back. Somehow it did not seem a bit +strange to him at the time that his horse should be down, and it never +occurred to him then that it had been shot. Another shrapnel burst +over the line and then the enemy's musketry blazed forth, finding an +excellent target in the massed brigade, which was deploying as best it +could.</p> + +<a id="img010" name="img010"></a> +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/img010.jpg" width="600" height="396" alt="" title=""> +<p class="smcap">Boer Trenches, Colenso.</p> +</div> + +<p>The battalion was dangerously crowded together, for it had been +advancing as if drilling on the barrack square, although Colonel +Cooper had tried to open out to double company interval, a proceeding +which the General had promptly counter-ordered. But all did their +best. The men rushed forward after their officers, and at their signal +lay down in the long grass, whence fire was opened at the invisible +foe.</p> + +<p>It was very difficult to discover the Boer positions. There was one +long trench near the kraal which the naval guns <span class="pagenum"><a id="page037" name="page037"></a>(p. 037)</span> had been +shelling, and further to the west could be seen another parapet from +which came an occasional puff of smoke betraying a Martini rifle and +black powder. But if the Boers could not be seen, they could be both +heard and felt. There was one ceaseless rattle of mausers, and a +constant hum of bullets only drowned by the scream of the shells.</p> + +<a id="img011" name="img011"></a> +<div class="cleared"> +<div class="floatleft"> +<img src="images/img011a.jpg" width="200" height="194" alt="" title=""> +<p><span class="smcap">Capt. Bacon.</span><br> +<span class="italic">Killed.</span></p> +</div> +<div class="floatright"> +<img src="images/img011b.jpg" width="200" height="203" alt="" title=""> +<p><span class="smcap">Lieut. Henry.</span><br> +<span class="italic">Killed.</span></p> +</div> +</div> +<div class="figcenter cleared"> +<img src="images/img011c.jpg" width="200" height="201" alt="" title=""> +<p><span class="smcap">Capt. H. M. Shewan.</span><br> +<span class="italic">Wounded.</span></p> +</div> +<div class="cleared"> +<div class="floatleft"> +<img src="images/img011d.jpg" width="200" height="197" alt="" title=""> +<p><span class="smcap">Major Gordon</span><br> +(<span class="italic">1st Battalion, attached</span>).<br> +<span class="italic">Wounded.</span></p> +</div> +<div class="floatright"> +<img src="images/img011e.jpg" width="200" height="200" alt="" title=""> +<p><span class="smcap">Second Lieut. Macleod</span><br> +(<span class="italic">1st Battalion, attached</span>).<br> +<span class="italic">Wounded.</span></p> +</div> +</div> + +<p class="center smcap cleared">Casualties at Colenso.</p> + + +<p>Short rushes were made as a rule, and the flank companies edged away +in order to give room for a more reasonable extension. But no sooner +had the battalion opened out than it was reinforced by companies of +the Connaught Rangers, and, later, of the Inniskilling Fusiliers and +the Border Regiment. In a comparatively short time, after the first +Boer shell, the 5th Brigade had been practically crowded into one +line. Officers led men of all the four regiments, and encouraged them +with the cry, 'Come on, the Irish Brigade!'</p> + +<p>There was no control, no cohesion, no arrangement in the attack. No +attempt was made to support, by the careful fire of one part of the +line, the advance of the remainder; nor did any order from the higher +ranks reach the firing line. Small groups of men, led by an officer, +jumped up, dashed forward a few scores of yards, and then lay down. +Nobody knew where the drift was, nobody had a clear idea of what was +happening. All pushed forward blindly, animated by the sole idea of +reaching the river-bank.</p> + +<p>On the left, part of the battalion was almost on the river when the +Boers first opened fire, and quickly reached the bank. After a short +halt they turned to their right and moved in single file along the +river, being exposed all the time to a heavy fire. They passed through +a kraal, and eventually, not being able to find the drift, assembled +in a hollow, where they stayed until orders to retire reached them. +The centre and right advanced through low scrub into a loop of the +river. Some sections of the 1st Battalion, on the extreme right, came +upon a spruit, and, under shelter of its banks, pushed ahead of the +line.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page038" name="page038"></a>(p. 038)</span> Thus, by short and constant rushes, the assailants worked +their way forward. A brigade of field artillery was supporting the +attack from behind, but they found it as difficult as the infantry did +to locate the Boers, and most of their shells were quite harmless to +the enemy, while a few dropped close to the attacking infantry. They +aided the latter indirectly, however, since the Boer guns turned their +attention to them.</p> + +<p>General Sir Redvers Buller had early recognised the difficulties of +the 5th Brigade, and sent orders for it to retire. But it is easier to +send a force into a battle than to draw it back. The great difficulty +at Colenso was to communicate with the company officers, who had to be +left entirely to their own 'initiative.' Finally an officer of the +Connaught Rangers volunteered to take to the firing line General +Hart's written order to retire. He succeeded in reaching the front, +but then, thinking he had struck the right of the line, turned to his +left. In reality he had gone to the centre of the attack, and, +consequently, the retirement was carried out partially and by +fractions. The left fell back about 10 a.m. in good order, though the +Boers, as usual, redoubled their fire when they saw their foes begin +to retreat. The centre and right, having received no order nor +warning, clung to their ground, and in some cases even made a further +advance. Section after section, however, gradually realised that their +left flank was uncovered and a general retreat of the brigade in +progress. A score of men, under the command of an officer, would rise +up and double back, causing, as they did so, an instant quickening of +the enemy's fire. All around the running figures the bullets splashed, +raising little jets of dust. Occasionally a man would stumble forward, +or sink down as if tired, but it seemed wonderful that the rain of +bullets did not claim more victims. They claimed enough, however, of +the unfortunate three companies of the 1st Battalion, whom the order +to retire never reached. Till <span class="pagenum"><a id="page039" name="page039"></a>(p. 039)</span> 1 p.m., and the arrival of the +Boers, they lay where they were, suffering a loss of some 60 per cent. +When at last Major Hicks realised the situation, he touched with his +stick the man on his right, to tell him to pass the word to retire, +but he touched a dead man; he turned to the left, only to touch +another corpse. One company was brought out of action by a +lance-corporal. Then the Boers arrived, and began making prisoners. +One shouted to Major Hicks for his revolver; he replied that he had +not got one—it was in his holsters on his dead horse—and stalked +indignantly off the battlefield, without another question being put to +him.</p> + +<p>Major Gordon, who was commanding one of the three companies of the 1st +Battalion, had been shot through the knee early in the day by a rifle +bullet. He lay for two hours or so momentarily expecting to be hit +again. After a time he noticed that as long as he lay still no bullets +came in his direction, but that the moment he attempted to move there +would be a vicious hiss and spurt of sand and dust close beside him. +In spite of this he managed to crawl through a pool of blood to a +neighbouring ant-heap, which offered some sort of protection, and into +which a bullet plunged just as he reached it. Here he remained till +the retirement, when, assisted by two sergeants of the regiment, +Keenan and Dillon, he managed to hobble away. Even then he noticed +that as long as they kept away from the troops who were still actively +engaged few bullets came their way, as though the Boers were purposely +not firing at the wounded.</p> + +<p>The Boer heavy artillery pursued the retiring troops with shells, +which made a prodigious noise, and raised clouds of dust, but seldom +did any damage. Gradually a region of comparative peace was reached, +where the ground was not being continually struck by bullets, and only +an occasional shell fell. The extended lines of the 4th Brigade, +ordered to cover the retirement, came into view, and behind them the +men of the Irish Brigade collected again in companies and <span class="pagenum"><a id="page040" name="page040"></a>(p. 040)</span> +battalions. Then, although the artillery was still roaring fiercely, +and the mausers rattled with tireless persistence, the brigade trudged +back to its former camping-ground, pitched tents, and began to cook +dinners. A prosaic but practical ending to an impossible attack.</p> + +<p>But there was still one task to accomplish—the preparation of the +casualty list: The regiment had suffered heavily. Two officers, +Captain Bacon (1st Battalion) and Lieutenant Henry, had been killed, +and three, Major Gordon (1st Battalion), Captain Shewan, and +Lieutenant Macleod (1st Battalion), wounded. The total casualties were +219, of whom 52 were killed. Among the latter were Colour-Sergeant +Gage (mortally wounded) and Sergeant Hayes.</p> + +<p>Captain Bacon (1st Battalion) was killed by a bullet, and must have +died immediately. He had previously served for a short time with the +2nd Battalion, in which he had many friends, and his loss was bitterly +deplored by Officers, N.C.O.'s, and Privates alike.</p> + +<p>Lieutenant Henry had scarcely two years' service, but had in that +short space of time endeared himself to every one in the regiment, and +was as smart and efficient a young officer as ever joined it. His +death must also have been mercifully instantaneous, as he was hit by a +shell.</p> + +<p>Second Lieutenant Macleod had only joined the 1st Battalion a few days +before it left the Curragh on November 10th. He was very severely +wounded, his thigh being broken, and although his leg was saved, it +was left two inches shorter than it had been, and in the end he had to +leave the service on this account.</p> + +<p>Major Gordon (1st Battalion), who received a Brevet +Lieutenant-Colonelcy for his services, was invalided home, but came +out again later on; while Captain Shewan, who had been shot through +the leg by a bullet, was back at work again in twelve days, a sterling +proof of that devotion <span class="pagenum"><a id="page041" name="page041"></a>(p. 041)</span> to duty which was later on rewarded +by the well-merited distinction of the D.S.O.</p> + +<a id="img012" name="img012"></a> +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/img012.jpg" width="600" height="400" alt="" title=""> +<p class="smcap">Group of Twenty Sergeants taken after the Battle of +Colenso.</p> + +<p class="smcap">All that remained of forty-eight who left Maritzburg.</p> + +<p class="smaller">The names reading from left to right in rows are:—(back row) Sergt. +Hanna; Band-Sergt. Cragg; Sergt. Davis; Lance-Sergt. Cullen; Sergt. +Rooney; Arm.-Sergt. Waite; Col.-Sergt. Cossey; Sergt. Smith; Sergt. +Sheridan. (2nd row) Sergt. Keenan; Sergt. French; Col.-Sergt. Ambrose; +Capt. Fetherstonhaugh; Col. Cooper; Col.-Sergt. Guilfoyle: Sergt. +McNay; Sergt. Hobson; Pioneer-Sergt. Duncan. (3rd row) Sergt. +Moriarty; Sergt. Purcell; Col.-Sergt. Connell; Sergt. Beatty.</p> +</div> + +<p>The three companies of the 1st Battalion had been the greatest +sufferers. Being on the right, they were the last to retire; in fact, +some of the men did not get in till 5 p.m., while a few were taken +prisoners on the banks of the river.</p> + +<a id="img013" name="img013"></a> +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/img013.jpg" width="600" height="402" alt="" title=""> +<p class="smcap">Bringing down the Wounded.</p> +</div> + +<p>Amongst a host of others who showed their worth under the trying +circumstances of this unfortunate day, was Bugler Dunne, a small boy +who did his duty well, and had the good fortune to be received by Her +Majesty the Queen on his return home. His father was also in South +Africa, a Colour-Sergeant in the 5th Battalion. Isolated cases must +always receive undue prominence—it is the way of the world—but the +spirit of the men was quite remarkable throughout, and made officers +and N.C.O.'s proud to command and lead them. Instead of depressing +them, the reverse seemed to have a contrary effect, and merely +hardened their determination to succeed.<a href="#toc"><span class="small">[Back to Contents]</span></a></p> + +<p class="chapter"><span class="pagenum"><a id="page042" name="page042"></a>(p. 042)</span> CHAPTER VI.<br> + +VENTER'S SPRUIT.</p> + +<p class="quotechapter">'Now no chastening for the present seemeth to be joyous, but + grievous.'—<span class="italic">Heb.</span> xii. 11.</p> + +<p>The greater part of December 16th was spent in burying the dead. At +nightfall orders were received to strike camp, and the brigade marched +back to Frere, which was reached in the early morning of the 17th, +when we occupied our former camping-ground.</p> + +<p>Another weary wait followed. Frere at the best of times is an +uninteresting spot, but it became absolutely repulsive as the grass +disappeared and mud and flies reigned supreme. Life in the camp was +monotonous, only slightly preferable to the long tours of outpost +duty, and a bathe in the river, varied by a walk round the lines, +formed the only amusement.</p> + +<p>General Hart did not relax any of his precautions, and his command +still stood to arms every morning. The rest of the army assembled at +Frere seemed, so far as could be seen, to rely on the 5th Brigade, for +no other unit followed the latter's example.</p> + +<p>Our listlessness was broken on January 6th, when the thunder of the +guns around Ladysmith was so distinct that it seemed as if Chieveley +must be attacked. Everybody soon learned that the Boers were making a +desperate attempt to capture the town, and there was naturally some +anxiety as to the result.</p> + +<p>A few days afterwards, signs of another forward movement became +apparent. One cheerful omen was the arrival of the doctors, whose duty +it was to convey the wounded back to the base, and of a large body of +civilian stretcher-bearers. <span class="pagenum"><a id="page043" name="page043"></a>(p. 043)</span> General Warren's Division, fresh +from England, marched in, and the second effort to relieve Ladysmith +was begun.</p> + +<p>The 5th Brigade left Frere at daybreak on January 11th, and, covered +by the 'Royals,' took the Springfield road. It had been raining +heavily, and the road, never good, soon became execrable. The column +was followed by a long line of waggons carrying baggage, supplies, +ammunition, pontoons, &c. On arriving at Pretorius' Farm, the brigade +halted and pitched camp. The battalion found the outposts, which were +especially ordered to protect themselves by building 'sangars' or +digging trenches.</p> + +<p>Meanwhile the apparently endless line of waggons had been blocked by a +bad drift below the camp, and the brigade was called upon to help. The +road was somewhat improved by throwing into the soft mud stones +obtained from a wall, and many waggons had to be hauled by ropes +through the spruit. For over forty-eight hours did that collection of +vehicles continue to cross and require help.</p> + +<p>On Thursday, January 12th, the 4th Brigade and General Warren's +Division passed through the camp and went straight on to Springfield, +since the cavalry had ascertained that there were no Boers south of +the Tugela in that direction. The 5th Brigade followed on the +afternoon of the 15th, crossing the Little Tugela by a foot +trestle-bridge made of spars cut by the Engineers from trees on the +bank. As the battalion approached Springfield, the sound of +artillery-fire greeted it, and our shrapnel could be seen bursting +against a hill which was evidently on the left bank of the Tugela. It +was clear that the army was again in touch with the enemy, but nobody +knew what Sir Redvers Buller had decided upon, although everybody, of +course, dogmatised on what he ought to do.</p> + +<p>On the afternoon of the 16th, orders were issued for the brigade to +march that night, although nothing was stated regarding its +destination. Vigorous operations were <span class="pagenum"><a id="page044" name="page044"></a>(p. 044)</span> plainly intended, +since the force was to move as lightly as possible. No tents or +blankets were allowed, and the great-coats were carried by the +regimental transport, in which officers were permitted to pack twenty +pounds of baggage. Six days' rations were also taken.</p> + +<p>The army moved from Springfield at dusk, leaving the camp standing in +charge of a few details (cooks, &c.), who had strict orders to light +fires and walk about, so that the vigilant burgher might not discover +that the army had slipped away. The general direction of the march was +north-west. It was a bright moonlight night, but the column moved +slowly, for the numerous waggons took up the centre of the road, while +the troops moved on the side. About midnight it began to rain, which +made everybody cold and uncomfortable, especially as halts were long +and frequent. It was not easy to see where the army was going, +although the Tugela could not be far off. Nobody knew the plan of +operations, which, however, evidently aimed at a surprise crossing of +the river, and it seemed as if the enemy must hear the noise of the +creaking transport and tramping men.</p> + +<p>About 2 a.m. there came a halt on the top of a ridge, where General +Hart formed up his brigade. Each regiment deployed into line, and then +lay down one behind the other in the following order: Royal +Inniskilling Fusiliers, Connaught Rangers, Royal Dublin Fusiliers, and +Border Regiment. Fatigued by a long night-march, every one soon fell +asleep. Unfortunately, however, the slumbers of the brigade were +disturbed by an incident which shows how easily confusion can arise in +night operations. A horse from somewhere in front broke loose and +galloped over the veld, straight into the ranks of the sleeping +regiments. For a moment everything was in confusion, and a general +panic nearly took place. Luckily the first glimmer of dawn had come, +and the company officers soon regained control of their men, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page045" name="page045"></a>(p. 045)</span> +but it might have been a different tale had darkness still prevailed.</p> + +<p>When daylight came, it showed the army to be on the top of a hill +overlooking Trichardt's Drift. On the other side of the river the +ground rose to a long ridge flanked on the east by a steep mountain, +and on the west by a bastion-like hill. Nobody then knew the country, +but that mountain was Spion Kop, and the ridge lying so calmly in the +morning light was to be the scene of six days' continuous fighting. At +dawn of January 17th, however, the ridge, which the natives called +Tabanyama, seemed deserted, and not a Boer was to be seen.</p> + +<p>It was now learnt that Sir Redvers Buller had divided his forces, +sending two brigades, under General Lyttelton, to Potgieter's Drift, +while the remainder of the army, under General Warren, was assembled +ready to cross the river at Trichardt's Drift.</p> + +<p>The battalion breakfasted quietly, and then 'H' company was sent down +to the drift in order to help in the construction of a bridge. As the +company descended the steep slope, the artillery from the heights +began to shell a farm on the far side of the river, whence a Boer +patrol had been sniping. The Engineers had massed the pontoon waggons +round a farm by the drift, and were looking for a suitable point for +the bridge. The pontoons were launched, and by 11.30 a.m. the first +bridge was ready. The infantry immediately began to cross, but the +artillery and transport had to wait for a second bridge, which was not +completed until after dark.</p> + +<p>The 5th Brigade marched down to the river at 2 p.m. and crossed. On +reaching the left bank the battalion deployed into line, with four or +five paces between the men, and slowly moved up the slope in support +of the widely-extended lines of the Lancashire Brigade. Except for an +occasional shot from the artillery at Potgieter's Drift, everything +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page046" name="page046"></a>(p. 046)</span> was still and peaceful; although, as the army moved away +from the river, most of the officers expected to be greeted by the +familiar 'pick-pock' of the enemy's mausers.</p> + +<p>The brigade in front eventually halted on the top of a minor ridge, +some three thousand yards or more from the crest-line of Tabanyama, +and separated from it by open and gently-sloping ground. The Dublin +Fusiliers formed quarter-column immediately behind the Lancashire +Brigade, and prepared to bivouac. Many of the officers strolled higher +up in order to look at the country through their glasses. The main +crest-line was evidently occupied, for men could be seen busily +digging. It was somewhat trying to think that precious time was being +wasted, while the burghers were preparing a defensive position.</p> + +<p>Our transport was still on the other side of the Tugela, and +consequently we had to do without blankets, great-coats, and kettles. +The officers' mess was saved by a subaltern, who succeeded in +procuring a Kaffir cooking-pot and some very tough fowls, which +Captain Hensley boiled with great skill. The night was unpleasant, for +khaki drill is but an inefficient protection against the cold and +heavy dew. The experience proved too much for Major Butterworth, +R.A.M.C., who had to go on the sick list soon afterwards. He had been +with the battalion since Ladysmith, and his coolness and devotion at +the battle of Colenso had made him popular with all ranks.</p> + +<p>The next day, January 18th, was spent in idleness, and the different +corps remained in their bivouacs. There was nothing to do except watch +the Boers still digging on the crest-line, and the shells fired by the +guns of General Lyttelton, who was apparently making a reconnaissance. +The greater part of General Warren's artillery crossed to the left +bank and took up a position close to the battalion.</p> + +<p>On the 19th the regiment took part in the movement <span class="pagenum"><a id="page047" name="page047"></a>(p. 047)</span> which was +initiated with the evident purpose of turning the Boer right by the +Acton Holmes road. Leaving the artillery and the Lancashire Brigade on +the ridge, the remainder of the army descended into the plain, and +moved up the left bank of the Tugela. The column marched along the +base of the main ridge, and was carefully watched by the Boer patrols +from Bastion Hill.</p> + +<p>After fording Venter's Spruit the battalion halted about 2 p.m. on +some rising ground, whence a good view of the surrounding country was +obtained. As there seemed every prospect of a long halt, the men began +to take off their boots and putties, in order to dry them, but they +had to put them on again hurriedly enough, since the guns suddenly +opened fire. At first everybody imagined that the Boers were attacking +the artillery and Lancashire Brigade. Soon, however, it was seen that +the latter were making a reconnaissance. Not much opportunity for +looking at the spectacle was afforded, since we received an order to +recross Venter's Spruit and bivouac. The movement by Acton Holmes had +been given up for some reason which was unknown, and it was not +difficult to see that the alternative was a frontal attack on the +position which everybody had watched being fortified.</p> + +<p>The battalion halted close to Venter's Spruit, and had a piquet ('H' +company) on the Trichardt's Drift road. The transport succeeded in +reaching the brigade that night, and the men were thus able to have +their great-coats. Not much sleep was, however, allowed. At a very +early hour, long before daylight, on the 20th, the brigade was +aroused. Great-coats were again packed on the waggons, and then, +without breakfast or any opportunity of issuing rations, the battalion +fell in and marched off. Owing to darkness and the rough track by +which the column marched, progress was at first very slow. When the +feeble light of early dawn enabled the country to be seen, the +regiment was crossing <span class="pagenum"><a id="page048" name="page048"></a>(p. 048)</span> a spruit near Fairview Farm, lying at +the foot of the ridge. It then ascended a small valley leading to +Three Tree Hill, where the Field Artillery had concentrated.</p> + +<p>The latter soon afterwards opened the battle, and fired on the Boer +trenches, which stood out more prominently than usual on the crest of +the ridge. The enemy's artillery did not reply, although a vigorous +rifle-fire was directed on the skirmishers of the Lancashire Brigade.</p> + +<p>The Connaught Rangers had been temporarily detached on escort duty, +and General Hart now moved his three remaining battalions to the left +in line of quarter-columns. It was a hot day, and the men, who had +eaten nothing that morning, suffered some discomfort from such a close +formation. The ground, too, was broken and covered with long grass and +scrub, so that it was no easy matter to satisfy the General's +injunctions in the matter of 'dressing.' The brigade moved in full +view of the enemy, and so compact a body of men must have been a great +temptation to the Boer gunners, who, however, were either not ready or +exercised much self-restraint. After scrambling through a remarkably +steep valley, the brigade halted in a gentle depression, where it was +safe from the random bullets that were falling near. A long pause +ensued, and the men were able to obtain some much-needed water.</p> + +<p>It was past noon before the infantry, in this part of the field, +advanced in earnest. Then the York and Lancaster Regiment and +Lancashire Fusiliers were sent forward as the firing-line against the +centre of the Boer position, and were supported by the Borders and 2nd +Royal Dublin Fusiliers. The formation adopted by General Hart for the +support was two lines. The first line, which was two deep, consisted +of the right half-battalions of the two regiments, the Borders being +on the right, and was followed at a distance of about two hundred +yards by a similar line, composed of the left half-battalions.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page049" name="page049"></a>(p. 049)</span> On emerging from the depression where it had been resting, +the support came under rifle-fire. The range must, however, have been +a long one, and the casualties were few. The attack was moving astride +of a spur which ran from the Boer position to the Tugela, a little +distance to the west of Three Tree Hill. At first this spur was broad, +forming almost a plateau, but further on it narrowed, and consequently +the left of the two lines advanced up a narrow valley, which afforded +excellent cover.</p> + +<p>Led by General Hart, the brigade advanced at a steady pace and, after +a time, closed up on the firing-line. It then halted, and from a +slight elevation opened fire in order to support the Lancashire +Regiments, who, having taken the enemy's advanced position, found that +some thousand yards of very open and almost-level ground lay between +them and the Boer trenches, which lined the northern edge of the +summit of the ridge. The attack could now only advance slowly, since +it was exposed to a cross-fire from both flanks. Hitherto it had only +faced rifle-fire, but about 1.45 p.m. the Boer guns, posted somewhere +near Spion Kop, came into action. They were able to rake the whole +assaulting line, and, in fact, many officers thought at first that the +shells were 'short' ones from our own artillery. The Boers on this +occasion managed to burst their shrapnel with some accuracy, and it +was fortunate that the attack could find good cover.</p> + +<p>This artillery and the increased rifle-fire on the right flank caused +the line to swing round in that direction, but any further advance was +suspended by superior orders soon after 4.30 p.m. The Borders, who had +pushed ahead, were ordered back, and the other regiments took cover +among the rocks, and maintained a vigorous fire. The rattle of +musketry gradually died away as the light failed, until after +nightfall the battalion assembled behind a wall and bivouacked.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page050" name="page050"></a>(p. 050)</span> By great efforts the regimental transport had succeeded in +getting touch with the battalion, which was thus able to obtain +rations. But it was not until 8 p.m. that the men could get anything +to eat.</p> + +<p>Thus ended the fight of January 20th. It had cost the regiment one of +its most efficient officers, Captain Hensley, who was mortally +wounded.<a id="footnotetag4" name="footnotetag4"></a><a href="#footnote4" title="Go to footnote 4"><span class="small">[4]</span></a> Major English had been hit in the leg—he was back within +a fortnight—and of the rank and file four were killed and twenty +wounded—among the former being Lance-Sergeant Taylor, a most +excellent N.C.O. Although the opposing forces were so close, the night +passed quietly. With daylight (January 21st), however, the rifle-fire +at once broke out. The battalion had just managed to have a scratch +meal when orders were received to move to the support of the 2nd +Brigade, which was away to the left. General Hart ordered Colonel +Cooper to move by the straightest line, first down a ravine across a +spruit, and then over a hill. While climbing the latter, the battalion +was in full view of the enemy, who at once opened fire with guns and +rifles. Each company extended in succession, and doubled, so far as +possible, over the exposed ground. Once over the hill a region of +comparative safety was reached, and General Hart finally formed up his +command behind a rocky ridge overlooking the position held by the 2nd +Brigade. <span class="pagenum"><a id="page051" name="page051"></a>(p. 051)</span> The latter were having a rifle duel with the Boer +trenches but did not advance. The 5th Brigade played a very passive +part, and spent the day behind the rocks. Bullets continually whistled +overhead, and the hostile artillery near Spion Kop burst an occasional +shrapnel along the position. Otherwise there was no excitement.</p> + +<p>Towards evening, the regiment received orders to move some few hundred +yards to the right, and bivouac. Colonel Cooper directed the companies +to close in succession, and march from the rocks to the new position. +This movement almost escaped the notice of the Boer artillery, and it +was not until the last company ('H') moved that two shells were fired. +They fell to the right and in front of the leading fours, and did no +damage. The battalion assembled in a narrow amphitheatre just below +the southern crest, and at the head of a valley leading to Fairview +Farm. Although the bivouac could not be seen by the enemy, except from +Spion Kop, it was not altogether sheltered from fire, for every now +and then a bullet would clear the crest-line and strike the ground +below.</p> + +<p>In this amphitheatre we perforce remained for three days, having a far +from pleasant time. From sunrise to sunset the rattle of musketry +practically never ceased, only at intervals the hum of the passing +bullets was drowned by the clang of bursting shrapnel. The Boer guns, +posted both directly in front and on the right flank, burst their +shells just over the crest, and fired intermittently all day. There +were four battalions crowded in the amphitheatre, and each one +occupied in turn the crest, whence an uninterrupted fire was directed +on the Boer trenches opposite. The enemy's marksmen had the range of +this crest-line, and it was a dangerous matter to stand up even for a +minute. Stone sangars were built and the companies relieved each other +by the men crawling up the slope. The enemy's artillery near Spion Kop +could rake the line of sangars, thus necessitating numerous <span class="pagenum"><a id="page052" name="page052"></a>(p. 052)</span> +traverses. When not in the firing line, we lay behind the slope in +column, each company being protected by a parapet of earth or stone. +Immediately below the amphitheatre the ground fell steeply, forming a +ravine in which the cooks set up their field kitchens in comparative +security. It was characteristic of the British soldier that whereas +during the greater part of the day he crouched behind his cover, the +sight of a fatigue party with the kettles made him forget the shells +and bullets, and he dashed off for his food regardless of danger.</p> + +<p>On Tuesday night (January 22nd) the proposed assault on Spion Kop was +announced, and every one hoped that a general advance would be the +result.</p> + +<p>The morning of January 23rd dawned with a thick white mist, which hid +everything from view. It was our turn to occupy the ridge, and the +companies lay there for nearly an hour before the usual exchange of +rifle-fire began. No news of the capture of Spion Kop had reached the +amphitheatre, but the fact could be guessed from the absence of the +Boer guns in that direction. Only the artillery in front of the +battalion's position fired in the morning, and even that ceased during +the afternoon. The enemy was evidently concentrating the greater part +of his forces against Spion Kop, and parties of mounted burghers could +be seen moving from their extreme right. On Spion Kop hung the white +clouds of bursting shrapnel, and the stuttering sound of the pompom +scarcely ceased for a moment, but the 5th Brigade made no advance. The +companies behind the sangars fired hundreds of rounds at the Boer +trenches, while their comrades below ate and slept.</p> + +<p>At dawn of the 25th, glasses and telescopes were turned on to the +summit of the mountain, and it was a bitter blow when the moving +figures there were seen to be Boers. It was not until late in the +forenoon, however, that the evacuation of Spion Kop was officially +communicated. But the renewal <span class="pagenum"><a id="page053" name="page053"></a>(p. 053)</span> of the Boer artillery fire +against the crest-line had been a sufficiently eloquent announcement +of the fact.</p> + +<p>As there seemed no reason why the regiment should remain in the +amphitheatre when it was not required to man the sangars, Colonel +Cooper obtained permission that afternoon to move down the valley +below Bastion Hill. The new bivouac was more sheltered, although an +occasional Boer shell still fell near.</p> + +<p>It was now evident that the second attempt to relieve Ladysmith had +failed, and that the army would have to recross the Tugela. On the +afternoon of the 25th, fatigue parties were sent by the battalion to +improve the track leading to Fairview Farm, and it was rumoured that +the retreat would take place that night. At 10.30 p.m. 'H' company was +sent to the farm, with orders to hold it during the retirement. But +the army did not move until Friday night, January 26th. At 10 p.m. on +that date, General Hart's command began to descend the valley in heavy +rain, which rendered the track extremely greasy.</p> + +<p>Only a short distance had been covered when there was an outburst of +rifle-fire from the rearguard, which was still holding the sangars. +For a moment it seemed as if the Boers had anticipated the retreat and +were attacking. The battalion halted, but the firing soon ceased, and +the march was continued, the men stumbling down the track as quickly +as the many boulders would permit. At Fairview Farm the column halted +for a considerable period, in order to let the rearguard close up. By +this time every one was wet to the skin, and the enforced rest was +somewhat trying, owing to the cold.</p> + +<p>However, after a wait of about an hour, the retirement was resumed. +The track was marked by orderlies and tins, but even with this help it +was difficult to find the way in the utter darkness. The surface of +the road, too, had become so slippery that falls were frequent. +Altogether, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page054" name="page054"></a>(p. 054)</span> progress was painfully slow and the march a very +fatiguing one. It was past 4 a.m., January 27th, before the pontoon +bridge at Trichardt's Drift was reached. The column had another +prolonged wait here, and so tired were the men that many of them +dropped to the ground and slept in the mud. Early dawn had come when +the brigade recrossed the Tugela and toiled up the steep slope on the +other side. A Boer gun sent a parting shell just as the column reached +the summit.</p> + +<p>It was a great relief to look back towards Tabanyama, where the +discarded biscuit tins were gleaming in the morning light, and say +good-bye to that long line of sangars and trenches. The men's spirits +were, moreover, cheered up by the sight of the 'Scotch' cart with the +kettles and rations. Breakfasts were cooked, and after a short rest +the brigade moved to the camping-ground selected for it. But it +arrived only to find that the position was within view and artillery +range of Spion Kop. So once more it had to trudge over the veld, +General Hart moving it in line of quarter-columns, and being as +particular about the 'dressing' as if he were on Laffan's Plain. His +command hardly appreciated this smartness at the time. But all were +finally rewarded by the arrival of the transport with tents and +baggage, and every one spent the night in comparative luxury.<a href="#toc"><span class="small">[Back to Contents]</span></a></p> + +<p class="chapter"><span class="pagenum"><a id="page055" name="page055"></a>(p. 055)</span> CHAPTER VII.<br> + +VAAL KRANTZ.</p> + +<p class="quotechapter"> + 'The best laid schemes o' mice and men<br> +<span class="add4em">Gang aft agley.</span><br> + And lea'e us naught but grief and pain<br> +<span class="add4em">For promised joy.'</span><br> +<span class="left50 italic">Burns.</span></p> + +<p>On January 30th we were reinforced by a draft of 400 men, principally +militia reservists, who were brought up by Captain Venour. They were a +welcome addition, being a physically fine body of men, and, although +their training was naturally not so good as that of their 'regular' +comrades, they proved equally brave and ready to follow their +officers.</p> + +<p>The battalion shifted its camp on January 29th to Spearman's Hollow, +where it stayed a week. It was here that Sir Redvers Buller visited +every brigade in turn, and made his speech stating that the fighting +around Spion Kop had enabled him to discover the key to Ladysmith. He +had earned the gratitude of the men by putting them on extra rations, +and was always a warm favourite with the rank and file, who love a +brave man and instinctively know one.</p> + +<p>On February 2nd the regiment left Spearman's Hollow for Spearman's +Hill, and, on the afternoon of Sunday, February 4th, marched with the +rest of the brigade towards Potgieter's Drift. The trek was a short +one, and at 6 p.m. we bivouacked behind Swaartz Kop. At nightfall the +officers were assembled and informed of the proposed operations for +the next day. The idea was to make a feint attack on Brakfontein and +then assault Vaal Krantz, the capture of which, it was thought, would +break the enemy's line.</p> + +<p>We rose at dawn on the 5th, had a comfortable breakfast, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page056" name="page056"></a>(p. 056)</span> and +only moved off about 7 a.m., just as the heavy artillery on Mount +Alice and Swaartz Kop began the fight by shelling Brakfontein. The +hills around rolled with the thunder of the guns, while the faint +echoes of the lyddite explosions on the distant ridges formed a piano +accompaniment. With this music in its ears, the battalion marched +through the gap between Mount Alice and Swaartz Kop by the road +leading to Potgieter's Drift. There was a short halt made at the gap, +from which a splendid view of the battlefield was obtainable. +Immediately below stretched the silver line of the Tugela, with all +its many loops and twistings visible. Beyond came a small brown ridge, +which had evidently been held by our troops, since a few biscuit-tins +glistened on the near slope. Further away was the background formed by +the Boer position, extending in a gigantic curve from Spion Kop on the +spectator's left to the lofty mass of Doorn Kloof on his right, the +centre being formed by Brakfontein and Vaal Krantz, over both of which +heavy columns of smoke were hanging. The Lancashire Brigade had +commenced the feint attack, and its extended lines could be plainly +seen as they advanced slowly in succession, while behind them the +batteries of field artillery had unlimbered on the plain, and were +already shelling the Boer trenches.</p> + +<p>After a short pause the regiment began to descend the hill. The 5th +Brigade was following the 4th, both of them marching in 'fours.' +Before reaching the drift, the head of the column wheeled to the right +and proceeded along the narrow plain between the Tugela and Swaartz +Kop. The sight of that long winding line must have been a great +temptation to the Boer gunners, but they remained silent. Not even a +rifle had spoken. It was only when the Lancashire Brigade began to +retire that the enemy disclosed himself. Then Brakfontein spluttered +with musketry, and the Boer artillery vented its wrath on the +batteries dotted over the plain. But both our infantry and gunners +seemed to treat <span class="pagenum"><a id="page057" name="page057"></a>(p. 057)</span> the fusillade with contempt. The former +marched back without apparently quickening their pace, and the latter, +limbering up, trotted off to support the attack on Vaal Krantz. This +hill was being literally covered with shells, and soon had the +appearance of a smoking volcano.</p> + +<a id="img014" name="img014"></a> +<div class="cleared"> +<div class="floatleft"> +<img src="images/img014a.jpg" width="200" height="202" alt="" title=""> +<p><span class="smcap">Second Lieut. Lane.</span><br> +<span class="italic">Wounded at Hart's Hill.</span></p> +</div> +<div class="floatright"> +<img src="images/img014b.jpg" width="200" height="206" alt="" title=""> +<p><span class="smcap">Lieut. J. McD. Haskard.</span><br> +<span class="italic">Wounded at Pieter's Hill.</span></p> +</div> +</div> + +<div class="figcenter cleared"> +<img src="images/img014c.jpg" width="200" height="202" alt="" title=""> +<p><span class="smcap">Second Lieut. Bradford.</span><br> +<span class="italic">Wounded at Pieter's Hill.</span></p> +</div> + +<div class="cleared"> +<div class="floatleft"> +<img src="images/img014d.jpg" width="200" height="200" alt="" title=""> +<p><span class="smcap">Capt. A. V. Hill</span><br> +(<span class="italic">1st Battalion, attached</span>).<br> + <span class="italic">Wounded at Pieter's Hill.</span></p> +</div> +<div class="floatright"> +<img src="images/img014e.jpg" width="200" height="197" alt="" title=""> +<p><span class="smcap">Second Lieut. Brodhurst Hill</span><br> +(<span class="italic">1st Battalion, attached</span>).<br> + <span class="italic">Wounded at Pieter's Hill.</span></p> +</div> +</div> + +<p class="center smcap cleared">Casualties at Tugela Heights.</p> + +<p>About 1 p.m. the Durham Light Infantry filed over the pontoon under +Swaartz Kop, and extended for the attack. At the same time we were +moved to a position below the southern end of the Kop in order to +cover by long-range rifle-fire the right of the 4th Brigade. 'B' +company fired a few volleys at some invisible snipers on the slopes of +Doorn Kloof, but with this exception we did not come into action.</p> + +<p>Watched by the whole army the Durhams advanced against Vaal Krantz, +which they took about 4 p.m. amidst the cheers of the onlookers. But +with this success the operations practically ended for the day.</p> + +<p>The battalion remained all the afternoon in the same position, and +then finally bivouacked there, having luckily succeeded in +communicating with the transport, so that the men had blankets. Its +outposts were pushed well round the southern slopes of Swaartz Kop, +thus overlooking the Tugela. A reconnoitring patrol was fired on from +the left bank, but otherwise the night passed without incident.</p> + +<p>We did not move on the 6th, and had practically nothing to do. The +artillery on both sides fired continually, although the damage done +must have been very small in proportion to the noise and expenditure +of ammunition.</p> + +<p>Every one watched with special interest a duel between our heavy +artillery and a large Boer gun which had suddenly been unmasked on +Doorn Kloof. This gun fired black powder, and its discharge could be +plainly seen, but it was apparently run up for every round behind a +parapet. It displayed absolute impartiality in its attentions. One +round would be directed against the infantry on Vaal Krantz, another +covered with dust a field battery on the plain, a third <span class="pagenum"><a id="page058" name="page058"></a>(p. 058)</span> just +missed the battalion, while a fourth shell would crash among the trees +on Swaartz Kop. All our heavy guns had a try at silencing it, and +their efforts sometimes met with partial success. The Boer gun would +cease firing for a time, but it always re-appeared when least +expected. Towards the evening it became quite lively and put a shell +through the pontoon bridge.</p> + +<p>The night of February 6th-7th was spent in comparative peace, although +the Boer artillery somewhat spoiled the first part of the night by +shelling Vaal Krantz. February 7th was a repetition of the 6th, except +that the gun on Doorn Kloof paid slightly more attention to our +position. The Colonel found it necessary to post a man on the +look-out, whose duty it was, on seeing the white puff of smoke, to +blow a whistle, whereupon everybody sought the shelter of the nearest +and largest boulder. But although, when the huge shell burst, the air +seemed unpleasantly full of whizzing iron fragments, no damage was +done, and the gun merely mitigated, to some extent, the monotony of +idleness.</p> + +<p>By this time it was clear that Sir Redvers Buller did not intend to +press the attack home, and no one was surprised to find the army in +retreat on the morning of the 8th. The battalion acted as rearguard +and marched back between the river and Swaartz Kop in widely extended +lines. The Boer guns on Doorn Kloof, the shoulder of Spion Kop, and +Brakfontein shelled us on our way, and one man of the rear company +('H') was killed, this being our only casualty between February 5th +and 8th. The heavy artillery on Mount Alice covered the retreat and +prevented the enemy's guns from being too attentive.</p> + +<p>The 5th Brigade halted at Springfield, and two days later went on to +Pretorius' Farm. On the 18th it made a march of fourteen miles to the +Blaukranz River, starting about 3.30 a.m. The day was hot, and as +there was no water on the route the newly-joined militia reservists +suffered considerably. <span class="pagenum"><a id="page059" name="page059"></a>(p. 059)</span> After a rest of two days the brigade +moved to a camp near Gun Hill at Chieveley, where the naval six-inch +gun was in position.</p> + +<p>The rest of the army was now engaged in the operations against Cingolo +and Hlangwane, and the battalion occupied itself in guarding +Chieveley, in beginning the construction of a railway to Hussar Hill, +and in convoying ammunition to the latter place. This was a somewhat +trying task, as during part of the way the convoy became the object of +many a Boer shell. The operations against Cingolo and Hlangwane proved +successful, and these positions were captured on the 19th. The next +day General Hart took the regiment on a reconnaissance towards +Colenso. It advanced cautiously on the west of the railway in column +of extended companies. The village was found unoccupied, but a party +of Boers, holding the horseshoe ridge on the left bank of the Tugela +opened a vigorous fire. The leading companies at once doubled forward +and lined the right bank, whence they answered the Boer marksmen. The +left half-battalion remained in support behind the village. A +detachment of Thorneycroft's Mounted Infantry appeared on the scene, +and having forded the Tugela above the road bridge, turned the Boers +out of their position. Later on in the afternoon a train steamed into +Colenso station from Chieveley, and took us back just before dusk.</p> + +<p>At 6 a.m. on February 21st, the Connaught Rangers and the Dublin +Fusiliers went by train to Colenso, where they were joined by a +battery. The horseshoe ridge on the left bank was being held by a +detachment of Thorneycroft's Mounted Infantry, but General Hart was +desirous of crossing the river with at least part of his force. For +this purpose he had brought on the train a boat, which was promptly +launched. As, however, the boat was small, and hardly capable of +holding more than four men, the General gave orders for the +construction of a raft. After some trouble <span class="pagenum"><a id="page060" name="page060"></a>(p. 060)</span> this was ready by +4 p.m., and some two hours later about seven companies of the +Connaught Rangers had succeeded in reaching the left bank.</p> + +<p>General Hart now received an order to cross early next morning, with +three battalions of his brigade, the pontoon bridge, which had been +constructed under Hlangwane. The regiment bivouacked in Colenso, and +at 5 a.m. on February 22nd marched down the right bank and crossed the +bridge. One company had been sent back to Chieveley for the purpose of +striking the camp, and with the transport rejoined the battalion about +7 a.m., after the latter had crossed the bridge and taken up a +position on the western side of the horseshoe ridge.</p> + +<p>Here it stayed the whole day, all ranks passing the time in examining +the Boer trenches, and picking up more or less worthless loot. Heavy +fighting was taking place in front, but only an occasional shell fell +near the ridge.<a href="#toc"><span class="small">[Back to Contents]</span></a></p> + +<p class="chapter"><span class="pagenum"><a id="page061" name="page061"></a>(p. 061)</span> CHAPTER VIII.<br> + +HART'S AND PIETER'S HILLS—THE RELIEF OF LADYSMITH.</p> + +<p class="quotechapter"><span class="add4em">'But since I knew</span><br> + No rock so hard but that a little wave<br> + May beat admission in a thousand years,<br> + I re-commenced.'<br> +<span class="left50 italic">Tennyson.</span></p> + +<p>Late on February 22nd, orders were issued for the brigade<a id="footnotetag5" name="footnotetag5"></a><a href="#footnote5" title="Go to footnote 5"><span class="small">[5]</span></a> to be +ready to move at an early hour next morning. Breakfasts were eaten +before 4 a.m., and the battalion fell in at about 4.15 on February +23rd. The brigade was to move from the left to the right of the army, +and it was probably the intention of the Headquarter Staff for the +march to take place during darkness. But there was a hitch in the +distribution of biscuits, and it was already broad daylight when we +started.</p> + +<p>General Hart moved his command in column of route, and the long line +soon attracted the notice of the enemy's artillery. It was somewhat +trying to the nerves to hear the whistle of a shell coming nearer and +nearer, until finally it struck the ground within a few yards of the +column. Luckily, the Boers were either using common shell or their +shrapnel did not burst, and the battalion had no casualties. Finally +the railway was reached, and the brigade turned to the left, each +battalion forming column of companies in succession. A halt was made +close to the railway line and a short distance to the south of the +viaduct over the Onderbrook Spruit. But as a few shells fell +dangerously near, and showed that the enemy could still see the +brigade, it was moved to the left <span class="pagenum"><a id="page062" name="page062"></a>(p. 062)</span> behind a rocky ridge. The +battalion stayed here for the rest of the morning. The Boer gunners +fired frequently at the ridge, but the slope of the ground saved us +from any losses. Sir Redvers Buller and his staff rode up about +mid-day in order to explain to General Hart what was required of him. +This was the capture of the hill known as Inniskilling, or Hart's +Hill. It could be plainly seen from the summit of the ridge behind +which we lay, and all officers and section commanders were called up +in order to have a look at it. They were told that it formed the +extreme left of the Boer position, and that its capture meant the +relief of Ladysmith. General Hart desired all officers to inform their +men of the necessity for a resolute assault. Our heavy artillery on +the right bank of the Tugela now began to shell the hill, which was +quickly covered by the smoke and dust of the lyddite explosions.</p> + +<p>Meanwhile, the 2nd Brigade was preparing the way by an assault on a +ridge some 1000 yards to the front. They had a tough fight, and their +wounded were soon being brought down the railway in trucks and +stretchers.</p> + +<p>The afternoon was well advanced when the 5th Brigade moved to the +attack. The hill to be assaulted lay some 3000 yards to the north-east +of the ridge which had been sheltering us, and the nature of the +intervening ground forbade a direct advance, which would dangerously +expose the left flank. It was necessary to hug the river-bank until a +position from which a direct attack became possible was reached.</p> + +<p>The brigade at first moved along the railway line in file in the +following order: Royal Inniskilling Fusiliers, Connaught Rangers, +Royal Dublin Fusiliers, and Imperial Light Infantry. The battalion +moved with the left in front. A brigade in file takes up a +considerable space, and by the time the regiment could start, a heavy +outburst of firing showed that the Inniskilling Fusiliers were already +engaged.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page063" name="page063"></a>(p. 063)</span> The advance along the railway line, through a cutting and +over the Onderbrook Spruit, was very slow, since checks were frequent. +The Boer artillery missed this favourable opportunity of shelling +their foes, luckily for the latter. After crossing Onderbrook Spruit, +the column turned to the right and crept along the river. The enemy +were sweeping the bank with pompoms and a heavy rifle-fire, but by +crouching under the bank the column obtained good cover for the +greater part of the way. But every now and then there came an exposed +bit of ground over which it was necessary to double, and so narrow was +the track that men had often to jump over the wounded or killed.</p> + +<p>The Langverwacht Spruit had to be crossed by the railway bridge. As +the latter was in full view of the enemy and was being raked by pompom +shells and bullets, it proved a great delay to the progress of the +column. It was only possible to cross at more or less long intervals. +Each man was forced to run the gauntlet by himself, and had to double +over as hard as he could. Beyond the bridge complete cover was +obtained except for a small stretch of ground by the Boer bridge. +Below the latter, the river ran between high hills, and the column was +therefore screened from view.</p> + +<p>By the time that the leading company of the battalion had cleared +'Pompom' bridge, the Inniskilling Fusiliers were advancing against the +Boer position on Hart's Hill. It was about 5 p.m., and the General +could not wait until his brigade had concentrated, but sent his troops +forward as they arrived. The left half-battalion of the Royal Dublin +Fusiliers formed up near a deserted Boer bivouac overlooking the +river, and then, without stopping for the right half, advanced to +where General Hart was standing.</p> + +<p>Lieutenant-Colonel Sitwell was in command of the left half-battalion, +and in a short time he was sent for by the General, who told him to +advance and help the Inniskilling Fusiliers to capture the hill.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page064" name="page064"></a>(p. 064)</span> The leading company ('H') was directed to extend to six paces +and move forward, the remaining companies ('G,' 'F,' and 'E') +following at a distance of 100 yards. No sooner had 'H' company +cleared the crest of the hill on which General Hart was standing, than +it came under a heavy rifle-fire, principally from the direction of +Railway Hill. Lieutenant Lane fell badly wounded—shot clean through +the head from one side to another, a wound from which he made a +marvellous recovery—and three or four men were hit. The company +received the order to double, no easy task down a steep slope strewn +with rocks and boulders. The railway line at the bottom of the slope +was crossed, and the opposite side of the valley, which was dotted +with small trees, ascended. The company had now caught up the lines of +the Connaught Rangers, and all climbed up the hill, the crest of which +had been gained by the Inniskilling Fusiliers. Although the attacking +infantry could not be seen from the Boers on Hart's or Railway Hill, +they were still exposed to an enfilade fire from the left.</p> + +<p>On arriving with 'H' company at the top of the hill, +Lieutenant-Colonel Sitwell found the Inniskilling Fusiliers lying +along the crest-line and facing the Boer trenches, which ran at about +three hundred yards distance on the far side of the flat plateau. The +Inniskillings had already suffered serious casualties, but, on +Lieutenant-Colonel Sitwell stating that he had been ordered to charge, +claimed the right of leading the assault. To this Colonel Sitwell +agreed, but it was decided to wait until the remaining companies of +the left half-battalion of the Royal Dublin Fusiliers were up. +Meanwhile our guns and the cavalry maxims on the right bank of the +Tugela were directing against the enemy's trenches a stream of bullets +and shrapnel shells, the latter seeming to burst immediately over the +infantry.</p> + +<a id="img015" name="img015"></a> +<div class="cleared"> +<div class="floatleft"> +<img src="images/img015a.jpg" width="200" height="192" alt="" title=""> +<p><span class="smcap">Capt. A. Hensley.</span><br> +<span class="italic">Killed at Venter's Spruit.</span></p> +</div> +<div class="floatright"> +<img src="images/img015b.jpg" width="200" height="197" alt="" title=""> +<p><span class="smcap">Lieut.-colonel Sitwell.</span><br> +<span class="italic">Killed at Hart's Hill.</span></p> +</div> +</div> + +<div class="figcenter cleared"> +<img src="images/img015c.jpg" width="200" height="200" alt="" title=""> +<p><span class="smcap">Capt. Maitland.</span><br> +(<span class="italic">Gordon Highlanders, attached</span>)<br> +<span class="italic">Killed at Hart's Hill.</span></p> +</div> + +<div class="cleared"> +<div class="floatleft"> +<img src="images/img015d.jpg" width="200" height="194" alt="" title=""> +<p><span class="smcap">Major F. P. English.</span><br> +<span class="italic">Wounded at Venter's Spruit<br> +and Zuikerbosch.</span></p> +</div> +<div class="floatright"> +<img src="images/img015e.jpg" width="200" height="222" alt="" title=""> +<p><span class="smcap">Second Lieut. Dennis.</span><br> +<span class="italic">Wounded at Hart's Hill.<br> +Died of Enteric at Aliwal North.</span></p> +</div> +</div> + +<p class="center cleared"><span class="smcap">Casualties at Tugela Heights</span> (<span class="italic">continued</span>).</p> + +<p>The sun had set, and the light was already failing by <span class="pagenum"><a id="page065" name="page065"></a>(p. 065)</span> the +time that the four companies of the left half-battalion had come up, +principally on the left of the Inniskilling Fusiliers. Then the signal +to charge was given, and the whole line rose up, and with a yell +dashed forward. But it was met by a murderous fire. In the gathering +darkness the Boer trenches quivered with the rifle-flashes, and the +bullets struck out sparks as they hit the rocks. At such a short range +the enemy's marksmen could hardly miss, and the line of charging +infantry was almost mowed down. The assault was checked, and the +attackers flung themselves on the ground and sought what little cover +there was.</p> + +<a id="img016" name="img016"></a> +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/img016.jpg" width="600" height="401" alt="" title=""> +<p class="smcap">After the Fight.</p> +</div> + +<p>Luckily night intervened, and, although the Boers never for a moment +ceased their fire, the survivors of that charge managed to creep back +to the crest. Here Colonel Brooke, of the Connaught Rangers, and +Lieutenant-Colonel Sitwell collected them, and took steps to guard +against a counter-attack. A low stone wall was built below the crest, +and behind this the night was spent.</p> + +<p>It was very dark, and the ground, covered with boulders, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page066" name="page066"></a>(p. 066)</span> +most difficult to move over. Wounded men lay all over the hill, but +there were no doctors, no stretcher-bearers, and no water. It was +impossible to help or to move them. Their groans, combined with the +intermittent rifle-fire, made sleep difficult.</p> + +<p>We had three officers wounded (Lieutenants Lane, Hill, and Dennis), +and some twenty casualties. Lieutenant Hill was again hit as he lay, +and subsequently lost his foot in consequence.</p> + +<p>The infantry crouching behind the stone wall were unable to +communicate with the rest of the army. At dawn, however, Major +McGrigor, the Brigade-Major, came up to the line and told Colonel +Brooke that General Hart wished him to hold on to his position, to +which reinforcements would be sent. Colonel Brooke explained that food +and water would have to be sent also, and, above all, that his left +must be protected. Having promised to do what he could, Major McGrigor +returned to his General. With daylight the battle recommenced. The +Boers, from their trenches on Hart's and Railway Hills, kept up a +vigorous rifle-fire, and were answered as far as possible by the men +of the 5th Brigade behind the wall. Our artillery shelled Hart's Hill, +and many of their shrapnel which burst short hit the unlucky wounded +who were still lying on the plateau.</p> + +<p>But the Boers were not content to remain on the defensive. Gradually +their skirmishers worked round the left of the hill, moving by the +dongas which ran down to the railway line, and were able to fire up +into the rear of the defenders of the wall. Part of the latter were +extended at right angles to the wall, and endeavoured to drive off the +enemy. But the Boers had excellent cover, whereas the infantry crowded +together on the hill presented an easy target. Casualties became +numerous. The morning wore on, and there were no signs of the promised +reinforcements or of the much-needed water and food. It seemed useless +to stay on the hill, and about 8 a.m. Colonel <span class="pagenum"><a id="page067" name="page067"></a>(p. 067)</span> Brooke gave +the order to retire. As the men rose to their feet and ran down the +hill, the rattle of the Boer musketry increased in volume, and the +bullets whistled among the retreating soldiers. Lieut.-Colonel Sitwell +was killed as he descended the slope, and Captain Maitland, of the +Gordon Highlanders, who had been in command of 'G' company since +November, was mortally wounded almost at the same time. Luckily, the +distance was not very great, and once over the railway line the stream +of bullets ceased.</p> + +<a id="img017" name="img017"></a> +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/img017.jpg" width="600" height="399" alt="" title=""> +<p class="smcap">The Grave of Colonel Sitwell and Captain Maitland, +Gordon Highlanders (attached), near Railway at Pieter's Hill.</p> +</div> + +<p>Lieut.-Colonel Sitwell's loss was severely felt. Though he had only +recently joined us, he had given numerous proofs of his soldierly +ability. He had the benefit of considerable previous war service, and +had he lived would doubtless have risen to high rank. Captain +Maitland, Gordon Highlanders, had been unable to join his regiment in +Ladysmith, and had been attached to the battalion since Estcourt. Over +and over again he had proved himself to be a most gallant soldier, and +had endeared himself to all his temporary comrades <span class="pagenum"><a id="page068" name="page068"></a>(p. 068)</span> (see +<a href="#appendix">Appendix</a>). He commanded 'G' company, which was most unfortunate in +respect of its commanders, having no less than six during the war. +Colour-Sergeant Connell, however, than whom no braver man lives, was +with it throughout.</p> + +<p>As the retiring infantry climbed up the slope of Hart's Hollow they +met the advancing lines of the 4th Brigade, who had been sent to +reinforce the 5th. The latter quickly re-formed—there were not many +of the Inniskilling Fusiliers left to re-form—and were able to obtain +food after a fast of nearly twenty-four hours.</p> + +<p>The casualties of the left half-battalion amounted to two officers +killed and three wounded, and eleven killed and fifty-six wounded of +the rank and file.<a id="footnotetag6" name="footnotetag6"></a><a href="#footnote6" title="Go to footnote 6"><span class="small">[6]</span></a></p> + +<p>The right half-battalion, under Major English, had, during the assault +of Hart's Hill, watched the right flank towards Pieter's Hill. General +Hart proposed that they should attack the Boers in that quarter, but +Colonel Cooper, who was with the right half-battalion, pointed out +that the day was too far advanced. The right half-battalion spent the +night of the 23rd-24th February among the rocks on the hill whence +General Hart had directed the attack. About 8 a.m. on February 24th, +'B' company was sent to drive off small parties of the enemy who had +crept down the dongas and reached the railway on the left. This +company came under a severe fire, and Lieutenant Brodhurst Hill was +wounded in the leg, but the Boers were driven back. The 24th was spent +in a ceaseless rifle-duel with the enemy, who had brought a gun to +bear on the hill. During the afternoon, preparations were made for a +fresh attack on Hart's Hill, to be undertaken by Colonel Cooper with +two battalions, while General Hart, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page069" name="page069"></a>(p. 069)</span> with the remainder of +the force at hand, assaulted Railway Hill. The attack was, however, +postponed.</p> + +<p>The enemy evidently feared another assault, for in the course of the +night of February 24th-25th, they opened a vigorous fire, which +disturbed the slumbers of General Hart's force, and created some +excitement.</p> + +<p>During all this time the unlucky wounded, who had been hit on the +23rd, had been left lying in front of the Boer trenches. It was +impossible to help them, since all attempts in that direction had been +frustrated by the enemy. But on the morning of Sunday, February 25th, +a partial armistice was agreed upon in order to bring in the wounded +and to bury the dead. The armistice ended at 6 p.m., and both sides +commenced firing immediately afterwards.</p> + +<a id="img018" name="img018"></a> +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/img018.jpg" width="600" height="394" alt="" title=""> +<p class="smcap">Pieter's Hill. February 27th, 1900.</p> +</div> + +<p>Meanwhile, Sir Redvers Buller had evolved a new plan of operations, +and decided to attack with his combined force the three +hills—Pieter's, Railway, and Hart's. For this purpose the greater +part of the artillery was brought from the left bank and concentrated +on the right bank, opposite <span class="pagenum"><a id="page070" name="page070"></a>(p. 070)</span> the points to be assaulted. It +was in position by the 26th, and began a slow bombardment of the Boer +trenches. During the night, the pontoon bridge under Hlangwane was +dismantled, and carried down to a point below the Boer bridge, where +it was relaid, an operation which was not concluded until 10 a.m. on +the 27th.</p> + +<p>On the day before, the Dublin Fusiliers had been ordered to join +temporarily General Barton's Brigade. It left its position among the +rocks of Hart's Hollow about 7 a.m. on February 27th, and, moving down +the hill through the deserted Boer laager, halted by the pontoon +bridge. Here it was joined soon after 9 a.m. by the Irish and Scots +Fusiliers, and came under the command of General Barton.</p> + +<a id="img019" name="img019"></a> +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/img019.jpg" width="600" height="397" alt="" title=""> +<p class="smcap">Pontoon Bridge, River Tugela. February 28th, 1900.</p> +</div> + +<p>The battalion followed the Scots Fusiliers, and moved along the left +bank of the Tugela at the foot of a steep ridge, being covered by +infantry and maxim fire from the right bank.</p> + +<p>After a march of two miles, and at the point where the Klip River +joins the Tugela, the 6th Brigade turned to its <span class="pagenum"><a id="page071" name="page071"></a>(p. 071)</span> left and +prepared to attack the Boer position, which, lying some two miles from +the river, stretched from the ridges north of Eagle's Nest to the +various kopjes constituting Pieter's Hill. General Barton directed the +Royal Irish Fusiliers to assault the western end of Pieter's Hill and +the Scots Fusiliers the eastern, while the 2nd Royal Dublin Fusiliers +formed the reserve.</p> + +<p>The assault was successful, and the greater part of Pieter's Hill fell +into our hands, but the Boers still held a kopje to the north of the +hill, and maintained a heavy fire. General Barton, anxious to complete +his victory, directed three companies of the battalion and one company +of the Scots Fusiliers to advance against the kopje. 'B,' 'C,' and 'H' +were the three companies selected, the first named being on the right +and the latter on the left, connecting with the Scots Fusiliers. +Guided by Captain MacBean, Royal Dublin Fusiliers, Brigade-Major 6th +Brigade, the detachment advanced about 2.30 p.m., and came at once +under a heavy rifle and pompom fire. The companies pushed forward, +however, by successive rushes until they reached a donga some three +hundred yards from the kopje. Here further progress was checked for a +time, and General Barton ordered forward three companies of the Royal +Irish Fusiliers. The latter came up about 5.30 p.m., and, supported by +the covering fire of 'B,' 'C,' and 'H' companies, rushed the left of +the hill, when the above-mentioned companies of the battalion, led by +Captain Venour, assaulted the right. The attack was successful, and +the kopje was captured.</p> + +<p>During the advance Lieutenants Haskard and Bradford, in command of 'C' +and 'H' companies, were wounded, and the engagement cost the regiment +nine killed and forty-three wounded. 'D' company, under Lieutenant +Ely, towards the close of the afternoon came up on the left of 'H' +company, in order to fill the gap between the latter and the Scots +Fusiliers.</p> + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page072" name="page072"></a>(p. 072)</span> +<a id="img020" name="img020"></a> +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/img020.jpg" width="600" height="403" alt="" title=""> +<p class="smcap">2nd Royal Dublin Fusiliers, heading Relief +Troops,<br> marching into Ladysmith, March, 1900.</p> +</div> + +<p>The three companies which had made their attack on the kopje spent the +night on the captured position. Captain Venour, who was the senior +officer present, re-formed the men of the Irish and Dublin Fusiliers, +and constructed sangars, with a view of warding off a Boer +counter-attack. In the meantime 'A,' 'E,' 'F,' and 'G' companies—with +whom was Colonel Cooper—were directed to the right, in order to guard +the flank of the brigade against the Eagle's Nest position. These +companies gained about 2 p.m. a ridge opposite the Eagle's Nest, and +overlooking the extensive plain which stretches up to Bulwana +Mountain. The enemy opened a well-aimed fire on this ridge, and also +brought into action a gun which was placed on the shoulder to the +north of the Nest. As the right of the four companies was thrown back +towards the Tugela, this Boer gun could nearly enfilade part of the +line. Sangars were built, however, and there were not more than three +or four casualties in this part of the field. The firing ceased at +dusk, but otherwise the night was <span class="pagenum"><a id="page073" name="page073"></a>(p. 073)</span> unpleasant, for it rained, +and the waggons could not get near the fighting line, so that the men +had to do without their great-coats.</p> + +<p>Before daybreak on February 28th the battalion collected its scattered +companies and was ready for action. There was no reliable news of what +had happened on other parts of the field during the 27th, and the full +extent of the victory was still unknown. When daylight came it was +evident that the Boers had evacuated the Eagle's Nest, and small +parties of them could be seen retiring, while the tents of their +laager under Bulwana were gradually diminishing. But even then few +could believe that the relief of Ladysmith was practically +accomplished.</p> + +<a id="img021" name="img021"></a> +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/img021.jpg" width="600" height="390" alt="" title=""> +<p class="smcap">General Sir Redvers Buller, V.C., entering Ladysmith.</p> +</div> + +<p>Before mid-day an order came, directing the Dublin Fusiliers to move +after dinner and join the 11th Brigade, the position of which was not +indicated. Major English rode on ahead in order to discover its +whereabouts, but by the time he found it, the battalion had gone two +miles out of its way. The 11th Brigade was joined about 4 p.m., and +the regiment bivouacked between Hart's and Railway Hills. A heavy +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page074" name="page074"></a>(p. 074)</span> thunderstorm burst over the country soon after 8 p.m., and +made everybody somewhat miserable, although the officers had been +cheered by the arrival of the invaluable Corporal Tierney, who, as +usual, succeeded in giving them food.</p> + +<p>The services of this N.C.O. (now Mess-Sergeant) will never be +forgotten by the regiment, as long as an officer who was present with +it in South Africa remains in it. Over and over again he brought up +food to the officers under heavy fire, and through those desperate +thunderstorms. Always cheery, ever ready, there he was in his +shirt-sleeves, with a drink and a snack, just as one had resigned +oneself to going without anything. A word must also be said in praise +of our French <span class="italic">chef</span>, M. Burst, who cooked for the officer's mess +throughout, and proved himself on all occasions a brave man.</p> + +<a id="img022" name="img022"></a> +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/img022.jpg" width="600" height="396" alt="" title=""> +<p class="smcap">The Dublins are coming—Ladysmith.</p> +</div> + +<p>After breakfast on March 1st, the 11th Brigade advanced along the +railway towards Ladysmith. It was thought that the Boers would be +holding Bulwana, and the brigade had orders to attack the hill. But it +was soon learnt that the enemy had retired, and we eventually reached +Nelthorpe <span class="pagenum"><a id="page075" name="page075"></a>(p. 075)</span> Station about mid-day and bivouacked. Major +English and Captain Venour took the opportunity of riding into +Ladysmith.</p> + +<p>March 2nd was spent at Nelthorpe. On the 3rd, Sir Redvers Buller's +army entered Ladysmith, and the honour of leading the army fell to the +2nd Battalion Royal Dublin Fusiliers—an honour which nobody grudged +them, on account of the constant fighting they had taken part in since +the beginning of the war, and the heavy casualties they had suffered. +The route was by the railway bridge, and the streets of the little +town were lined by the garrison, who, emaciated but clean, presented a +startling contrast to their war-stained relievers.</p> + +<a id="img023" name="img023"></a> +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/img023.jpg" width="600" height="395" alt="" title=""> +<p class="smcap">Sir George White watching Relief Force entering +Ladysmith.</p> +</div> + +<p>The entry into Ladysmith, with its enthusiasm and meeting of old +friends, formed a fitting ending to the battalion's Natal campaign. +Hardly any other unit in the army had suffered such casualties. Only +five company officers marched through Ladysmith with it. The others +had been killed, wounded, or disabled.<a href="#toc"><span class="small">[Back to Contents]</span></a></p> + +<p class="chapter"><span class="pagenum"><a id="page076" name="page076"></a>(p. 076)</span> CHAPTER IX.<br> + +THE SIEGE OF LADYSMITH.</p> + +<p class="quotechapter">'I am shut up.'—<span class="italic">Ps.</span> lxxxviii. 8 and <span class="italic">Jer.</span> xxxvi. 5.</p> + +<p class="title">Chronicle of the part taken by the detachment 2nd Battalion Royal +Dublin Fusiliers in the Siege of Ladysmith from November 1st, 1899, to +February 28th, 1900. By <span class="smcap">Lieut. L. F. Renny</span>, 2nd Batt. Royal Dublin +Fusiliers.</p> + +<p>The detachment which was left behind in Ladysmith when the battalion +was ordered to Colenso consisted of two officers, three +non-commissioned officers and fifty-one men. The latter were made up +by a section of 'G' company which was left on piquet because they +could not be relieved in time, and the men of the regimental +transport, which had been left behind owing to there being no facility +for sending the waggons and animals by train with the battalion.</p> + +<p>The morning after the departure of the latter I was ordered by the +D.A.A.G. of the divisional troops to proceed to the various camps in +Section A, and find convenient space for the transport waggons. I +found the necessary ground in rear of the camp of the 1st Battalion +Gloucester Regiment, behind the railway cutting leading to the Orange +Free State Junction. Here we were joined in the afternoon by +Lieutenant H. W. Higginson, who took command, and the section of 'G' +company, when the Gloucesters helped us in every way, and made us as +comfortable as they possibly could. All that day we were left in +comparative peace, there being no firing on either side; but the next +morning about 5 a.m. the Boers opened with 'Long Tom' from Pepworth +Hill, and commenced a duel of some hour's duration with our naval 4·7, +which was placed on Junction Hill. They also kept up a continual +cannonade <span class="pagenum"><a id="page077" name="page077"></a>(p. 077)</span> with their long-range twelve-pounders, but did +little or no damage, as they had not yet discovered the exact location +of our camps.</p> + +<p>For the next three or four days we remained in the Gloucester's camp +and aided in starting the trenches which eventually formed the fort +known as 'Tunnel Hill.' This was by no means pleasant work, as it was +carried out under fire, the enemy being very quick at spotting our +working parties and remarkably so at obtaining our range. We used to +watch with great interest the duel every morning between the two big +guns. Once the Boers hoisted a large white flag over their epaulement +and proceeded to repair some small damage to their gun—they have very +weird ideas about the white flag.</p> + +<p>On November 7th our detachment was suddenly ordered to proceed to +'Bell's Spruit,' and form the guard there. I was ordered to hand over +our transport to the Army Service Corps, so we took away the majority +of the men and brought the strength of our piquet up to thirty-one +men; the transport was sent to the railway station yard for the use of +the Army Service Corps, where it remained throughout the siege. We +were stationed at the mouth of the spruit just where it runs through +the ridge opposite the cemetery. Our fortifications consisted of a +thick wall with sandbag loopholes running right across the spruit; +about fifty yards in front were strips of high and low wire +entanglement, making it practically impossible for the enemy to rush +the post at night. By night we had to man two sangars placed on the +hills on each side of the spruit. I know nothing more productive of +bad language than visiting the sentries on those hills in the dark, +scrambling over the hugest boulders up a hill like the side of a +house. We were not very comfortable at first, there being absolutely +no shelter from sun or rain, but after about a week we managed to +obtain a couple of railway tarpaulins, and rigged up shelters on the +sides of the spruit. We were all very <span class="pagenum"><a id="page078" name="page078"></a>(p. 078)</span> lucky in not getting +hit, as the enemy had a nasty habit of bursting shrapnel over the +place and sending common shell on to the crests, which produced a +shower of rocks, splinters and stones; but although we were in the +spruit for seven weeks with absolutely no cover, not a man in the +detachment was hit. During our stay in the spruit our rations were +exceptionally good, as we got extras in the way of bacon, jam, +chocolate, &c.</p> + +<p>The night-work at this time was very hard, as everybody not actually +on outpost duty had to work at the trenches from 6.30 in the evening +till 3 a.m. the next morning. Sleep being impossible in the day-time +owing to the heat and a plague of flies, this continual night-work +told on the men severely. On November 9th the enemy made a feeble +attempt at capturing the place, and came on in considerable numbers +against Observation Hill, but were easily repulsed. On the night of +December 7th-8th an attack was made on Gun Hill, where the Boers had a +'Long Tom' and a five-inch howitzer, besides one or two small guns. +These guns had been annoying us very greatly for the past three weeks, +and we were all delighted in the early morning when we heard the +attack had been successful, and the guns blown up. We none of us knew +anything about this affair till it was over. I was visiting our posts +about 2.30 a.m. when I saw two large flashes on Gun Hill; on listening +I could not hear any shells travelling or bursting, so concluded the +enemy were amusing themselves by firing blank charges. It was not till +we saw our column returning at dawn that we solved the problem. We +found the spruit very unpleasant in wet weather, as the water used to +come down like a mountain torrent and wash away bits of our wall and +shelters; after wet nights we used to spend our time in digging our +belongings out of the sand, having spent the night sitting on the +rocks.</p> + +<p>About December 18th, after the failure of General Buller's first +attempt to relieve us, there was a general interchange <span class="pagenum"><a id="page079" name="page079"></a>(p. 079)</span> of +posts amongst the troops of our section, and the detachment received +orders to proceed to the Newcastle Road examining guard. We were all +heartily sick of the spruit, and glad of the change. It was about this +time that our rations began to be diminished, and we had completely +run out of all extras. The post of the examining guard was on the road +just inside the ridge which formed our general line of defence, but by +night we moved out as a piquet about half a mile on to the veld into a +spruit which ran under the Harrismith line, whence we patrolled out to +Brooke's Farm, and the surrounding country. I think this was the worst +post we had throughout the siege, as we came in for a long spell of +wet weather, and night after night had to lie out on the open veld +from 8 p.m. till 4 a.m., wet to the skin and miserably cold. The +duties on this post came very hard on our men, as we had to find a +double and single sentry by day, so that they never got a night in +bed, and only about one day in three off duty.</p> + +<p>On Christmas Eve the men came into possession of a fine pig, so that +we all had pork for our Christmas dinner, a great change from eternal +'trek ox,' but unfortunately nothing stronger to drink than tea. I'm +sure it was the first Christmas any of us had spent in such an +uncongenial way.</p> + +<p>On January 6th the enemy made their desperate attack on Waggon Hill +and Caesar's Camp. They seem to have completely surprised our +outposts, as they succeeded in crawling up the hill in the dark, and +the fighting commenced at 3 a.m. The cannonade all day was something +tremendous, 'Long Tom' firing 125 rounds. They kept us pretty busy on +our side of the defences as well, but never developed any serious +attack. Whilst on this post we were subjected to a continuous and +daily course of sniping, the enemy getting on the kopjes behind +Brooke's Farm, and firing all day at a range of 2800 yards. At this +range the <span class="pagenum"><a id="page080" name="page080"></a>(p. 080)</span> bullets used to whiz over the hill and drop +amongst us, although we were only a few yards behind the crest. +Higginson and I used to spend hours lying on the crest with rifles and +glasses trying to spot them, but never succeeded in doing so, as they +used to take up their position before dawn and never move all day.</p> + +<p>It was about this time that our men began to show the effects of +exposure and constant sentry-go, and several of them went down with +fever and rheumatism; but we were extremely lucky throughout the +siege, having only one casualty: Private Ward, 'G' company, a +reservist, who died of enteric at Intombi Camp.</p> + +<p>I forgot to mention that on January 6th our section had to be entirely +denuded of supports and reserves in order that they might be sent to +Waggon Hill, so that if the enemy had attacked us seriously we should +have had a hard job to keep them back.</p> + +<p>On January 25th the detachment was ordered to garrison Liverpool +Castle, a fort overlooking the Newcastle Road, but we had not been +there twelve hours before we were ordered to Tunnel Hill. This latter +post consisted of a large main fort capable of holding two hundred +men, and two small works about a quarter of a mile on each flank, in +all of which we had to find a guard. Our fighting strength was at this +time reduced to twenty-seven men, so that they did guard and patrol +alternate nights. We had to send out five of the latter during the +night about half a mile to the front and a mile laterally along the +valley. The confinement in this fort was rather trying, and the +eternal manning of the trenches at 4 a.m. very monotonous. After about +three weeks on this post I was suddenly seized with a 'go' of fever, +and was sent down to a room in one of the houses. When I rejoined the +detachment, after a fortnight on the sick list, they had moved to the +railway station as guard over the bridge across the Klip River. Here +we had to endure rather a severe dose of <span class="pagenum"><a id="page081" name="page081"></a>(p. 081)</span> 'Long Tom'—this +gun never missed a day without dropping shells into and round the +station, it was one of its favourite spots, and all the tin buildings +about bore evidence of its attentions. One shell, pitching in the +parcels office, blew the roof off and the floor in, having first +penetrated half-a-dozen walls to get there. We had trenches on our +side of the river, which we manned, as usual, at 4 a.m. We also had to +man them in the afternoon about 5 o'clock, when the train from Intombi +Camp was due. This used to be rather a comic proceeding: a 'key' was +made in the line about half a mile outside the station, where the +train was brought to a standstill, then either Higginson or myself had +to walk out and inspect the train to see there were no Boers inside +it. We often used to wonder what would have been our lot if the train +had been full of them. On our reporting 'all correct' to the Railway +Staff Officer (Captain Young, R.E.), the train was allowed to proceed +into the station, and the little play was over till the next day. This +was undoubtedly the most comfortable job we had, as the men lived in a +shed, whilst Higginson and I had a railway carriage.</p> + +<p>On the afternoon of February 28th we heard the joyful tidings of +General Buller's victory at Pieter's Hill, and in the evening descried +Lord Dundonald and his men crossing the plain; our wild excitement may +be left to the imagination. I'm sure we all put on about seven pounds +of our lost weight at the mere thought of our being at last relieved. +Our troubles were not over yet, however, as the next morning we were +ordered back to Tunnel Hill, a spot we had learned to loathe with a +truly deep loathing. This move was due to our flying column going out +to hurry the enemy's retreat, most of the troops in our section taking +part in it. For some unknown reason we were kept four or five days in +that smelly fort, and it was not till March 7th that we received +orders to rejoin the battalion, which was encamped about two miles out +of Ladysmith. We all felt as though we had begun a <span class="pagenum"><a id="page082" name="page082"></a>(p. 082)</span> new life; +but it was heartbreaking to see the havoc in our regiment; one had to +look about to find faces that one recognised.</p> + +<p>Our rations were pretty well reduced towards the end of the siege: one +biscuit, one pound of horseflesh, two teaspoonfuls of sugar, and a +pinch of tea is not much to keep body and soul together, and we were +all pretty feeble and pulled down. I think we must have done the +record piquet duty of any men in any service, as we were never +relieved throughout the whole siege; I suppose this was on account of +being left as a separate unit all through, but we certainly thought it +rather hard work. It is a wonder that our little detachment stuck out +four months' constant exposure with so little sickness, whilst our +luck in sitting under that constant shelling without a man being hit +was nothing short of providential.</p> + +<p>I have merely chronicled the chief moves and duties of the detachment +throughout the siege: it would take a small book to set down all our +little experiences, details, and troubles.<a href="#toc"><span class="small">[Back to Contents]</span></a></p> + +<p class="chapter"><span class="pagenum"><a id="page083" name="page083"></a>(p. 083)</span> CHAPTER X.<br> + +ALIWAL NORTH AND FOURTEEN STREAMS.</p> + +<p class="quotechapter"> + 'But thus much is certain: that he that commands the<br> +<span class="add1em">sea is at great liberty, and may take as much,</span><br> +<span class="add2em">and as little of the war, as he wish.'</span><br> +<span class="left50 italic">Bacon.</span></p> + +<p>After marching through Ladysmith, the battalion proceeded with the +11th Brigade to a camp about three miles to the north of the town and +on the left bank of the Klip River. It remained here until March 7th, +when it rejoined the 5th Brigade, which was encamped on the south side +of the Klip River, and about one mile nearer Ladysmith. On the same +date, Colonel Cooper was given the command of the 4th Brigade, and +accordingly handed over the battalion to Major Bird.</p> + +<a id="img024" name="img024"></a> +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/img024.jpg" width="600" height="402" alt="" title=""> +<p class="smcap">Sergeant Davis in Meditation over 'Long Cecil' at +Kimberley.<br> 'Shall I take it for the Officers?'</p> +</div> + +<p>There was another change of camping-ground on March <span class="pagenum"><a id="page084" name="page084"></a>(p. 084)</span> 12th, +the brigade moving to the north-east of Ladysmith, under Surprise +Hill. It was an uneventful time, although outpost duties were somewhat +severe.</p> + +<p>In recognition of the gallantry displayed by the Irish regiments in +the Natal campaign, the Queen had directed that the shamrock should be +worn by all ranks on St. Patrick's Day. Accordingly, on March 17th, +every man wore a piece of green, since shamrock was unobtainable, and +the tents were decorated with boughs. A telegram was dispatched to the +Queen, who sent the following message in reply:—</p> + +<p>'The Queen desires to thank her Dublin Fusiliers for their expression +of loyalty.'</p> + +<a id="img025" name="img025"></a> +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/img025.jpg" width="600" height="402" alt="" title=""> +<p class="smcap">St. Patrick's Day in Camp.<br> +Private Monaghan, the regimental Butcher, in foreground.</p> +</div> + +<p>The battalion also received many congratulatory telegrams from Irish +associations and individuals in various parts of the world.</p> + +<p>The detachment of the 1st Battalion was sent back to Colenso on March +21st. It had been just over four months with the 2nd Battalion, and +had borne its full share of the <span class="pagenum"><a id="page085" name="page085"></a>(p. 085)</span> casualties. Originally +numbering eight officers and 287 rank and file, it returned with only +two officers and 92 rank and file.</p> + +<p>The 5th Brigade moved on the 23rd to Modderspruit, and thence on the +next day to Elandslaagte, where it encamped a short distance to the +west of the battlefield. Here it stayed for ten days, and, as there +was little to do beyond outpost work, the battalion resumed ordinary +parades and route marching.</p> + +<p>On April 4th, General Warren's Division relieved General Hunter's at +Elandslaagte, and the brigade marched back to Modderspruit. The 10th +Division (General Hunter), which consisted of the 5th and 6th +Brigades, was to proceed to Cape Colony for the relief of Mafeking.</p> + +<p>On April 7th, Major Tempest Hicks, 1st Battalion Royal Dublin +Fusiliers, arrived from Colenso, and assumed command of the battalion. +The 5th Brigade began to move by train to Durban on the 9th, and we +were ordered to entrain at 1.45 p.m. on the 10th. But during the +morning, heavy firing broke out at Elandslaagte, and, as the enemy +seemed aggressive, the troops at Modderspruit were directed to be +ready to move to Elandslaagte.</p> + +<p>We had struck camp and packed all the baggage in the train, and had, +therefore, to lie out in the hot sun for several hours, and await with +patience the development of events. The Boers apparently contented +themselves by a demonstration, and at 6 p.m. the battalion was allowed +to depart. The train reached Colenso at 9 p.m., where the 1st +Battalion was encamped, and Maritzburg about 4 a.m. Here, in spite of +the early hour, a number of friends, together with a band, were on the +platform, and the regiment received a warm greeting. The men were +given cigarettes and tobacco.</p> + +<p>Durban was reached about 10 a.m. on April 11th, and the battalion at +once commenced to embark. The headquarters <span class="pagenum"><a id="page086" name="page086"></a>(p. 086)</span> and about six +companies were carried by the <span class="italic">Cephalonia</span>, while the remaining two +companies went in the <span class="italic">Jamaica</span>. They were both slow ships, but the +absolute peace, the good food, the clean baths, and many other +luxuries, made everybody regret that they were not even slower.</p> + +<p>East London was reached on the 12th, and the battalion was ordered to +disembark, since the 5th Brigade was urgently required to relieve +Wepener, which was surrounded by the enemy. General Hart, with the +Border Regiment and Somersetshire Light Infantry<a id="footnotetag7" name="footnotetag7"></a><a href="#footnote7" title="Go to footnote 7"><span class="small">[7]</span></a> started for Aliwal +North at once, but the battalion remained on board during the whole of +the 13th, although 'H' company, under Captain Romer, disembarked in +the afternoon, and was at once dispatched by train. The other +companies landed on the 14th, and left East London in two trains, +starting at 4 and 6 p.m.</p> + +<p>Lieutenant Le Mesurier, who had been captured on October 20th, but +had, with Captain Haldane (Gordon Highlanders), effected a plucky +escape from Pretoria, rejoined us at East London. Unluckily he at once +developed typhoid fever, and had to be left behind.</p> + +<p>Aliwal North was not reached until 10.30 a.m. on April 16th. 'H' +company had arrived the previous afternoon, and was encamped near the +station, but the remainder of the battalion crossed the Orange River, +and pitched camp about 600 yards from the bridge, with its outpost +line pushed forward on the high ground to the north.</p> + +<p>Major Hicks became commandant of Aliwal North, and had no easy task. +The town was General Hart's base during the operations for the relief +of Wepener, and there was consequently much to be done. Moreover, the +surrounding country was disturbed, the Dutch population had to be +watched, and there were constant rumours of the approach of <span class="pagenum"><a id="page087" name="page087"></a>(p. 087)</span> +commandoes. In the early hours of the 21st, a report reached the +commandant that a large body of Boers was marching on the town. He +therefore decided to bring the regiment back to the south side of the +river, only leaving the piquets on the north bank. We therefore at +once struck camp, and, crossing the river, bivouacked near the bridge. +But as the report proved to be misleading, camp was re-pitched on a +square in the middle of Aliwal North. The outskirts of the town were +put into a state of defence, and a series of trenches covered the +approaches to the bridge. Although this necessitated much labour, +everybody enjoyed their stay at Aliwal. It was a pretty place, with +trees and gardens full of roses, with plenty of water, including a hot +stream running through the camp, with a well-stocked library, and +lastly, but by no means leastly, with a hotel possessing excellent +lager beer.</p> + +<a id="img026" name="img026"></a> +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/img026.jpg" width="600" height="394" alt="" title=""> +<p class="smcap">A Wash in hot Water. Aliwal North.</p> +</div> + +<p>The time passed, in fact, too quickly, for on the 26th news was +received of the relief of Wepener, and orders were issued for our +movement to Kimberley. We started at once in two trains, the first +leaving at midnight <span class="pagenum"><a id="page088" name="page088"></a>(p. 088)</span> the second at 1 a.m. on the 27th. It was +a long and monotonous journey, the only breaks in which were stops for +the purpose of cooking meals. Kimberley was reached at 10 p.m. on the +28th, and the train stopped the night in the station, going on at 6 +a.m. on the 29th to Doornfield, about eight miles north of Kimberley, +where the Connaught Rangers and the 6th Brigade were already encamped. +Since General Hart, with the Borders and Somersetshire Light Infantry +were still near Wepener, Colonel Brooke assumed the command of the +brigade.</p> + +<p>General Hunter's division had been ordered to relieve Mafeking, and +the General decided to cross the Vaal near Windsorton with the 6th +Brigade, and to advance up the right bank; while General Paget with +the Royal Munster Fusiliers, Connaught Rangers, and Royal Dublin +Fusiliers, faced the Boer position at Fourteen Streams. Colonel +Mahon's mounted column was to move by Barkley West, and reach Mafeking +by sweeping round the Boer flank.</p> + +<p>The battalion accordingly left Doornfield by train at 9 a.m. on May +2nd, and about mid-day reached Content, where it detrained and +encamped. The next day it marched with the Connaught Rangers to a +position about two miles south of Warrenton. The opposite bank of the +Vaal was held by the Boers, who were strongly entrenched and had +field-guns. On the south bank of the Vaal were the Munster Fusiliers, +a battery of field artillery, a six-inch gun mounted on a railway +truck, and a balloon, the whole detachment being under Major-General +Paget.</p> + +<a id="img027" name="img027"></a> +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/img027.jpg" width="600" height="304" alt="" title=""> +<p><span class="smcap">Taking XIV STREAMS on 7th May 1900 at 9.30 a.m. very +bad ford.</span><br> +<span class="italic smaller">From a sketch by Col. H. Tempest Hicks, C.B.</span></p> +</div> + +<p>As all tents had been left at Content, the regiment bivouacked, and +remained more or less idle. The Munsters were holding Warrenton, and +there was constant sniping between their posts and the Boer trenches. +The balloon ascended daily, and the six-inch gun fired an occasional +shot, while the enemy's field-guns came into action at intervals. It +was a monotonous and unpleasant time for the Connaught <span class="pagenum"><a id="page089" name="page089"></a>(p. 089)</span> +Rangers and ourselves, since there was nothing to do, while it was +very hot by day and cold by night.</p> + +<a id="img028" name="img028"></a> +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/img028.jpg" width="600" height="401" alt="" title=""> +<p class="smcap">The regimental Maxim in Action at Fourteen Streams.</p> +</div> + +<p>A little excitement was afforded on May 6th, when the Connaught +Rangers and half the battalion made a demonstration against a drift to +the east of Fourteen Streams. The object apparently was to draw the +Boers' attention from the 6th Brigade, who, after a victory at Rooi +Dam, were moving up the right bank. The movement caused a slight +amount of sniping, and the detachment returned to the bivouac soon +after 2 p.m.</p> + +<p>The approach of the 6th Brigade, aided, perhaps, by this +demonstration, caused the enemy to evacuate hurriedly their trenches +during the afternoon of the 6th. Early on the morning of the 7th, the +Connaught Rangers and the right half-battalion started to ford the +Vaal at Warrenton.</p> + +<p>The river at this point was broad and swift. The ford was a difficult +one, being beset by rocks and holes, and it took a considerable time +for the column to cross, since the water was up to the men's waists. +The left half-battalion under Major Bird moved one and a half miles up +the river <span class="pagenum"><a id="page090" name="page090"></a>(p. 090)</span> near Fourteen Streams, where there was a +ferry-boat. The latter had been rendered useless by the Boers, but as +they had left the wire hawser, it was easy for the Royal Engineers to +construct a raft, on which the left half-battalion crossed comfortably +and quickly.</p> + +<p>The right half-battalion joined the left half at the ferry, and +breakfasts were cooked. Before leaving the river-bank everybody made +an inspection of the Boer trenches, which formed an exceedingly strong +position. They were very deep, and so well adapted to the ground, that +it was no easy matter to discover them from the opposite bank. +Evidences of the hurried Boer retreat were plentiful in the shape of +full ammunition-boxes, half-cooked food, blankets, and kettles. One +Boer, who was too ill to march, was captured in the trenches.</p> + +<p>After breakfasts, the battalion moved through a piece of ground +thickly covered with bush, and eventually bivouacked about one mile +from the Vaal, near the railway line. The 6th Brigade halted near the +same place, and the whole force was occupied for the next fortnight in +covering Fourteen Streams. The important railway bridge at this point +had been destroyed by the Boers, and the Royal Engineers, aided by +large working parties from the infantry, at once commenced to +construct a deviation bridge. This necessitated a great amount of +labour, and since, in addition, defensive works had to be made, we +were all kept very busy.</p> + +<p>The stay at Fourteen Streams was interrupted on May 15th by a movement +on Christiana, a town in the Transvaal, reported to be held by a +strong party of Boers. The whole of the 10th Division took part in the +operations, and were thus the first regular troops to enter the +Transvaal. The frontier was crossed at 9 a.m. The advance was through +an undulating country, at times thickly covered by bush. Towards the +afternoon the brigade halted, as news was received that the mounted +troops had entered Christiana. A <span class="pagenum"><a id="page091" name="page091"></a>(p. 091)</span> bivouac was formed in a +clearing among the bush, and dinners were cooked.</p> + +<p>The next day the brigade marched back to Fourteen Streams, and reached +that place early on May 17th, having done some twenty-six miles in +nineteen hours. Work on the railway bridge was resumed, and, as the +6th Brigade had not returned, the battalion had to watch a more +extensive area. Each company was given a section, and constructed a +redoubt.</p> + +<a id="img029" name="img029"></a> +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/img029.jpg" width="600" height="404" alt="" title=""> +<p class="smcap">Captain Jervis, General Fitzroy Hart, C.B., C.M.G., and +Captain Arthur Hart.</p> +</div> + +<p>About May 24th, Second Lieutenant Bradford, with twenty-nine men, was +sent up the line to garrison Border Siding, where they were picked up +three days later.</p> + +<p>The deviation bridge over the Vaal having been completed, the +battalion was sent forward by train to Vryburg, travelling in two +trains. Camp was pitched just outside the station, and for the next +two days every one spent their time in buying <span class="italic">karosses</span> and in +shooting partridges.</p> + +<p>The 10th Division, when Mafeking had been relieved by Colonel Mahon, +was ordered to march to Johannesburg viâ <span class="pagenum"><a id="page092" name="page092"></a>(p. 092)</span> Lichtenburg. As the +first part of the route lay through a country very deficient in water, +the division marched in several columns, which followed each other at +a day's interval. The battalion left Vryburg on May 30th at 7.30 a.m., +and proceeded to Devondale, and on the next day made a march of +twenty-two miles to Dornbult, where Captain Mainwaring, with Second +Lieutenants Newton and Smith, joined.</p> + +<p>Their wanderings before they succeeded in doing so are sufficient +evidence how little was known, even to our own staff officers of the +whereabouts of the several columns. On arrival at Cape Town in the +s.s. <span class="italic">Oratava</span>, they were transhipped to the s.s. <span class="italic">Ranee</span> and sent to +Port Elizabeth. On reporting themselves there they were entrained and +sent to Bloemfontein. No one there seemed to know where the regiment +was, but at that very time the report arrived of the march on +Christiana. Captain Mainwaring then met Captain Carington Smith of the +regiment, who was at that time serving in Roberts' Horse (which he +later on commanded), and as that officer was shortly going north with +some men of his corps, it seemed to both that the speediest way to get +to the Dublin Fusiliers was for Captain Mainwaring to be attached to +Roberts' Horse. An application to that effect was made to the staff +and granted, but shortly afterwards the news of the Christiana +column's return to the railway came to hand, so the three officers +once more entrained, and proceeded viâ De Aar to Kimberley.</p> + +<p>Although Captain Carington Smith did not serve with either battalion +during the war, it would not be out of place here to mention the great +part he took in it. He commenced by serving in Roberts' Horse, and was +with them throughout Lord Roberts' advance to Bloemfontein. In the +action at Sanna's Post he was shot through the knee, but resolutely +refused to be invalided home. His recovery from this severe wound was +little short of marvellous, and he actually managed to rejoin the +headquarters of his corps in time to share in the <span class="pagenum"><a id="page093" name="page093"></a>(p. 093)</span> entry into +Pretoria. Shortly after this he was again shot at Heidelberg, this +time through the other knee, and again made a second and equally +marvellous recovery. Towards the end of the war he commanded Roberts' +Horse, and later on the South African Light Horse, and his trekking +during the campaign amounted to no less than 9000 miles.<a href="#toc"><span class="small">[Back to Contents]</span></a></p> + +<a id="img030" name="img030"></a> +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/img030.jpg" width="600" height="405" alt="" title=""> +<p class="smcap">Issuing Queen Victoria's Chocolate.<br> Colour-Sergeant +Connel, 'G' Company, on left.</p> +</div> + +<h2><span class="pagenum"><a id="page095" name="page095"></a>(p. 095)</span> PART II.<br> + +TREKKING.</h2> + +<p class="chapter"><span class="pagenum"><a id="page097" name="page097"></a>(p. 097)</span> CHAPTER I.<br> + +VRYBURG TO HEIDELBERG.</p> + +<p class="quotechapter"> + 'None of us put off our clothes.'<br> +<span class="left50"><span class="italic">Neh.</span> iv. 23.</span></p> + +<p>Now commenced a different phase of warfare. If, in the constant +fighting of the Natal campaign, the regiment had been called upon to +prove its fighting capabilities—a call to which their noble response +earned them encomiums wherever they went—they were now to be called +upon to prove another essential of the true soldier—their mobility. +And well they proved it. Day after day, week after week, the tired, +footsore, but stout-hearted column-of-route made its slow and +wearisome way over the apparently limitless expanse of the swelling +veld. And how monotonous that veld can be none can appreciate save +those who have experienced its deadly sameness. Ahead, behind, all +round, nothing but veld, veld, veld. No trees, no hills, no rivers, no +lakes, no houses, no inhabitants! Here and there, perhaps, a miserable +shanty of the sealed-pattern South African type: rough stone walls and +corrugated-iron roof, a room on each side of the door, a narrow +verandah—occasionally occupied by a quiet, peaceful-looking old +patriarch, with a grey beard, and an air savouring rather of the +pulpit than the sheltered side of a boulder—a scraggy tree or two, +and a lick of water in a 'pan'—or pond as we should call it—hard by; +a woman, some children, and a couple of goats; a few mealie cobs +yellowing on the roof, and a scared, indignant, and attenuated fowl.</p> + +<p>Alas! how those quiet-looking, quiet-spoken old gentlemen, open Bible +on knee, deceived us. Oh, no! they had <span class="pagenum"><a id="page098" name="page098"></a>(p. 098)</span> never wished for war. +Fight? yes; they had fought, and surrendered, and taken the oath, and +hoped never to fight again. Peace? yes; they wanted peace, and urged +us to hasten on and conclude it. The same story everywhere: in the +villages as in the solitary hamlets. A vast, empty, forsaken +wilderness, with nothing more bellicose than a lean and hungry +boar-hound or two. And yet for two long years to come this very +country, over which the battalion trekked so peacefully, fifes and +drums playing, officers out on the flanks shooting, mess-president +cantering miles away in quest of eggs and their producers, was to be +the scene of many a hard-fought fight and many weary nights of +outposts. Indeed, it never really succumbed to the very end; the happy +hunting-ground of the gallant De la Rey, it was a thorn in the side of +our leaders up to the day the Delegates came in.</p> + +<p>One day's march varied little from another. Up at dawn, and off after +the scantiest of scrappy breakfasts. Good marching while the dew was +on the grass, and the sun a welcome ally after the clear, crisp, +frosty nights; soon, however, to get hot enough, until the welcome +mid-day halt and meal, after which tighten up belts once more and on, +and on, one horizon following another with wearisome regularity, and +never a sign of the long-looked-for water, till at last, as the sun +set behind our backs, its last rays would glint on the miserable 'pan' +by whose side we were to halt for the night. And then what bitter +feelings of depression and disgust when sometimes the fiat would go +forth 'Water for cooking purposes only,' and one had to turn into +one's blankets grimy, dusty, clammy, and miserable.</p> + +<p>On May 31st, the regiment, having arrived at the railway, was told +they would halt there next day. But on the morning of June 1st, the +order was given for the column<a id="footnotetag8" name="footnotetag8"></a><a href="#footnote8" title="Go to footnote 8"><span class="small">[8]</span></a> to march at 2 p.m. to Marigobo Pan, +a distance of eight miles only, but <span class="pagenum"><a id="page099" name="page099"></a>(p. 099)</span> quite ten by the route +taken. The evenings soon close in at this time of year in South +Africa, and it was almost dark when the column arrived. As it was a +fine mild night, every one hoped to be allowed to bivouac, but tents +were pitched after all, and naturally enough pitched anyhow.</p> + +<p>In this matter of pitching tents, the battalion particularly prided +itself. On arrival at the selected site of the camp the Sergeant-Major +blew a whistle, when all those whose duty it was to assist ran towards +him, the men to mark the tent-poles, bayonets in hand, and two others +with the mekometer, to ensure a true right-angle. Every one knew his +particular job, so no time was wasted, while the symmetrical lines +obtained by the use of the instrument were a joy to the General's +eye.<a id="footnotetag9" name="footnotetag9"></a><a href="#footnote9" title="Go to footnote 9"><span class="small">[9]</span></a></p> + +<a id="img031" name="img031"></a> +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/img031.jpg" width="600" height="398" alt="" title=""> +<p class="smcap">First Entry into Krugersdorp.<br> Captain and Adjutant +Fetherstonhaugh in foreground.</p> +</div> + +<p>In the same way, whenever a halt was ordered, it was the regiment's +custom to lay out their kits, mess-tins, belts, &c., in lines outside +their tents. Each Colour-Sergeant had <span class="pagenum"><a id="page100" name="page100"></a>(p. 100)</span> a ball of string, +which was stretched between a couple of pegs; the kits were laid along +it, the string was rolled up and pitched into a tent, and neatness and +regularity prevailed without any extra trouble to any one. This +neatness in camp, in addition to its other soldierly qualities, +endeared the battalion in the eyes of General Hart, a soldier of the +old school, to whom order and regularity particularly appealed.</p> + +<p>On the 2nd the column made another short march to Greysdorp, where +there were two or three good wells, but where the water in the pan was +of a most peculiar green colour.</p> + +<p>The Mafeking relief column was met on the way, and very hard and +serviceable they looked, while several officers met old friends, +amongst others Prince Alexander of Teck, whom we had known at +Maritzburg before the war.</p> + +<p>A longish march of nineteen or twenty miles on the 3rd, with a halt +midway, brought us in the evening to a place called Barber's Pan, +somewhat superior to the generality of these places. There was a +certain amount of water in the pan, but brackish and unpleasant to +drink. Round it were scattered some half-dozen houses, but the most +remarkable thing in connection with it was the sunset. As the light +faded, a mist rose from the veld, which after a few minutes began to +change colour, until at last it settled down to a most beautiful shade +of light green. None of us had seen anything similar before, nor did +we ever see anything like it again.</p> + +<p>A march of about fourteen or fifteen miles on the 4th brought us to a +most uncomfortable camp. On the way, Captain Fetherstonhaugh (acting +Adjutant since Captain Lowndes was hit at Talana) rode off some +distance to a flank to try and get some supplies. He returned with a +great story of his reception by crowds of women and one or two men; +the latter stated they had been reluctantly compelled to fight against +us at Modder River, on pain of <span class="pagenum"><a id="page101" name="page101"></a>(p. 101)</span> being shot, but that their +sympathies were entirely with us, &c. They even gave him a pound of +butter. And we believed this story at the time.</p> + +<p>But, for that matter, who would not have been taken in? Every one +coming up the line brought better and better news. Lord Roberts was +close to the capital, and, thought we in our simplicity, that of +course must end the war. No one guessed there was extra time—two +solid years extra time—to be played. So we enjoyed the butter, and +said they were sensible people after all, and hoped we'd be in time +for the siege of Pretoria.</p> + +<p>The next day's march was a pleasanter one than usual, the halts being +better arranged, with the result that the troops and transport got +into camp quite as early as they would have done under the ordinary +circumstances, but very much fresher and fitter. The fact is, staff +officers do not understand marching. They go tittuping gaily past long +straggling columns, passing the time of day cheerily to friends, and +momentarily halting to deliver some ironical knock to acquaintances on +the subject of their transport, or their sections of fours, or +something of the sort. But the regimental officer, who foots it +alongside his company, he understands marching right enough. He will +tell you when the going is good, and when it only looks good; he will +tell you the effects of five-minute halts, and how much benefit the +closing-up rear of the column derives from them; he will tell you when +a steady, swinging pace is being set that the men could keep up for +ever; and he will also tell you when some long-legged officer in front +is going four miles an hour, till some one suggests it is too fast, +and he sinks into a slow and tiring two and a half. Colonel Hicks +commanded the column on the 5th, and let us march our own way, with +the beneficial results already recorded.</p> + +<p>And that cheery rumour about Pretoria. French <span class="pagenum"><a id="page102" name="page102"></a>(p. 102)</span> reported to be +there, and Mr. Kruger gone off with a couple of millions. What did we +care about the latter? We should not have got any of it.</p> + +<p>Another short march of a little over ten miles brought us to a camp +where there was actually a stream. Here the men got the chance of a +much-needed bathe, and how they enjoyed it! Every one, in fact, was in +excellent spirits, for the news about Pretoria turned out to be true, +and though some of us were disappointed at not being up in time to +share in the triumphant entry into the capital, the majority were all +for England, home, and beauty.</p> + +<p>On the 7th we arrived at Lichtenburg, a small town or village that was +to see some heavy fighting later on in the war. On the present +occasion all seemed most peaceful. The houses were of the stereotyped +South African pattern, with the invariable half-stoep, half-verandah +running half-way along their fronts. Clear streams of water ran coolly +and pleasingly by the sides of the streets, shaded by the ubiquitous +weeping-willow. There was nothing to be bought, and no one to be seen, +however, and those of us who went into the town next morning were very +soon satisfied, returning to camp minus the various articles we had +set forth to buy. It was interesting, however, to see the Boers +handing in their rifles and taking the oath of allegiance.</p> + +<p>Captain MacBean, who was now on General Hunter's staff, turned up +here, and dined with the regiment, and very glad we were to see him. +He gave us all sorts of news, too, which we were very deficient of, as +the system of daily bulletins had not then started.</p> + +<p>After having halted for the 8th and 9th, we resumed our desert march +on the 10th, but only made some ten miles. It was most bitterly cold +all the way.</p> + +<p>The next day proved far pleasanter, and another short, easy march of +about ten miles saw us in camp by 1.30 p.m.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page103" name="page103"></a>(p. 103)</span> On the 12th we made a march of sixteen miles. We were then +within about thirty-three miles of the railway from Johannesburg to +Potchefstroom, and, when a wire came ordering us to do it in two days, +we thought a lot of the task, whereas a few months later we were doing +that distance in one day, and, curiously enough, almost in the same +neighbourhood.</p> + +<p>In consequence of this we marched right through Ventersdorp, to our +regret, as it looked quite a nice place, and there was a regular +trout-stream flowing past it, in which a bathe would have been most +welcome. We did eighteen miles before halting.</p> + +<p>As indicative of the curious state of the war even in these early +days, General Hunter's experience at Vryburg was a good example. He +had ridden on with only thirty cavalrymen to Ventersdorp, when +suddenly some two hundred and fifty of the enemy appeared on the +scene. Fortunately for the General, their only object was to give up +their arms and take the oath.</p> + +<p>Starting at 7.30 a.m. next day, we made short work of the march to the +railway, which we struck at Frederickstadt, a place that many of us +were destined to become very well acquainted with before we had done. +It is rather prettier than most Boer villages, being situated on the +pleasant little Mooi River, whose clear, rapid current reminded us of +our home streams. There are a few trees in the vicinity, whilst on the +further bank and beyond the railway rise the serrated, well-wooded, +and extremely picturesque Gatsrand Hills.</p> + +<p>There was only one man to be seen, peacefully hoeing his potato-patch. +But if the men were scarce and polite, the same could not be said for +the fair sex, who, despite the fact that their knowledge of English +was only to be compared with our ignorance of Dutch, did not fail to +let us know their opinions of things generally. Indeed, the +mess-president, who had gone on ahead on a pony in search of <span class="pagenum"><a id="page104" name="page104"></a>(p. 104)</span> +farmyard products, had a battle-royal with an elderly Dutch lady who +asked six shillings a dozen for her eggs.</p> + +<p>We heard more detailed accounts here of the relief of Mafeking, and of +the gallant part Major Godley of ours had taken in its defence, while +Major Pilson and Captain Kinsman (also Royal Dublin Fusiliers) had +assisted in the relief. As Carington Smith had arrived in Kimberley +with the cavalry, we were able to claim representation in all three of +the great sieges and reliefs of the war.</p> + +<a id="img032" name="img032"></a> +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/img032.jpg" width="600" height="414" alt="" title=""> +<p class="smcap">'Speed Dead Slow.'</p> +</div> + +<p>But a disappointment was in store for us all the same. The column did +not move next day (the 15th), but although engine after engine came +puffing up from Potchefstroom they all failed to bring the carriages +which our aching legs made us so anxiously look for. We heard of the +strike of forty engine-drivers at Potchefstroom, but as they had all +been cast into durance vile, and the engines still continued to +arrive, that could not have been the reason. However, any doubts we +entertained were soon set at rest by an order to continue our march to +Johannesburg next day.</p> + +<a id="img033" name="img033"></a> +<div class="cleared"> +<div class="floatleft"> +<img src="images/img033a.jpg" width="200" height="190" alt="" title=""> +<p><span class="smcap">Lieut. Ely.</span><br> +<span class="italic">Died at sea of Enteric.</span></p> +</div> +<div class="floatright"> +<img src="images/img033b.jpg" width="200" height="198" alt="" title=""> +<p><span class="smcap">Capt. H. Carington Smith.</span><br> +<span class="italic">Wounded at Sanna's Post<br> +and Heidelberg.</span></p> +</div> +</div> + +<div class="cleared"> +<div class="floatleft"> +<img src="images/img033c.jpg" width="200" height="190" alt="" title=""> +<p><span class="smcap">Capt. Watson.</span><br> +(<span class="italic">Attached to Scottish Horse</span>).<br> +<span class="italic">Killed at Moedwil.</span></p> +</div> +<div class="floatright"> +<img src="images/img033d.jpg" width="200" height="201" alt="" title=""> +<p><span class="smcap">Capt. H. J. Kinsman.</span><br> +<span class="italic">Wounded in Transvaal.</span></p> +</div> +</div> + +<div class="cleared"> +<div class="floatleft"> +<img src="images/img033e.jpg" width="200" height="201" alt="" title=""> +<p><span class="smcap">Capt. J. A. Macbean.</span><br> +<span class="italic">Killed at Nooitgedacht.</span></p> +</div> +<div class="floatright"> +<img src="images/img033f.jpg" width="200" height="197" alt="" title=""> +<p><span class="smcap">Lieut. Adrian Taylor.</span><br> +<span class="italic">Severely wounded when serving<br> with +M.I. near Parys.</span></p> +</div> +</div> + +<p class="center smcap cleared">Miscellaneous Casualties.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page105" name="page105"></a>(p. 105)</span> Starting on the 16th, an uneventful march of twelve miles +brought us to Wolverdiend, a place which had not then attained the +importance it afterwards assumed.</p> + +<p>It was another fifteen on to Blauw Bank Station next day. This march +was remarkable in that it was the first occasion since this trek +started that the column moved with any military precautions worth +mentioning.</p> + +<p>Leaving Bank, as it got to be called later on, we struck off from the +railway, left shoulders up, in a bee-line for Johannesburg, the city +of our dreams, which it was hard to believe was not paved with gold, +if one listened to the reports of those who had been there before the +war. After a short march of ten miles we halted at a farm called +Gemsbokfontein, and looked with longing eyes at the distant ridge, +peeping over which could plainly be seen the huge mine-chimneys, like +sentinels along the hills, duly noting our arrival.</p> + +<p>A fierce grass-fire broke out here, which necessitated the active +co-operation of all hands, and all blankets, to oppose it, one +too-adventurous officer getting rather scorched for his pains.</p> + +<p>As we sat at lunch we could see General Mahon's mounted column +ascending the long rise to Randfontein, on our left front, and heard +they had gone to Krugersdorp.</p> + +<p>'Krugersdorp! Where's that?' 'Let's look at your map,' and so on. +Well, we undoubtedly knew where it was a few weeks later. Moreover, +there must be Boers there, for had not a party on an engine come out +that very day, and after destroying a small bridge, and firing a +couple of shots, snorted their way back to the Dorp.</p> + +<p>The Royal Dublin Fusiliers supplied the advanced guard on the 19th, +and duly started for Johannesburg, but a message very shortly came +ordering a left incline, and nominating Krugersdorp as our objective. +It was disappointing, but General Mahon had reported the +Krugersdorpers 'truculent,' and we had to make a demonstration. This +we most certainly did, halting above the railway, just outside the +town, and <span class="pagenum"><a id="page106" name="page106"></a>(p. 106)</span> then—producing drums and fifes—forming up and +marching through to 'St. Patrick's Day' and the 'British Grenadiers.' +But, unlike the peaceful and amiable agriculturist, these townsfolk +had no smiles of reciprocation to our advances, and we marched through +long lines of scowling male faces, with here and there one or two of +the fair sex, but also, alas! sombre to a degree.</p> + +<a id="img034" name="img034"></a> +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/img034.jpg" width="600" height="395" alt="" title=""> +<p class="smcap">Hoisting The Union Jack at Krugersdorp.</p> +</div> + +<p>After emerging on the far side of the town we passed the famous +Paardekraal Monument on our right, and finally camped about half a +mile further on. It appears it was a very close thing whether they +opposed us or not, and the peaceful solution that eventually took +place was largely due to the tactful intervention and determination of +an Englishman, Mr. W. Bruce Honman, who had considerable influence +amongst the Dutch.</p> + +<p>The troops halted at Krugersdorp next day, and the town was formally +taken over in the Queen's name, an impressive parade for that purpose +being held in the market square. Each regiment furnished a Guard of +Honour of 100 men. <span class="pagenum"><a id="page107" name="page107"></a>(p. 107)</span> The Royal Dublin Fusilier Guard was under +the command of Major English, with Captain Higginson and Lieutenant +Haskard. It was extremely interesting for those of us who were not on +duty to watch the faces of the large numbers of Boers, male and +female, who watched this ceremony and the hoisting of the Union Jack. +On the whole they took it extremely well, and for the most part +behaved like brave men, who, having fought and lost, were content to +make the best of the situation.</p> + +<a id="img035" name="img035"></a> +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/img035.jpg" width="600" height="414" alt="" title=""> +<p class="smcap">Johan Meyer's House, five Miles outside Johannesburg.</p> +</div> + +<p>The trek commenced again on the 22nd, and this time we felt convinced +our destination must be Johannesburg, as we were marching along the +Witwaters Rand straight for it. A halt was made after some ten miles, +at Florida, rather a pleasant sort of Saturday-to-Monday resort of +Johannesburgers, with a nice lake and pleasant woods.</p> + +<p>At last we seemed about to receive our reward, only to have our hopes +dashed rudely to the ground. True, we marched to Johannesburg, and +even through it, but only through the most miserable of its slums, +seeing nothing of its fine buildings, nothing of the wealth and +magnificence we <span class="pagenum"><a id="page108" name="page108"></a>(p. 108)</span> had confidently expected. But, indeed, even +the finest part of it was only a sorry spectacle in those days, and +for many a weary month afterwards. Skirting the racecourse, we marched +on to a spot some six miles from the town, near the house of Johan +Meyer, a brother of Lucas Meyer. Colonel Hicks and Captain +Fetherstonhaugh called on this gentleman, and got a lot of interesting +information from him. His house was one of the finest we saw in the +whole Transvaal, and from its site—at the head of a fine +valley—commanded a magnificent view of the country almost as far as +Heidelberg.</p> + +<p>But, as some set-off to our disappointment and long, tiring march of +fifteen miles, Captain Sir Frederick Frankland, who had gone on to +Joh'burg, as it is universally called, to buy what stores he could, +turned up just before dinner, not only with a large amount of +provisions, but also with a case of excellent champagne, which he +presented to the mess, God bless him! We were very proud of our noble +Baronet that night, and he had to reply to the toast of his health +over and over again.</p> + +<a id="img036" name="img036"></a> +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/img036.jpg" width="600" height="394" alt="" title=""> +<p class="smcap">Sergeant Davis, evidently with All we wanted.</p> +</div> + +<p>Sergeant Davis, champion forager of the Army, also put <span class="pagenum"><a id="page109" name="page109"></a>(p. 109)</span> in an +appearance here, having met with no end of adventures and +misadventures since the Colonel had sent him back to the +Kimberley-Mafeking Railway. As usual, he had a fine lot of stores, +and, also as usual, just what we wanted: baccy, chocolate, biscuits, +sjamboks, stamps, etc., etc.</p> + +<p>An uneventful march of fifteen miles, with a halt at Reitfontein, was +only noticeable for a particularly cold night and the final splitting +up of the Irish Brigade, the Connaughts and Borders being ordered to +Pretoria.</p> + +<p>On the 25th our long march came to an end with a twelve-mile step into +Heidelberg. The band of the Derbyshire Regiment played us in, while +our old friend, General Bruce Hamilton, rode out to meet us. We halted +on a slope about three-quarters of a mile outside the town, which in +its essential features is remarkably like Krugersdorp, the streets +being lined with tall blue-gum trees, and the plan of course +rectangular, with the usual market square in the centre.</p> + +<p>There had been a fight here, and we found Captain Carington Smith +again amongst the wounded; this time, as already mentioned, with a +bullet through his other knee, but as cheery as ever, and smiling away +at seeing us all again. Lieutenant Adrian Taylor, of the regiment, was +also here, and very glad we were to see him once more. Like Captain +Carington Smith he was detached from the regiment throughout the +campaign, serving with the M.I., and was about a month later very +severely wounded near Parys when De Wet crossed the Vaal with Lord +Kitchener at his heels. Still another Dublin Fusilier met us at +Heidelberg—Major Rutherford, Adjutant of the Ceylon Volunteers, who +had come over in command of a detachment of that corps.</p> + +<p>In addition to all these, General Cooper (our late C.O.) and his +A.D.C., Lieutenant Renny, R.D.F., were also coming up from the south, +while the 1st Battalion, who had helped to win Alleman's Nek, were not +far off.</p> + +<p>On arrival at Heidelberg we had marched just 300 miles <span class="pagenum"><a id="page110" name="page110"></a>(p. 110)</span> in +twenty-seven days, and although we had not pressed in any way, we had +come along fairly well seeing that we were not bound on any specific +object, such as the relief of a town, or the participation in a siege +or battle. We averaged just over eleven miles a day, including halts +at Lichtenburg (two days), Frederickstadt and Krugersdorp (two days), +or just a shade under fourteen miles for each marching day.<a href="#toc"><span class="small">[Back to Contents]</span></a></p> + +<a id="img037" name="img037"></a> +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/img037.jpg" width="400" height="597" alt="" title=""> +<p class="smcap">Paardekraal Monument, Krugersdorp.</p> +</div> + +<p class="chapter"><span class="pagenum"><a id="page111" name="page111"></a>(p. 111)</span> CHAPTER II.<br> + +HEIDELBERG.</p> + +<p class="quotechapter"> + 'Wherever a man's post is, whether he has chosen it of his own + will, or whether he has been placed at it by his commander, there + it is his duty to remain and face the danger, without thinking of + death, or of any other thing except dishonour.'—<span class="italic">Socrates.</span></p> +<p class="quotechapter"> + 'Such officers do the King best service in the end.'—<span class="italic">Hamlet.</span></p> + +<p>A considerable force had now assembled at Heidelberg, but it was not +to remain there long. General Hunter took over command from General +Ian Hamilton, who had had a bad fall from his horse, and shortly moved +off to the Free State, where he and his men soon covered themselves +with distinction by the rounding-up of Prinsloo's commandoes near +Golden Gate, on the Basuto border.</p> + +<p>The 2nd Royal Dublin Fusiliers, a half-battalion Somersetshire Light +Infantry, and the 28th Field Battery Royal Artillery, with some +details, were left to garrison Heidelberg.</p> + +<p>The battalion was soon split up into a number of small detachments, +and posted at various places along the railway line, which had +suffered considerably at the hands of the Boers. Scarcely a bridge +remained intact, while the presence of wandering bodies of the enemy +in the neighbourhood necessitated the utmost caution and continual +vigilance on the part of the companies, half-companies, and even +sections, into which some of the companies were at length subdivided.</p> + +<p>Headquarters and those companies not on detachment in the meantime had +plenty of work cut out for them too. In order to defend the place two +hills to the west of the town were occupied, one by the Royal Dublin +Fusiliers, known as Dublin Hill, and the other by the Somersetshire +Light <span class="pagenum"><a id="page112" name="page112"></a>(p. 112)</span> Infantry. Our hill was put into a most thorough state +of defence by many hours of hard labour and efficient work under the +direction of Colonel Hicks. Sangars were built on every spur and knoll +which afforded a good field of fire; traverses and shelters were +numerous; in case of a night attack whitened stones along well-made +tracks showed the nearest way to the various posts; while not only +every company, but every section, had its well-defined trench or wall +to rally on and hold.</p> + +<p>To some of us, indeed, all these precautions at the time seemed +somewhat excessive, and it is true that no attack was ever made; but +just as example is better than precept and practice better than +theory, so prevention is better than cure, and there is little doubt +that the fortification of that hill, in full view of many a Boer +field-glass in the town, whence our movements were of course fully +reported as frequently as possible to the enemy in the field, had a +deterrent effect on any designs our very active foes might otherwise +have contemplated.</p> + +<p>On the morning of the 26th the left half-battalion, under Major Bird, +was suddenly ordered off to Nigel Road Station, about three miles out +on the railway to Johannesburg. The Boers having blown up a bridge +between this station and Heidelberg, all stores, &c., arriving from +Johannesburg had to be dumped down on the veld here, and it was +necessary to have a force on the spot to load them into waggons, as +well as to guard them and the trains. These soon began to arrive in +large numbers, and as each came up the sides of the railway waggons +were opened, and their heterogeneous contents chucked out anyhow into +a huge mass. In the mean time R.E. construction trains also arrived, +and the quiet little siding was soon a scene of wild bustle and +excitement. The R.E. went to work on the broken bridge, and made a +most excellent job of it in a surprisingly short time, though a casual +inspection of the temporary structure they built for <span class="pagenum"><a id="page113" name="page113"></a>(p. 113)</span> +trains to pass over gave the lay mind the impression that an extra +strong puff of wind would blow the whole thing over. However, it +answered its purpose very thoroughly, and reflected much credit on its +constructors.</p> + +<a id="img038" name="img038"></a> +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/img038.jpg" width="400" height="601" alt="" title=""> +<p><span class="smcap">COLONEL H. TEMPEST HICKS, C.B.</span><br> +Commanding 2nd Royal Dublin Fusiliers<br> +March 1900 to March 1904.</p> +</div> + +<p>In the meantime Major Bird soon produced law and order out of chaos. +The coolies were made to put mealie-bags in one place and +biscuit-boxes in another, while the soldiers built both up into a very +serviceable sort of fort for the time being, an example of soldierly +adaptability which was not lost on any one who saw it or took part in +its erection.</p> + +<p>We spent two or three very cheery days at Nigel Siding, the +stationmaster's house (two rooms) forming an ideal officers' mess, but +on the 28th 'E' and 'F' companies, under Captains Shewan and G. S. +Higginson, were recalled to headquarters, 'H' company, under Captain +Romer, was sent nine miles nearer Johannesburg to guard Reit Vlei +Bridge, while 'G' company remained at Nigel Road to watch over such +stores as had not yet been removed. This company was shortly further +subdivided by the left half-company, under Lieutenant E. St. G. Smith, +being sent to guard a culvert half-way to Reit Vlei Bridge.</p> + +<p>In the meantime Colonel Hicks never for a moment relaxed the soldierly +precautions which it was his custom to observe, whether the Boers were +reported in the neighbourhood or not; and several times rumours of +intended attacks did arrive, though they invariably proved false.</p> + +<p>The town of Heidelberg itself was very Dutch and seething with +malcontents and treachery. One could easily forgive them for not being +exactly content, but what one could not forgive was their slimness, +their plausible exterior, and their inner mass of falsehood. No class +were more bitter than the clergymen, and one of these gentry was +strongly suspected of being in constant communication with the Boers +in the field, though his oath of neutrality was taken and he was +availing himself of our hospitality. On one occasion Captain G. S. +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page114" name="page114"></a>(p. 114)</span> Higginson spent the night in an empty house in the town in +an attempt to mark this fox to ground, but unfortunately his vigil was +unproductive of result.</p> + +<p>Lieutenant Haskard was now acting as Railway Staff Officer, and having +a very busy time of it, as in addition to hundreds of other duties he +had to send rations up and down the line to the various detachments.</p> + +<p>On the 9th, Sergeant-Major Burke rejoined the regiment, having been a +prisoner since he was wounded at Talana, and left at Dundee. During +this time his duties had been ably performed by Colour-Sergeant C. +Guilfoyle, now Sergeant-Major, 2nd Battalion Royal Dublin Fusiliers. +Lieutenants Marsh and Weldon also joined here, as Lieutenant Supple +had done a few days before. The two former had followed the regiment +up the line to Mafeking, and thence across the Western Transvaal in a +cape-cart, following very nearly in our tracks. They had an +adventuresome journey, and were delighted to reach us at last. Captain +Clarke, R.M.L.I., who was attached to the regiment, escorted an +important Boer commander, named Van Rensburg, to Johannesburg, on his +way to St. Helena.</p> + +<p>It is necessary to explain briefly here the situation of the three +companies, 'A,' 'E,' and 'F,' under Major English, Captain Shewan, and +Captain G. S. Higginson, which had been sent out to guard various +points on the line from Heidelberg to Standerton.</p> + +<p>'A' and 'E' companies had originally gone out, and were posted at +Botha's Kraal. Later on it became necessary to hold Zuikerbosch as +well. Major English, with Lieutenant Newton as his subaltern, was sent +to garrison it. Taking 'E' company with him and leaving Captain +Higginson at Botha's Kraal, Major English, with some 110 Royal +Engineers, occupied the post, and at once set about to put it into a +thorough state of defence. He fully recognised the inherent weaknesses +of his situation, and saw that unless well <span class="pagenum"><a id="page115" name="page115"></a>(p. 115)</span> entrenched he was +practically at the mercy of an enemy armed with artillery, as he had +none to reply with, while the nearest reinforcements were miles away, +and liable themselves to be attacked in force at any moment. He +therefore spared no ingenuity in strengthening the position. Having +Royal Engineers and a considerable number of Kaffirs at his disposal, +he very soon effected his purpose and dug himself comfortably in.</p> + +<p>In the meantime signs were not wanting of approaching Boer activity. A +large commando, under Hans Botha, was known to be hovering about the +neighbourhood, and as it was also known that Botha was occasionally in +the habit of spending a night under his own roof—not three miles +away—Captain G. S. Higginson made two efforts to catch him napping. +But on neither occasion was the chieftain at home, and the unfortunate +Higginson, who had selected the darkest and wildest nights as most +suitable for his purpose, was foiled each time, and had to withdraw +somewhat crestfallen, under a fire of raillery from the ladies of the +establishment. He collected some valuable information, nevertheless, +and sent in reports of Boers in the vicinity, which, however, were not +sufficient to induce General Hart to take any extra precautions.</p> + +<p>Such was the situation of affairs when, on the misty morning of July +21st, we at Heidelberg heard the hoarse barking of the accursed +pompom, varied by the duller and more menacing note of heavier guns. +Anxiously we asked each other what it could be, and reluctantly we +came to the conclusion that our comrades were being submitted to +shell-fire with no possible chance of reprisal. As the sun rose, the +mist did the same, and very soon cheerful messages came twinkling over +'the misty mountain-tops,' announcing that a considerable force of +Boers were attacking them, but that they had little fear of not being +able to keep them off.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page116" name="page116"></a>(p. 116)</span> General Hart hastily assembled a small column<a id="footnotetag10" name="footnotetag10"></a><a href="#footnote10" title="Go to footnote 10"><span class="small">[10]</span></a> and marched +to Major English's assistance, leaving Colonel Hicks in command of the +camp, and as it was quite possible the main attack might be intended +for Heidelberg, we took all necessary precautions for the safety of +the town.</p> + +<p>Before General Hart's force arrived, the Boers had commenced to +withdraw, having discovered that on this occasion they had attacked a +veritable hornet's nest.</p> + +<p>The hill on which Major English had dug his entrenchments is situated +in the angle made by the Zuikerbosch River where it turns sharply to +the south, and was on the left bank of the stream. On the other side +of the river was the hill occupied by the Royal Engineers. Between +these two was the new deviation bridge then under construction. The +Kaffirs lived in the hollow between the hills, as did also the +Yeomanry, of whom there were about ten, under a very young officer. +Major English had given this officer orders that, on any attack taking +place, he should at once lead his horses down to the river, where +there was a kind of hollow place which would have afforded them +excellent cover. This order, however, probably from the suddenness of +the attack, was not complied with in time, and the horses were in +consequence stampeded almost immediately. The natives also were not +long in effecting a rapid southerly movement, for which, of course, +they cannot be blamed, and the Boers shelled them lustily as they +streamed away.</p> + +<p>The Royal Dublin Fusiliers' camp was on the southern slope of the +hill, the summit being occupied at night by alternate companies, who +stood to arms shortly before dawn. Captain Shewan was on the hill, and +on the point of letting the men fall out, when the attack commenced. +The trenches were at once manned without the slightest noise or +confusion, and the Boers' rifle-fire vigorously replied to.</p> + +<p>The two Boer guns were in position on the hills to the <span class="pagenum"><a id="page117" name="page117"></a>(p. 117)</span> +north, some 3400 yards off, while the pompom came into action near the +Fortuna coal-mine. Owing to the excellent disposition and construction +of the defences, the enemy's fire made little or no impression, until +after a time they began to move round to the flanks of the position. +Their rifle-fire then began to have some effect, but at the same time +the fire of the defence had a better target, and after a short time +the burghers commenced to withdraw from the rear face of the work. In +the meantime they had swung round to the west of the Engineers' hill, +and under cover of a grass fire, which was lighted by them and spread +right up to the trenches, endeavoured to attack this part of the +position, in which, however, they also failed. The enemy continued his +endeavours until mid-day, when he commenced to withdraw, his movement +being somewhat expedited by the arrival of the reinforcements under +the General.</p> + +<p>Considering the numbers of the attacking force, and the resolute +manner in which they had persevered, the casualties were +extraordinarily small, two officers and three men wounded, one of the +former being Major English himself; he was struck by a shell splinter +in the eye, but most fortunately did not lose the sight of it.</p> + +<p>This gallant defence called forth a most eulogistic order from the +Commander-in-Chief. The success had come at a time when it was badly +needed. The guarding of the railways necessitated the splitting-up of +forces, and in more than one recent instance a commander of less +foresight than Major English had failed to realise the responsibility +of his position, with the result that more additions were made to the +already-far-too-long list of 'regrettable incidents.'</p> + +<p>The following telegrams passed between General Hart and Major +English:—</p> + +<p>Helio message received at Zuikerbosch Fort on July 22nd, 1900, from +General Hart: 'Received following wire from Lord Roberts. +Begins—"Please convey my congratulations <span class="pagenum"><a id="page118" name="page118"></a>(p. 118)</span> to Major English, +and all concerned on the gallant manner in which they defended their +post on the Zuikerbosch."'</p> + +<p>Major English made the following reply:—'All in the Zuikerbosch +command thank our General for forwarding Lord Roberts' telegram, which +they consider a great honour.'</p> + +<p>The following is an extract from Army Orders in South Africa, dated +Pretoria, July 26th, 1900:—</p> + +<p>'<span class="italic">Engagement.</span>—The Field-Marshal Commanding-in-Chief desires that the +following account from Major-General A. Fitzroy Hart, C.B., Commanding +5th Brigade, of the successful defence of a post by a small force of +infantry against a determined attack of the enemy with guns, be +published as an example of what can be accomplished by a small body of +resolute men, well commanded and skilfully and judiciously +entrenched:—</p> + +<p>'From General Hart, Zuikerbosch, to Lord Roberts, Pretoria, July 21st: +"Enemy made a determined attempt to destroy my advanced post at +Railhead, Zuikerbosch, to-day. Major English, Royal Dublin Fusiliers, +commands the post, with two companies of Dublins, ten Yeomanry, and +110 Royal Engineer reparation party, defending the new railway bridge +which replaces destroyed one. Boers began attack at daybreak with two +or three guns and a pompom, shelling the position hard. They then +advanced, and completely surrounded him with mauser fire, keeping it +up from 6.20 a.m. to 11.45 a.m., and it was hotly returned. English +signalled early to me at Heidelberg, thirteen miles off, that he was +surrounded, and holding his own confidently. I started from Heidelberg +with two guns, a pompom, 130 Somersets, and 140 Marshall's Horse and +Yeomanry, and, on approaching English's position, found he had already +beaten off the enemy, and saw them assembled on the heights N.E. of +his position, and beginning to ride off N.E. My guns opened fire, and +Boers broke into a gallop. The complete repulse of the Boer attack is +entirely due to the skill with <span class="pagenum"><a id="page119" name="page119"></a>(p. 119)</span> which Major English had +fortified his position, his vigilant arrangements, and the good +fighting of the garrison. Casualties: wounded—Lieutenant Greig, +severely; Privates Mallon, Stanton, and O'Brien, slightly. The bridge +and train not injured. Line only injured to the extent of three rails +taken up. Numbers of enemy's casualties not known. Boers sent out an +ambulance for wounded, and were seen burying dead."'</p> + +<p>The following extracts from a letter from Sapper F. Adcock, published +in a home newspaper, are also of interest. After a brief description +of the situation, he continues:—'It was at this time that the +heliographers of the Dublin's showed their pluck, for, fixing up their +stand amidst shot and shell, they got their message through to +Heidelberg.... We could watch every move of the Dublins, as the ditch +ran in the line of their kopje.... Another bit of pluck well worth +seeing happened just as there was a lull in the firing. Two of the +Dublins ran from their entrenchments to their tents, quite a quarter +of a mile, and carried all their bread in a blanket between them to +the entrenchments. The Boers fired three shells at them when they were +going back, but two fell short, and the other was right between them.'</p> + +<p>The sapper was right, and it is pleasant to read letters like the +above when emanating from an entirely independent source. Major +English reported most favourably of the signalling, which was +necessarily conducted practically in the open, the enemy's projectiles +falling all round the operator and Major English, who stood close +beside him. For this service Private Farrelly, who sent the message, +was awarded the distinguished conduct medal. The two brave men who +went out for the bread were Privates Hayes ('A' company) and Townsell +('E' company).</p> + +<p>The remainder of our stay at Heidelberg was uneventful except for what +might very easily have been a most unpleasant <span class="pagenum"><a id="page120" name="page120"></a>(p. 120)</span> accident. We +were all seated at lunch one day when there was a sudden and loud +report close at hand. Investigation proved that it came from Captain +Pomeroy's revolver (an officer belonging to a West Indian Regiment who +was attached to us). He had carelessly left it in his tent loaded, +while his servant had still more carelessly fired it off. The only +sufferer was an unfortunate animal, Major Bird's charger, which was +shot in the hoof.</p> + +<p>On our departure on the 27th, Major-General Cooper's Brigade took over +the defence of the town.<a href="#toc"><span class="small">[Back to Contents]</span></a></p> + +<a id="img039" name="img039"></a> +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/img039.jpg" width="600" height="406" alt="" title=""> +<p class="smcap">The Officers' Mess.</p> +</div> + +<a id="img040" name="img040"></a> +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/img040.jpg" width="600" height="342" alt="" title=""> +<p>Position at Zuikerbosch. 12 m. below Heidleburg</p> +<p>attacked on 21st July by 1000 Boers with 4 guns.</p> +<p>Defended by 180. 2 +R.D.F, 110 Engineers, 10 Yeomen, no guns.</p> + +<p>Under Major English 2 R.D.F.</p> + +<p class="small italic">From a sketch by Col. H. Tempest Hicks, C.B.</p> +</div> + +<p class="chapter"><span class="pagenum"><a id="page121" name="page121"></a>(p. 121)</span> CHAPTER III.<br> + +AFTER DE WET. + +<p class="quotechapter">'It is vain for you to rise up early.'—<span class="italic">Ps.</span> cxxvii. 2.</p> + +<p>Having been for a month at Heidelberg, we had begun to quite make it +our own, and felt as if we should finish the war where we were. And +although there were still any amount of commandoes in the field, we +could scarcely be blamed for thinking that the back of the business +was broken, and that a few weeks, or at the outside months, must see +us returning to England. Well, we reckoned without our host, or rather +the hosts of Messrs. Botha, De Wet, De la Rey, & Co., and if we made a +mistake we made it in good company.</p> + +<p>The Colonel had never ceased fortifying and improving Dublin Hill, and +there is no doubt that at the end of July his efforts had resulted in +a very sound and efficient post.</p> + +<p>Everything pointed to peace and quiet when, late on the afternoon of +July 27th, the ominous 'order' call broke the stillness of the crisp +wintry evening.</p> + +<p>'Come for orders! Come for orders! Hurry up, hurry up; come for +orders!'</p> + +<p>Who, that soldiered through those long weary months, but must remember +that infernal call? For it was characteristic of the war, and owing, +doubtless, to the immense tract of country over which it was waged, +that not only the rank and file, but even the officers, with one or +two exceptions, knew little or nothing of what was going on. +Consequently one never knew what the next minute would bring forth, +and waited accordingly with ears at tension for the strains of the +bugle, whose notes might portend nothing or everything.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page122" name="page122"></a>(p. 122)</span> On this occasion they were the prelude to one of the most +stirring periods in the history of the war—the first great De Wet +hunt. It is beside the purport of this volume to discuss the +advantages of British infantry pursuing mounted Boers. It has often +been maintained that the result of such an apparently hopeless +hare-and-tortoise sort of procedure would have been successful on this +occasion but for the fact of the unblocking of Olifant's Nek. On the +other hand, there are not wanting many who are equally prepared to +argue that, although this bolt-hole being open may have facilitated +the guerilla's escape, that astute leader would easily have found some +other nook or cranny quite sufficient for his purpose had it been +shut; while, if the worst had come to the worst, from his point of +view, he could, at the sacrifice of his waggons and guns, have +dissolved his commando in the night, only to unite again at some more +suitable and less column-infected time and place.</p> + +<p>At the time we knew nothing of all this; all we knew was that some big +move was in progress, for, as we neared the railway next day, train +after train steamed through, reminiscent of the vicinity of Epsom on a +Derby Day, but that was all. Where we were going, when we were going, +why we were going, were all questions quite beyond our ken—not to be +answered, indeed, until some days later, when an officer on General +Hunter's Staff told us what it was all about.</p> + +<p>Our march to the railway on the 28th was a long and trying one, +variously computed at from twenty-one to twenty-three miles. Whatever +its exact length may have been is immaterial; it was the method in +which it was conducted that was so desperately trying. After the usual +sketchy apology for a breakfast, the column moved off with the +Somersets as advance-guard, and 'F' and 'G' company of the Dublins as +rearguard. From a variety of causes the progress was uncommonly slow, +and, no halt being made of greater length than a few minutes, the men +of the rearguard <span class="pagenum"><a id="page123" name="page123"></a>(p. 123)</span> had a trying time, for any one who has +marched behind a column of waggons, &c., miles in length, knows that +one practically gets no halt at all from these five-minute snatches, +owing to the necessity of continually closing up. It was quite dark +when the rearguard hove in sight of the passing trains, and then, to +make matters thoroughly uncomfortable, some half-dozen waggons stuck +firmly in a snipe-bog, scarcely a mile from their destination.</p> + +<a id="img041" name="img041"></a> +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/img041.jpg" width="600" height="395" alt="" title=""> +<p class="smcap">Corporal Tierney and Chef Burst.</p> +</div> + +<p>It looked uncommonly as if the unfortunate rearguard would have to +bivouac in that miserable marsh. As everybody was pouring with +perspiration from their endeavours with the waggons, and as it was +beginning to freeze, while there was no chance of getting at +great-coats, blankets, or food unless the waggons came out, out they +jolly well had to come—and came. It was ten o'clock before the men +got anything to eat, and 11.30 p.m. before our arrangements for the +night were completed. Our invaluable French 'chef' had kept some hot +soup for the rearguard, and seldom was soup more appreciated than by +those famished and frozen warriors.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page124" name="page124"></a>(p. 124)</span> We now heard that we were going south, and going south by +train, and that at all events was something to look forward to. At +least it was a change—something to look forward to with anticipation; +and certainly it is something to look back upon with a certain amount +of amusement, but at the time that railway journey was certainly the +reverse of comfortable.</p> + +<p>We could not get off as early as we expected to on the 29th. The first +train started all right, but owing to the amount of work to be done in +getting kit over a small drift that lay between our bivouac of the +night before and the station, the second train did not follow it till +3.30 p.m.</p> + +<p>After this the difficulty of dispatch increased with each succeeding +train, until when it came to entraining reluctant horses and still +more reluctant mules practically in the dark, for there was no other +light but the dim glimmer of two candle-lamps, the task became +herculean, and required an infinity of patience and tact. The General +and his staff having gone by the first excursion, the task of bringing +along the remainder of the column devolved on Colonel Hicks, with +Captain Fetherstonhaugh as his staff officer. They did not complete +the entraining until the early hours of the 30th, and then only to +find the line blown up in front of them. The fact that no disaster +occurred here was owing to Colonel Hicks' determination not to try to +get through that night, as he clearly foresaw what actually took +place, and that there was nothing to prevent the enemy blowing up the +line.</p> + +<p>It is necessary now to turn our attention to the second train, which +conveyed most of the regiment, under command of Major Bird. Some forty +men with their arms and accoutrements were told off to each open +truck, necessitating the tightest packing, which, however, had a +beneficial effect in so far as it took off the worst part of the +constant succession of jerks and jolts which the journey consisted of. +But everybody was full of fun, and the men as merry as crickets at the +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page125" name="page125"></a>(p. 125)</span> change from the long days of uninteresting 'foot-slogging' +and the prospect of a brush with the elusive De Wet.</p> + +<p>The officers—about twenty in number—travelled in the guard's van, on +the floor of which they made themselves as comfortable as possible +under the circumstances.</p> + +<a id="img042" name="img042"></a> +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/img042.jpg" width="600" height="389" alt="" title=""> +<p class="smcap">Fourth Class on the Z.A.S.M.</p> +</div> + +<p>After passing Vereeniging and duly admiring the excellent work of the +sappers, the mess-president proposed that they should sample the +hampers he had provided for them. This was carried unanimously, but at +that moment the train began to slow up, and, anxious to see every new +place, we determined to wait until the train started again, and then +enjoy our dinner in peace and comfort.</p> + +<p>The sudden explosion of a shell from 'Long Tom' in our midst could not +have had a more demoralising effect than the news which greeted us +when we came to a standstill. It arrived in the shape of a telegram +from the General, ordering the officers to ride in the trucks with the +men, and to keep a sharp look-out for attacks from both sides. So +there was no chance of any dinners after all, and all our visions of +chicken and tongue, whisky and sparklets, and a hot cup of tea or +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page126" name="page126"></a>(p. 126)</span> chocolate resolved themselves into a lump of chocolate out +of one's haversack and a pull at one's water-bottle. The +mess-president proved himself a man of resource on this trying +occasion. With hunger gnawing at his vitals he saw a beautiful dinner +laid out in a waiting-room for some staff officers. Unable to satisfy +his comrades he saw no reason why he himself should go unsatisfied, +and in the three or four minutes occupied by the engine in watering he +hastily bolted a fine plate of roast beef and potatoes, not omitting a +bottle of beer standing hard by, and jumped into the train at the last +moment, thanking his astonished host and friend, Major Hickie of the +7th Fusiliers, as the train moved off into the darkness.</p> + +<p>Anything more cheerless than the remainder of that night journey it +would be hard to conceive. In the first place, when there are forty +men in an open truck, it is very difficult to find room for two more. +In the second place, it was bitterly cold, and a pitch-dark night. In +the third place, the even-money chance of a slab or two of gun-cotton +on the line ahead was not a pleasing one to contemplate. In the fourth +place, the men were ordered to 'charge magazines,' and to spend +several hours jolting along with the cold barrel of a loaded rifle +poking one in the ribs, or insinuatingly tucking itself into the nape +of one's neck, could by no stretch of imagination or fire-eating +ambition be called comforting. However, there was one fine piece of +news at any rate to act as a compensation, the surrender of Commandant +Prinsloo and three or four thousand men to General Hunter.</p> + +<a id="img043" name="img043"></a> +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/img043.jpg" width="600" height="397" alt="" title=""> +<p class="smcap">Fifth Class on the Z.A.S.M.</p> +</div> + +<p>Once or twice ghostly forms on horseback loomed suddenly out of the +blackness of the veld, momentarily lit up by the glare from the +engine. On each occasion they shouted some warning, but what it was +nobody could make out. Our engine-driver fully expected to be blown +up, and had taken the bit between his teeth, cracking on at a pace +that stirred up the living contents of the trucks <span class="pagenum"><a id="page127" name="page127"></a>(p. 127)</span> behind +him, until if any one of them had had a spare morsel of fat on him, he +must inevitably have been churned into butter. Carrying on at this +rate, we soon arrived at our destination, a small station called +Kopjes. And when very shortly after our arrival two or three dull +explosions in the direction whence we had come signified that the line +had been blown up right enough, our gratitude to the engine-driver was +considerably increased. Nor did his solicitude for our welfare end +even then, for having effected his object, he said we could have as +much boiling water out of the engine as we liked, and in less than +sixty seconds we were drinking steaming hot chocolate, and returning +grateful thanks to our host. If any one class more than another +deserved special recognition during this war, it was the railway +staff—the drivers, stokers, and guards. It is no exaggeration to say +that during the whole war no train was ever run at night but that +these men did not run the risk of being blown sky-high, in addition to +all the other incidental dangers of their hazardous calling.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page128" name="page128"></a>(p. 128)</span> The break in the line necessitated our waiting some two or +three days at the station, until the remainder of the column got +through. When it was at last assembled, we marched off due west, +towards the sound of heavy firing in the distance. A march of fourteen +miles brought us within sight and almost within range of a long, low +line of kopjes, and here, we were informed on our arrival, was the +famous guerilla chief, surrounded—so we were informed—at last, and +only awaiting the arrival of our column to be finished off altogether. +Without going so far as some of the subalterns, who on hearing he was +surrounded seemed to anticipate the sight of De Wet in the middle of a +sort of cock-pit, with the British forces sitting round, there still +seemed a considerable number of sufficiently large gaps in the chain +of columns and brigades slowly and ponderously extending round either +flank of the Boer position. The firing we had heard had been from the +Boer guns, they having shelled the Derbyshire Regiment out of their +camp, which had been pitched imprudently close to the harmless-looking +kopjes. Needless to say, there was not a move of any sort to be seen, +and how on earth three or four thousand men managed to conceal +themselves so absolutely must ever remain a marvel. True, their camp +was beyond the crest-line, but it is certain they had outposts and +sentries on the look-out, and these must of necessity have been posted +where they could see us; but certain it was we could not see them, +carefully as telescopes and Zeiss glasses swept every inch of the +hills.</p> + +<p>Unfortunately we had to leave eighty-nine men behind at the railway, +as they had no boots, a serious matter with every probability of a +stiff fight on our hands: for General Hart's orders were to prevent De +Wet going south; to attack, if necessary, to make him go north, but +not to allow him to go in any other direction. This being so, our +object was effected, as will appear later on.</p> + +<p>Another and equally sudden interruption to a meal took <span class="pagenum"><a id="page129" name="page129"></a>(p. 129)</span> place +on August 1st. Marshall's Horse, a Colonial corps of whom we saw a +good deal, had gone out on a reconnaissance in the morning, and had +some scrapping with the enemy's patrols, &c. But now word suddenly +came that they were surrounded, and in a tight corner. Hastily +dropping knives and forks, we fell in almost at the double, and, +though somewhat struck by the incongruity and apparent anomaly in the +fact of our cavalry being surrounded by the Boers when we had been +distinctly informed that it was we who were surrounding them, set off +as hard as we could lay legs to the ground. After marching between +four and five miles, well within the hour, we met the doctor of our +mounted corps, who said he had been taken prisoner and released, and +that there was no necessity for going any further, as our friends had +beaten off our enemies and were on their way back. So back we trudged +too, meeting on the way what most of us thought was a squadron of +cavalry, but which turned out to be Brigadier-General Little's cavalry +brigade. The sight of the attenuation of this force afforded us food +for reflection, and made some of us begin to understand a little how +it was that, in spite of our magnificent paper forces, we still found +such difficulty in rounding-up our foes.</p> + +<p>The next three or four days were uneventful. Lord Kitchener arrived +and took over the chief command of all the forces, which now really +seemed to be closing in on De Wet. The noose was being drawn tighter +and tighter daily, and the Boers' position became more and more +precarious. What would have happened but for Lord Kitchener's arrival +it is hard to say, as General Hart, ever impatient of passivity, a +very Ney for pertinacity of attack, personal bravery, and confidence +in his troops, was undoubtedly on the eve of launching an attack. But +in the light of the succeeding events, it is clear now that such an +attack would have been premature and ill-timed. In the event of its +non-success—and we had a very small force to carry it out with—the +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page130" name="page130"></a>(p. 130)</span> general operations would have been completely ruined, for we +being the Southern force, there would have been nothing to prevent De +Wet going south. In the event of success it would merely have meant +that the Boers would have slipped away north two or three days sooner +than they did, when, seeing that our arrangements to intercept them +were not even then complete, an earlier start would have enabled them +to carry out their retreat with even greater ease.</p> + +<p>Major King, of General Hunter's staff, now arrived in camp with a Boer +prisoner, one of Prinsloo's staff. The latter was being sent through +with a message to De Wet, informing him of the full magnitude of the +Boer surrender at Golden Gate, and advocating his own relinquishment +of further operations. They went through to the Boers' position, and +were courteously received, but General De Wet declared it was +impossible for him to think of giving up now, as he had President +Steyn with him. Nobody believed in the excuse, and its purport is +somewhat difficult to understand, but it ended the conference, and +Major King and his prisoner returned to camp.</p> + +<p>Major English, whose eye had proved troublesome and kept him behind, +now rejoined the battalion, to everybody's gratification, for the +publication of Lord Roberts's army order, which took place at this +time, had made us all very proud of him and his men.</p> + +<p>On the 5th an order was given to send out a small force, consisting of +two companies of the regiment, a pompom, and a troop of Marshall's +Horse, to a point five miles N.N.E. of the camp, in order to fill up a +somewhat big gap between General Hart and the 3rd Cavalry Brigade. 'B' +and 'G' companies, under an officer of the regiment, with Captain +Nelson, R.M.L.I., and Lieutenants Smith and Molony as subalterns, and +Lieutenant Nek of Marshall's Horse, were selected, and started as soon +as the men's dinners were finished. General Hart rode out later on, +and, catching this force up, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page131" name="page131"></a>(p. 131)</span> selected a site, and gave +orders to the officer commanding it to dig himself in, promising that +the pompom, which had not turned up, should be sent on.</p> + +<p>In the meantime the remainder of General Hart's force also started +digging, a very different state of affairs to his premeditated attack +a couple of days earlier.</p> + +<p>The detachment sent out patrols on the morning of the 6th to see if +they could draw the enemy's fire, with strict injunctions to content +themselves with doing so and then withdraw. This they soon succeeded +in doing. On their return they passed a farmhouse, and received +information that an important Boer General was in the habit of +sleeping there sometimes. Visions of a capture of De Wet inflamed the +minds of some of the younger officers, and on the night of the 6th-7th +Captain Nelson and Lieutenant Smith, with a few picked men, made a +raid on the house. However, they found nobody but womenfolk, and +returned empty-handed.</p> + +<p>Next day commenced our memorable pursuit. De Wet and his merry men had +slipped away over the ford bearing his own name as neatly as a +cherry-stone from between finger and thumb, and, with their heads +turned north, were to give us, and many another converging column like +us, the hunt of our lives. The regiment started at 11.30 and only +halted at dusk, some three miles from a range of hills on which rumour +said the Boers were going to stand and fight it out to the bitter end, +even if the whole British Army came against them. 'B' and 'G' +companies did not get in until 9 p.m., as, in addition to having an +extra five miles to march, they had some trouble with their waggons.</p> + +<p>We marched all day on the 8th in an easterly direction along the left +or southern bank of the Vaal River—a long, tiring, uneventful trek. +Expecting momentarily to see our prey delivered over to us, our +spirits sank lower and lower as the day dragged on with no sign of any +Boers. There was the usual aggravating little drift to be negotiated +at 6 p.m. <span class="pagenum"><a id="page132" name="page132"></a>(p. 132)</span> only half a mile short of our camping-ground for +the night, but eventually we got all the waggons over, and men and +officers obtained something to eat. This proved one of the coldest +nights of the winter, and there was ice instead of water in most of +the water-bottles next morning when reveille went at 3.30 a.m.</p> + +<p>Starting at 5 a.m. we again went steadily on till 6 p.m., making well +over thirteen hours without food. We skirted round the south of Parys, +a name which appealed strongly to a good many of us, and suddenly +heard the welcome sound of heavy firing not very far ahead. The column +halted, and word soon came that this time our pains were really to be +rewarded; the Boers were only six miles ahead, and Lord Methuen was +engaged with their rearguard. All signs of hunger and fatigue at once +disappeared, the regiment started trekking off once more, +instinctively 'stepping out' as they went. The guns still thundered +invitingly just ahead, and as we topped each fresh horizon or rounded +the slope of the next kopje we all expected to see our prey close in +front. But it was not to be. As the afternoon wore on the sound of the +guns died away, until at last we came to a halt at dusk in a sort of +amphitheatre among the low hills. Too tired to want much food, the men +sank down with the delightful nightcap that reveille might again be +expected at 3.30 a.m.</p> + +<p>The 10th proved more or less a repetition of the preceding days. +Starting at 5 a.m., we did not halt till well after dark, the waggons, +kits, food, &c., not getting up to us till 10 p.m. Seeing that there +was no chance of any other food, some bullocks were commandeered, and +the men cooked them in little chunks in their mess-tins over the grass +fires. Tired out as they were it was too cold to get any sleep without +blankets, and long lines of melancholy soldiers could be seen standing +along the edges of the grass fires, against which their figures were +outlined in bold silhouette, and from whose scanty flames they +endeavoured to get what little warmth they could. Everybody was wet +through to the knee, a good many to the <span class="pagenum"><a id="page133" name="page133"></a>(p. 133)</span> waist, while some +were soused all over, for in the course of our march we had turned due +north, and crossed the Vaal at Lindeque Drift. The river is very broad +here, and split up into numerous small streams, in the wading of which +many humorous incidents took place, owing to the slippery nature of +the rolling stones in the bottom of the river. A rolling stone may not +gather much moss, but it is undoubtedly capable of gathering a +considerable quantity of slimy weeds, and when concealed by two or +three feet of running water it offers about as precarious a footing as +it is possible to imagine.</p> + +<a id="img044" name="img044"></a> +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/img044.jpg" width="600" height="402" alt="" title=""> +<p class="smcap">The Vaal River, Lindeque Drift.</p> +</div> + +<p>Winding our way through the low hills on the Transvaal side of the +river, we at length emerged on to an enormous plain. The far horizon +was bounded by the Gatsrand hills, with which, as with another +detached clump of rounded kopjes on our left, known as the Losberg, we +were destined ere long to become closely acquainted. As we finally +turned in about 11 p.m. we heard reveille was not to sound till 4.30 +a.m., but when some subaltern attempted a feeble joke about a 'Europe +morning,' his effort met with nothing but silent contempt.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page134" name="page134"></a>(p. 134)</span> There is little doubt that any one who shared in that next +day's march will never forget it. As we proceeded across the +illimitable plain a strong head-wind began to blow, increasing in +strength as the day wore on. De Wet had fired all the grass ahead of +us, with the result that the air was laden with millions and millions +of particles of minute ashes and sharp cinders. These soon filled +eyes, ears, nostrils, throats, and lungs, until breathing became +well-nigh impossible, and the agony caused by their penetration into +our eyes almost intolerable. But woe to him who endeavoured to +alleviate his distress by wiping his eyes with grimy hands. Such +action merely had the effect of 'rubbing it in,' and so accentuating +the misery and discomfort. The men very soon began to fall out in +ever-increasing numbers. On one occasion Captain Nelson, R.M.L.I., was +seen straggling off right away from the column. Lieutenant Bradford +went after him and found that he was temporarily quite blind. At last, +after hours of torment, we reached a pass in the Gatsrand, on the far +side of which we halted, as night fell. A big grass fire almost +immediately broke out, and as the grass was long and thick, and a +strong wind still blew to fan it, things looked very ugly. The flames +swept right through the camp, but luckily the tents were not up. But +what would happen when they reached the guns and ammunition? What, +indeed, might have happened, but for the gallantry of the gunners and +naval detachment, it is hard to say. As it was the ammunition-waggons +caught fire and were sufficiently charred to demonstrate the closeness +of the danger. But, as ever, 'the handy-man' was to the fore, and with +promptitude and courage, that could not have been excelled, managed to +extinguish the flames.</p> + +<p>And now for a wash—what, no water! No water, which, hungry and +exhausted as they were, every one wanted even more than food. But, +alas! it was too true, and after contenting ourselves with some liquid +mud, flavoured with <span class="pagenum"><a id="page135" name="page135"></a>(p. 135)</span> charcoal, called coffee, and some few +mouthfuls of tough old trek-ox, liberally peppered with burnt grass, +we only waited to hear that reveille was to be at 1.30 a.m. before +sinking down to snatch what rest was possible. This delightful spot +rejoiced in the refreshing name of Orange Grove.</p> + +<p>The 12th of August. Shade of St. Grouse! At 3 a.m. we were on the move +in bright moonlight and sharp frost, with a wind blowing which cut +like a knife. After doing some sixteen or seventeen miles we arrived +about 10 a.m. at Wolverdiend station—a large force of cavalry and +infantry assembled there, moving out as we moved in. Camp was pitched, +and a good meal cooked—our first respectable one for three days—and +then—then came the order to start off again in the afternoon. Wearily +we resumed that march, but even as we started the prospect was +brightened by the sound of heavy guns ahead, on our right front. We +finally bivouacked for the night on the most stony kopje in all South +Africa. It was impossible to find a spot anywhere that did not consist +of sharp, jagged rocks, rendering sleep, to any troops less tired than +we were, an utter impossibility. A rumour credited Lord Methuen with +again having brought De Wet to bay, and we were almost positively +assured that next day would end our laborious march.</p> + +<p>No less than ten mules were lost during the day, from utter +exhaustion. Many a heart, weary in itself, ached yet more deeply for +the sufferings entailed on the dumb animals.</p> + +<p>Reveille at 2, off at 3, was our time-table for the next day. After +proceeding some five or six miles, the force came to the pretty little +Mooi River. The Colonel found an excellent place for us to cross it, +compared to the spot where the Somersets were obliged to plunge in. A +halt was called on the far side, and a scratch meal taken. While thus +employed, some of our troops who had been De Wet's prisoners, amongst +them a couple of our own men, came in. <span class="pagenum"><a id="page136" name="page136"></a>(p. 136)</span> They had been with De +Wet's rearguard, and told us that when Lord Methuen had shelled it the +day before, they had managed to escape; also that the fire of Lord +Methuen's guns had knocked over a Boer gun and exploded one of their +ammunition waggons. They added that De Wet was in command of a very +considerable force, and some distance ahead.</p> + +<a id="img045" name="img045"></a> +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/img045.jpg" width="600" height="397" alt="" title=""> +<p class="smcap">The R.D.F. bathing in Mooi River, Potchefstroom.</p> +</div> + +<p>We presently resumed the pursuit, finally camping in some very +desolate country, where the water was scarce and bad. Signs of +over-fatigue and want of sleep were now becoming very apparent, a +large number of men falling out and riding on the waggons. Poor +fellows! they stuck it out as long as ever they could, but their socks +gave out from the constant wettings, and they pitched them away, +marching on in their boots until the pain of the raw chafes became too +much to bear. There was never a grumble or complaint: a man simply +asked to see his Captain, and respectfully said his feet had given +way, and he must regretfully fall out. The officers knew it was true, +and felt for their comrades whose emaciated kits precluded the +possibility of a change. To <span class="pagenum"><a id="page137" name="page137"></a>(p. 137)</span> such a state was the column now +reduced that the General, who had ordered reveille for 2 a.m. the +following morning, actually put it back till 6 o'clock.</p> + +<p>The regiment acted as rearguard on the 14th, and did not start till 9 +a.m., halting for a short time at mid-day near a blown-up Boer +ammunition waggon. Every conceivable sort and kind of small-arm +ammunition lay scattered around on the veld, and those who were keen +on curios of this description made quite a collection of full and +empty cases.</p> + +<p>The battalion lost eleven more mules, the poor brutes simply falling +to the ground from utter exhaustion, being perforce left where they +lay. We arrived in camp at 5.30 p.m., and then for the first time, in +at all events some of our lives, heard two reveilles in one day, the +hated call blaring in our ears at 10.30 p.m. Starting at 12, we pushed +on, belts tightened, teeth clenched, and simply determined <span class="italic">not</span> to +give in. We were told that the cavalry brigades had De Wet at last at +the foot of the Magaliesberg, only sixteen miles ahead. So on we went +into the sheer and bitter night, more like ghostly shadows than +anything else, as the spectral column wound its way through sleeping +villages and over mile after mile of dark and silent veld. At last our +eyes were gladdened by the sight of twinkling watch-fires on the +slopes of some hills just ahead, and as the first signs of dawn began +to become manifest, we sank wearily down to enjoy a few minutes' +repose. But it was broad daylight when we woke, and alas! for all the +hopes of the past eight days, the hills ahead were only occupied by +our cavalry. Theirs had been the watch-fires of the dark hours of the +night. The game was up, and we were told the first great De Wet hunt +was over. Some one had failed to stop the earth; the fox had foiled +his pursuers, and the various Generals reluctantly whipped off their +hounds.</p> + +<p>It was a bitter disappointment. We had been so buoyed up by the +promises held out to us. Every one had so <span class="pagenum"><a id="page138" name="page138"></a>(p. 138)</span> thoroughly entered +into the job, and plodded stolidly along; and all for nothing. Work +which, if successful, would have lived in history, but which, being +unsuccessful, was fated to be forgotten and ignored; and unsuccessful +through no fault of any of the troops engaged in it. There was no +General or Staff to blame: no regiment or department which could be +hauled over the coals. No; some one had blundered, that was all. The +point has never been exactly cleared up, and probably never will be, +and there the matter ended.</p> + +<p class="poem">'Lay not your blame on me: if you have lost him,<br> + Why, I have lost him too.'—<span class="italic">Othello.</span></p> + +<p>So we turned over and fell asleep again, and woke up at 9 a.m. and had +some breakfast, and were about to fall asleep again when the word came +to fall in and march on to some other bivouac. The one we were in was +good enough for us, but of course there was nothing for it but to +obey, and we marched to a small village called Rietfontein. Here we +heard that Colonel Hore's column was surrounded, and in a bad way, +some eighty miles off, and that we were to form part of a small force, +and make a forced march to his relief.</p> + +<p>Accordingly the column marched at 8 a.m. next morning. After going +about two miles, an order arrived saying we were to go back; and back +we went—a somewhat profitless proceeding, but doubtless unavoidable. +The remainder of the day was spent resting, but it was known that +reveille was to sound at midnight, and that we were to make a big +effort next day.</p> + +<p>Starting at 1 a.m., and steadily tramping on till 9.30 a.m., we put +twenty miles behind us. A halt was then made for a meal in rather a +pretty spot, which actually boasted of some trees sufficiently large +to afford shade, and under the foot of some well-wooded kloofs on our +right. Resuming our march, we did some two or three miles more +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page139" name="page139"></a>(p. 139)</span> when word came that Colonel Hore was all right, having made +a most gallant resistance and suffered many casualties, and that we +were to go back the way we had come and march to Pretoria.</p> + +<p>By the time we got back to our bivouac it was still early in the day, +and we had already marched twenty-five miles. Five more mules had +fallen dead, making a total of thirty-eight since we started on the +7th.</p> + +<p>On the 18th we resumed our return journey, if return journey it could +be called, since wherever we were going it was a hundred to one +against its being the place we had come from. After a short trek we +out-spanned for breakfasts, and an order was then given that we were +to stay where we were and bivouac there for the night.</p> + +<p>We moved to Vlakfontein next day, a distance of about sixteen miles, +and the march quite uneventful. Rumour, however, pointed to +Krugersdorp as our destination, and this must have been the exception +that proves the rule, for on this occasion rumour proved right.</p> + +<p>Another long and equally uninteresting march of eighteen or nineteen +miles, only relieved by the arrival in hot haste of an indignant +Marquis. It appeared he had been at a farm some two miles off on our +left front, and had been offered some tea, which he had refused, and +on leaving the house had been shot at by about a dozen Boers. What it +was all about, or what he had been doing alone at this farm, and why +the Boers should not shoot at him when he withdrew, none of us could +quite make out. However, there were some Boers there, so the Colonel +fired a few long-range volleys in the direction indicated, but +declined to make a deviation with a view to reprisals.</p> + +<p>Another eighteen miles on the 31st brought us to within about eight of +Krugersdorp. About time too, for the men's boots were giving way +badly, and scarcely one in ten had any socks.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page140" name="page140"></a>(p. 140)</span> The eight miles proved to be very long ones, however—longer +than even Irish miles—and although we had made an early start, it was +noon before we at last reached Krugersdorp for the second time. On +this occasion we halted on a hillside just outside the north of the +town, and beside a sort of small suburb on the further side of the +creek.</p> + +<p>Since leaving Heidelberg we had marched 289 miles. But of this +distance 123 had been covered in the week during which we pursued De +Wet, and 228 in the fortnight commencing August 7th. The longest +distance covered in any one day had been the 25 miles on the day we +turned. This marching was not done on roads it must be remembered, but +across country, over hills, and through rivers, with frequent troubles +with the unfortunate transport to overcome, and with very little food, +and that of an inferior quality.</p> + +<p>So ended our attempt on foot to catch De Wet on a thoroughbred. It was +hopeless from the first, and yet went within measurable distance of +succeeding, though even if we had rounded up some of his force at +Olifant's Nek, it is very doubtful if De Wet himself would have been +caught.<a href="#toc"><span class="small">[Back to Contents]</span></a></p> + +<p class="chapter"><span class="pagenum"><a id="page141" name="page141"></a>(p. 141)</span> CHAPTER IV.<br> + +SEPTEMBER IN THE GATSRAND.</p> + +<p class="quotechapter">'Why gaddest thou about so much?'<br> +<span class="left50"><span class="italic">Jer.</span> ii. 36.</span></p> + +<p>From August 23rd to 28th we obtained a very welcome week's rest, which +would have been more enjoyable had the weather not broken badly, +resulting in a succession of cold, high winds and heavy thunderstorms. +These latter were of the most abominable description and a severe +trial to those of us whose nervous systems were so constituted as to +be affected by them. Some declared that they liked them; others +frankly admitted that they detested them. They seemed to have a way of +coming along about 4 p.m., and as soon as they got into position, +immediately above our heads, opened fire. Needless to say, in the +course of the long campaign there were a good many very narrow shaves, +and one of our men was actually killed by lightning. The storms were +almost invariably accompanied by torrential rain, which, though adding +greatly to our discomfort, mitigated the danger, the local cognoscenti +assuring us that even they looked upon a dry thunderstorm as no joke.</p> + +<p>The regiment was a good deal split up at this time owing to the men we +had dropped behind us on our late trek; they had fallen out from a +variety of causes, but ninety per cent. of them on account of sore +feet or lack of boots. There were no less than 160 at Wolverdiend, 50 +at Rhenoster, 40 at Wolverhoek, and so on. The Colonel made many +attempts to gather up his chickens once more, but when we started on +our next trek we were still deficient of a good many. Major Bird left +us at this time to go to Natal, where he was to arrange about our +property, and organize orderly-room <span class="pagenum"><a id="page142" name="page142"></a>(p. 142)</span> papers, etc. Major +English was unfortunately down with a severe attack of dysentery, and +had it not been for Major Rutherford's arrival on the morning of the +29th the battalion would have been Majorless. Our padre, Father +Mathews, presented us with a very fine pair of koodoo horns which he +picked up at a store while we were here. He had originally been +attached to the Royal Irish Fusiliers, but had come to us after +Nicholson's Nek. He remained with us till the end of the war, and +proved himself a brave soldier and a welcome member of the mess.</p> + +<a id="img046" name="img046"></a> +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/img046.jpg" width="600" height="411" alt="" title=""> +<p class="smcap">Father Mathews.</p> +</div> + +<p>Orders were eventually issued for a start at 6 a.m. on the morning of +the 29th, but a night of heavy rain and succession of thunderstorms +put an early start out of the question, and we did not get off till 3 +p.m. The force was known as the Pochefstroom Column,<a id="footnotetag11" name="footnotetag11"></a><a href="#footnote11" title="Go to footnote 11"><span class="small">[11]</span></a> and our +mission, as far as we knew, was to lay waste the country between +Krugersdorp and <span class="pagenum"><a id="page143" name="page143"></a>(p. 143)</span> that place, to fight the enemy whenever we +met him, to bring in women and children, to destroy anything in the +way of forage, &c., which might be useful to our enemies, if we could +not bring it along for our own use; to collect waggons, cape-carts, +animals, harness, &c.; and generally to carry fire and sword +throughout the land.</p> + +<p>Moving off in a southerly direction through the town, we came to what +should have been a harmless little drift, about two or three miles +out. The recent rains had, however, transformed it into a formidable +obstacle, and waggon after waggon stuck hopelessly in its miry +embrace. The General, therefore, determined to halt on a rising slope +on the far side, and as many waggons as possible were man-handled over +the bog. Tents were pitched, but scarcely were they up when a furious +storm burst overhead. In a minute everything and everybody was soused +through and through, the scene being vividly lit up by the almost +continuous flashes of vivid lightning, while the crashing, bellowing +boom of the thunder in our ears made voices inaudible and orders +perfectly useless. What sort of teas the regimental cooks prepared we +did not know, but the invaluable and ubiquitous Corporal Tierney +managed to bring each of us a cup of hot tea and a rasher or a steak +in our tents. The storm lasted till dawn, when the heavy clouds, as if +despoiled of their victims by the rising sun, reluctantly drew off +northwards. A glorious morning was the consequence, but, of course, +there was no chance of trekking for some hours to come.</p> + +<p>At 2 p.m. a start was again made, but as the tents and everything else +were soaked through, and weighed fifty per cent. more than they would +under ordinary circumstances, there was little hope that our transport +animals would be able to drag them through any bad drifts. We only +managed to do some seven miles before darkness came on, when we camped +for the night at the Madeline Gold-mine. It was jumpy work here, as +the whole place was honeycombed with <span class="pagenum"><a id="page144" name="page144"></a>(p. 144)</span> prospecting-holes and +ditches, varying in depth from three feet to about three hundred. How +on earth no one fell in must ever remain a mystery, as, to add to the +delightful freshness of the situation, a large herd of bullocks took +command, and meandered through the camp, one of which moved the mess +president on some considerable distance, fortunately for him with a +horn on each side of him, instead of one through him, as was doubtless +intended.</p> + +<p>We marched from the Madeline at 7 a.m. on August 31st, and after +trekking some miles arrived at a large coal-mine, which seemed to be +in very good order. This country had been the scene of a goodish bit +of fighting. Not far off the ill-fated Jameson raid had come to its +inglorious conclusion; a little further on the Gordons had suffered +severely during the advance on Johannesburg; and here the Pochefstroom +column was to be 'blooded.'</p> + +<p>We did not know that anything interesting was on the tapis until we +saw the white cotton-wool puffs of our shrapnel bursting against a +range of kopjes in our front. Then the Colonel told us that there were +supposed to be a good many Boers on ahead, and that the General had +gone off with a portion of the column to attack them, while we were to +advance and seize and hold a nek, with a view to cutting off the +retreating Boers, or threatening their left flank, or reinforcing our +right, or some obscure purpose. It was the same in so many of our days +of scrapping and trekking. Talk about the fog of war: we who were +actually in the battle knew nothing about it. Doubtless the Commanding +Officer was in the know, but the Company Officer, the commander of +what is now recognised as the real fighting unit, he knew nothing. It +was a funny fight. We trekked along, unconcernedly watching the pretty +effect of our friends the gunners' practice; able with glasses to see +the stones and dust driven ahead when the shells burst low; but unable +to see any Boers. On reaching our destined spot we lay down <span class="pagenum"><a id="page145" name="page145"></a>(p. 145)</span> +and had a smoke, and thought of all sorts of things other than +fighting, until at last news came from the General, and we heard we +had fifteen casualties. So it had been quite a battle after all, as +fights were going in those days, when any scrap that resulted in a +casualty was known as a hardly-contested engagement.</p> + +<p>On the 1st we moved to a rather pretty camp, close under the far side +of the hills, called Jakfontein. The General and the troops he had +with him on the 31st arrived at about 5.15 p.m., and camped alongside. +The General told the Colonel they had had quite a victory yesterday, +driving the Boers from their position, and occupying it at nightfall. +They also thought they had done a good deal of damage to them with our +guns, as they withdrew.</p> + +<p>The column did not march on the 2nd, but two companies ('E' and 'F') +under Captain Shewan proceeded to Bank Station as escort to the +wounded, while two more ('A' and 'B'), under Major Rutherford, were +sent off to commence the burning and looting, which, as far as we +could understand, was the <span class="italic">raison d'être</span> of the column. However that +might be, there was a tremendous fuss on their return, and all sorts +of accusations made <span class="italic">re</span> looting. There is no disguising the fact that +we were altogether too squeamish, and that the orders on these and +subsequent occasions were capable of more than one interpretation. +Here were we in an enemy's country, badly off for a cart, let us say, +for the officers' mess; the very thing is found in an unoccupied farm; +to bring it along and use it was to loot: to burn it was to obey +orders. At this length of time it is easy to write dispassionately, +and there can be no harm in saying that it was vexing to be found +fault with when under the impression that one was doing one's best for +the general good, and not in any way profiting oneself. A few days +later an officer searching a farm for concealed weapons, &c., came +across a heavy ebony stick—just the thing he wanted. The <span class="pagenum"><a id="page146" name="page146"></a>(p. 146)</span> +old Boer lady made a great fuss about his taking it, saying it was all +she had to beat the Kaffirs with. That finally determined him, more +especially as he was not exactly standing on ceremony at the time, +seeing the next company was being sniped at, and his turn liable to +come at any moment.</p> + +<p>Captain G. S. Higginson was appointed Remount officer, and from this +moment we began to lose sight of him, to everybody's great regret.</p> + +<p>After spending another day in bringing in forage and supplies, the +column started at 9 p.m. on the 3rd on a night march. For the first +four or five miles all went well, and the advance-guard, under the +careful leading of Captain Romer, maintained the right direction. +Then, however, the road made a sharp turn, and although Captain +Romer's party followed the turn right enough, part of his +advance-guard, under a subaltern, went wandering off into the black +night. It took some time to retrieve them, and as the column +immediately afterwards came to a deep drift, it was considerably +delayed. 'G' company was sent up a high hill on the left to guard that +flank until the whole of the transport and rearguard was past, and the +cold on the top was a thing to remember. The main column got into +bivouac shortly after 1 a.m., but this unfortunate company was out +till 5, which, seeing the march was resumed at 6, was rather hard +luck. However, there was plenty of that going for everybody in those +days, and after the usual short 'grouse,' the sleepless night was +forgotten.</p> + +<p>After moving into the hills about eight miles further, and passing +through some beautiful farms, with every peachtree a mass of glorious +bloom, the column halted. The Imperial Yeomanry, who had been scouting +far ahead, now found themselves perilously involved with a small body +of the enemy. General Hart, with a portion of the column, including +the artillery and naval gun, moved out to extricate them, and very +soon we heard heavy fighting going on. He <span class="pagenum"><a id="page147" name="page147"></a>(p. 147)</span> succeeded in his +object, however, at the expense of four of the Yeomanry wounded and +one man killed. In the meantime, Colonel Hicks had thrown out outposts +on the hills, 'G' company coming in for another sleepless night, +probably through some mistake in the roster. Captain Nelson, R.M.L.I. +(attached), had a somewhat peculiar experience. Having been detained +for some purpose when his company was going out, he gave Lieutenant +Marsh, his subaltern, orders where to go, and later on followed +himself. But then he couldn't find them. Nor could the other companies +on other hills see anything of them, though signals were flashed in +the direction they had taken. It was not until next morning that they +were discovered, quite close to the place they had been ordered to go +to. It was characteristic of the nature of the country in which we +were operating, and the excellent manner in which they hid themselves, +that Captain Nelson should have missed them, for at one time he must +have passed quite close to the piquet.</p> + +<p>Next morning Boers were reported in the vicinity. It is impossible to +say they were in our front, as our front coincided with the report of +the first visible Boer, and we simply went for anything we saw. Rumour +put this force at 700 strong, but most people considered that an +exaggerated estimate. We moved off in three columns: the South Wales +Borderers took the right, moving along the difficult, serrated tops of +the hills; the cavalry and yeomanry took the lower, more undulating, +easier hills to the left, while the rest of us with the guns moved +along in the centre; the General, conspicuous by a large red flag +which a trooper carried behind him, moving wherever any opposition +presented itself. It must be the unanimous opinion of all troops who +knew our General, that a braver man never fought in action, but at the +same time the man who carried that red flag deserved some honourable +distinction. Perhaps he got it; probably he did not.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page148" name="page148"></a>(p. 148)</span> After moving some two or three miles, our further way was +blocked by mauser-fire from a very ominous, black-looking kopje which +stretched down into the valley from the high ground on our left. The +guns came into action against this hill at a range of about two +thousand yards, and it seemed as if a golden-crested wren could not +have escaped if it had been unlucky enough to be there. The shrapnel +kept up an almost incessant hail, covering the wooded sides of the +kopje with jets of round white balls of smoke, while every now and +then the deeper note of the 4·7 was followed by a huge cloud of dust +and yellowish vapour thrown up, and off, by the explosion of the +lyddite in the huge projectile. How many Boers held that hill will +probably never be known; only four were found. But a strange spectacle +ensued. Emerging from the cover on the far side, rode, +<span class="italic">ventre-à-terre</span>, a solitary horseman. Immediately two companies +extended in our front opened fire on him. How he escaped was a marvel, +for in front, behind, on every side of him could be seen 'the bullets +kicking dust-spots on the green.' But escape he did, and many a 'Good +luck to you' went after him, for he was a bold man to have stayed as +long as he had, and fully deserved to escape. Our bombardment had +effected one useful purpose. Amongst the killed was a Commandant +called Theron, a brave, enterprising young fellow of about twenty-five +years of age, whose exploits had already stamped him as a born leader +of men. Our own casualties amounted to four yeomen wounded.</p> + +<p>We camped a little further on, and buried our enemy, and one of our +own men who had died from his wounds, side by side, with all due +honour, ceremony, and respect.</p> + +<a id="img047" name="img047"></a> +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/img047.jpg" width="600" height="395" alt="" title=""> +<p class="smcap">Funeral of Commandant Theron and a British Soldier. +September 6th, 1900.</p> +</div> + +<p>September 6th was an unpleasant day. In the first place we made a very +early start, which, after the two previous nights' work, was rather +hard on the troops. Several had been without sleep for two nights, and +engaged with the <span class="pagenum"><a id="page149" name="page149"></a>(p. 149)</span> enemy all day. As far as fighting went this +long-range scrapping was not of course worthy of the name, but as far +as discomfort and fatigue were concerned, the operations were entitled +to the most dignified and resonant title in the vocabulary. The 6th +was an example. In the first place there was no fighting; in the +second place, there was very little marching; in the third place, +there was no rest; in the fourth place, there was no food. In the +absence of definite orders the commanding officers delayed for a long +time ere venturing to outspan and cook: when they did do so orders +immediately arrived, scattering companies right, left, and centre, on +the burning and capturing expeditions. Finally, when orders were +published, they were for another night march, the object and +destination of which were concealed even from officers commanding +regiments. However, there was nothing for it but to make the best of +an unpleasant state of affairs, to snatch a few mouthfuls of food +whenever possible and a few minutes' sleep at any opportunity and once +more the long column wound its way through the <span class="pagenum"><a id="page150" name="page150"></a>(p. 150)</span> night. It +arrived on the morning of the 7th at Wolverdiend station, where there +was now a considerable garrison, among them 140 of our own men, who +had been there since the De Wet trek. The day was passed in shifting +camp and fatigue work in the station, where there was much to do in +the way of loading and unloading trains.</p> + +<p>Captain Romer got three days' leave here to meet his father, the +famous judge, who had come out as President of the Royal Commission.</p> + +<p>At 9 p.m. the column started on another night march, the battalion +supplying the rearguard. It was weary work waiting on those occasions. +Tents were struck, and coats, blankets, &c., packed on the waggons an +hour before the advance-guard was due to march off, after which there +was nothing to do but lie down on the ground in the bitter cold, and +wait till all the transport had got away. Nor did the advance-guard +have very much the best of it, as they of course arrived hours before +the waggons, and had their shivering turn in the early morning, at the +other end of the march.</p> + +<p>By 10 a.m. the column arrived at Klerkskraal, a small and very widely +scattered village on the banks of the beautiful Mooi River, a stream +of the clearest and most delicious water. Companies were sent to clear +out the neighbouring farms as usual, and a good deal of information +was gathered about a considerable quantity of the enemy, who had been +trekking through for some time past in small groups.</p> + +<p>A dozen fine Indian tents, the gift of Rai Bahadur Boota Singh, of +Rawal Pindi, were handed over to us here for the use of the officers. +Very welcome they proved, as our old ones were nearly worn out.</p> + +<p>Sunday, September 9th, 1900, was a day that will live long in the +annals of the battalion. It was given out that in view of the hard +work done by the troops, the day would be treated as a day of rest, +almost immediately following which order came another, detailing two +companies of each <span class="pagenum"><a id="page151" name="page151"></a>(p. 151)</span> corps to go out on the unpleasant foraging +duties. The roster declared that 'G' and 'H' companies were next in +succession, and these two companies started immediately, officers and +men snatching a hasty and very scratch breakfast before starting. They +were out all day, from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m., during which time they were +gathering in supplies of straw, fodder, &c., together with all carts, +waggons, and harness in a serviceable condition, burning such as they +could not carry away with them. At about 5 p.m. a heliograph message +recalled them to camp, in reaching which they had to cross a small +stream with a snipe-marsh on either side: the waggons of course stuck, +but the men set to with a will, impelled doubtless by a keen desire to +get back to their dinners in camp, and dragged them out one by one +with ropes. A dismal surprise was in store for them. For even as they +came in sight of the camp, it was struck, and in place of the dinners +they had so fondly anticipated, some tea alone awaited them. The +officers were even worse off, for as the mess president had been +employed with the two companies out foraging, no one else had thought +of keeping even a cup of tea for them, and, exhausted as they were by +ten hours' work without food, under a burning sun, they received the +pleasing intelligence that the column was starting at once to march to +Pochefstroom, a distance variously estimated at from thirty-five to +thirty-eight miles.</p> + +<a id="img048" name="img048"></a> +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/img048.jpg" width="600" height="415" alt="" title=""> +<p class="smcap">Buffelsdoorn Camp, Gatsrand Hills.</p> +</div> + +<p>The force marched in three parts. First, mounted men, guns, and 'A' +and 'E' companies Royal Dublin Fusiliers in waggons. Then the main +body of infantry, and lastly the transport with 'G' and 'H' companies +Royal Dublin Fusiliers as rearguard. There was a moon for most of the +way, but it only served to make the surroundings more weird. Parallel +to our right ran a low range of hills, whilst on the left was the Mooi +River, with a farm looming up out of the night every mile or so along +the way. There was one halt of half an hour towards midnight, but the +remainder of the <span class="pagenum"><a id="page152" name="page152"></a>(p. 152)</span> halts were merely of the usual five +minutes' duration. And hard it was to resume the weary way at the end +of even those brief spells of rest. Every one was so fit that the +actual marching was nothing like so trying as the difficulty of +keeping awake through the long, dreary hours, and one would time after +time drop asleep as one walked mechanically along, only to wake in the +very act of falling. Frederickstadt was reached in the small hours of +the morning, and the stream crossed to its left bank. There was then a +halt of about an hour to close up the transport, and very welcome it +was, for we were still an ordinary day's march from our destination. +Turning to our right, we brought the Gatsrands on our left, and the +word went forth that the Boers were in them, a report which seemed to +be confirmed a moment later as a blaze of light suddenly appeared +above their summits. 'There they are!' 'That's their signal lamp!' +were the comments that greeted the glory of the morning star, whether +Jupiter or Venus, on that as on many a previous and subsequent +occasion. On straggled the column, many of the men completely worn +out, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page153" name="page153"></a>(p. 153)</span> having been reluctantly compelled to avail themselves +of the permission to ride on the waggons; the remainder, with grim +determination to march till they dropped, trudging patiently and +silently on. At last came the welcome flush of dawn; no 'envious +streaks' these, but the first message from the longed-for day which +ended that abominable night. When Pochefstroom finally came in sight +it was still a good five miles off, and those last five miles were as +bad as any part of the march. For though in some mysterious way the +coming of day had dispelled to a great extent the deadly sleepiness +from which most of us suffered, our aching limbs now began to make +themselves manifest, and those far-off trees never seemed to get any +nearer. However, by ten o'clock the last man was in, but very nearly +done. It had been a remarkable march—very remarkable seeing the +conditions under which some of the troops performed it.<a id="footnotetag12" name="footnotetag12"></a><a href="#footnote12" title="Go to footnote 12"><span class="small">[12]</span></a> For to do +from thirty-five to thirty-eight miles, most of it by night, on an +empty stomach, after a hard ten hours' work under a hot sun, in +sixteen hours, is a performance of which any troops may be justly +proud.</p> + +<p>Nor was it altogether without result, for our mounted and +waggon-carried troops had arrived much earlier, and, fairly taking the +place by surprise, had surrounded it, killed seven, and captured some +seventy or eighty prisoners, and put a good many more to ignominious +and hasty flight.</p> + +<p>We also obtained some draught beer. Beer! None of us had tasted it for +months. How it went down! Yet our memory of it is sad, for the +unfortunate manager of the brewery was afterwards shot by the Boers +for selling it to us. The column remained at Pochefstroom till the +12th, our stay being darkened by the melancholy death of the +signalling officer, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page154" name="page154"></a>(p. 154)</span> Lieutenant Maddox, of the Somersetshire +Light Infantry, who was shot through the heart while going round his +stations.</p> + +<a id="img049" name="img049"></a> +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/img049.jpg" width="600" height="402" alt="" title=""> +<p class="smcap">A Group of Boer Prisoners taken at the Surprise of +Pochefstroom.</p> +</div> + +<p>On the 12th Colonel Hicks took command of a small force<a id="footnotetag13" name="footnotetag13"></a><a href="#footnote13" title="Go to footnote 13"><span class="small">[13]</span></a> which +moved out to occupy some kopjes overlooking two drifts over the Mooi +River. Starting at about 3 p.m., we did not reach our destination +(some five miles south of Frederickstadt) till dark. Somewhat to our +surprise, the hills were unoccupied, as Boers were known to be in the +vicinity, while there had been a certain amount of distant sniping +throughout the march. Putting piquets at the drifts, the infantry and +guns occupied one hill, and the mounted troops another hard by. We had +just turned in for the night when a sharp rifle-fire broke out all +along the front, to which our sentries were not slow to respond. We +immediately occupied the posts to which we had been assigned, but the +firing soon died away. No one was hit by the enemy, but an unfortunate +trooper in Marshall's Horse was shot by a comrade, and later on +succumbed to the wound.</p> + +<a id="img050" name="img050"></a> +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/img050.jpg" width="600" height="398" alt="" title=""> +<p class="smcap">Colour-Sergeant Cossy issuing Beer.</p> +</div> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page155" name="page155"></a>(p. 155)</span> At daybreak on the 13th, we located a Boer laager some five +miles out on the plain. One of our officers had a deer-stalking +telescope, with which it was possible to follow the movements of the +Boers as they woke up, a most interesting spectacle. They were of +course far out of range of our fifteen-pounders, but just as we were +regretting our inability to get at them, General Hart's force from +Pochefstroom could be seen trekking slowly in their direction from our +left front. We, from our elevated position, could see what the Boers +could not, and to watch our comrades creeping slowly nearer, while the +Boers were loitering about and stretching themselves, was a sight the +opportunity to view which was seldom afforded in the course of the +war. But long before the General got close enough to do any harm, the +alarm went. Any one who has ever seen a pebble cast into an ants' nest +can realise the proceedings of the next two minutes. Darting about in +every direction, the Boers caught their horses and inspanned their +transport with a celerity which fairly took our breath away, and in +what seemed an incredibly short <span class="pagenum"><a id="page156" name="page156"></a>(p. 156)</span> space of time they were +trekking away across our right front, their movements still more +hastened by a few rounds from the naval guns. Moreover, they came +within very long range of our fifteen-pounders, so we were enabled to +return them a 'quid' for their 'quo' of the previous night, with +probably about the same result to their skins, though one riderless +horse could be seen careering about.</p> + +<p>A helio message from the General instructed us to march off and join +him at Frederickstadt, where we arrived that afternoon, spending the +morning in the usual domiciliary visits, getting a really handsome +waggon for the mess, and carefully searching a farmhouse belonging to +the Bezuidenhouts.</p> + +<p>On the 14th there was a considerable amount of firing in the +neighbourhood, but nobody seemed to take much interest in it. As, +however, it resulted in the loss of twelve mules and some waggons, and +one gunner wounded, it is hoped that we did some damage in return.</p> + +<p>On the 15th Colonel Hicks again took out a small force of all +arms,<a id="footnotetag14" name="footnotetag14"></a><a href="#footnote14" title="Go to footnote 14"><span class="small">[14]</span></a> for the purpose of getting in more stores, of burning +Bezuidenhout's farm (it being now clear he had murdered two +telegraphists), and to hold the kopjes we were on the 13th, while the +Somersetshire Light Infantry marched to join us from Pochefstroom. The +country was now thoroughly infested with Boers, who made some slight +effort to oppose Colonel Hicks. He very soon brushed them aside, +however, and, marching his force along two parallel ranges of low +hills, arrived at the place where we had bivouacked on the night of +the 12th-13th. Dinners were cooked on arrival before the companies +went out marauding. Whilst they were being prepared a cartridge went +off in one of the fires, and severely wounded one of the cooks, the +bullet penetrating his chest. This poor fellow was later on sent into +hospital at Krugersdorp, and, as the wound <span class="pagenum"><a id="page157" name="page157"></a>(p. 157)</span> never improved, +was eventually invalided home. But the line was blown up just in front +of his train, and he was brought back to hospital. He soon began to +recover, and one day went wandering about without his hat, got +sunstroke, and died, one piece of bad luck on the top of another, and +a melancholy example of how 'when sorrows come, they come not single +spies, but in battalions.'</p> + +<p>A convoy under Captain H. W. Higginson, arrived at Frederickstadt at +this time, after having been considerably pestered by some Boers who +had shelled him with a nine-pounder Krupp, and severely wounded one of +our men. Luckily, the General had sent out a small force with two guns +to meet this convoy, or it might have had a very much worse time.</p> + +<p>Next day Bezuidenhout's farm was duly burnt, and at 3 p.m. the force +started to march back to Frederickstadt, the Somersetshire Light +Infantry (wing) under Major Williams, with eighty prisoners, a large +number of refugees and waggons, starting an hour earlier, having of +course further to go. The march was not interfered with, and the force +reached its old quarters once more before dark.</p> + +<p>The dreary monotony of these days and nights of trekking and foraging +suffered a variation on the 17th. In the morning 'A' company, under +Major Rutherford, took over the eighty odd prisoners from +Pochefstroom, and marched off with them to Wolverdiend. In the +afternoon a shell suddenly burst in the middle of the camp. The cheek +of these foes of ours. The first arrival was shortly followed by +several more in quick succession, some of which landed in camp, and +some of which went over our heads. We turned out, lowered the tents, +and then lay down in extended order, trying to locate the position of +the hostile gun. At last some one saw the flash, after which our naval +gun and fifteen-pounders picked up the range with admirable celerity, +immediately silencing the opposition. At a range of 3600 yards, the +second shot from the naval gun had burst within <span class="pagenum"><a id="page158" name="page158"></a>(p. 158)</span> four feet of +the marks of the Krupp nine-pounder which had been shelling us.</p> + +<p>At the time the enemy opened fire a regimental court-martial for the +trial of twenty-one prisoners had just assembled, under the presidency +of Captain Shewan. On the arrival of the shells, the court, escort, +witnesses and prisoners dissolved themselves with one accord, and were +not afterwards reassembled.</p> + +<p class="poem">'In such a time as this it is not meet<br> + That every nice offence should bear his comment.'<br> +<span class="left50 italic">Julius Cæsar.</span></p> + +<p>The sun was in the enemy's eyes, and the village of Frederickstadt +almost immediately behind our camp, which may account in some measure +for the indifference of their fire, as we must have offered a +magnificent target to them. As it was, our only losses were four +horses, not a man being hit. But we were fairly caught napping.</p> + +<p>The General ordered the regiment to take possession of the hill, which +was done without any further fighting, two companies being left on +outpost duty on its summit.</p> + +<p>On the 18th some of the usual desultory sniping commenced on the other +side of the camp, but a demonstration by the inlying piquet ('G' +company, 2nd Royal Dublin Fusiliers) was sufficient to put a stop to +it.</p> + +<p>Major Bird arrived back from Maritzburg. Next day the trek commenced +once more. A small force<a id="footnotetag15" name="footnotetag15"></a><a href="#footnote15" title="Go to footnote 15"><span class="small">[15]</span></a> was left behind under command of Major +Bird to hold the hills from which we had been shelled, and to take +care of most of the transport. The remainder of the column marched at +11 p.m. on Ventersdorp, where some Boers were reported. After marching +all night and covering some twelve miles, the enemy opened fire in +front and on both flanks. Our guns came into action, and a sort of +running fight was maintained. Eventually the <span class="pagenum"><a id="page159" name="page159"></a>(p. 159)</span> enemy took up a +more definite position, when General Hart ordered Colonel Hicks, with +two companies of the regiment, two guns and a pompom, to advance to a +small ridge on one flank, while he with the remainder of the force +marched round the enemy's rear. This resulted in the evacuation of +their position, when Colonel Hicks's small party got an opportunity to +deliver an effective fire on them.</p> + +<p>Next day sniping at the bivouac began at dawn, but the troops were +allowed a meal before resuming their march. Colonel Hicks was again +detailed to take a kopje from which a considerable but ineffectual +fire was coming. Moving steadily on, with his 200 men in +widely-extended order, he brought a maxim into action, which had the +effect of clearing the hill, but the long-range fighting went on +without a break till the evening.</p> + +<p>Having more or less broken up the Boers in this direction, orders were +issued for the return march to Frederickstadt. An early start was +made, and at 10 a.m. a halt and outspan ordered. At mid-day the +officers commanding units were sent for, when the General informed +them that a large force of Boers, under Steyn and De Wet, with women +and children, 3000 strong, was reported in the neighbourhood of +Klerksdorp. Rumour further said that they were so bewildered by our +apparently aimless midnight movements that they neither knew where to +go nor what to do. The General added that it was his intention to +march again in the afternoon in their direction, to have another +outspan at dusk, and then to march all night and surprise them next +morning. The commanding officers looked at one another in blank +amazement, for they knew better than the General could the effect +these constant nights without sleep and days of fighting without food +were having on their men, but there was nothing for it, and the +General called upon his troops for one more supreme effort. At the +same time he heliographed to Major Bird to march from Frederickstadt +and join him <span class="italic">en route</span>, which was done.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page160" name="page160"></a>(p. 160)</span> Major Bird's force had not been left altogether unmolested +during this time. The company of Somersetshire Light Infantry were +holding a small knoll in prolongation of his left, and some 2000 yards +off. Against them the Boers brought up their Krupp gun which they had +used against us two or three days before. The range was considerable, +but they managed to reach their target; yet, though they fired +twenty-three shells into the camp of this company, the only damage +they did was to knock the top off a box of eggs <span class="italic">without breaking a +single egg</span>. They also managed to pitch a shell or two amongst the +transport. Our fifteen-pounders endeavoured to reply, but, in spite of +digging deep holes for the trails, were unable to reach the ridge from +which the Boers were firing.</p> + +<p>Major Bird's force having joined hands with the main column shortly +after dark, the long march was resumed at 10 p.m. It was a pitch-dark +night, and the difficulty of keeping in touch, and the still greater +difficulty of keeping the transport in touch, wore out tempers as well +as sinews. On one occasion the regiment as nearly as possible got +left. We were following the first-line transport of the corps +immediately in front of us, and keeping close up to it, but the +Colonel got anxious, and, after several times asking the adjutant if +he was certain we were in touch, told him to ride on and see. He came +back in a few minutes to say that there was nothing to be seen ahead. +The carts in front had lost touch, and they were all we had to guide +us. The adjutant at once cantered on, and had the good fortune to +shortly pick up the tail of the column, when everything was soon all +right again. The march continued the whole night, dawn being heralded +by the corncrake-like note of the pompom, which led us to hope we had +effected our object. But once again it was not to be, for the Boer +laager had moved off, and from the top of a small hill could be seen +trekking away about 7000 yards distant. Men and horses had been at it +since 6 a.m. the day before, and any further pursuit was out <span class="pagenum"><a id="page161" name="page161"></a>(p. 161)</span> +of the question. Indeed, an extra two or three miles that had to be +done to reach a better camping-ground almost proved the last straw. +The right half-battalion had marched thirty-three miles in the +twenty-four hours, and only slept on one night out of the last three, +while the left half-battalion had done twenty-six miles in eighteen +hours.</p> + +<p>Our enemy had slipped away once more at the critical moment, but our +spirits were raised all the same by the arrival of a dispatch, which +we understood called us back to Krugersdorp and hinted that the war +was over.</p> + +<p>After a day's rest at this rather pleasant camp, the force moved into +Pochefstroom (eighteen miles), and marched past the General in the +Market Square on the 25th, remaining there until the 27th. It had been +on the move for nearly a month with very little rest, during which +time men and horses had undoubtedly got very wiry and fit. But beyond +collecting a certain amount of stores, cattle, and forage, it is +doubtful whether all the forced marches and strenuous exertions had +been of much benefit, or whether they served to bring hostilities much +nearer to a conclusion. Although the enemy, in more or less force, had +been viewed practically every day, it had always been impossible to +bring him to close quarters, and the policy of wearing out +infantrymen's hearts, tempers, constitutions, and boots in abortive +pursuits of mounted enemies was, and in the light of all that we now +know still is, open to question, for a reference to the <span class="italic">Times</span> +history of the war shows that all our wanderings and meanderings are +summed up in very few sentences, the most pregnant of which is to the +effect that word had gone out to the Boer Commandoes not to interfere +with us.</p> + +<p>On the 27th the column started on its march back to Krugersdorp, and +did the distance (sixty-two miles) in four easy stages. It marched by +the road south of the Gatsrand Hills, with the Losberg on its right, +and with the exception of one day (29th) without molestation from the +enemy. On that <span class="pagenum"><a id="page162" name="page162"></a>(p. 162)</span> occasion they made a somewhat determined +attack on the rearguard, attempting to cut off some waggons, and the +last few miles of the march took the shape of a running fight. The +General had ridden on ahead with the cavalry to our next camp, so +Colonel Hicks sent back a couple of guns to the rearguard, who shook +off the terrier-like attentions of the enemy without very much +trouble; but they had delayed the march a good deal, and it was not +till late in the evening that every one got in, and heard that the war +really was over at last. An officer in the regiment who was +considerably exhausted sank on to his valise, too tired to care for +anything. His servant said to him, 'We'll be in Krugersdorp to-morrow, +sorr, and I'll be able to get yiz some claning matherials,' to which +his weary master replied, 'I don't care a damn whether I'm clean or +whether I'm dirty.' In answer his man made the following cryptic +remark: ''Tis no use talking like that, sorr. Lord Roberts says the +war is over, and we'll begin soldiering now.'</p> + +<p>The following summary of the work done was published for +information:—</p> + +<p class="smcap p2 center">'Summary of Work of Pochefstroom Column.</p> + +<p>'The Pochefstroom column started from Krugersdorp on the 29th August, +and returned on 30th September. The task of the column is to assist in +stamping out the resistance of the remaining scattered forces of the +enemy by hunting them, and depriving them of their supplies of food +and transport, with a view to bringing the war to an end. In the first +cruise of 33 days the column has marched 310 miles—the length of +England from Portsmouth to Scotland—and was in action with the enemy +on 29 days, putting them to flight on each occasion. The column's +casualties were only 3 killed, 24 wounded, and 3 missing. The Boers +lost considerably according to accounts of Kaffirs present; we found +some of their dead, including General Theron. In prisoners <span class="pagenum"><a id="page163" name="page163"></a>(p. 163)</span> +of war and important arrests, the column took 96 of the enemy. Loyal +inhabitants, numbering 316 men, women, and children, were rescued from +Pochefstroom, and safely conveyed to Wolverdiend. General Liebenburg +ordered General Douthwaite to attack this convoy, but Douthwaite +thought it dangerous, and was arrested by Liebenburg for suggesting +that he, Liebenburg, "had better do it himself." The convoy was not +attacked. The column took from the enemy the following cattle: 2720 +sheep and 3281 goats; 1066 sacks of mealies, 104 sacks of meal, 2 +waggon-loads of mealie cobs, 12 sacks of wheat, 847 loaves of bread, +162 sacks of potatoes, 68 sacks of oats, 33 sacks of bran, 36,000 +bundles of oat-hay, 299 bales of chaff, 400 bundles of manna-hay, 90 +horses, 28 ponies, 11 mules, 36 waggons, 31 carts, and destroyed 45 +waggons and carts that could not be taken away.</p> + +<p><span class="add3em">'(Signed)</span><br> +<span class="left50"><span class="smcap">A. Hart</span> (Captain),</span><br> +<span class="left40">'<span class="italic">C.S.O. Pochefstroom Column.</span></span></p> +<p>'<span class="italic">Krugersdorp, 2nd October, 1900.</span>'<a href="#toc"><span class="small">[Back to Contents]</span></a></p> + +<a id="img051" name="img051"></a> +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/img051.jpg" width="600" height="396" alt="" title=""> +<p class="smcap">'Come to the Cook-House Door, Boys!'</p> +</div> + +<p class="poem">'We looked for peace, but no good came.'—<span class="italic">Jer.</span> viii. 15.</p> + +<p class="chapter"><span class="pagenum"><a id="page164" name="page164"></a>(p. 164)</span> CHAPTER V.<br> + +FREDERICKSTADT—KLIP RIVER—THE LOSBERG.</p> + +<p class="quotechapter"> + 'Have I not heard great ordnance in the field,<br> + And Heaven's artillery thunder in the skies?'<br> +<span class="left50 italic">Taming of the Shrew.</span></p> + +<p>Our camp, on this our third visit to Krugersdorp, was on the +south-west side of the town. The 6th Brigade (General Barton's) was +also in Krugersdorp, and had been for some time, so it was with +somewhat mixed feelings that we heard we were to set out on the trek +once more almost immediately. However, in the end the other brigade +went out, with what result will presently appear. Krugersdorp was now +surrounded by a large circle of forts and fortified houses. The +perimeter of these defences was very large, not far short of twelve +miles, but the positions themselves were well selected from a tactical +point of view. As they were continually being strengthened, improved, +and added to, in a few months' time it would have been very difficult +for the Boers to have taken the place, provided a sufficient garrison +remained in it. But this strength, or sometimes weakness, was a +constantly varying one—about the middle of December sinking as low as +300—which of course was risking a good deal. Moreover, it was not +until some time later, when the Officer Commanding Town Guards devised +an inner series of defences, that the town could be said to be in any +way safe from a midnight raid; and it was this, more than even the +capture of the place, which seemed so likely to occur, when the banks +and stores could have been cleared out in a few minutes, and the +raiding party gone before any force could have been assembled to +interfere with it. The town <span class="pagenum"><a id="page165" name="page165"></a>(p. 165)</span> was, of course, full of spies +and friendly enemies, ever on the look-out for any chance of getting a +bit of their own back—and who could blame them?—but on the whole +remained very quiet and well-behaved throughout the occupation.</p> + +<p>The regiment's headquarters were destined to remain here for the rest +of the campaign, with the exception of the three treks which form the +subject of this chapter, and Krugersdorp will ever be identified with +our name in South Africa in consequence. As we got to know its +inhabitants better, and as they got to appreciate our men better, a +kindlier feeling was generated on both sides, with which improved +state of affairs the cricket and football we played with them had not +a little to do.</p> + +<p>General Barton moved off on October 5th, with much the same commission +that General Hart had carried, and immediately came into contact with +the enemy, the noise of the fight sounding loud in our ears, while +from Captain Nelson's piquet the bursting shells and even some of the +Boers could be plainly seen. The day before a flag of truce had come +in with a letter, saying that one of our men was lying wounded in a +farmhouse a little way outside the outposts; a waggon was sent out and +brought him in, when he proved to be one of our mounted infantry, who +had been wounded in Colonel Rochfort's dashing attack on a Boer laager +near Pretoria.<a id="footnotetag16" name="footnotetag16"></a><a href="#footnote16" title="Go to footnote 16"><span class="small">[16]</span></a> The Boers had looked after him as well as they +could, and dressed his wounds according to their homely lights, and +altogether played the game so far as he was concerned.</p> + +<p>Next day still brought the sound of General Barton's artillery, and +the right half-battalion under Major Bird went out as escort to two +waggon-loads of ammunition for <span class="pagenum"><a id="page166" name="page166"></a>(p. 166)</span> him. The General sent +half-way to meet him, and our men got back all right about 6 p.m.</p> + +<p>With the advent of summer the thunderstorms increased in frequency and +severity, and it was no joke to have to suddenly jump up and hang on +to the pole of one's tent to prevent it being blown away, with the +uncomfortable knowledge that lightning has a partiality for running +down tent-poles. We had one really bad experience in this way, to be +narrated later, but nothing to touch the blizzard that struck the camp +of the 5th Battalion Royal Dublin Fusiliers near Mafeking, when sheets +of corrugated iron flew about like packs of gigantic cards, and +Colonel Gernon and Captain Baker, the Quartermaster, together with +many others, sustained very serious injuries. Still, our share was bad +enough, and quite spoiled the summer for a good many of us. The +mornings would break clear, cloudless, and invigorating; but about 3 +p.m. on about three days of the week, a bunch of cotton-wool clouds +would appear from the south. As these rose higher and higher, they +swelled into enormous piles of grand, rolling cloud-masses, like +stupendous snow-clad mountains, whose bases grew black and ever +blacker, until they would suddenly be riven by blinding flashes of +flickering ribbons of lightning, and the air torn and rent by +reverberating booms of awe-inspiring thunder.</p> + +<p>Second Lieutenant Tredennick joined at this time. Second Lieutenant R. +F. B. Knox should have arrived with him, but had to remain behind in +Johannesburg, as he was seedy. The train they were in had been +attacked by Boers near Heidelberg.</p> + +<p>Rumour now began to be busy with General Barton's force, and on the +22nd an order came for General Hart to join him. We had just packed +up, when an order came countermanding the move.</p> + +<p>Next day, however, another order came to the same <span class="pagenum"><a id="page167" name="page167"></a>(p. 167)</span> effect, +but detailing Colonel Hicks to command the column. Though small in +point of numbers,<a id="footnotetag17" name="footnotetag17"></a><a href="#footnote17" title="Go to footnote 17"><span class="small">[17]</span></a> it would have been hard to have picked a better +one in point of quality. A finer body of horsemen, or one more adapted +to the work in hand, than Strathcona's Horse it would be impossible to +conceive. Without making any invidious comparisons, it is only just to +say that these Canadian troops appeared to us to have no superiors, +while the truly magnificent way in which they literally brushed away +the opposition, on the morning we joined hands with General Barton, +was a sight to be remembered.</p> + +<p>The regiment was entrained, but did not get off till about 5 p.m., our +departure being marked by a peal of thunder which made even those who +declared themselves fond of such phenomena nearly jump through the +roof of the guard's van. We only got as far as Bank Station, as the +line was reported infested with the enemy, and it was important that +we should not be blown up. Indeed, we had scarcely arrived there, when +a loud explosion—fortunately behind us—proved the activity of our +watchful foes. After making teas we bivouacked in the train.</p> + +<p>The regiment reached Wolverdiend next day, in the course of which the +remainder of the force assembled, preparations being made for an early +start next morning.</p> + +<p>Fearing that information would get through, the Colonel gave orders +that the column would start at 6 a.m., but at the same time issued +confidential orders to officers commanding units that he really +intended to start at 3.30 a.m. Unfortunately, however, it rained so +hard all night that it was impossible to start until 5 a.m. Colonel +Hicks sent Strathcona's Horse out to the front and left flank, while +Brabant's Horse took the right flank and front. The Essex Regiment +supplied the advance-guard, while one company <span class="pagenum"><a id="page168" name="page168"></a>(p. 168)</span> of the Dublin +Fusiliers acted as rearguard and escort to the waggons. In this order +the force approached a low line of bush-covered hills, which separated +them from General Barton. These hills were occupied by two or three +hundred Boers, who had been detailed to check our advance. On arrival +within rifle-range of the hills, Strathcona's Horse made a dash right +at them, the effect of which was so imposing that the enemy +immediately resigned all idea of resistance, and bolted as hard as +they could go. With this range of kopjes in our possession, the rest +was plain sailing, and we marched on to the hill on which the larger +part of General Barton's force was posted. The column had barely +arrived when a fierce rifle-fire broke out in front. It was impossible +to see what was going on, as the hillside was covered with thick +mimosa bush, but that a fierce fight was raging in our close proximity +was very evident from the prolonged and heavy fire, in which the +pompoms soon began to take part, while the naval gun and smaller +field-pieces joined in. Colonel Hicks, accompanied by an officer of +the Dublin Fusiliers, then climbed some little way up the hill in the +direction of the 4·7, and there a sight met their eyes which was +seldom seen in this war. The plain at their feet, stretching from the +railway west to the village of Frederickstadt, was covered with flying +Boers—Boers flying on their feet, a most unusual occurrence with +them. As they fled across the open veld in full view, they were +pursued by every variety of missile. In one spot, seven Boers were +running side by side. The officer with Colonel Hicks had just drawn +his attention to them, when a shell from the naval gun burst in the +air behind them, and a second later tore up the ground all round. Five +fell at once; the other two staggered on a few paces and then fell +also, all seven being afterwards found stone-dead. It was all over in +a very short time, and then the stretcher-bearers began to come in +with their patient, gruesome burdens, and <span class="pagenum"><a id="page169" name="page169"></a>(p. 169)</span> the prisoners +arrived under escort, to be handed over to the Royal Dublin Fusiliers +for safe custody.</p> + +<a id="img052" name="img052"></a> +<div class="figcenter"> +<a href="images/img052.jpg"> +<img src="images/img052tb.jpg" width="600" height="462" alt="" title=""></a> +<p class="smcap">Plan of Battle of Frederickstadt.</p> +</div> + +<p>Then we heard the story of the fight. General Barton's position, which +he had occupied for some days, extended along a line of low hills, the +two main features of which were divided by a valley running back at +right angles to the railway into the Gatsrand, the general line of the +position being parallel with the railway. The station was held and +used as a hospital, while the hill on which General Barton's camp was +situated extended down to the railway, and was the nearest point to +the river. For some days the Boers, under De Wet, had been gathering +round this position, and the force had been subjected to a constant +shell-fire and the intermittent attentions of a particularly +aggressive and unlocatable pompom. Under the railway, about midway +between General Barton's two main positions, ran a small, dry donga. +Into this underfeature De Wet had ordered about 200 men on the night +of the 24th-25th. The first indication of their presence was a +somewhat foolish attempt made by them to capture some mules. Unaware +of their numbers—and truly the situation was such that any one could +be pardoned for not grasping it at once—a company or part of a +company was sent forward to dislodge them and clear up matters. The +Boers allowed them to approach quite close, and then annihilated them. +It was now very evident that the donga was held in force, and, as the +General was aware by this time of the arrival of Colonel Hicks' +column, he launched a vigorous attack. This was the heavy firing we +heard on our arrival. After offering a slight resistance, some of the +enemy surrendered, the remainder flying on foot as already stated to +their horses, which they had left amongst the trees near the river. It +is not often the Boer leaves his horse thus, and it offered strong +presumptive evidence of their confidence in their ability to rush the +position, in accordance with De Wet's intention.</p> + +<p>The battalion bivouacked on the hill, and threw out outposts. +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page170" name="page170"></a>(p. 170)</span> To them was also assigned next morning the intensely +unpleasant duty of shooting three prisoners who had been tried and +found guilty of showing the white flag and afterwards resuming their +fire. 'G' company, being the nearest piquet to the place selected for +the execution, was detailed to carry it out. The casualties on our +side had been about forty-one killed and wounded, while twenty-four +Boers were killed, sixteen wounded, and twenty-six taken prisoner.</p> + +<a id="img053" name="img053"></a> +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/img053.jpg" width="600" height="402" alt="" title=""> +<p class="smcap">Sergeant French and the Officers' Mess, Nachtmaal.</p> +</div> + +<p>After remaining at Frederickstadt on the 26th, orders came for our +return to Krugersdorp on the 27th. We had an uneventful march to +Wolverdiend, and there entrained, reaching our destination late in the +evening. The officers, as usual, rode in the guard's van, and, as +these trains used to bump and jolt in the most unpleasant manner, we +made ourselves as comfortable as we could in a sort of 'zariba' +composed of our valises and a number of large packages sewn up in +sackcloth. Our feelings when we later on discovered that these +packages were corpses may be left to the imagination.</p> + +<p>We returned to our last camp, and set to work to make it <span class="pagenum"><a id="page171" name="page171"></a>(p. 171)</span> +more comfortable, running up wood and corrugated-iron shelters for +stores, officers' mess, &c. We were also kept perpetually busy in +building more forts and improving those already in existence. Captain +Romer gave his name to a work which he erected and on which he +expended much time, pains, and ingenuity. Posts and piquets also had +to be held on all the principal roads into the town. Captain Nelson, +R.M.L.I., in command of one of these, one afternoon shouted to two men +who were driving through his posts to stop. Unfortunately for them, +they paid no attention and drove on, so he seized a rifle and fired, +killing one of the occupants stone-dead, an exemplary lesson to the +inhabitants to make them understand that outposts were not posted for +amusement.</p> + +<p>General Clements' column was now stationed at Krugersdorp, and we saw +something of Captain MacBean, Royal Dublin Fusiliers, his +Brigade-Major. Alas! poor MacBean; he was killed a few days later, +standing close beside his General, at the battle of Nooitgedacht. A +universal favourite, and one of the most popular officers in the +regiment, he was also probably the ablest. Passing brilliantly into +and through the Staff College, he went on to the Egyptian Army, taking +part in all the principal actions up to and including the battle of +Omdurman, receiving a D.S.O. in recognition of his services. In the +present campaign he had commenced the war as a Brigade-Major, later on +serving on General Hunter's staff, and now transferred to General +Clements', who had the highest opinion of his capabilities. Amongst +many other accomplishments he was one of the best bridge-players in +the service. There is little doubt that if he had been spared he would +have risen to the highest rank. He was gazetted to a Brevet-Majority +after his death.</p> + +<p>On November 15th Lord Roberts inspected the regiment, and +congratulated them on the work they had done, afterwards speaking to +Major English and telling him how highly he had thought of the +Zuikerbosch affair. It is these little <span class="pagenum"><a id="page172" name="page172"></a>(p. 172)</span> acts of kindness and +remembrance that make all the difference, and their effect is much +more far-reaching than those who confer them often imagine. One only +does one's duty, of course, but yet one is only human, and it is very +pleasant to feel that that duty has been appreciated.</p> + +<p>Captain Lowndes, the adjutant, who had been home after his severe +wound at Talana, now rejoined the regiment, and took over the +adjutancy from Captain Fetherstonhaugh. That officer had filled the +post with marked zeal and ability for over twelve months, and was the +only officer who was present with the Headquarters of the battalion +from the start of the war without being wounded.</p> + +<p>On November 16th the regiment formed part of a column,<a id="footnotetag18" name="footnotetag18"></a><a href="#footnote18" title="Go to footnote 18"><span class="small">[18]</span></a> ordered to +march off and scour the veld, though our destination was, as usual, +shrouded in mystery. The night of the 15th-16th however, precluded any +possibility of carrying out the intended early start, as the rain +descended in torrents, deluging kits and country. At about 2 p.m., +however, a start was effected, and all went well till a small drift +was reached, when the 'cow-gun,' which had taken the place of our old +and tried friend, the Naval gun, stuck hopelessly. Colonel Hicks fell +out 120 men and put them on to the drag-ropes. Their first pull was +too much for the rope, which broke, with the inevitable result that +the whole 120 were deposited on the veld, on the broad of their backs. +Another and a stouter rope was produced, which proved itself equal to +the strain, and with a long pull, a strong pull, and a pull all +together, the heavy weapon was dragged on to <span class="italic">terra firma</span>, and the +march resumed, a halt being made for the night about eight or nine +miles out, and almost on the historic site of Doornkop.</p> + +<p>The trek was resumed next morning under more favourable auspices, but +these soon proved a delusion and a snare. The column was making for a +pass in the Gatsrand, not far from <span class="pagenum"><a id="page173" name="page173"></a>(p. 173)</span> the waterworks, known to +be in the enemy's occupation, when at about 11 o'clock a violent +thunderstorm broke directly overhead. Marching along, soaked to the +skin, with a lightning-conductor in the shape of a rifle over one's +shoulder, was not conducive to steady nerves, but so dense was the +rain that it had, at all events, one beneficial effect, for the Boers +holding the pass left their positions and took shelter in some +farmhouses, with the result that they were very nearly captured by our +cavalry, who, indeed, succeeded in taking possession of the pass +without opposition, the enemy, taken completely by surprise, having +only just time to jump on their horses and gallop off. Getting the +'cow-gun' over the pass, however, was no easy matter, but it was +eventually accomplished, and after a march of about sixteen miles, the +force halted for the night in rather a pretty camp, on a farm known as +Hartebeestfontein.</p> + +<a id="img054" name="img054"></a> +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/img054.jpg" width="600" height="400" alt="" title=""> +<p class="smcap">4·7 Crossing a Drift, assisted by the Dublin +Fusiliers.</p> +</div> + +<p>The column marched to Klip River, about seventeen miles, next day, +arriving there about 5 p.m. The rearguard was sniped at the whole way +by our friends of the day before, but <span class="pagenum"><a id="page174" name="page174"></a>(p. 174)</span> without effecting much +damage. A cavalry brigade under Brigadier-General Gordon was here on +our arrival, and an exchange of troops took place, we receiving some +Greys and Carabineers in exchange for half a battalion of South Wales +Borderers.</p> + +<p>A halt was now made for a day, most of us taking the opportunity to +get a bathe in the river.</p> + +<p>Leaving Klip River on the morning of the 20th, we marched back in the +direction whence we had come two days before, and were soon engaged +with the enemy's snipers, of whom we captured one; but they had the +best of the argument, as they killed two of our column. One of these +poor fellows had very bad luck: he had received a letter at Klip River +only the day before, telling him he had come into a sum of money, +sufficient to enable him to retire and spend the remainder of his days +in peace and quiet.</p> + +<p>Nor was the day to prove uneventful for the rest of us. About 1 p.m. +it began to cloud over, and presently to rain; this soon turned into +hail, of the variety which one is accustomed to at home. This was at +first refreshing, and one would pick up the cool hailstones—they were +about as big as peas—and eat them, and the rattle they made on the +helmets was quite musical. When they grew to the size of gooseberries, +and began to sting, they provided less amusement, shoulders being +shrugged up and necks arched to obtain as much protection as possible. +The unfortunate dogs, of which a variety invariably turned up with +every column, howled with pain, and the cattle and horses grew very +restive. But soon the stones, driven by a gale of wind, increased to +the size of cherries and strawberries, with occasional jagged lumps of +ice an inch in diameter. As there seemed no particular reason why they +should not run through the whole gamut of the orchard, and rival +plums, peaches, and melons, and as there was no earthly chance of +obtaining a vestige of shelter of any kind, men began to wonder what +was going to happen <span class="pagenum"><a id="page175" name="page175"></a>(p. 175)</span> next, with an occasional +sharper-than-usual belt between the shoulders or on the boot to +quicken their fancy. It was only with the greatest difficulty that the +horses were controlled, but the stones providentially grew no larger, +though the storm continued. The entire country-side was a rolling mass +of ice nearly over the tops of boots. Runnels and rivulets became +roaring torrents, roads became rivers. When the storm eventually +subsided the transport of course could not go another yard, and camp +was pitched where we were. The carpet of hailstones in the tents +slowly melted into mud, and we made ourselves as comfortable as +possible under the circumstances. Several kids and lambs we had with +us were killed by the stones. Not one of us had ever been out in such +a storm before, but, as those who had not been on 'the Natal side' +confidently predicted, those who had been declared that this was mere +child's play to the hailstones they had seen there.</p> + +<p>What became of the Boers we never knew: up to the commencement of the +storm we had been merrily sniping away at each other at extreme +ranges, but during and after it they entirely disappeared, so entirely +that even next day we never got a sign of them, and concluded they had +all been drowned.</p> + +<p>There was, however, nothing to complain of on this score the day +after, as sniping was carried on all the time. Though this form of +fighting resulted in few casualties, it was destructive to peace and +comfort and enjoyment of the scenery. It was interesting to notice +what officers recognised when we arrived at places we had visited on +previous treks, and instructive to note that it was almost always +those who were addicted to sport and field-pursuits who were the first +to pick up their bearings and the lie of the land. The force +eventually encamped at the foot of the hill on which 'G' company had +spent such a cold and miserable night when waiting for the transport +to pass, two months before.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page176" name="page176"></a>(p. 176)</span> On the 23rd, the march took us up again through Orange Grove +and on past Leeuwport Nek, moving along the south side of the main +ridge of the Gatsrand, with three companies making the best of their +way along their jagged peaks. Two of Roberts' Horse were hit on this +march, one being killed.</p> + +<p>The column reached Buffelsdoorn Pass on the 24th, after a spirited +rearguard action, the brunt of which fell on the South Wales +Borderers, who had several men and one officer hit. We remained in +this pass for some days, sending out small expeditions among the +adjacent hills, and erecting fortifications to cover the defile. It +was in its way an important place, being within a few miles of +Wolverdiend Station, and providing an excellent door through the +rocky, serrated peaks of the Gatsrand into the broad plain which lay +between them and the Vaal. Our camp was situated just on the north +side of the pass, in a picturesque place, with easy access to the +railway, and from a tactical point of view an excellent position.</p> + +<p>Next day a convoy with nearly ten thousand cattle, sheep, &c., was +dispatched to Wolverdiend, without seeing any signs of the enemy.</p> + +<p>The night of the 25th-26th could scarcely have been worse; heavy rain, +howling wind, and vivid and frequent lightning with its sonorous +accompaniment, put sleep out of the question; indeed, at one period it +became necessary to get up and hold on to the tents to prevent them +being blown away. With the advent of dawn the forces of nature gave us +a rest, our friends the enemy immediately filling their place. They +opened fire from some kopjes to the east of the camp, and endeavoured +to round up some of our cattle. The South Wales Borderers undertook to +dislodge them, and speedily did so, the 'Cow-gun' joining in at long +range as soon as the Boers evacuated their positions. Having disposed +of man for the time being, Nature again rolled up in dense masses of +magnificent clouds to the <span class="pagenum"><a id="page177" name="page177"></a>(p. 177)</span> attack. The storm which followed +was also one to be remembered; the lightning could be seen striking +the ground in the close vicinity of the camp, and though no one was +hit, we heard that two men of the regiment at Kaalfontein were not so +fortunate, one poor fellow being killed and the other severely +wounded. 'C' company, 2nd Royal Dublin Fusiliers, was on piquet +through both these night and day storms, and had, as may be imagined, +an unenviable experience.</p> + +<p>On the 27th, General Hart rode down to Wolverdiend to see Sir John +French. While he was away, word arrived that a party of Roberts' Horse +who were out scouting had been held up. Colonel Wilson—the senior +officer in camp—detailed 100 Carabineers to go to their assistance, +but they found the opposition still too great, so two companies of the +regiment were sent out to reinforce them, while the guns opened fire +from the summits of the hills. In the middle of the operations a +thunderstorm joined in to swell the general din, under cover of which +the Boers crept in round three sides of the force. There was never any +question of their succeeding in cutting it off, but the boldness of +their tactics was characteristic of the phase the war had now begun to +assume. There was a good deal of rifle-fire on both sides, and the +28th Battery R.F.A., under its new commander, who had replaced our +esteemed friend, Major Stokes, D.S.O., promoted to R.H.A., fired +nearly one hundred rounds. What casualties the enemy suffered was not +ascertained, but on our side there was only one, a man in Roberts' +Horse being badly hit. Those of us who were not engaged sat among the +rocks on the tops of the hills, whence a fine panoramic view of the +skirmish was obtainable by the aid of telescopes and binoculars.</p> + +<p>The 28th and 29th passed uneventfully, Captain Romer occupying the +time in again demonstrating his architectural capabilities in the +erection of a fort near the pass.</p> + +<a id="img055" name="img055"></a> +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/img055.jpg" width="600" height="393" alt="" title=""> +<p class="smcap">Boy Fitzpatrick waiting at Lunch.</p> +</div> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page178" name="page178"></a>(p. 178)</span> On the 30th a reconnaissance in force was made along the +Gatsrand in a westerly direction, the left half-battalion of the Royal +Dublin Fusiliers acting as the infantry of the force. Moving along the +summits of the hills in four lines of widely extended companies, they +marched to within sight of Frederickstadt before they returned. +Imagine exaggerated Pyramids of Cheops; imagine each block of stone +carved by stress of weather into a thousand needle-points and +ankle-twisting crevices; plant a dense growth of mimosa and other +thorny scrub in every cranny and interstice. Take a dozen such +pyramids, and do your morning constitutional over them, after the +scrappiest of breakfasts at 5 a.m., and you will find twelve or +fourteen miles quite as much as you care about. But the march was not +devoid of interest, though we met with no Boers. Small buck, hares, +and partridges were there in sufficient number to afford a good day's +sport under other circumstances, while a profusion of various kinds of +flowers afforded satisfaction to the eye, in strong contrast to the +bare and barkless trunks <span class="pagenum"><a id="page179" name="page179"></a>(p. 179)</span> of trees riven by the frequent +storms that devastate these hills. In one place a most gruesome sight +was met with. Under a small tree beside a tiny stream stood a +three-legged cooking-pot, and round it lay three skeletons, with a +scattering of shrapnel bullets to silently tell the story of the +tragedy. Beside one body lay a Rifleman's haversack, an eloquent if +speechless travesty on the fortunes of war, for undoubtedly they were +the remains of Boers, over whose head a chance shrapnel must have +burst months before.</p> + +<p>A similar reconnaissance, but in the opposite direction, was made next +day, resulting in one man being wounded. Convoys were also passing to +and fro, and on the 2nd, Captain Fetherstonhaugh took over the duties +of provost-marshal, temporarily, from Captain Thompson, of the +Somersetshire Light Infantry, who had hurt his knee. Rumours of an +early move also began to circulate, with the Losberg, the grim and +solitary hill rising out of the plain to the south of the Gatsrand, as +our probable destination. For some time past the Boers had used it as +a sort of headquarters and rallying-place for their frequent raiding +parties. Columns were now converging on it from all points of the +compass, but as they could be plainly seen from its summit, the high +hopes entertained in some quarters of rounding up a large number of +the enemy were not shared by everybody.</p> + +<p>Yet the start at 9 p.m. on the 3rd was sufficiently impressive. The +officers were assembled, and had their several duties clearly pointed +out to them, one peak of the hill being assigned to the South Wales +Borderers and the other to the Dublin Fusiliers. To 'A' company of the +latter regiment, under Major English, was given the honour of leading +the attack, which was to be made at dawn next morning. Silently and +with all due precautions the column slowly wound its way down the +pass, like some gigantic boa-constrictor, and out on to the plain +below. Whenever a farm <span class="pagenum"><a id="page180" name="page180"></a>(p. 180)</span> was reached it was entered, and steps +taken to prevent lights being shown or signals flashed: three Boers, +booted and spurred, being taken in one. It was a perfect night for +marching, all Nature hushed in deep repose save the loud-mouthed +bull-frog; the moon set an hour before dawn, reminding one of +Whyte-Melville's line:</p> + +<p class="poem"> + 'The darkest hour of all the night is that which brings the day.'</p> + +<p>But dark as it was our objective could be seen ominously looming up—a +lamp-black mass against the velvet softness of starlit sky. The +movement had been admirably timed, and as day broke the two regiments +advanced to the attack, the South Wales Borderers on the right, the +Dublins on the left, while the artillery opened fire against the +hillside between the two summits. But that was all. Not a shot was +fired in return. Not a Boer was even seen. Nothing. Except, indeed, +large quantities of most delicious and most acceptable oranges, after +eating which the tired troops lay in the rain, which commenced to pour +down, and slept peacefully till the transport came up.</p> + +<p>Before we started next morning, a huge herd of blesbok suddenly +appeared on the scene, wildly galloping about in every direction, +being continually brought up by the barbed wire fences of the farms. A +good many were shot, but it was cruel to kill them, or try to, with +hard bullets, and many and many a beast must have got away badly +wounded, whilst the indiscriminate manner in which the sportsmen fired +in all directions was a source of danger, not only to themselves and +the buck, but to the camp as well. One fine old fellow, with a good +head, charged right through the camp, altogether eluding one regiment, +in spite of every variety of missile, from cooking-pots to helmets, to +finally fall a victim in another regiment's lines to a tent-pole. +After which interlude the force marched to Modderfontein.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page181" name="page181"></a>(p. 181)</span> Next day a helio from Bank directed the column to make its +way to that station, a party of the South Wales Borderers being left +behind to watch the pass at Modderfontein, where they were to have a +rough experience later on. The remainder of the force moved to Bank on +the 7th, and marched again the same night for Krugersdorp, making a +total distance of thirty-three miles in the twenty-four hours, a good +wind-up to the three weeks' trek. An enormous number of cattle and +sheep were brought in, but it was the end of the Pochefstroom column, +which was now finally broken up into a number of small posts.</p> + +<a id="img056" name="img056"></a> +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/img056.jpg" width="600" height="411" alt="" title=""> +<p class="smcap">'The Latest Shave.'<br> +Captain G. S. Higginson (mounted) and Major Bird.</p> +</div> + +<p>The regiment camped once more on the same site it had last occupied.<a href="#toc"><span class="small">[Back to Contents]</span></a></p> + +<p class="chapter"><span class="pagenum"><a id="page182" name="page182"></a>(p. 182)</span> CHAPTER VI.<br> + +BURIED TREASURE—THE EASTERN TRANSVAAL—THE KRUGERSDORP DEFENCES.</p> + +<p class="quotechapter"> + 'They are wet with the showers of the mountains, and embrace the + rock for want of a shelter.'—<span class="italic">Job</span>, xxiv. 8.</p> + +<p>By this time we had begun to regard Krugersdorp as our base, and to +look upon our returns to it as more or less getting home. But on this +occasion there was to be no rest of any length. From the plum-bloom +blue of the far Magaliesberg, General Clements' heliograph was +twinkling and blinking for the remainder of his force and more mounted +men. In addition to this Colonel Hicks took out a column. These and +other deductions left Krugersdorp with a garrison of 300 men to man a +perimeter of some ten or twelve miles, or, roughly speaking, just over +fifty yards for each rifle. 'C' company, under Captain Pomeroy, W.I.R. +(attached), and Lieutenant Molony, occupied Fort Craig; 'D' company, +under Captain Clarke, R.M.L.I. (attached), and Lieutenant Marsh, held +Fort Kilmarnock; and 'G' company, under its Captain and Lieutenant +Smith, took over Fort Harlech. Major Rutherford took over this fort +next day, as the captain of 'G' company had been appointed commander +of the town guards and piquets and interior defences. Colonel Hicks +had been ordered to Johannesburg to see General French, who informed +him that he was to take command of a mixed force<a id="footnotetag19" name="footnotetag19"></a><a href="#footnote19" title="Go to footnote 19"><span class="small">[19]</span></a> and march to the +Losberg, there to dig up a large sum of gold, reputed to amount to +nearly 100,000<span class="italic">l.</span>; after which he was to proceed south to the Vaal, +and hold the drifts between Vereeniging and Rensburg.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page183" name="page183"></a>(p. 183)</span> Starting at midnight on the 10th-11th, the column marched +till 6 a.m., covering fifteen or sixteen miles. The men then had +breakfasts; and, after resting till mid-day, when they had dinners, +started again for Orange Grove, the pass in the Gatsrand with which we +were by this time so familiar. It was occupied by Boers, estimated at +about one hundred in number, who offered considerable resistance, but +who were finally shelled out of it, without loss on our side, though +charged by a squadron of Carabineers with great dash. Having done +about twenty-six miles, the camp was pitched at 6 p.m., outposts +being, of course, thrown out on the adjacent hills.</p> + +<p>Reveille sounded at 4.30 a.m., and by 5.30 the small column was on the +way again. Their destination was plain enough this time, and very grim +and formidable it looked in the broad light of day, considering the +very small force which was about to attack it. Moreover, on this +occasion it held something besides oranges. Advancing from the north +in the direction of the spot from which we had advanced to the attack +a few days before, Colonel Hicks made a demonstration as though about +to attack the eastern peak, then, suddenly opening a heavy shell fire +on the nek between the two, he launched his real attack against the +other summit. Although the hill was held by a considerable number of +the enemy, estimated at 500, these tactics proved eminently +successful, for when they discovered the direction of the main attack +shrapnel was bursting all over the nek along which they would have had +to gallop to meet it, and they gave up the idea and evacuated the +position, which fell into Colonel Hicks' hand with a loss of one man, +who had the misfortune to be hit in no less than five places. A guide +had been sent with the column who knew where the gold was, and a party +was told off to dig it up and bring it in. The guide may or may not +have known where the gold <span class="italic">was</span>, but he certainly did not know where +it was <span class="italic">then</span>, and the search proved entirely <span class="pagenum"><a id="page184" name="page184"></a>(p. 184)</span> abortive. He +was a murderer under sentence of death, and was to save his life by +showing the gold and ten buried guns.</p> + +<p>The force started at 5 a.m. next morning for Lindeque Drift. There was +a certain amount of sniping all the way, principally at the cavalry, +who were riding wide on either flank, collecting cattle and burning +straw and hay, in addition to guarding the flanks. Lindeque was +reached at 5.30 p.m., a camp of our people being in view on the far +bank of the river, with whom communication was opened by signal. The +drift was very deep, but an orderly managed to get across with a +letter. Orders also arrived from General French giving Colonel Hicks +thirty miles of river to watch, which seemed a good deal, considering +the paucity of the numbers at his disposal.</p> + +<p>At 6.30 a.m. a helio message was received calling the column at once +back to Krugersdorp, and a start was made for the return journey at 8 +a.m. The Boers endeavoured all day to cut off the rearguard, but met +with no success, the gunners shelling them whenever they got close +enough to be unpleasant.</p> + +<a id="img057" name="img057"></a> +<div class="figcenter"> +<a href="images/img057.jpg"> +<img src="images/img057tb.jpg" width="600" height="505" alt="" title=""></a> +<p><span class="smcap">Kilmarnock.</span><br> +<span class="small italic">From a sketch by Col. H. Tempest Hicks, C.B.</span></p> +</div> + +<p>The 15th proved to be almost a repetition of the day before, the enemy +hanging persistently on the flanks and rear of the little column, but +showing no signs of any desire to make their closer acquaintance. +Indeed, that morning Colonel Hicks had prepared a small surprise for +them which fully realised his anticipations. Whenever columns were +moving about it was the invariable custom of the enemy to at once +occupy the vacated camping-ground in search of any odds-and-ends that +might have been left about, but more especially ammunition, which used +to drop out of our men's pouches in surprising quantities, in spite of +the most stringent orders on the subject. On this occasion the Colonel +left a small party in ambush when he moved off, with the result that +when half-a-dozen Boers began rummaging about in the camp they were +suddenly invited to hold their hands up, a <span class="pagenum"><a id="page185" name="page185"></a>(p. 185)</span> request which +they had of necessity to comply with, one of them being a Field-Cornet +and a man of some local importance. A halt was made in sight of +Randfontein, on the slopes of which a column, under Colonel the Hon. +Ulick Roche, could be seen proceeding in the direction of Krugersdorp. +Next day was Dingaan's Day, and rumour stated that the Boers under De +la Rey, flushed with their victory over Clements, were going to attack +Krugersdorp.</p> + +<p>The column marched the remaining fifteen miles by 2.30 p.m. next day +without seeing any sign of the enemy. During the six days they had +been away they had marched 102 miles, skirmished with the enemy nearly +every day, taken a strong position by a fine example of tactics, +captured a good many prisoners, and brought in a large quantity of +cattle, sheep, &c.: a very fine six days' work.</p> + +<p>Since May 30th the headquarters of the battalion had marched well over +1200 miles. On three occasions it had exceeded thirty miles in +twenty-four hours—the record, of course, being the thirty-eight miles +in sixteen hours from Klerkskraal to Pochefstroom in September. But +the most wonderful part of its work was the strange immunity it +experienced from any of the determined attacks which were so +constantly being made on other columns. Whether it was good or bad +luck, good or bad scouting, whatever it was, the fact remained that +with the exception of the almost daily scrapping and sniping, which +constant use had made to appear as part of the day's work, no action +of any importance came our way in spite of the countless marches and +counter-marches we made to bring one on. With the solitary exception +of the afternoon at Frederickstadt, when the Boers dropped a few +shells into our camp, and the two following days, when General +Liebenburg paid a similar attention to the detachment left behind on +the hill, we had not been under shell-fire.</p> + +<p>In the meantime, the disaster to General Clements at <span class="pagenum"><a id="page186" name="page186"></a>(p. 186)</span> +Nooitgedacht had drawn all eyes to the state of Krugersdorp, which +with its small garrison seemed to offer a tempting bait to De la Rey, +and column after column arrived to assist in repelling the assault +which was threatened for Dingaan's Day. Before the reinforcements +arrived the General had taken every sort of precaution; amongst +others, arresting most of the principal inhabitants of the town, and +holding them as hostages. The festival, however, passed without +incident, and the tide of men and horses, guns and waggons, which had +reached a record height in the history of the town, soon began to ebb +once more, and then everything settled down to the quiet, peaceful +state of affairs which almost always characterised Krugersdorp. The +band played in the market square, and concerts were arranged in the +town hall, while the General set a fine example to his troops for +their guidance in his treatment of those of our late enemies who had +observed their oaths of neutrality, as a large number of them most +religiously did. Ever foremost in aggressive tactics in the field +until the enemy was overcome, the General adopted a policy of +conciliation at other times which undoubtedly had far-reaching effects +as regarded the conduct of the inhabitants of Krugersdorp.</p> + +<p>On December 19th, 400 men of the regiment, under Major Bird, started +off to join the force under General French which was going to sweep +the Eastern Transvaal, very much on the same lines that the various +columns had been sweeping the Western Transvaal. Their special duty +was to act as a baggage-guard to the various mounted corps, a duty +which they shared with a battalion of Guards. Their lives for the next +two or three months were very much the same as they had been for the +previous two or three months, though they covered an even greater +number of miles, and, owing to the rains and thunderstorms of the +South African summer, experienced an even harder time. It is the +custom to speak in terms of high praise of the climate of South +Africa, but <span class="pagenum"><a id="page187" name="page187"></a>(p. 187)</span> if the British Army had been consulted on the +subject after some of these treks, it is doubtful if their vocabulary +would have been large enough to enable them to thoroughly ventilate +their opinions. The fact is that the spring, summer, and autumn are +ruined by the desperate storms which are of such common occurrence at +those times of year. There are, it is true, four winter months of +glorious weather: fine, frosty, starlit nights, and clear days of +brilliant sunshine when the heat is never unpleasant. But of these +four months, two are completely ruined by the high winds which sweep +the broad veld, and which, in the vicinity of the mines, fill the air +with minute particles of gritty dust from the waste-heaps, penetrating +eyes and nostrils, throats and lungs.</p> + +<p>The first portion of the trek was, however, spent in the country that +General Hart had been operating in. The following account of some of +their hardships and privations is given by Lieutenant and +Quartermaster Burke:—</p> + +<p class="p2 center italic">With General Knox's Brigade in the sweeping movement by General +French on the eastern side of the Transvaal. Detail of a few orders as +showing the hardships the troops suffered through bad weather and +scarcity of food.</p> + +<p>Brigade Orders. 'Witcomb, 8.2.01. Owing to the late arrival of the +convoy, the force will go on <sup>2</sup>/<sub>3</sub> biscuits.'</p> + +<p>This all the time we were marching daily and fighting.</p> + +<p>16.2.01. Our force reached Piet Retief.</p> + +<p>Brigade Orders. '20.2.01. The following will be the scale of rations +until further orders:—2 ozs. rice, 4 ozs. jam, ½ lb. mealie meal, +1-½ lb. meat. No coffee, tea, biscuits, vegetables, or salt.'</p> + +<p>Orders received from General French:—'Convoy under General +Burn-Murdoch is terribly delayed by swollen rivers and bad roads. The +Pongola is fifty yards and the Intombi 300 yards wide. You must use +your utmost resources to economise food, and so meet this unfortunate +state of affairs, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page188" name="page188"></a>(p. 188)</span> which will assuredly last till the weather +improves. No forage for horses and mules. Send parties for food to +search out as far as ten miles. Kaffirs to receive 1<span class="italic">l.</span> in gold for a +bag of mealies, or a heifer for five bags.'</p> + +<p>21, 22, 23.2.01. 1 oz. jam, ½ lb. mealie meal, 1-½ lb. meat, +nothing else.</p> + +<p>24, 25. Same.</p> + +<p>26. No jam, ½ lb. mealie meal, 1-½ lb. meat, nothing else. I paid +a shopkeeper at Piet Retief 2<span class="italic">s.</span> 6<span class="italic">d.</span> for a quarter-handful of salt.</p> + +<p>Brigade Orders. 27.2.01. By General French: 'O.C. units will take +steps to let the troops know how highly their spirits and bearing +under the privations they are suffering from bad weather and short +rations are appreciated by the Lieutenant-General Commanding.'</p> + +<p>27.2.01. Burnt mealie cobs issued for coffee.</p> + +<p>Telegram from Lord Kitchener to General French, Piet Retief, +28.2.01:—'Explain to the troops under your command my admiration of +the excellent work they have performed, and the difficulties they have +overcome.'</p> + +<p>8.3.01. Full rations, first issue since 14.2.01.</p> + +<p>To show that the troops, besides suffering from frightful bad weather +(constant rain for a month), had to work hard, the following results +are shown.</p> + +<p>General Orders. The following results of our operations since 27.1.01, +is published for officers and men:—</p> + +<p><span class="italic">Boers</span>, killed, wounded, and captured, 393; surrendered, 353. Total +accounted for, 746.</p> + +<p><span class="italic">Cannon</span> taken, excluding a maxim, 4.</p> + +<p><span class="italic">Rifles</span>, 606. <span class="italic">Ammunition</span>, 161,630.</p> + +<p><span class="italic">Horses and mules</span>, 6504. <span class="italic">Trek oxen</span>, 362.</p> + +<p><span class="italic">Other cattle</span>, 20,986. <span class="italic">Sheep</span>, 158,130.</p> + +<p><span class="italic">Waggons and carts</span>, 1604.</p> + +<p><span class="italic">Mealies and oat hay</span>, over 4,000,000 lbs.</p> + +<p class="left50 smcap">H. Burke, Lt.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page189" name="page189"></a>(p. 189)</span> Colonel Hicks now set every one to work improving the various +posts round Krugersdorp, setting a fine example to all by the interest +he took in the work, and showing his thoroughness by the attention he +devoted to even the most trivial details. He also took infinite pains +to make Christmas as pleasant as he could for every one. The regiment +was, of course, very much split up in the various forts and fortified +houses, but headquarters still remained till the end of the year in +our old camping-ground.</p> + +<p>On the very last day of the year an escort of forty men returning to +Krugersdorp had a near shave of being cut off; they lost four men +captured, and would assuredly have lost more but for the prompt action +of Major English, who went out from Kilmarnock with twenty men to help +them in.</p> + +<p>So ended 1900. It had been a hard year for every one, but one and all +had done their best, and no sign of failing spirits was visible +anywhere. It was difficult to see anything like an end to the +campaign, however, for the process of attrition, which now seemed the +sole solution, was necessarily a slow one, and considerably interfered +with by the various 'regrettable incidents' that occurred from time to +time in the huge theatre of the war. These not only assisted our +indomitable foes with extra supplies of clothing, arms, ammunition, +&c., but also had the effect of keeping up their <span class="italic">morale</span>.</p> + +<p>On January 4th, 1901, the 400 men under Major Bird passed through on +their way to Elandsfontein, but nobody knew about the move in time to +go up to the station and see them.</p> + +<p>Large bodies of the enemy were now known to be in the neighbourhood, +and a spy came in saying that it was an open secret among the Boers +that Krugersdorp was De la Rey's objective as soon as a favourable +opportunity should present itself. In spite of this it was difficult +to make the danger of going beyond the outposts appreciated, and this +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page190" name="page190"></a>(p. 190)</span> resulted in the death of one of our men, Private Hyland, +servant to one of the clergymen. It was supposed that the poor fellow +had gone out in a cape-cart with the object of getting some flowers +for the church; his body was found on the 8th simply riddled with +bullets, as was also that of the Cape-boy who had driven him.</p> + +<p>On the 10th, Major Pilson, Royal Dublin Fusiliers, one of the first +officers selected to proceed to South Africa on special service before +the war, arrived—not, unfortunately, to join the regiment, but the +South African Constabulary.</p> + +<p>On the 11th the enemy blew up the railway just beyond Roodeport, the +first station out of Krugersdorp on the way to Pochefstroom. +Lieutenant Marsh and twenty men of the regiment were sent out as +escort to guard the Engineers who repaired it.</p> + +<p>The storms continued to be very severe. Kilmarnock House was struck by +lightning, and the sentry on guard at the Court House in the town sent +spinning, fortunately only receiving a severe shaking.</p> + +<p>On the 23rd the sad news of the death of Her Majesty Queen Victoria +was made known to the troops, by whom it was received in deep and +impressive silence.</p> + +<p>A salute was fired by the Artillery on the 24th with plugged shell, to +celebrate the Accession of King Edward VII.</p> + +<p>At the end of the month General Hart left us. The regiment had been +continuously under his command since the formation of the Irish +Brigade; officers and men alike had learned to entertain a deep +respect and admiration for their General, than whom no braver man ever +went into action. He on his part loved the regiment, and fully +appreciated the <span class="italic">esprit de corps</span> which permeated it, from the Colonel +to the last-joined recruit. His farewell letter to Colonel Hicks, +another on the subject of our camping arrangements, and his farewell +order to his brigade, may all be found in the <a href="#appendix">Appendix</a>, and afford +proof of his <span class="pagenum"><a id="page191" name="page191"></a>(p. 191)</span> regard for his troops and the spirit which he +breathed into them.</p> + +<p>Colonel Groves took over command of Krugersdorp and its defences, and +gave Colonel Hicks a free hand: he also rode round the inner defences +with the commander of the town-guards and piquets, and arranged for +their being made stronger also.</p> + +<p>In spite of the presence of a good many of our columns, the enemy was +very active all over the Magaliesberg and the Gatsrand at this time. +It will be remembered that on the return from the Klip River trek, a +party of the South Wales Borderers had been left to watch the +Modderfontein Pass.</p> + +<p>This small force was now surrounded and being fiercely attacked, and +offering as determined a resistance. A force was hastily organized to +proceed to their relief, under command of Colonel the Hon. U. Roche, +of the South Wales Borderers. With half or more of the battalion away +under Major Bird, we could only supply 180 men, under command of +Captain Shewan, for this column.</p> + +<p>They marched that night, and the following morning found all the hills +for ten miles held by the enemy, Colonel Roche wiring in that the +Boers were in too great force for his column to proceed. Indeed, the +column had to fight hard enough to maintain its position and to save +itself from being surrounded. General Conyngham, hastily gathering +together another 500 men and a battery, marched off to reinforce +Colonel Roche, but before they could get to the unfortunate post at +Modderfontein, it had fallen to superior numbers. The Boers, who were +under the command of General Smuts, sent in a flag of truce, giving +notice of the capture of the post, stating that there were many +British wounded, and suggesting that an ambulance and doctors should +be sent out to them. This incident was very hard lines on a most +gallant regiment, and in no way reflects adversely on them for one +instant. They defended their position splendidly as long as <span class="pagenum"><a id="page192" name="page192"></a>(p. 192)</span> +defence was possible, and suffered greatly from want of water as well +as from the enemy's fire. Colonel Roche reported that Captain Shewan +and his men had done very well, and had held a hill on the left of his +position, until he recalled them.</p> + +<p>Colonel Hicks never for a moment remitted his exertions in the +fortifying of the various posts and houses in the section of the +command for which he was responsible, with the result that he very +soon had them in a most efficient state. Ammunition, food, and water, +in sufficient quantities to withstand a regular siege, were stored in +each post, while the wire entanglements would have effectually +precluded any attempt on the part of the enemy to rush them. Indeed, +no precautions were omitted, and one began to enjoy one's sleep +considerably more than had been the case for some months past.</p> + +<p>On the 7th, the headquarters of the regiment at last moved into +Kilmarnock, a house which had belonged to a Mr. Burger, a brother of +Mr. Schalk Burger, the acting President. Here they remained until the +regiment left for Aden in January 1902.<a href="#toc"><span class="small">[Back to Contents]</span></a></p> + +<a id="img058" name="img058"></a> +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/img058.jpg" width="600" height="399" alt="" title=""> +<p class="smcap">The Hairdresser's Shop.</p> +</div> + +<p class="chapter"><span class="pagenum"><a id="page193" name="page193"></a>(p. 193)</span> CHAPTER VII.<br> + +THE LAST TWELVE MONTHS.</p> + +<p class="quotechapter"> + 'In the morning thou shalt say, Would God it were even! and at + even thou shalt say, Would God it were morning!'—<span class="italic">Deut.</span> xxviii. + 67.</p> + +<a id="img059" name="img059"></a> +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/img059.jpg" width="600" height="409" alt="" title=""> +<p class="smcap">Kilmarnock, Krugersdorp.</p> +</div> + +<p>With the occupation of Kilmarnock by the headquarters of the regiment +arrived the third and last phase of the war. It had begun with four +months' hard fighting, continued with twelve months' hard marching, +and was to end with twelve months of weary escorts to convoys, +occupation of blockhouses, and garrison work generally. It was, +perhaps, in its way, the most trying period of the three, for in +addition to unceasing vigilance there was added the dead monotony of +week after week in the same place, surrounded by the same faces, and +feeding on the same indifferent food. One was buoyed up by the reports +published <span class="pagenum"><a id="page194" name="page194"></a>(p. 194)</span> from time to time of the hauls of prisoners made +by the various columns, but there was always some pessimist handy to +discount one's hopes, and even though the result proved their dismal +croakings more or less correct, they might have had the grace, even if +they had not the common sense, to keep their miserable opinions to +themselves. Thank goodness there were not many of these gentlemen in +the regiment. Throughout the war I only heard one man grumble sulkily, +and only heard of one man who paid too great a regard to the use of +cover. The high tone with which the war had been entered upon was +maintained to the very end, and if the regimental officer came out of +it with credit, the N.C.O. and private soldier did every bit as well. +Hardship, fatigue, stress of weather—everything was accepted as part +of the general day's work, and as such cheerfully met and thoroughly +done.</p> + +<p>Lieutenants B. Maclear and J. P. B. Robinson joined about this time, +the former a brother of Percy Maclear, Adjutant of the 1st Battalion.</p> + +<p>In spite of all the work, however, time was yet found for a certain +amount of play, the exercise of which was very beneficial. Cricket +matches were played against the town, the S.A.C., and amongst +ourselves, and later on football matches against the town and other +regiments. We proved more successful at the latter game than the +former: not to be wondered at, seeing that two of our +officers—Lieutenants Maclear and Newton—were later on to become +International three-quarter backs, the former playing for Ireland and +the latter for England.</p> + +<p>Lieutenant Knox joined on March 23rd, having been detained nine months +through illness on the way up.</p> + +<p>In March, Major-General Mildmay Willson, a Guardsman, took over from +Colonel Groves the command, which now became 'the District West of +Johannesburg.'</p> + +<p>On April 17th, Major English proceeded to Bank in command of a small +mixed force (one hundred Royal Dublin <span class="pagenum"><a id="page195" name="page195"></a>(p. 195)</span> Fusiliers) to try and +catch a Boer force who had been for some time hovering round that +station. He returned on the 19th, having seen no Boers.</p> + +<p>On the 21st, Captain Watson, formerly in the regiment, came to see us. +He was then Adjutant of the Scottish Horse, and was shortly afterwards +killed at Moedwil. He had distinguished himself on many occasions, and +had received special promotion into the Lancashire Fusiliers.</p> + +<p>On the 30th, Major Bird and his half-battalion at last got back. They +had done a lot of marching and good work in the Eastern Transvaal with +General French's columns, but had not had much fighting. They all +seemed glad to be back; it is always satisfactory to have the regiment +together, as we have a feeling of dependence on one another that one +cannot have when working with other troops, however good they may be.</p> + +<p>On May 3rd Captain Kinsman, Royal Dublin Fusiliers, came to see the +battalion. He was then in the S.A.C. He had been badly wounded some +time ago, having been with the force under General Plumer since the +beginning of the war, and present at the relief of Mafeking, and had +seen a deal of fighting.</p> + +<p>On May 7th Lieutenant Seymour joined the regiment, in which his father +had also served.</p> + +<p>On May 25th a force<a id="footnotetag20" name="footnotetag20"></a><a href="#footnote20" title="Go to footnote 20"><span class="small">[20]</span></a> went out to escort the S.A.C. to a fort they +were to build. The column was under command of Colonel Hicks, and +almost immediately met with opposition, the Scottish Horse, on the +left, coming in for a good deal of sniping. Sending out his mounted +men well ahead, and occupying a ridge in front with the Worcesters, +the Colonel then rode on with Colonel Edwardes, S.A.C., to select a +spot for the erection of the work. The only casualties were two men +wounded and five horses killed, and the force then bivouacked on the +positions they held. Next <span class="pagenum"><a id="page196" name="page196"></a>(p. 196)</span> day building was commenced on a +small fort and three blockhouses, the building parties being sniped +for some time until a detachment of the regiment under Captain +Fetherstonhaugh and Lieutenant Maclear went out and drove the Boers +away. By the 27th the fort and posts were nearly completed, the enemy +still hovering round the neighbourhood, and next day the column +returned to Krugersdorp, meeting and dispersing a few Boers on the way +back.</p> + +<a id="img060" name="img060"></a> +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/img060.jpg" width="600" height="401" alt="" title=""> +<p class="smcap">A Blockhouse.</p> +</div> + +<p>On June 3rd Colonel Hicks took over command of the Krugersdorp +sub-district, as Colonel Groves was down with measles, as was also +Lieutenant Bradford—an extraordinary disease for a man of the +Colonel's time of life.</p> + +<p>On the 15th of June Colonel Groves handed over the Krugersdorp +sub-district to Brigadier-General Barker, R.E. Before leaving he said +some very nice things about the regiment, and we on our part were +sorry to lose him, as he had always had a good opinion of the +battalion, and had assisted the Colonel in his endeavours to put +Krugersdorp in a thorough state of defence.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page197" name="page197"></a>(p. 197)</span> On the 27th Lieutenant Frankland, 2nd Royal Dublin Fusiliers, +came to see us. It will be remembered that he was taken prisoner at +the very beginning of the war in the armoured-train disaster. Since +the capture of Pretoria he had been occupied on the line of +communications. He told us that Lieutenant Le Mesurier had probably +never got over the exposure to which he was subjected during his +escape from Pretoria and on his long march to Delagoa Bay, as he no +sooner got over one attack of fever than he was down with another. He +also gave us an account of the escape, which was a most gallant +affair, and in the light of what has since happened to the only other +officers who escaped—Captain Haldane and Mr. Winston Churchill—it +seems hard luck that Le Mesurier should have received nothing. He +added that Lieutenant Grimshaw had been attached to the Mounted +Infantry since the relief, and that Captain Lonsdale had got into the +Staff College.</p> + +<p>On July 1st two convoys went out, one under Major English and the +other under Captain Fetherstonhaugh, not returning until the 6th. The +remainder of the month brought forth nothing novel, however, and was +spent in strengthening posts and escorting convoys.</p> + +<p>August also passed uneventfully, but on September 16th Colonel Hicks +was given command of a mixed force some 1000 strong, 170 of whom +belonged to the regiment, with orders to move along through the same +old Gatsrand country, visit posts, burn farms, collect cattle, &c., +&c. He marched accordingly, but met with little opposition until well +inside the hilly country, where some sniping took place. After a +fortnight's trek he arrived in Pochefstroom, where he found General +Willson, who informed him that he was to succeed General Barker in +command of the Krugersdorp sub-district. He returned to that place on +the 30th, only to find a wire ordering him to go back for the present +to his column and to move to a place on the Vaal south of Pochefstroom +and <span class="pagenum"><a id="page198" name="page198"></a>(p. 198)</span> turn out a Boer force which was occasioning considerable +trouble. Colonel Hicks by a rapid march anticipated the Boers at a +pass leading into this valley, their commander, George Hall, +afterwards declaring that this step saved us a hundred men, as he had +determined to hold the pass till the last.</p> + +<p>On October 5th he encountered a force of Boers who were prepared to +dispute the ownership of some cattle with him, but he had little +difficulty in convincing them that under the circumstances might was +undoubtedly right. On the 6th the seven-pounder gun lost by the S.A.C. +was recovered, and George Hall, a prominent Boer leader, captured. The +Colonel induced him to send a letter out to his commando advising them +to give in, which resulted in twenty-two of them surrendering at +Pochefstroom a few days later. In addition to this the column captured +about fifteen prisoners and brought or sent in very large quantities +of stock, mealies, cattle, &c. The Colonel got back to Krugersdorp on +the 12th, having returned by train to take over his command.</p> + +<p>Lieutenants Frankland and Weldon of ours were present at the fight at +Bakenlaagte, when Colonel Benson was killed, and had a hot time of it. +Our mounted infantry lost two killed and six wounded. The following +description is supplied by Lieutenant Weldon:—</p> + +<p class="center p2 smcap">The Royal Dublin Fusiliers Mounted Infantry at Bakenlaagte.</p> + +<p>On the afternoon preceding the move from Zwakfontein, where Colonel +Benson's column was camped, I was ordered to escort Lieutenant Biggs, +R.E., to a drift some miles away on the road to Bakenlaagte: this we +accomplished, bringing back one prisoner, whom we took near the drift. +At daybreak on the following morning our outposts were attacked before +the column had moved out of camp, and the rearguard action commenced. +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page199" name="page199"></a>(p. 199)</span> Our mounted infantry formed the right and left flank guards +to the light transport, the right under Lieutenant Grimshaw, and the +left under Lieutenants Frankland and Weldon. The enemy did not pay +much attention to us at first, but after going a little way I galloped +with my section to take possession of a small kopje which commanded +the route. The Boers made a simultaneous dash for it, resulting in a +spirited race, in which we proved victors, having been expedited on +the way by two 'belts' from our own pompom. On gaining the hill we at +once poured a heavy fire into our opponents, who withdrew. In the +meantime considerable difficulty was experienced in getting the +transport over the drift, which gave the Boers time to get round us. +Eventually, however, most of it was got across and the march resumed. +On nearing camp our mounted infantry closed in a bit, when we were +suddenly fired on from a farmhouse flying the Red Cross flag, and +sustained five or six casualties. We were detailed to a section of the +defence of Bakenlaagte, which was practically surrounded. We lay down +on the slopes with our heads downhill, and kept the enemy well away, +taking the opportunity to improvise some sort of head-cover whenever +their fire slackened. Although we fully expected an attack in the +night, or at dawn, none was made, there being no sign of the enemy +next day.</p> + +<p class="left50">Kenneth Weldon.</p> + +<p>On December 6th Captain Romer took over the appointment of C.S.O., +Krugersdorp Sub-District, from our old friend, Captain Hart, who was +appointed to General Knox's staff. We were very sorry to lose him, as +from first to last he had done his best to oblige all, and during his +term of office made friends with everybody.</p> + +<p>On the 9th Lieutenant Britton and fifty men of the regiment proceeded +to Middelvlei to relieve a party of the Border regiment.</p> + +<p>On the 17th Lieutenant Robinson had to perform the <span class="pagenum"><a id="page200" name="page200"></a>(p. 200)</span> +unpleasant duty of carrying out the sentence of death on a Boer +prisoner, who had been tried and condemned for shooting three of our +men after having surrendered.</p> + +<p>General Cooper arrived on the 19th, to say good-bye to the regiment, +as he was on his way home. He brought the very welcome intelligence +that we were shortly to be relieved, but of course this was only made +known to the Colonel at the time.</p> + +<p>Lieutenant Renny, who had been A.D.C. to General Cooper, rejoined on +the 27th, and brought further rumours to the effect that the regiment +was shortly to leave the country, and as orders had come to get in all +our employed men, and men from forts, blockhouses, and stations all +over the country, it began to look as if there was some truth in the +rumours.</p> + +<p>On the very last day of 1901 a severe thunderstorm passed right over +headquarters, two of our men being struck by lightning.</p> + +<p class="p2 center">1902.</p> + +<p>On the first day of the New Year the order for the battalion to leave +South Africa arrived at the brigade office, its destination being +Gibraltar, the best of the Mediterranean stations; but next day a wire +arrived cancelling the move.</p> + +<p>On the 5th, however, Lord Kitchener passed through Krugersdorp, when +the Colonel saw him and ascertained that the regiment was to go to +Aden.</p> + +<p>At 8.30 p.m. on the 11th, part of the 1st Battalion Royal Dublin +Fusiliers, under Majors Shadforth and Gordon, Captains Swift and +Maclear, and Lieutenant Le Mesurier, with some other officers, arrived +to take over the defences from the 2nd Battalion.</p> + +<p>On the 14th, 300 of the 1st Battalion, under Major Gordon, proceeded +down the Pochefstroom line to take over the posts at present held by +us.</p> + +<a id="img061" name="img061"></a> +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/img061.jpg" width="600" height="531" alt="" title=""> +<p><span class="smcap">KRUGERSDORP</span> from Kilmarnock House.<br> Shewing the Gold +mines Monument, Camps &c.</p> +<p class="small italic">From a sketch by Col. H. Tempest Hicks, +C.B.</p> +</div> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page201" name="page201"></a>(p. 201)</span> On the 20th, Captains Kinsman and Rowlands (now serving in +the S.A.C.) arrived to say good-bye, and on the 23rd, Colonel Mills +and Major Bromilow, 1st Battalion, arrived.</p> + +<a id="img062" name="img062"></a> +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/img062.jpg" width="600" height="388" alt="" title=""> +<p class="smcap">The 'Blue Caps' relieving the 'Old Toughs.'</p> +</div> + +<p>On January 26th the regiment fell in for the last time at Kilmarnock, +and marched through Krugersdorp to the station. They had made many +friends during their stay, and the entire town, Boers as well as +Britons, turned out and enthusiastically cheered the corps as it +marched out of the town it had first marched into on June 19th, 1900. +The night was spent at the railway station, and a start made at 4 a.m. +on the 27th. A good view of Talana, from a distance of about five +miles, was obtained on the morning of the 28th, and it may easily be +imagined with what mixed feelings our thoughts flew back to that grey +morning of October 20th, 1899, and our well-loved comrades who had +given their lives to gain that gallant victory. Ladysmith was reached +about 1 p.m., and Maritzburg in the small hours of the 29th, which was +unfortunate, as the regiment had so many friends <span class="pagenum"><a id="page202" name="page202"></a>(p. 202)</span> there. In +spite of the hour, however, a large number of the inhabitants were on +the platform with various small presents of cigarettes, &c., for the +men. Durban was reached a few hours later, when an illuminated address +was presented to the regiment, as well as refreshments to officers and +men, after which the battalion embarked on board the <span class="smcap">S.S.</span> <span class="italic">Sicilian</span> +for conveyance to Aden.<a href="#toc"><span class="small">[Back to Contents]</span></a></p> + +<h2><span class="pagenum"><a id="page203" name="page203"></a>(p. 203)</span> PART III.</h2> + +<p class="chapter"><span class="pagenum"><a id="page205" name="page205"></a>(p. 205)</span> CHAPTER I.<br> + +THE ADEN HINTERLAND</p> + +<p class="quotechapter"> + 'For this relief much thanks.'<br> +<span class="left50 italic">Hamlet.</span></p> + +<p>The voyage from Durban to Aden was a welcome change, but quite +uneventful, with the exception of one sad event, the death of Sergeant +Pearson, who had embarked in a state of collapse, with little or no +prospect of recovery. He was a most promising N.C.O., and his father +had served in the regiment before him. Aden was reached on February +11th, 1902, and the battalion disembarked that afternoon.</p> + +<p>The year passed without any incident calling for remark, and on +October 1st the following notice appeared in battalion orders:—'It is +notified for general information that the battalion will leave Aden +for home in H.M.T. <span class="italic">Syria</span>, on or about the 11th of February, arriving +home on 24th February, 1903.' 'There is many a slip 'twixt the cup and +the lip,' however, and the old adage was once more to be exemplified.</p> + +<p>For some time past rumours of approaching trouble with regard to the +delimitation of the Turkish frontier in the Hinterland had been rife. +A force of Turkish troops was encamped near Dthala, about one hundred +and ten miles from Aden, and the Sultan of Dthala finally appealed to +the British for support. The result was that instead of going home, a +column was organized under the command of Brevet-Lieutenant-Colonel F. +P. English, 2nd Royal Dublin Fusiliers, to watch the frontier.</p> + +<p>The following is an extract from the Aden District Orders:—</p> + +<p class="p2 center smcap"><span class="pagenum"><a id="page206" name="page206"></a>(p. 206)</span> District Orders by Lieutenant-Colonel H. T. Hicks, C.B., + 2nd Royal Dublin Fusiliers, Commanding + Aden District.</p> + +<p>No. 450. <span class="ralign italic">Aden, Friday, December 12th, 1902.</span></p> + +<p>In supersession of previous instructions, a column composed as under +will be held in readiness to proceed, on field-service scale, from +Aden into the interior of Arabia:—</p> + +<table border="0" cellpadding="1" summary="District orders."> +<colgroup> + <col width="70%"> + <col width="30%"> +</colgroup> + +<tr> +<td colspan="2">In Command: Lieutenant-Colonel F. P. English, 2nd Royal +Dublin Fusiliers.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td colspan="2">Staff Officer: Major S. M. Edwards, D.S.O., 2nd Bombay +Grenadiers.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td colspan="2">Supply and Transport Officer: Captain W. C. W. Harrison, +Supply and Transport Corps.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td colspan="2">Staff Medical Officer: Captain I. A. O. MacCarthy, Royal +Army Medical Corps.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>2nd Royal Dublin Fusiliers (including + section of maxim gun and twelve + signallers)</td> +<td>225 N.C.O.'s and men.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>No. 45 company, Royal Garrison Artillery + (with two seven-pounder + mountain guns and four nine-pounders)</td> +<td>80<span class="add2em">"</span></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td rowspan="2">Aden Troop</td> +<td>25 horsemen.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>12 camelmen.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>2nd Bombay Grenadiers</td> +<td>A double company.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td colspan="2">Section A. No. 16 British Field Hospital.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td colspan="2"><span class="spaced2">" " 68</span> <span class="spaced2">Native " "</span></td> +</tr> +</table> + +<p>If the column is required to move out, they will be joined <span class="italic">en route</span> +(if necessary) by a detachment of No. 3 company Bombay Sappers and +Miners.</p> + +<p> +<span class="add3em">(By Order)</span><br> +<span class="left40"><span class="smcap">C. H. U. Price</span>, <span class="italic">Major</span>,</span><br> +<span class="left50 italic">D.A.A.G. Aden District.</span></p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page207" name="page207"></a>(p. 207)</span> The following officers of the regiment accompanied the +column:—Lieutenant Haskard, Lieutenant Wheeler, Lieutenant Smith, +Second Lieutenant Tredennick, Second Lieutenant W. F. Higginson. + +<p>The following standing orders are quoted in full, as they give a good +idea of the scope of the operations, the difficulties likely to be met +with, and the precautions taken to overcome those difficulties:—</p> + +<p class="p2 center smcap">Column Standing Orders by Lieutenant-Colonel + F. P. English, Commanding Aden Column.</p> + +<p class="right italic">December 24th, 1902.</p> + +<p>1. <span class="italic">Water.</span>—It is anticipated that in all probability it will be +difficult to obtain good drinking water in sufficient quantities on +some of the marches into the interior. All ranks are therefore +cautioned to husband their drinking water as much as possible. Troops +and followers should be forbidden to draw water from the camel tanks +without permission from the officer in charge, and be cautioned +against drinking water from any but authorised sources, as some of the +water on the route is brackish and liable to bring on diarrhœa.</p> + +<p>Each unit will detail an officer or selected N.C. officer to be in +charge of the water camels, who will see that their supply is only +drawn on by order of the officer commanding, and that great care is +taken to prevent wastage. Whenever possible, water tanks and bottles +should be replenished; halts will be made for this purpose. +Water-bottles will be filled overnight. On arrival in camp, the +sources of water supply will be pointed out by the staff officer, and +sentries posted to see that the right people draw from the right +source.</p> + +<p>2. <span class="italic">Country and Inhabitants.</span>—It should be remembered that the +country through which the column will march <span class="pagenum"><a id="page208" name="page208"></a>(p. 208)</span> to Dthala is in +the British Protectorate, and that the inhabitants and their property +must not be interfered with. All supplies must be paid for, and +foraging is strictly forbidden.</p> + +<p>3. <span class="italic">Camps.</span>—On arrival at the camping-places, the staff officer will +point out the sites for the camps of the different units to N.C.O.'s +detailed for that purpose. Officers commanding units will see that +their respective camping-grounds are cleared up before departure.</p> + +<p>4. <span class="italic">Transport.</span>—On arrival in camp the transport in charge of each +unit will be picketed near its camp.</p> + +<p>5. <span class="italic">Order of March and Baggage.</span>—Each unit will be complete in +itself, being followed by first line transport, viz:—</p> + +<p>1. Signalling equipment. 2. First reserve ammunition. 3. Entrenching +tools. 4. Water camels. 5. Stretchers. 6. Great-coat camels.</p> + +<p>All followers not required with the above are to accompany the baggage +of their corps. The transport officer will act as baggage-master, and +all baggage-followers and baggage-guards will be under his orders. He +will see that the baggage moves off the ground in the following order, +viz:—Field hospital with its baggage in rear of fighting portion of +column; ammunition second reserve and ordnance park; staff baggage, +including supplies; regimental baggage with supplies in regimental +charge in order of march of unit; supply go-down; spare animals in +transport charge; rearguard.</p> + +<p><span class="add3em">(By order)</span><br> +<span class="left40"><span class="smcap">S. M. Edwards</span>, <span class="italic">Major</span>,</span><br> +<span class="left50 italic">S.O. Aden Column.</span></p> + +<p><span class="italic">January 2nd, 1903, Sheikh Othman.</span>—On January 2nd, 1903, the column +assembled at its rendezvous, Sheikh Othman, some ten miles from Aden.</p> + +<p><span class="italic">January 3rd, Bir Sayed Ali Wells</span> (2-½ <span class="italic">miles north of +Firush</span>.)—An early start was made, though as it was the first day's +march as a column it was not intended to go very far. <span class="pagenum"><a id="page209" name="page209"></a>(p. 209)</span> The +going, moreover, was bad. It takes time to accustom oneself to +marching through deep sand, just as it takes time to acquire the +'heather-step' in August. However, every one did well, the water was +good and fairly plentiful, though somewhat scattered, and the spirits +of the little force rose high at the possibilities of the prospect +before them.</p> + +<p><span class="italic">January 4th, Bir Salim.</span>—The water at this camp was good, but +insufficient in quantity, necessitating the watering of the animals +some mile away.</p> + +<p><span class="italic">January 5th, Shaika.</span>—Another good march, the only incident of which +was the breaking down of the treasure-camel, an important item of the +force.</p> + +<p><span class="italic">January 6th.</span>—Owing to the necessity of making very early starts, +long before daybreak, Lieut.-Colonel English gave orders for bonfires +to be built overnight. These proved a great success, and enabled the +packing-up in the morning to be accomplished with facility and +dispatch.</p> + +<p><span class="italic">January 7th, Alhaja.</span>—This place was reached after a long and trying +march, but the water proved bad in quality and small in quantity. +Captain Harrison, however, luckily joined the force here with a good +supply from Aden, so all was well.</p> + +<p><span class="italic">January 8th, Hadaba.</span>—Another tiring march, but a spring in the +river-bed provided a plentiful supply of good water. As there were +1300 human beings and animals to provide for, it can easily be +understood that the problem of the water-supply was a never-ceasing +care to the staff. Its solution would have been still more difficult +had not the O.C. column arranged that the Bombay Grenadiers and native +hospital should march a day behind the rest of the force.</p> + +<p><span class="italic">January 9th, Arrado.</span>—A short march, and more water than was +expected.</p> + +<p><span class="italic">January 10th, Dthala.</span>—There was a difficult pass to ascend before +the column reached its objective; three camels were in consequence +lost <span class="italic">en route</span>, one falling over a precipice <span class="pagenum"><a id="page210" name="page210"></a>(p. 210)</span> and two dying +from exhaustion. By 1 p.m., however, all difficulties had been +overcome, and the camping-ground was reached without opposition.</p> + +<p><span class="italic">January 11th.</span>—The remainder of the column arrived safely.</p> + +<a id="img063" name="img063"></a> +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/img063.jpg" width="600" height="445" alt="" title=""> +<p class="smcap">Dthala Camp.</p> +</div> + +<p>The rest of the month was occupied in putting the camp in a state of +defence, and the usual camp life. A force of 400 Turkish troops, with +four guns and twenty-five mounted men, was encamped only two miles off +at Jelala, and, as the condition of affairs, according to the +political officer, Colonel Wahab, was very acute, it was necessary to +observe the strictest precautions at all times. On January 30th the +detachment of the Royal Dublin Fusiliers was relieved by one from the +Hampshire Regiment, and marched off on their way back to Aden, under +command of Lieutenant Haskard. Colonel <span class="pagenum"><a id="page211" name="page211"></a>(p. 211)</span> English did not +return, having received orders from Lord Kitchener to remain in +command of the field force, whose total strength now consisted of 818 +officers and men, and 735 animals.</p> + +<a id="img064" name="img064"></a> +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/img064.jpg" width="600" height="399" alt="" title=""> +<p class="smcap">Dthala Village from Camp.</p> +</div> + +<p><span class="italic">February 1st.</span>—The situation now, however, became more serious. +Colonel English received a wire at 2.30 p.m. directing him to stop +Haskard's return march at Nobat-Dakim, and another at 6 p.m. informing +him that the whole of the Dublin Fusiliers were coming up, and also +half the 23rd Bombay Rifles. On February 10th instructions were +received to recall Haskard, who marched on the 12th, arriving at +Dthala on the 14th. On the 18th, headquarters and the remainder of the +Dublin Fusiliers left Aden, reaching Dthala on the 26th, when Colonel +Hicks took over command of the column, Lieut.-Colonel English assuming +command of the battalion.</p> + +<p>On March 22nd the Turks, however, evacuated Jelala, retiring behind +Kataba. Jelala was at once occupied by two companies of the Bombay +Rifles. Captain Rooth, Brevet-Major <span class="pagenum"><a id="page212" name="page212"></a>(p. 212)</span> Carington Smith, +Captains Garvice, Grimshaw, and Taylor arrived on the same day.</p> + +<p>On April 27th a detachment, consisting of 100 Royal Dublin Fusiliers, +two guns 6th Mountain Battery, and 100 Bombay Rifles, with supply and +transport, the whole under the command of Lieutenant-Colonel English, +occupied Sanah, where they remained until July 11th, when they +returned to Dthala.</p> + +<p>On May 18th a detachment of 100 men of the Royal Dublin Fusiliers, +under Brevet-Major Smith, joined a column under command of Colonel +Scallon, C.I.E., D.S.O., 23rd Bombay Rifles, which proceeded on a +punitive expedition to Hardaba. They met with some slight opposition, +in which No. 7274 Private Martin, Royal Dublin Fusiliers, was slightly +wounded. The column returned to Dthala on May 25th, after suffering +considerably from heat.</p> + +<p>On August 31st a small flying column, under Major Delamain, left for +the Bunna River. Lieutenant Wheeler, Royal Dublin Fusiliers, acted as +Staff Officer to this force. On September 4th, Lieutenant Haskard, +Royal Dublin Fusiliers, with thirty-five men, went out to Delamain +with a convoy, returning on September 6th.</p> + +<p>Considerable trouble had for some time been caused by the depredations +of the Arab tribes, who had been killing camelmen, and generally +making themselves obnoxious on the line of communications. Information +was now received that these Arabs were beginning to get very excited, +and that they contemplated an attack on a post under Captain Shewell, +at Awabil. A force was immediately got together, and placed under the +command of Colonel English. He marched on September 13th, only to +find, however, on arrival that Shewell had beaten off the attack by +himself, with a loss of one man killed and five wounded. Colonel +English then returned to Dthala, which place he reached on September +19th.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page213" name="page213"></a>(p. 213)</span> On October 5th the same officer took command of another +column, to punish the Dthanbari tribe and destroy their chief town, +Naklain. The column consisted of Royal Dublin Fusiliers, 4 companies; +6th Mountain Battery, Royal Artillery, 1 section; Camel Battery, 2 +guns; Aden Troop, 17 sowars; Bombay Grenadiers, 1 double company; 23rd +Bombay Rifles, 23 men.</p> + +<a id="img065" name="img065"></a> +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/img065.jpg" width="600" height="447" alt="" title=""> +<p class="smcap">A Frontier Tower. Abdali Country.</p> +</div> + +<p>Colonel English arrived before Naklain at 8.25 a.m. on October 7th, +after pushing back the enemy, who disputed the passage of a difficult +gorge for some time. He then proceeded to destroy the place, and at +11.15 a.m. started on his return march. The enemy clung to his flanks, +and kept up a long-range fire until 2.30 p.m., when he repassed the +gorge mentioned above. His casualties consisted of one killed (No. +5710 Private Andrew Keegan), and six wounded, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page214" name="page214"></a>(p. 214)</span> while there +were in addition six cases of sunstroke. The column did not return to +Dthala, but marched straight to Aden, where it arrived on October +14th.</p> + +<p>The remainder of the battalion left Dthala on October 10th, reaching +Aden on the 16th, where, on October 24th, it embarked on the transport +<span class="italic">Soudan</span> for home.</p> + +<p>For his services in the Aden Hinterland, Lieutenant-Colonel English +was awarded the D.S.O. It was never better earned. But no medal was +issued to the regiment, in spite of the fact that for ten months they +had been living under active service conditions, which necessitated +unceasing vigilance by day and night. It is true they had not suffered +many casualties, or seen much fighting, but as this was undoubtedly +due to the excellent manner in which the operations were conducted, +and to the precautions taken, it seemed a little hard that the coveted +distinction of a medal should be withheld, although the little +campaign is ranked in war services as active service.</p> + +<p>However, the experience and the knowledge of the country gained will +doubtless prove beneficial to all concerned, who still look back upon +Dthala with affection, and speak of it with regret. On the night after +Colonel English had dealt with the Dthanbari tribe, Major Carington +Smith, who was in command of a small detachment, after posting his +outposts was just thinking of retiring when he heard the sentries +challenge; this was immediately followed by a rush of horsemen, headed +by a most gorgeously dressed officer. Reining up almost at Smith's +feet he informed him that his master, a neighbouring potentate, +friendly to the English, had sent him and his men to assist in the +repulse of the bloodthirsty Dthanbari tribe, who might be expected to +attempt to rush the camp that night. Although not anticipating +anything of the kind, Major Smith was far too polite to say so, and +after thanking his allies, suggested that they should take up a line +of cossack posts in front of his outpost <span class="pagenum"><a id="page215" name="page215"></a>(p. 215)</span> line. To this they +consented, but before leaving declared their earnest conviction that +an assault would be delivered. Shortly after midnight Smith was +awakened by a fiendish din. Grasping his sword with one hand and his +pistol with the other, he rushed out to meet the crisis. From every +direction his allies came galloping in as fast as their horses could +lay legs to the ground, while the detachment sprang to arms in a +second, fully expecting to be attacked by every Arab in the +Hinterland. Reining up his horse as before, the leader of the cavalry +once more saluted Smith, and made the following report: 'Sah, I have +honour to salute you, and inform your Honour that Dthanbari tribe have +not yet arrived.'</p> + +<p>The following description of the action at Naklain appeared in the +home press:—</p> + +<p class="p2 center smcap">'An Arab Drive.'</p> + +<p class="center smcap">'Hot Fighting in the Aden Hinterland.</p> + +<p>'The expedition, under Brevet-Lieutenant-Colonel English, was sent out +to destroy the chief village and crops of the tribe Naklain, as +punishment for the shooting of Government camels and the looting of +his Majesty's mails. The tribe is very warlike, and their country had +never hitherto been penetrated.</p> + +<p>'After leaving As Suk camp, the British column began to wind among the +mountains, which rise very abruptly from the plain, and, as they met +with no opposition for a considerable time, they began to think there +would be no resistance. Suddenly, without warning of any sort, a +ragged volley was opened on the advance-guard, apparently from some +very broken ground, fifty to a hundred yards in front.</p> + +<p>'This seemed to be a prearranged signal, for from the hills on both +flanks the firing was taken up, the enemy constantly changing their +positions after firing. The guns <span class="pagenum"><a id="page216" name="page216"></a>(p. 216)</span> were brought into action +almost at once, and the infantry, extending at the double, soon +covered a wide front and swept along the hills parallel to the +advance.</p> + +<p class="p2 center smcap">'Moving Forward.</p> + +<p>'After the surrounding hills had been shelled, the whole column moved +forward, the infantry pushing the enemy back step by step until the +village of Naklain was reached. While parties of men were told off to +keep down the enemy's fire from points of vantage, others proceeded to +blow up the houses with gun-cotton, and the more inaccessible houses +were shelled.</p> + +<p>'The crops were then destroyed by the men with their bayonets and +swords. There was a fierce fire while this was proceeding, the enemy +evidently not having expected such a reprisal. The work having been +completed, the arduous retirement commenced, the enemy following the +force up step by step the whole way back, at one time coming to +comparatively close quarters and necessitating a most careful +management of the rearguard.</p> + +<p>'As Suk was reached after a trying march of twenty miles, the troops +being under fire most of the time, with scarcely any water and exposed +to a burning sun. The British casualties were seven men of the Dublin +Fusiliers wounded (one since dead) and one native and one gunner +slightly wounded.'<a href="#toc"><span class="small">[Back to Contents]</span></a></p> + +<a id="img066" name="img066"></a> +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/img066.jpg" width="600" height="397" alt="" title=""> +<p class="smaller">2nd Lieut. H. St. G. S. Scott; 2nd Lieut. B. Maclear; +2nd Lieut. E. St. G. Smith; 2nd Lieut. J. P. Tredennick.</p> + +<p class="smaller">Bt.-Major E. Fetherstonhaugh; Lieut. A. H. D. Britton; Lieut. and +Qr.-mr. Burke; Major S. G. Bird, D.S.O.; Lieut. Haskard; Lieut. +Wheeler; 2nd Lieut. R. F. B. Knox; 2nd Lieut. J. P. B. Robinson; 2nd +Lieut. A. W. Newton.</p> + +<p class="smaller">Lieut. C. Garvice, D.S.O.; Capt. G. N. Cory, D.S.O.; Capt. M. Lowndes; +Lieut.-Col. H. T. Hicks, C.B.; Lieut. L. F. Renny; Capt. H. W. +Higginson; 2nd Lieut. E. F. E. Seymour; Lieut. A. de B. W. W. Bradford +(absent).</p> + +<p class="smcap">Officers of the 2nd Battalion Royal Dublin Fusiliers who embarked for +Aden.</p> +</div> + +<p class="chapter"><span class="pagenum"><a id="page217" name="page217"></a>(p. 217)</span> CHAPTER II.<br> + +THE RETURN HOME AND RECEPTION.</p> + +<p class="quotechapter"> + 'I must to England.<br> + I pray you give me leave.'<br> +<span class="left50 italic">Hamlet.</span></p> + +<p>Early in October, 1903, the 2nd Battalion at length heard the good +news that the date of their departure from Aden had been definitely +fixed, and on the 23rd of the month it sailed in the s.s. <span class="italic">Soudan</span>, +arriving at Queenstown late in the evening of November 9th. The tour +of foreign service had lasted for twenty years all but two months, and +only one man in the whole battalion had seen it through from start to +finish without coming home, the present quartermaster, Lieutenant J. +Burke.</p> + +<p>The 2nd Battalion Royal Dublin Fusiliers left England for Gibraltar on +January 9th, 1884, and in February, 1885, proceeded to Egypt, where it +was quartered first at Ramleh, and later on at Cairo. Early in 1886 +the battalion went to India, headquarters being stationed successively +at Poona, Nasirabad, Karachi, Quetta, and Bombay.</p> + +<p>In May, 1897, it was suddenly ordered to South Africa, and quartered +at Maritzburg, as already stated in the opening chapter.</p> + +<p>The details were at Buttevant, County Cork, and thither the battalion +proceeded on their arrival in Ireland.</p> + +<p>Just two days prior to the arrival home of the 2nd Battalion the +regiment had been honoured by having appointed as its Colonel-in-Chief +Field-Marshal H.R.H. A. W. S. A. Duke of Connaught and Strathearn, +K.G., K.P., K.T., G.C.B., G.C.M.G., G.C.I.E., G.C.V.O.</p> + +<p>On November 13th, 1903, the battalion proceeded to Dublin <span class="pagenum"><a id="page218" name="page218"></a>(p. 218)</span> to +attend a public reception and also to receive their medals at the +hands of H.R.H. the Duke of Connaught. The following is the account of +the proceedings as published in the <span class="italic">Irish Times</span> of November 14th, +1903, to whom the thanks of the regiment are due for their kindness in +permitting its reproduction:—</p> + +<p class="p2 center">(<span class="italic">Extract from 'Irish Times,' Saturday, November 14th, 1903.</span>)</p> + +<p class="center smcap">Home-coming of the Royal Dublin Fusiliers.</p> + +<p>The officers, non-commissioned officers, and men of the 2nd Battalion +of the Royal Dublin Fusiliers may well feel proud of the reception +accorded them on their return to their native land and city after a +long and arduous service under the British flag in foreign lands. +There was quite a contest for places on the gallery in the great +Central Hall of the Royal Dublin Society's buildings at Ballsbridge to +see the heroes of a regiment which had gained undying laurels in +Burmah, India, and South Africa. Exceptional arrangements had been +made for the entertainment of the battalion at Ballsbridge, and the +reception committee, which had for its chairman the Earl of Meath, +must be congratulated on the manner in which they carried out the +entertainment and provided for the enjoyment of such a large number of +guests. The arrangement of the hall was admirable in every respect. At +the further end a slightly-raised daïs was placed and profusely +decorated with palms and evergreens, and immediately behind the chair +subsequently occupied by H.R.H. the Duke of Connaught was the +regimental emblem introducing the figures of an elephant and a tiger; +the former bringing to mind the doughty deeds of the Dublin Fusiliers +in Burmah and the latter their equally splendid record on the historic +field of Plassey. At the back was the regimental motto, <span class="italic">Spectamur +Agendo</span>, and the roof and gallery railings were handsomely draped with +red, green, and blue muslin, while <span class="pagenum"><a id="page219" name="page219"></a>(p. 219)</span> the names of the various +engagements in which the men took part were prominently displayed. On +the right-hand side of the hall four long rows of tables were placed, +handsomely prepared for the dinner, while the centre of the building +facing the daïs was kept clear for the men to be drawn up in proper +formation to receive H.R.H. the Duke of Connaught. The spacious +galleries reserved for ticket-holders were crowded long before the +hour fixed for the ceremony, 12.30 o'clock. Shortly before 10 o'clock +a large number of reservists of the battalion, about 250, and some +reservists from other battalions of the regiment assembled at the +Marshalsea Barracks, and under the command of Captain Perreau, Royal +Dublin Fusiliers, Adjutant 5th Battalion, and Major Baker, D.S.O., +marched viâ Thomas Street, Cork Hill, Dame Street, Nassau Street, +Merrion Square North, Lower Mount Street, and <span class="pagenum"><a id="page220" name="page220"></a>(p. 220)</span> Northumberland +Road to Ballsbridge. The men were dressed in civilian clothes, but +wore their medals and other decorations, and many showed by their +appearance that they, too, had played no insignificant part in the +recent campaign. They were accompanied by the massed bands of the 3rd, +4th, and 5th Battalions Royal Dublin Fusiliers. The 2nd Battalion of +the regiment arrived from Buttevant by train at the Ballsbridge siding +at 11.30 a.m., and marched across the roadway into the Royal Dublin +Society's premises. A great crowd of people watched the men +detraining, and several hearty rounds of cheering greeted their +appearance. The men looked in splendid form as they defiled into the +main hall and took up the positions allotted to them. It was at first +stated that the strength comprised 25 officers, 2 warrant officers, 8 +staff sergeants, 54 sergeants, and 528 rank and file; but the figures +given yesterday were 18 officers and 523 rank and file. Be the numbers +as they may, the appearance of the men thoroughly maintained the +regimental nickname of 'The Old Toughs.' Hardy, wiry warriors they +looked—thoroughly capable of accomplishing the daring and courageous +deeds which have covered the Dublin Fusiliers with special glory. It +is worthy of note that the majority of the non-commissioned officers +served through the South African campaign from the Battle of Dundee, +and that Lieutenant and Quartermaster Burke is the only remaining one +who left England with the battalion nineteen years ago. The officers +and men of the battalion were dressed in general service (khaki) +uniform, and carried their rifles and bayonets. They also wore Indian +helmets with puggarees, while the mounted company were attired in the +clothing suited to this, particular branch of the Service. They were +under the command of Colonel Tempest Hicks, C.B., Colonel English, and +Major Fetherstonhaugh, and when they marched into the hall and took up +position on either side, in line of half-battalions, they were greeted +with loud cheering, and when the order <span class="pagenum"><a id="page221" name="page221"></a>(p. 221)</span> 'stand at ease' was +made a number of reservists and other friends rushed forward to +exchange greetings with former acquaintances. There was nearly a +half-hour's wait for the arrival of the Duke of Connaught, and in the +interval the bands of the Fusiliers and Warwickshire Regiment played +some selections. At a quarter-past twelve precisely, H.R.H. the +Commander of the Forces in Ireland arrived in an open carriage, +accompanied by H.R.H. the Duchess of Connaught and Princesses Margaret +and Patricia of Connaught, and attended by the following staff: +Major-General Sir William Knox, Major-General Sir John Maxwell, +Colonel Hammersley, Colonel Davidson, Colonel Dickinson, Colonel +Congreve, V.C., and Major Murray, A.D.C.</p> + +<a id="img067" name="img067"></a> +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/img067.jpg" width="600" height="444" alt="" title=""> +<p class="smcap">Homeward bound at last after twenty Years' Foreign +Service.</p> +</div> + +<p>The Duke, who wore the uniform of a Field-Marshal, was received by the +following members of the reception committee: Major Domville, D.L. +(vice-chairman), Mr. Justice Ross, Sir Wm. Thompson, Sir Charles +Cameron, C.B., Major Davidson Houston, Colonel Finlay, Colonel +Davidson, Major-General Sir Gerald Morton, K.C.B., Colonel Paterson, +Colonel G. T. Plunkett, C.B., Captain Lewis Riall, D.L., Colonel +Vernon, D.L., and Alderman Harris.</p> + +<p>Major-General Vetch, commanding the Dublin District, was accompanied +by Major Lowndes, A.D.C., Major Gilles (Brigade-Major), and Captain +Fox Strangways (Garrison Adjutant). A guard of honour of the Royal +Irish Rifles was drawn up outside the Show Buildings, and the band of +the regiment played the National Anthem when the Duke and Duchess of +Connaught drove up.</p> + +<p>Their Royal Highnesses having taken seats on the daïs, the Duke of +Connaught, who spoke in a tone which was easily heard in all parts of +the building, said, 'Colonel Hicks, officers and non-commissioned +officers, and men of the 2nd Battalion Royal Dublin Fusiliers, allow +me to welcome you most warmly home again to old Ireland after your +very arduous four years' service. I am sure I am only <span class="pagenum"><a id="page222" name="page222"></a>(p. 222)</span> the +mouthpiece, not only of the General Officer Commanding this Army +Corps, but also of every loyal Irishman, when I assure you how warm +and how hearty is the greeting that is given you on your return to +your native country, and especially in this capital of Ireland. You +are an old and distinguished regiment; raised originally for service +in India as the Royal Madras and Royal Bombay Fusiliers. During the +time that you bore this name and the numbers 102 and 103, you took a +very honourable part in all those great battles that assured us the +conquest of India. Now, since the year 1881, you have become closely +associated not only with Ireland, but with its capital. Your first +service since you became the Royal Dublin Fusiliers was in South +Africa, and through the arduous services in that country you, men, +whom I have now the honour of addressing, nobly maintained the +traditions of those fine soldiers who went before you. When you were +sent from India amongst the first reinforcements of the troops in +South Africa in 1897—soon afterwards the war broke out—you took a +leading part in the Battle of Talana. You then went back to Ladysmith, +and after falling back across the Tugela, you were attached to the +army of Sir Redvers Buller, in the Irish Brigade under General Hart. +During all those weary months on the Tugela, you took a leading part +in every action that took place, and you distinguished yourselves so +much at Pieter's Hill that when the relief force of Ladysmith marched +in, the general officer commanding gave you the post of honour, and +you led the troops that marched into Ladysmith. (Cheers.) Men of the +Royal Dublin Fusiliers, this occasion is one of especial pleasure and +satisfaction to myself, as His Majesty has done me the great honour of +appointing me your Colonel-in-Chief—(cheers)—and I hope that in this +you will recognise not only His Majesty's high appreciation of the +distinguished services you have rendered to his throne and his empire, +but also that you will see in it his wish that <span class="pagenum"><a id="page223" name="page223"></a>(p. 223)</span> you will have +some special mark of distinction when he has made me, his only +brother, Colonel-in-Chief of the regiment. I hope I shall long have +the honour to be your Colonel-in-Chief, and to have a connection with +a regiment of which every Irishman feels so proud.' (Cheers.)</p> + +<p>Colonel G. T. Plunkett, C.B., read the following letter, received from +the Earl of Meath, H.M.L. for the County and City of Dublin:—</p> + +<p class="p2 right italic">'Ottershaw, Chertsey.</p> + +<p><span class="smcap">'My dear Plunkett</span>,—Owing to absence from Ireland, I shall be unable +to be present in person with you on the 13th, when you and the +Reception Committee entertain the 2nd Battalion Royal Dublin Fusiliers +on their return home from foreign service, but I shall be with you in +spirit, and I hope you will let the officers and men know how sorry I +am that I cannot personally welcome them on their return to Ireland, +and to Dublin, after so many years spent abroad in the service of +their Sovereign.</p> + +<p>'The fame which the regiment has acquired by daring deeds of valour +performed during the late war has travelled far beyond the shores of +Ireland. Military men the world over, and all who have studied the +South African War, have heard of the famous deeds of the Dublin +Fusiliers. The citizens of the Metropolitan county and City are proud +of the men who, mindful of their origin, have known how to make the +name of Dublin to be honoured in all lands. Both officers and men have +done their duty to King and country, and we, their Irish brothers, +accord them a hearty welcome on their return to the dear land of their +birth.</p> + +<p><span class="left30">'Believe me, yours sincerely,</span><br> +<span class="left50 smcap">'Meath,</span><br> +<span class="left40 italic">'H.M.L. for County and City of Dublin.'</span></p> + +<p>The Duke of Connaught then said: 'I have been particularly requested +by His Excellency the Lord Lieutenant <span class="pagenum"><a id="page224" name="page224"></a>(p. 224)</span> of Ireland to assure +you of his warm welcome. He is away in England at present, but he has +sent his military secretary and senior A.D.C. to represent him, and to +give you his warmest wishes.' (Applause.)</p> + +<p>His Royal Highness then distributed the medals and other distinctions +to the officers and rank-and-file of the battalion who were entitled +to them. The following officers were decorated, the Duke cordially +shaking hands with each recipient:—Colonel Hicks, C.B., Colonel +English, Major Fetherstonhaugh, Major Carington Smith, Captain H. W. +Higginson, Captain Cory, D.S.O., Captain Garvice, D.S.O., Lieutenants +Grimshaw, D.S.O., Haskard, Britton, Wheeler, St. George Smith, Knox, +Tredennick, Seymour, Robinson, and Maclear, and Lieutenant and +Quartermaster J. Burke and Sergeant-Major Sheridan. His Royal Highness +pinned distinguished-conduct medals on the breasts of Lieutenant and +Quartermaster J. Burke, Corporal Connell, and Privates C. N. Wallace, +M. Farrelly, and M. Kavanagh, each recipient being loudly cheered.</p> + +<p>The following officers who had served with the battalion during the +war, but who had previously come home through wounds or sickness, +availed themselves of the opportunity to have their medals presented +to them by the Duke:—Captain Downing, Captain Dibley, Lieutenants +Renny, Supple, Newton, Weldon, Molony, Armstrong, and Cooper. The +distribution of the medals occupied over half an hour.</p> + +<p>When this important portion of the programme had been completed, the +order to 'stack arms' was given, and the men filed into their seats at +the four long rows of tables which had been admirably prepared for the +dinner by the caterers, Messrs. Mills & Co., of Merrion Row. Messrs. +Mills & Co. had a picked staff of forty-two persons to carve the +various dishes and wait at table. Dinner consisted of several courses, +with selected fruit; while in addition to liberal supplies of ale, +stout, and mineral waters, 300 bottles <span class="pagenum"><a id="page225" name="page225"></a>(p. 225)</span> of champagne were +placed before the honoured guests. This last-mentioned luxury was the +generous gift of Messrs. Perrier-Jouet & Co., of Epernay, the famous +wine shippers, who kindly and thoughtfully presented this supply of +their extra-quality wine through their Irish representatives, Messrs. +James McCullagh, Son & Co., 34 Lower Abbey Street. When the guests +were seated, H.R.H. the Duke of Connaught, the Duchess of Connaught, +and the Princesses Margaret and Patricia of Connaught, with the +Reception Committee, a number of ladies, and a resplendent military +<span class="italic">entourage</span>, walked slowly down between the rows of tables, stopping +to speak a few gracious words to the non-commissioned officers and men +who had made themselves conspicuous even amongst their comrades for +valorous deeds and unflinching devotion to duty. Many of the +reservists who sat beside former 'chums' at table, and on whose less +warlike garb, the ordinary civilian clothes, medals and clasps shone +out in high relief, also received kindly congratulations from the +Commander-in-Chief in Ireland. Meanwhile the string band of the 21st +Lancers, who occupied a good position on the gallery, played a +beautiful selection of airs, principally Irish, not the least being +'The Wearin' of the Green.' The Royal party on walking down the centre +of the hall was enthusiastically cheered, and the Duchess and her +daughters left the building at about half-past one.</p> + +<p>The Duke remained for lunch with his staff and the officers of the +battalion. The health of His Majesty the King was drunk amidst much +enthusiasm. After dinner, cigars and cigarettes and tobacco were +liberally distributed, officers of the regiment performing most of +this agreeable duty, and each man was presented with a nice briar pipe +before leaving, the gift of Messrs. Lalor & Co., of Nassau Street.</p> + +<p>In the interval between dinner and leaving the premises <span class="pagenum"><a id="page226" name="page226"></a>(p. 226)</span> at +Ballsbridge, many friends and relatives of the members of the +battalion were afforded an opportunity for a pleasant chat, and most +of these accompanied the men in their subsequent march through the +city. One figure attracted much attention during the afternoon—a +sturdy soldier who formerly belonged to the Royal Dublins, and who +appeared in the quaint, and, in this country, unusual uniform of a +West African regiment. It would be certainly less than unwarranted to +refer to the general appearance and behaviour of the men. Clean, +smart, soldierly fellows, they all appeared to be impressed with the +one idea—that they belonged to a crack corps with unrivalled +traditions to maintain.</p> + +<p>The departure from Ballsbridge occasioned unbounded enthusiasm on the +part of thousands of eager spectators, who, unaware of the exact time +at which the entertainment would finish, had patiently waited for a +couple of hours to catch a glimpse of the 'Old Toughs.' The main +thoroughfare from the Show-grounds to Pembroke Road was lined by +detachments of the Warwickshire, East Lancashire (with band), and +Middlesex Regiments, while a guard of honour of the Royal Irish Rifles +(with their band) was stationed opposite the main entrance. About 3.15 +o'clock H.R.H. the Duke of Connaught, preceded by two mounted +policemen and an escort of the 21st Lancers, drove out, and passed +over the route to be traversed immediately afterwards by the +Fusiliers. The Field-Marshal was loudly cheered as he proceeded to the +Royal Hospital, and repeatedly returned the cordial salutations of the +large crowds who were assembled at different points. The appearance of +the fêted warriors was the signal for an astonishing ovation at +Ballsbridge.</p> + +<p>The scene was a striking one. A splendid body of the 21st Lancers, +numbering fifty, occupied first place in the procession, and these +were followed by four or five bands <span class="pagenum"><a id="page227" name="page227"></a>(p. 227)</span> and the heroes of the +day. Another detachment of fifty Lancers brought up the rear, and a +number of men of the same dashing cavalry regiment marched on either +side of the advancing column. Many relatives and friends of the +Fusiliers had now an opportunity to exchange greetings, and strict +army discipline was at an end. There was nothing reprehensible, +however, and the progress to Kingsbridge was of the most orderly and +praiseworthy description.</p> + +<p>The route followed was the main road from Ballsbridge—Pembroke Road, +Upper Baggot Street, Lower Baggot Street, Merrion Row, Stephen's +Green, North Grafton Street, College Green, Dame Street, Parliament +Street, and the south lines of quays to Kingsbridge. At different +points, like Baggot Street Bridge, Stephen's Green, and Grafton +Street, the reception was of a most cordial nature, while an immense +crowd in College Green raised deafening cheers as the sturdy warriors +marched past. Enthusiasm reached its height when the tattered colours +of the battalion, borne by two stalwart young ensigns, came into view. +The officers and men appeared delighted with the cordial reception +extended to them on all sides. At Grattan Bridge the band of the +Seaforth Highlanders, which had already delighted a large concourse of +people with some choice selections, struck up a lively air as Dublin's +guests moved past, while a splendid send-off characterised the +entrainment of the battalion at Kingsbridge for Buttevant, co. Cork.</p> + +<p>The Railway Company made excellent arrangements for the men, who, +considering their long day and its happy experiences, went through the +ordeal in first-class style. After all, one could scarcely expect less +from soldiers who carry six or seven, or even nine clasps, on their +medal ribbons.</p> + +<p>It is right to mention that a number of members of the Army Veterans +Association, decorated with their medals and other distinctions, +visited Ballsbridge, and cordially <span class="pagenum"><a id="page228" name="page228"></a>(p. 228)</span> congratulated the +Fusiliers on their return from foreign service.</p> + +<p>On reaching Buttevant, the men will be supplied with new clothing and +granted a general furlough.</p> + +<hr> + +<p>Shortly after the reception the battalion was once again supplied with +their home service full-dress head-gear—the busby, and it was with +much gratification that the men wore their new busby hackle for the +first time. This distinction was granted in 1902, when by Army Order +57 it was directed that the Royal Dublin Fusiliers should wear a blue +and green hackle in their busbies: that for the officers to be blue +and green, eight inches long, and that for the non-commissioned +officers and men a similar but shorter one, in recognition of their +services during the war in South Africa. In explanation of the colours +of the hackle it may be stated that blue is the distinguishing colour +of the 1st Battalion ('Blue Caps'), and green that of the 2nd +Battalion ('Old Toughs').</p> + +<p>On November 27th, 1903, the regiment was honoured by having appointed +as its Colonel Major-General W. F. Vetch, C.V.O., commanding Dublin +Garrison, <span class="italic">vice</span> Lieut.-General Sir John Blick Spurgin, K.C.B., +G.C.S.I., deceased.</p> + +<p>General Vetch joined the 102nd Foot on March 8th, 1864, was promoted +Lieutenant, July 1st, 1869; Captain, May 22nd, 1875; Major, June 18th, +1881; Lieut.-Colonel, June 7th, 1884; Colonel, June 7th, 1888; and +Major-General, April 1st, 1900.</p> + +<p>After a quiet and uneventful stay at Buttevant for nearly three years +the battalion proceeded to Fermoy on September 14th, 1906, and took up +quarters in the New Barracks at that station.<a href="#toc"><span class="small">[Back to Contents]</span></a></p> + +<p class="chapter"><span class="pagenum"><a id="page229" name="page229"></a>(p. 229)</span> CHAPTER III.<br> + +THE MEMORIAL ARCH.</p> + +<p class="quotechapter"> + 'Even so great men great losses should endure.'<br> +<span class="left50 italic">Julius Cæsar.</span></p> + +<p>On August 19th, 1907, the memorial arch to the officers and men who +fell in South Africa was opened by H.R.H. the Duke of Connaught, +Colonel-in-Chief the Royal Dublin Fusiliers. The 2nd Battalion was +marching from Kilworth Camp to Ballyvonaire Camp on that day, but the +authorities very kindly did everything in their power to make the +ceremony a success, and Colonel English, Major Bromilow, and every one +of any importance who had taken part in the war proceeded to Dublin by +special train on the morning of the 19th, while the Depôt and Militia +officers also assembled in good force.</p> + +<p>The officers and men of the regiment were very sensible of the honour +shown to them by H.R.H. the Duke of Connaught in personally opening +the arch, and so identifying himself with it and them, while every +Dublin Fusilier present felt an added pride in himself and his uniform +as he saw it worn by His Royal Highness the brother of His Majesty the +King.</p> + +<p>The following account of the ceremony is taken from the Dublin <span class="italic">Daily +Express</span>, to whose proprietors our thanks are due for permission to +reproduce it:—</p> + +<p class="p2 center smcap">'Royal Dublin Fusiliers' Memorial in Stephen's Green<br> + inaugurated by the Duke of Connaught.<br> + Luncheon at Shelbourne Hotel.</p> + +<p>'To-day the Royal Dublin Fusiliers' Memorial to the officers and men +of the regiment who fell in South Africa was <span class="pagenum"><a id="page230" name="page230"></a>(p. 230)</span> formally +inaugurated by the Duke of Connaught, Inspector-General of the British +Army. His Royal Highness arrived at Amiens Street terminus by the +early morning train from Belfast, and was received by the Viceroy's +Military Secretary. The Duke of Connaught at once drove to the +Shelbourne Hotel, where he was received by the following members of +the Memorial Committee:—The Earl of Meath, President; the Earl of +Drogheda, Mr. Justice Ross, Colonel Vernon, Sir Frederick Shaw, Bart., +D.S.O., Sir Maurice Dockrell, Mr. Richard Dowse, Colonel Gore-Lindsay, +Colonel Finlay, Sir Thomas Drew, R.H.A., Sir Charles Cameron, C.B., +&c.</p> + +<p>'Lunch was served immediately afterwards, and was presided over by the +Earl of Meath, K.P., who was supported on his right by H.R.H. the Duke +of Connaught, K.P., the Earl of Drogheda, Major-General Vetch, C.V.O., +and Mr. Justice Ross, P.C.; and on his left by Lord Grenfell, G.C.B., +Commander-in-Chief of the Forces in Ireland; Viscount Iveagh, K.P.; +Major-General Sir Herbert Plumer, K.C.B.; Lieut.-Colonel Sir F. Shaw, +D.S.O., 5th Royal Dublin Fusiliers. There were also present:—</p> + +<p>'Sir G. Holmes, K.C.V.O.; Col. Vernon, D.L.; Brig.-Gen. Hammersley, +Col. Lindsay, D.L.; Brig.-Gen. Monro, C.B.; Col. R. St. L. Moore, +C.B.; Lieut.-Col. Hackett, 4th R.D.F.; Sir Daniel Hegarty, Captain +Seymour, A.D.C.; Sir T. Myles, Major D. C. Courtney, Alderman Cotton, +D.L.; Mr. Gerald M'Guinness, Col. Doyly Battley, Capt. Cameron, Dr. +Wheeler, Mr. G. S. Dockrell, Capt. Halahan, Col. Chapman, 1st R.D.F.; +Sir Horace Plunkett, P.C.; Col. Finlay, Sir John Arnott, Brig.-Gen. +Cooper, C.B.; Mr. G. A. Stevenson, M.O.; Col. Hutcheson Poe, D.L.; Mr. +P. Hanson, Sir John Moore, Major Carington Smith, Major Domville, +D.L.; Col. Lyster Smythe, D.L., A.D.C.; Major Skeet, Capt. Garvice, +Capt. Thompson, Mr. H. M. Dockrell, Mr. Wm. Graham, Mr. John Laverty, +Col. F. P. English, D.S.O., 2nd R.D.F.; Mr. R. Dowse, B.L.; Major-Gen. +Sir John Maxwell, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page231" name="page231"></a>(p. 231)</span> K.C.B.; T. A. O'Farrell, J.P.; Surg.-Gen. +Edge, C.B.; Col. the Hon. E. Lawless, Col. O'Neill, 3rd R.D.F.; Sir W. +Watson, D.L.; Col. Colville Frankland, Major Lowndes, Mr. James F. +Darcy, D.L.; Mr. J. H. Pentland, R.H.A.; Mr. Key, A.D.C.; Mr. J. A. +Pigott, Mr. Robert Mitchell, Mr. R. H. A. M'Comas, Mr. Major Gorman, +Mr. George Healy, Mr. R. Tyson, Mr. R. A. Falconer, Major-Gen. +Bunbury, C.B.; Sir Maurice Dockrell, Brig.-Gen. Mills, C.B.; Sir John +Ross of Bladensburg, K.C.B.; Sir T. Drew, R.H.A.; Sir G. Moyers, D.L.; +the Hon. M. Ponsonby, A.D.C.; Sir William Thomson, Sir C. Cameron, +C.B.; Sir L. Ormsby, Col. D. Browne, Mr. R. H. Jephson, Major Knight, +Mr. A. E. Kennedy, Mr. W. A. Shea, Mr. Milward Jones, Mr. F. J. Usher, +Mr. J. H. Reid, Mr. Henry L. Barnardo, Mr. R. P. Jephson.</p> + +<p>'After lunch, which was admirably served,</p> + +<p>'The Earl of Meath arose, amidst applause, and said:—"The toast list +to-day is short, and contains but one toast, that of The King +(applause). His Majesty King Edward occupies a position amongst rulers +which is absolutely unique. He not only rules over twelve million +square miles, one-sixth of the earth's surface, and governs four +hundred millions of subjects of all races, colours, creeds, and +conditions of civilisation, from the most advanced to the most +backward, but he is a Monarch whose personal qualities are of so +distinguished an order that he has come to be regarded as a statesman +of the first rank (applause). The world watches His Majesty's +movements with breathless interest. Under his masterful touch +international difficulties which seem insuperable are solved, +political sores are healed. His presence seems to breathe the spirit +of peace and of goodwill, so that when he undertakes a journey it +needs no strong imagination to picture to oneself the Angel of Peace +hovering over his footsteps with healing in her wings (applause). King +Edward is no stranger to Ireland; certainly not to Dublin <span class="pagenum"><a id="page232" name="page232"></a>(p. 232)</span> +(renewed applause). We knew him and loved him as Prince of Wales, and +our affection for him has only increased since he became King, and +since we recognised that Ireland and the Irish are as dear to him as +he is to us (applause). We are an open-hearted race, and on each +occasion that he has visited these shores, his kindly, sympathetic, +and genial nature has captivated our hearts. He is just such a monarch +as we love (applause). May he be long spared to reign over us and may +he often grace this island with his genial and captivating presence." +(Loud applause.)</p> + +<p>'The toast was duly honoured, and the festive proceedings terminated.</p> + +<p class="center smcap p2">'Inauguration Ceremony by the Duke of Connaught. + Brilliant Function.</p> + +<p>'Brilliant and strikingly picturesque was the ceremony of unveiling +the Royal Dublin Fusiliers' war memorial in St. Stephen's Green, which +took place at four o'clock this afternoon. The weather was, +fortunately, bright, although inclined to be showery, and no heavy +rain fell at any stage to mar the success of the interesting +proceedings, which were attended by a very large and distinguished +gathering. Long before the ceremony commenced, a great crowd had +assembled in the Green and its vicinity.</p> + +<a id="img068" name="img068"></a> +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/img068.jpg" width="600" height="402" alt="" title=""> +<p class="smcap">The Memorial Arch, Dublin.</p> +<p class="smcap">Erected to the Memory of the Officers, N.C.O.'s. and Men of The Royal +Dublin Fusiliers.</p> +<p class="smcap">Opened by H.R.H. The Duke of Connaught, K.G., etc., Colonel-in-Chief<br> +The Royal Dublin Fusiliers, August 19th, 1907.</p> +</div> + +<p>'The military arrangements were of a most elaborate nature, and +thoroughly in keeping with the occasion. The troops of the Dublin +Garrison and representative detachments of the Line and Militia +battalions of the Royal Dublin Fusiliers were drawn up in the vicinity +of the Memorial Arch, and presented a very imposing appearance. There +was also a representative gathering of ex-soldiers who had served in +the Royal Dublin Fusiliers during the South African war and of members +of the Veterans' Club, who were accommodated in special places +reserved for them on the outside of the arch. After the troops had +been drawn up, the massed bands of the <span class="pagenum"><a id="page233" name="page233"></a>(p. 233)</span> 13th Infantry +Brigade played a number of pleasing selections whilst awaiting the +arrival of H.R.H. the Duke of Connaught.</p> + +<p>'The magnificent monument, which takes the form of a triumphal arch +spanning the north-west corner of St. Stephen's Green, was greatly +admired by the crowd. The noble archway is undoubtedly a most +beautiful and artistic ornament to the city. Twelve feet in width, it +springs from rusticated piers, each intersected by a pedestal and a +pair of pilasters supporting a Doric entablature. The frieze bears on +its four elevations the names in gold of the principal actions in the +South African War in which the regiment took part. The entablature is +surmounted by an Attic storey broken over the pilasters, and bearing +two inscription panels. The front keystone supports a bronze +cartouche, flanked by branches of bay bearing the arms of the +regiment. Within the arch appear the names of the gallant 212 who +perished in the war.</p> + +<p>'Loud cheers were raised when, at a quarter to four o'clock, +Field-Marshal H.R.H. the Duke of Connaught arrived on the scene and +was received with a Royal salute. He was accompanied by the Right Hon. +the Earl of Meath, President of the Memorial Committee; General the +Lord Grenfell, K.C.B.; Sir George Holmes, K.C.V.O.; the members of the +committee, and others who had attended the luncheon at the Shelbourne +Hotel. More cheers rose from the expectant gathering when, a few +minutes later, their Excellencies the Lord Lieutenant and the Countess +of Aberdeen arrived, and were received with a Royal salute. The flag +on the Memorial Arch was then half-masted, and the order was given for +the troops to "reverse arms" and "rest on their arms reversed." The +massed bands of the 13th Infantry Brigade played the "Dead March in +Saul," after which "Oft in the Stilly Night" was played by the band of +the 2nd Battalion Royal Dublin Fusiliers. The massed bugles of the +13th Infantry Brigade <span class="pagenum"><a id="page234" name="page234"></a>(p. 234)</span> then sounded "The Last Post," and the +flag on the Memorial Arch was mast-headed.</p> + +<p>'His Excellency the Lord Lieutenant extended a hearty welcome to the +Duke of Connaught, and congratulated the Memorial Committee, and every +one connected with the undertaking, upon the successful manner in +which it had been carried out.</p> + +<p>'The Earl of Meath, in requesting his Royal Highness the Duke of +Connaught to open the gates of the archway, said:—"Your Royal +Highness, we meet to-day for the purpose of honouring the memory of +the gallant men belonging to the Royal Dublin Fusiliers who sacrificed +their lives for King and country in the late South African war. By the +aid of subscriptions raised throughout the city and county of Dublin +and its neighbourhood, a large sum of money has been collected, and I +trust that your Royal Highness will agree with the general opinion +that a very handsome and satisfactory memorial has been raised, worthy +of the heroes whose fame it is destined to perpetuate. As the only +surviving brother of the gracious and mighty Sovereign whose uniform +these heroes wore when they died in the defence of their country's +interests, and as Colonel of the regiment in which they so faithfully +served, it is fit and proper that you, Sir, should have been invited +to perform the ceremony of opening the gates of the arch erected to +their memory. We who have been actively concerned with the erection of +the memorial most sincerely and gratefully thank your Royal Highness +for the honour you have done the regiment by thus personally +identifying yourself with the effort to keep fresh in the minds of +their fellow-countrymen the gallant deeds performed by those heroes +whom to-day we delight to honour. Irish gallantry and Irish fidelity +to King and country are well known. Wherever British arms have +penetrated, there the record of Irish valour need not be sought in +brass or stone, but in the soil itself, which has been made <span class="pagenum"><a id="page235" name="page235"></a>(p. 235)</span> +sacred to Erin's sons by the knowledge that it holds the mortal +remains of hearts which have been faithful to duty and to high ideals +of Irish valour even to the gates of death. But, sir, it may safely be +said that not in the Peninsula, nor in India—where this regiment +under its old title, in a hundred fights never knew the meaning of the +word defeat—did Irish soldiers ever cover themselves with greater +glory than did the Dublin Fusiliers in the battles of South +Africa—Talana, Colenso, Tugela Heights, Hart's Hill, Ladysmith, and +Laing's Nek. These glorious contests are commemorated on the memorial +arch which your Royal Highness will shortly declare open. Situated in +the centre of the Irish capital this memorial, recording the gallant +deeds of brave men, will be an ever-present reminder to coming +generations of the citizens of Dublin of the obligations of loyalty, +of faithfulness to duty and to honour which Ireland demands of all her +sons. I have the honour, sir, on behalf of the Dublin Fusilier +Memorial Committee, to ask your Royal Highness to declare the gates of +the archway to be open."</p> + +<p>'As his Royal Highness formally opened the gate, the massed bands +played the National Anthem.</p> + +<p>'Headed by H.R.H. the Duke of Connaught, the troops then marched +through the arch with bayonets fixed, the Royal Dublin Fusiliers +leading, and the other battalions following in regimental seniority, +headed by their bands. Loud cheers were raised as the soldiers passed +out into Grafton Street, and proceeded down that thoroughfare, which +was thickly lined on either side with spectators. At College Green the +troops separated, and marched off to their respective quarters.</p> + +<hr> + +<p>'The memorial which was inaugurated to-day forms a handsome addition +to the ornamental architecture of the city. It stands in one of the +most prominent and most beautiful parts of the city, and is a striking +adornment to the main entrance to Stephen's Green Park. The luxuriant +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page236" name="page236"></a>(p. 236)</span> trees and foliage of the park form a capital background to +the fine imposing arch, the design for which was suggested by Sir +Thomas Drew, composed entirely of Irish granite; the height of the +memorial is thirty-two feet six inches, and the breadth twenty-seven +feet three inches. The ornamental iron gates leading into the +principal carriage-drive of the park are cast out of metal taken from +guns captured by the British Army from enemies in the past, and +suspended over the keystone there will be an interesting trophy +consisting of the Crest and Arms of the regiment. In front a large +millstone will bear the inscription:—</p> + +<p class="center"> + FORTISSIMIS SUIS MILITIBUS<br> + HOC MONUMENTUM<br> + EBLANA DEDICAVIT. MCMVI.<a id="footnotetag21" name="footnotetag21"></a><a href="#footnote21" title="Go to footnote 21"><span class="small">[21]</span></a></p> + +<p>'In big letters in the frieze appear the names of the important +battles in which the battalions of the regiment took part, and on the +back of the arch the inscription:—"In memory of the officers, +non-commissioned officers, and men of the Royal Dublin Fusiliers who +died in the service of the country during the South African War, +1899-1902."</p> + +<p>'The Earl of Meath, H.M.L., President of the Memorial Committee, and +his colleagues, including the Earl of Drogheda, Sir Maurice Dockrell, +Sir Thomas Drew, Colonel Gore Lindsay, and Colonel Vernon, are to be +congratulated upon the successful result of their indefatigable +efforts. When the project was first mooted, it met with enthusiastic +support, and the necessary sum of 1800<span class="italic">l.</span> was quickly raised to cover +the cost of erection.</p> + +<p>'The plans were designed by Mr. Howard Pentland, of the Board of +Works, in consultation with Sir Thomas Drew, and Messrs. Laverty & +Son, Belfast, carried out the contract.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page237" name="page237"></a>(p. 237)</span> 'The losses of the 1st and 2nd Battalions of this famous +regiment in the Boer war totalled 31 officers and 655 non-commissioned +officers and men. The glorious and inspiring deeds performed by these +two battalions during the terrible engagements which led to the relief +of Ladysmith are still fresh in the memory of their proud countrymen. +Throughout the whole of the arduous campaign, indeed, the regiment +nobly upheld the finest tradition of the Irish soldier, and gained the +admiration and respect of friend and foe alike. The 5th Battalion +lost, in several minor engagements, two officers and ten men killed, +and eight wounded.'<a href="#toc"><span class="small">[Back to Contents]</span></a></p> + +<p class="chapter"><span class="pagenum"><a id="page238" name="page238"></a>(p. 238)</span> EPILOGUE.</p> + +<p class="p2">With the opening of the Memorial the curtain drops on the last scene +of the drama of the South African war, and the regiment's share in it. +To the large majority of those present the ceremony was probably +merely a spectacular entertainment, but its real significance was +borne fully home to us, even without the sight of more than one poor +woman, silently weeping from the re-opening of the never-healed wound +in her heart. For there is nothing truer than that a victory is only +less terrible than a defeat, and as the sad strains of the wailing +music fell on our ears, our thoughts flew back through the many happy +years of good-comradeship we had spent with the gallant friends whom +we have never ceased to mourn, and whose names will be treasured +memories as long as the regiment endures.</p> + +<p>But with the opening of the gates by our Colonel-in-Chief a fresh +chapter in the history of the regiment commenced, and all that remains +for us who share in the triumph of the present is to emulate in the +future the noble deeds of those who gave their lives in willing, +cheerful sacrifice for their sovereign, their country, and their +regiment.<a href="#toc"><span class="small">[Back to Contents]</span></a></p> + +<h2>THE END.</h2> + +<a id="img069" name="img069"></a> +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/img069.jpg" width="600" height="400" alt="" title=""> +<p class="smcap">The South African Memorial, Natal.</p> +</div> + +<a id="appendix" name="appendix"></a> +<h2><span class="pagenum"><a id="page239" name="page239"></a>(p. 239)</span> APPENDIX.</h2> + +<p class="section">I.<br> + +<span class="smcap">Roll of Death Casualties.</span><br> + +<span class="smcap">Killed in Action.</span></p> + +<table border="0" cellpadding="1" summary="Killed in action."> +<colgroup> + <col width="10%"> + <col width="15%"> + <col width="20%"> + <col width="15%"> + <col width="10%"> + <col width="25%"> +</colgroup> + +<tr class="bold smaller"> +<td>No.</td> +<td>Rank and Name.</td> +<td class="center">Place of Death.</td> +<td class="center">Cause.</td> +<td class="center">Date.</td> +<td>Remarks.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td> </td> +<td>Capt. Weldon</td> +<td class="center">Talana Hill</td> +<td class="center">Killed in action</td> +<td class="center">20/10/99</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5103</td> +<td>Pte. Cahill</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5794</td> +<td class="indent05">" Merrill</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5933</td> +<td class="indent05">" Crotty</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5918</td> +<td class="indent05">" Callaghan</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5795</td> +<td class="indent05">" Balfe</td> +<td class="center">Chieveley</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">15/11/99</td> +<td>Armoured Train</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5031</td> +<td class="indent05">" Birney</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="indent2">"</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5546</td> +<td class="indent05">" O'Shea</td> +<td class="center">Colenso</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">1/11/99</td> +<td>While on patrol, M.I.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td> </td> +<td>Lieut. Henry</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">15/12/99</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>3441</td> +<td>Sgt. Hayes</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4488</td> +<td>Pte. Smith</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5930</td> +<td class="indent05">" Sinnott</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5123</td> +<td class="indent05">" Broderick</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5319</td> +<td>L.-Cpl. Coyne</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5833</td> +<td>Pte. Dillon</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4795</td> +<td class="indent05">" Murphy</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4380</td> +<td class="indent05">" Doolan</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4299</td> +<td class="indent05">" McAlpine</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5044</td> +<td class="indent05">" Moore</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4560</td> +<td class="indent05">" Clifford</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4838</td> +<td class="indent05">" Flood</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>6287</td> +<td>L.-Cpl. Gibson</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>6134</td> +<td>Pte. Pearse</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>6044</td> +<td>L.-Cpl. Cathcart</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4462</td> +<td>Pte. Murphy</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>6165</td> +<td class="indent05">" Bennett</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>6297</td> +<td class="indent05">" Campion</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4679</td> +<td class="indent05">" Bowen</td> +<td class="center">Potgieter's Drift</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">8/2/00</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td> </td> +<td>Capt. Hensley</td> +<td class="center">Venter's Spruit</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">20/1/00</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5668</td> +<td>L.-Sgt. Taylor</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td> </td> +<td>Lt.-Col. Sitwell</td> +<td class="center">Hart's Hill</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">24/2/00</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td> </td> +<td>Capt. Maitland</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4261</td> +<td>Cpl. Seymour</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4871</td> +<td>Pte. White</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5359</td> +<td class="indent05">" Galbraith</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>6296</td> +<td class="indent05">" Allen</td> +<td class="center">Pieter's Hill</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">27/2/00</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>3303</td> +<td class="indent05">" Timmins</td> +<td class="center">Hart's Hill</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">24/2/00</td> +<td>Militia 4th R.D.F.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4012</td> +<td class="indent05">" Armstrong</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>Militia 5th R.D.F.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>2037</td> +<td class="indent05">" Whelan</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="indent2">"</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>2872</td> +<td class="indent05">" Wade</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="indent2">"</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5073</td> +<td class="indent05">" Kinsella</td> +<td class="center">Pieter's Hill</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">27/2/00</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5618</td> +<td class="indent05">" Purcell</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>1769</td> +<td>Sgt. Brennan</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>Section 'D'</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>1717</td> +<td>Pte. Shirwin</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>Militia 5th R.D.F.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>2327</td> +<td class="indent05">" Grimes</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="indent2">"</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5573</td> +<td class="indent05">" Tyrrell</td> +<td class="center">Near Talana</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">20/10/99</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td><span class="pagenum"><a id="page242" name="page242"></a>(p. 242)</span> + 5987</td> +<td>Pte. Mahoney</td> +<td class="center">Near Talana</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">20/10/99</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4864</td> +<td class="indent05">" Byrne</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5861</td> +<td class="indent05">" McGuire</td> +<td class="center">Chieveley</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">15/11/99</td> +<td>Armoured train</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>2112</td> +<td class="indent05">" Kelly</td> +<td class="center">Hart's Hill</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">23/2/00</td> +<td>Section 'D'</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>6171</td> +<td class="indent05">" Kavanagh</td> +<td class="center">Colenso</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">15/12/99</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>6011</td> +<td>Cpl. Sinnot</td> +<td class="center">Steelkoolspruit</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">25/10/01</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4621</td> +<td>Pte. Hyland</td> +<td class="center">Nr. Krugersdorp</td> +<td class="center">Murdered by Boers</td> +<td class="center">6/1/01</td> +<td>Found riddled with bullets</td> +</tr> +</table> +<p class="right"><a href="#toc"><span class="small">[Back to Contents]</span></a></p> + +<p class="section">II.<br> + +<span class="smcap">Died of Wounds.</span></p> + +<table border="0" cellpadding="1" summary="Died of Wounds."> +<colgroup> + <col width="10%"> + <col width="15%"> + <col width="20%"> + <col width="15%"> + <col width="10%"> + <col width="25%"> +</colgroup> + +<tr class="bold smaller"> +<td>No.</td> +<td>Rank and Name.</td> +<td class="center">Place of Death.</td> +<td class="center">Cause.</td> +<td class="center">Date.</td> +<td>Remarks.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td> </td> +<td>2nd-Lt. Genge</td> +<td class="center">Talana Hill</td> +<td class="center">Of wounds</td> +<td class="center">21/10/99</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>1166</td> +<td>C.-Sgt. Anderson</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5263</td> +<td>Pte. Johnston</td> +<td class="center">Maritzburg</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">27/11/99</td> +<td>Arm. train disaster</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>3467</td> +<td>Clr.-Sgt. Gage</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">20/12/99</td> +<td>Battle of Colenso</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>6293</td> +<td>Pte. Crosbie</td> +<td class="center">Spearman's Cmp</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">26/1/00</td> +<td class="indent2">" Venter's Spruit</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>1823</td> +<td class="indent05">" Finnegan</td> +<td class="center">Hart's Hill</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">25/2/00</td> +<td>Section 'D'</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>219</td> +<td class="indent05">" Oldham</td> +<td class="center">Chieveley</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">3/3/00</td> +<td>Battle of Hart's Hill</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>3648</td> +<td class="indent05">" Norton</td> +<td class="center">Maritzburg</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">2/3/00</td> +<td class="indent2 spaced2">" "</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5745</td> +<td class="indent05">" Brady</td> +<td class="center">Colenso</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="indent2">" Pieter's Hill</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>6299</td> +<td class="indent05">" Kelly</td> +<td class="center">Maritzburg</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">8/3/00</td> +<td class="spaced2 indent2">" "</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5349</td> +<td class="indent05">" Bracken</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">16/3/00</td> +<td class="indent2">" Hart's Hill</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>3094</td> +<td>Sgt. Broughton</td> +<td class="center">Dundee</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">22/10/99</td> +<td class="indent2">" Talana</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>2753</td> +<td>Pte. Frahill</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">28/11/99</td> +<td class="indent2 spaced2">" "</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4029</td> +<td class="indent05">" Quirke</td> +<td class="center">Colenso</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">1/3/00</td> +<td class="indent2">" Colenso</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5706</td> +<td class="indent05">" McEvoy</td> +<td class="center">Johannesburg</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">11/11/01</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>6347</td> +<td class="indent05">" Nugent</td> +<td class="center">Bakenlaagte</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">31/10/01</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5710</td> +<td class="indent05">" Keegan</td> +<td class="center">Dthala</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">8/10/03</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +</table> +<p class="right"><a href="#toc"><span class="small">[Back to Contents]</span></a></p> + +<p class="section">III.<br> + +<span class="smcap">Deaths by Disease.</span></p> + +<table border="0" cellpadding="1" summary="Deaths by Disease."> +<colgroup> + <col width="10%"> + <col width="15%"> + <col width="20%"> + <col width="15%"> + <col width="10%"> + <col width="25%"> +</colgroup> + +<tr class="bold smaller"> +<td>No.</td> +<td>Rank and Name.</td> +<td class="center">Place of Death.</td> +<td class="center">Cause.</td> +<td class="center">Date.</td> +<td>Remarks.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5102</td> +<td>Pte. Phelan</td> +<td class="center">Frere</td> +<td class="center">Enteric</td> +<td class="center">24/12/99</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>642</td> +<td>Q.M.S. Hynes</td> +<td class="center">Maritzburg</td> +<td class="center">Pneumonia</td> +<td class="center">7/1/00</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>2865</td> +<td>Sgt. Linehan</td> +<td class="center">Pretoria</td> +<td class="center">Dysentery</td> +<td class="center">16/12/99</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5519</td> +<td>Pte. Brennan</td> +<td class="center">Maritzburg</td> +<td class="center">Abscess liver</td> +<td class="center">7/1/00</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>3498</td> +<td class="indent05">" Dunphy</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">Dysentery</td> +<td class="center">19/1/00</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>6129</td> +<td class="indent05">" Homan</td> +<td class="center">Mooi River</td> +<td class="center">Enteric</td> +<td class="center">22/2/00</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4593</td> +<td class="indent05">" Keating</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">15/2/00</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5368</td> +<td class="indent05">" Walsh</td> +<td class="center">Cape Town</td> +<td class="center">Tumour brain</td> +<td class="center">26/11/99</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>2775</td> +<td class="indent05">" Ward</td> +<td class="center">Ladysmith</td> +<td class="center">Enteric</td> +<td class="center">7/2/00</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5317</td> +<td class="indent05">" Maher</td> +<td class="center">Estcourt</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">8/3/00</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>6510</td> +<td class="indent05">" Tobin</td> +<td class="center">Ladysmith</td> +<td class="center">Dysentery</td> +<td class="center">22/3/00</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5909</td> +<td class="indent05">" Dixon</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">25/3/00</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5801</td> +<td class="indent05">" Martin</td> +<td class="center">Chieveley</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">24/4/00</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td><span class="pagenum"><a id="page243" name="page243"></a>(p. 243)</span> + 5790</td> +<td>Pte. Greene</td> +<td class="center">Mooi River</td> +<td class="center">Enteric</td> +<td class="center">15/4/00</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td> </td> +<td>2nd Lt. Dennis</td> +<td class="center">Aliwal North</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">2/5/00</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>1600</td> +<td>Pte. O'Brien</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>3rd R.D. Fus.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4791</td> +<td class="indent05">" O'Connor</td> +<td class="center">Mooi River</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">3/5/00</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5200</td> +<td class="indent05">" Hart</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">Fractured thigh</td> +<td class="center"> 1/5/00</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>3380</td> +<td class="indent05">" Cummings</td> +<td class="center">Aliwal North</td> +<td class="center">Enteric pneumonia</td> +<td class="center">5/5/00</td> +<td>3rd R.D. Fus.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>3760</td> +<td class="indent05">" Keogh</td> +<td class="center">Chieveley</td> +<td class="center">Enteric</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4012</td> +<td class="indent05">" Mack</td> +<td class="center">Aliwal North</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">12/5/00</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5847</td> +<td class="indent05">" O'Carroll</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">Enteric phthisis</td> +<td class="center">15/5/00</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4566</td> +<td class="indent05">" Gray</td> +<td class="center">Kimberley</td> +<td class="center">Enteric</td> +<td class="center">17/5/00</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5622</td> +<td class="indent05">" Corr</td> +<td class="center">Maritzburg</td> +<td class="center">Ague</td> +<td class="center">28/2/00</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4131</td> +<td>Cpl. Looney</td> +<td class="center">Woolwich</td> +<td class="center">Dysentery</td> +<td class="center">24/3/00</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td> </td> +<td>Lieut. Ely</td> +<td class="center">At sea</td> +<td class="center">Enteric</td> +<td class="center">15/4/00</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>6049</td> +<td>Pte. Neill</td> +<td class="center">Kimberley</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">23/5/00</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>6309</td> +<td>L.-Cpl. McGinley</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">8/6/00</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>6608</td> +<td>Pte. Behan</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">19/6/00</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4686</td> +<td class="indent05">" Ears</td> +<td class="center">Wynberg</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">25/6/00</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>7049</td> +<td class="indent05">" Roach</td> +<td class="center">Heidelberg</td> +<td class="center">Pneumonia</td> +<td class="center">14/7/00</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5881</td> +<td class="indent05">" Pooley</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">Enteric</td> +<td class="center">18/7/00</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4499</td> +<td>O.R.S. Hanrahan</td> +<td class="center">Maritzburg</td> +<td class="center">g.s. skull</td> +<td class="center">2/7/00</td> +<td>Suicide</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5873</td> +<td>Pte. Hunt</td> +<td class="center">At sea</td> +<td class="center">Enteric</td> +<td class="center">26/4/00</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>3998</td> +<td class="indent05">" Kenny</td> +<td class="center">Krugersdorp</td> +<td class="center">Pneumonia</td> +<td class="center">12/9/00</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>1741</td> +<td class="indent05">" Burke</td> +<td class="center">Johannesburg</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">11/9/00</td> +<td>Section 'D'</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4737</td> +<td>Cpl. Wilson</td> +<td class="center">Maritzburg</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">27/10/00</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5741</td> +<td>Pte. Dwyer</td> +<td class="center">Germiston</td> +<td class="center">Enteric</td> +<td class="center">31/10/00</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5697</td> +<td class="indent05">" Davis</td> +<td class="center">Pretoria</td> +<td> </td> +<td class="center">29/11/00</td> +<td>Died in hospital, prisoner of war</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5181</td> +<td class="indent05">" Clark</td> +<td class="center">Kaalfontein</td> +<td class="center">Lightning</td> +<td class="center">24/11/00</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>6800</td> +<td class="indent05">" Connor</td> +<td class="center">Johannesburg</td> +<td class="center">Enteric</td> +<td class="center">25/11/00</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5967</td> +<td class="indent05">" Sutton</td> +<td class="center">Krugersdorp</td> +<td class="center">Jaundice</td> +<td class="center">18/1/00</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>2961</td> +<td class="indent05">" Ambrose</td> +<td class="center">Johannesburg</td> +<td class="center">Enteric</td> +<td class="center">3/2/01</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>6770</td> +<td class="indent05">" Cassidy</td> +<td class="center">Bloemfontein</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">22/3/01</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>1346</td> +<td class="indent05">" Hanlon</td> +<td class="center">Maritzburg</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">5/4/00</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>6109</td> +<td class="indent05">" Buckley</td> +<td class="center">Cork</td> +<td class="center">Insane</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>3910</td> +<td>L.-Cpl. Stewart</td> +<td class="center">Gaskraal</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">28/8/01</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>6491</td> +<td>Pte. O'Connor</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5532</td> +<td class="indent05">" Peel</td> +<td class="center">Krugersdorp</td> +<td class="center">Enteric</td> +<td class="center">14/8/01</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4657</td> +<td class="indent05">" Mooney</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">22/12/01</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5397</td> +<td class="indent05">" Melia</td> +<td class="center">Kroonstad</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">27/12/01</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5540</td> +<td class="indent05">" Quinn</td> +<td class="center">Krugersdorp</td> +<td class="center">Drowned</td> +<td class="center">14/1/02</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>6028</td> +<td>Sgt. Pearson</td> +<td class="center">At sea</td> +<td class="center">Enteric</td> +<td class="center">7/2/02</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5303</td> +<td>Pte. Furlong</td> +<td class="center">Aden</td> +<td class="center">Heat apoplexy</td> +<td class="center">29/5/02</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4938</td> +<td class="indent05">" Moore</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">Heart disease</td> +<td class="center">9/8/02</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4921</td> +<td>Sgt. Smith</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">Syncope</td> +<td class="center">13/9/02</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4565</td> +<td>Pte. Dunne</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">Multiple neuritis</td> +<td class="center">10/10/02</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5686</td> +<td class="indent05">" Gray</td> +<td> </td> +<td class="center">Diseased liver</td> +<td class="center">11/10/02</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>3661</td> +<td class="indent05">" Mooney</td> +<td class="center">Krugersdorp</td> +<td class="center">Enteric</td> +<td class="center">6/7/01</td> +<td>4th R.D. Fus.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>6332</td> +<td class="indent05">" Merrigan</td> +<td class="center">Aden</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">8/11/02</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>7547</td> +<td>Boy Roberts</td> +<td class="center">Dthala</td> +<td class="center">Pneumonia</td> +<td class="center">8/3/03</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>7182</td> +<td>Pte. Dempsey</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">Enteric</td> +<td class="center">13/10/03</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5944</td> +<td class="indent05">" Wynne</td> +<td class="center">Aden</td> +<td class="center">Consumption</td> +<td class="center">2/3/04</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +</table> +<p class="right"><a href="#toc"><span class="small">[Back to Contents]</span></a></p> + +<p class="section"><span class="pagenum"><a id="page244" name="page244"></a>(p. 244)</span> IV.<br> + +<span class="smcap">List of Wounded.</span></p> + +<table border="0" cellpadding="1" summary="List of Wounded."> +<colgroup> + <col width="10%"> + <col width="20%"> + <col width="10%"> + <col width="15%"> + <col width="25%"> + <col width="20%"> +</colgroup> + +<tr class="bold smaller"> +<td>Reg.<br>No.</td> +<td>Rank and Name.</td> +<td class="center">Date.</td> +<td class="center">Place.</td> +<td>Nature of Wound.</td> +<td>Remarks.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td> </td> +<td>Capt. M. Lowndes</td> +<td class="center">20/10/99</td> +<td class="center">Talana</td> +<td>g.s. leg</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td> </td> +<td class="indent05">" Dibley</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. head</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td> </td> +<td>Lieut. Perreau</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. shoulderd</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5686</td> +<td>Pte. Gray</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>2753</td> +<td class="indent05">" Frahill</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5310</td> +<td class="indent05">" Black</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4815</td> +<td class="indent05">" Doyle</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4700</td> +<td class="indent05">" Leonard</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4894</td> +<td>Sgt. Grace</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5430</td> +<td>Pte. Babester </td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5317</td> +<td class="indent05">" Maher</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4790</td> +<td class="indent05">" O'Brien</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5047</td> +<td class="indent05">" Greer </td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4359</td> +<td class="indent05">" Smith</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4699</td> +<td class="indent05">" Callaghan</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4931</td> +<td class="indent05">" Righton</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5947</td> +<td class="indent05">" Dwyer</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>43</td> +<td>Sgt.-Maj. Burke</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>3770</td> +<td>Col.-Sgt McNeice</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5426</td> +<td>Sgt. Walton</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>3139</td> +<td class="indent05">" McKenna</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>6264</td> +<td>Pte. Carroll</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>6125</td> +<td class="indent05">" Dempsey</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5038</td> +<td class="indent05">" Richardson</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5523</td> +<td class="indent05">" Ryan</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4620</td> +<td class="indent05">" Summerville</td> +<td class="center">" </td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5635</td> +<td class="indent05">" Tracey</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>6084</td> +<td class="indent05">" Brady</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4910</td> +<td>Dmr. Brudnell</td> +<td class="center"> "</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5078</td> +<td>Pte. Gorman</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5643</td> +<td class="indent05">" Cullen</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5011</td> +<td class="indent05">" Brennan</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4382</td> +<td class="indent05">" Jordan</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4766</td> +<td class="indent05">" Murphy</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4592</td> +<td class="indent05">" Cullen</td> +<td class="center">" </td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>6096</td> +<td class="indent05">" Gilhooley</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>3704</td> +<td class="indent05">" Kearns</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4857</td> +<td class="indent05">" Butler</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4767</td> +<td class="indent05">" Byrne</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>6022</td> +<td class="indent05">" Cassin</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5156</td> +<td class="indent05">" Fitzpatrick</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5118</td> +<td class="indent05">" Magee</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5142</td> +<td class="indent05">" Murray</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5063</td> +<td class="indent05">" Kelly</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5595</td> +<td class="indent05">" Reynolds</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4948</td> +<td class="indent05">" Wilby</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td> <span class="pagenum"><a id="page245" name="page245"></a>(p. 245)</span> +5634</td> +<td>L.-Cpl. Keenan</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4593</td> +<td>Pte. Flood</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5137</td> +<td class="indent05">" McGrath</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4785</td> +<td class="indent05">" Hopkins</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5531</td> +<td class="indent05">" Hatt</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4444</td> +<td class="indent05">" Creegan</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4347</td> +<td class="indent05">" Lahey</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5914</td> +<td class="indent05">" Coyle</td> +<td class="center">15/11/99</td> +<td class="center">Armr. Train</td> +<td>shell, arm</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td> </td> +<td>Capt. Shewan</td> +<td class="center">15/12/99</td> +<td class="center">Colenso</td> +<td>g.s. thigh</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4341</td> +<td>Sgt. Doherty</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. shoulders</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4986</td> +<td>L.-Sgt. Gibbons</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. arm</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5668</td> +<td class="indent05">" Taylor</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. shoulder</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>3150</td> +<td>Sgt. Towey</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. hand and foot</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>501</td> +<td class="indent05">" Hamilton</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. foot</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5108</td> +<td class="indent05">" Bodkin</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. leg</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5628</td> +<td>L.-Sgt. Church</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. leg</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5374</td> +<td>Cpl. Loughran</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. thigh</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>6684</td> +<td>Pte. O'Brien</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. hand</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5117</td> +<td class="indent05">" Lillis</td> +<td class="center"> "</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. foot</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4589</td> +<td class="indent05">" Whelan</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. hand</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5637</td> +<td class="indent05">" Taylor</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. thigh</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4898</td> +<td class="indent05">" Walker</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. head</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5687</td> +<td class="indent05">" Enright</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. hand</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5869</td> +<td class="indent05">" Mackey</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. knee</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5584</td> +<td class="indent05">" Carr</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. hip</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>6145</td> +<td class="indent05">" Byrne</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. elbow</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>6103</td> +<td class="indent05">" Cooney</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. foot</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4997</td> +<td class="indent05">" Ludlow</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. arm</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4201</td> +<td>Dmr. Webb</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. thigh</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5970</td> +<td>L.-Cpl. Cooper</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. leg</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>6094</td> +<td class="indent05">" Hanley</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. leg</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5760</td> +<td>Pte. Brown</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. leg</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5765</td> +<td class="indent05">" Welsh</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. foot</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4545</td> +<td class="indent05">" Flood</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. thigh</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4959</td> +<td class="indent05">" Smith</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. hand</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5672</td> +<td class="indent05">" Sanders</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. leg</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5661</td> +<td class="indent05">" Murphy</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. foot</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4582</td> +<td class="indent05">" McCarthy</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. head</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4395</td> +<td class="indent05">" Ellis</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. arm</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4290</td> +<td>Sgt. Hunt</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. wrist and thigh</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4987</td> +<td>Pte. Reilly</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4552</td> +<td class="indent05">" Kelly</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. thigh</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>3362</td> +<td>Dmr. Murphy</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4411</td> +<td>Pte. Murray</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5716</td> +<td class="indent05">" Lahey</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>6038</td> +<td class="indent05">" Kelly</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>3013</td> +<td>Sgt. Healey</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4726</td> +<td>Pte. O'Brien</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5848</td> +<td class="indent05">" Townsend</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td><span class="pagenum"><a id="page246" name="page246"></a>(p. 246)</span> + 5834</td> +<td>Pte. McBride</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. hip</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5520</td> +<td class="indent05">" Hackett</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4441</td> +<td>L.-Sgt. Merry</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. thigh</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5023</td> +<td>L.-Cpl. Hayes</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. feet</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4543</td> +<td>Pte. Keating</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. foot</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>6123</td> +<td class="indent05">" Kelly</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4800</td> +<td class="indent05">" Walsh</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4226</td> +<td class="indent05">" Reilly</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. hand</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>6137</td> +<td class="indent05">" O'Brien</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. thigh</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>2442</td> +<td class="indent05">" Leary</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5151</td> +<td class="indent05">" Clark</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td> </td> +<td>Maj. English</td> +<td class="center">20/1/00</td> +<td class="center">Vent. Spruit</td> +<td>g.s. leg</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>6105</td> +<td>L.-Cpl. Kidd</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. neck</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>6796</td> +<td>Pte. Burke</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. foot</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>6285</td> +<td class="indent05">" Healey</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. back</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>3141</td> +<td class="indent05">" Rooney</td> +<td class="center"> "</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. arm</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4644</td> +<td class="indent05">" Burke</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">" </td> +<td>g.s. hip, thigh</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5997</td> +<td class="indent05">" Davis</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. thigh, leg</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5458</td> +<td class="indent05">" Burke</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">" </td> +<td>g.s. neck</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5873</td> +<td class="indent05">" Hunt</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. head</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5659</td> +<td class="indent05">" Walsh</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. leg</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5069</td> +<td class="indent05">" Lee</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. hand</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>6121</td> +<td class="indent05">" Brien</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. thigh</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>2892</td> +<td>L.-Sgt. Ryan</td> +<td class="center">21/1/00</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. foot</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>3548</td> +<td>Sgt. Cragg</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. hand</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>6047</td> +<td>Pte. Cole</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. arm</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>6391</td> +<td class="indent05">" Richardson</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. foot</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4898</td> +<td>L.-Cpl. Walker</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>6366</td> +<td>Pte. Molloy</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. right leg</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>6310</td> +<td class="indent05">" Gibney</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. leg</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5883</td> +<td class="indent05">" Marshall</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. hand</td> +<td> </td> + </tr> +<tr> +<td>5283</td> +<td class="indent05">" Shaughnessey</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. left leg</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5904</td> +<td class="indent05">" Edwards</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. right hand</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4636</td> +<td>Cpl. Reynolds</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. chin</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4368</td> +<td>Pte. Githens</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. arm</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5056</td> +<td class="indent05">" Lordan</td> +<td class="center">22/1/00</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. thigh</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4794</td> +<td class="indent05">" Murray</td> +<td class="center">23/1/00</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. right forearm</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4689</td> +<td>L.-Sgt. O'Higgins</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. chest</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4384</td> +<td>Pte. Ring</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. head, shoulder</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5888</td> +<td class="indent05">" Kenny</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. head, shoulder</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>6484</td> +<td class="indent05">" Duffy</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. hip</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5882</td> +<td>Sgt.-Dmr. Smith</td> +<td class="center">25/1/00</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5900</td> +<td>Pte. Mason</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. hand</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>6569</td> +<td class="indent05">" Conroy</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. foot</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td> </td> +<td>2nd Lieut. Lane</td> +<td class="center">23/2/00</td> +<td class="center">Hart's Hill</td> +<td>g.s. head</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td> </td> +<td class="indent05">" Dennis</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. left leg</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>2872</td> +<td>Pte. Wade</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td> </td> +<td>5th R.D. Fus.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4012</td> +<td class="indent05">" Armstrong</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>3303</td> +<td class="indent05">" Timmins</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td><span class="pagenum"><a id="page247" name="page247"></a>(p. 247)</span> + 5167</td> +<td>Pte. McDonnell</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5928</td> +<td class="indent05">" Pender</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. right hand</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4791</td> +<td class="indent05">" Connor</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. chest</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4817</td> +<td class="indent05">" Iliffe </td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4559</td> +<td class="indent05">" McCabe</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>2426</td> +<td class="indent05">" O'Beirne</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>6522</td> +<td class="indent05">" Ryan</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. right hip</td> +<td>1st Battalion</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5461</td> +<td>L.-Cpl. Dennehy</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5387</td> +<td>Pte. Brannagan</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. chest</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4771</td> +<td class="indent05">" Johnston</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. left thigh</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5765</td> +<td class="indent05">" Ward</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. arm and knee</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4557</td> +<td class="indent05">" McCarthy</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. back</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5811</td> +<td class="indent05">" Ryan</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. arm</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>2921</td> +<td class="indent05">" Thompson</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>6355</td> +<td class="indent05">" Fagan</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>148</td> +<td class="indent05">" Metcalf</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. right arm</td> +<td>5th R.D. Fus.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>2096</td> +<td class="indent05">" Farrell</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>1557</td> +<td class="indent05">" Kinsella</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4530</td> +<td class="indent05">" Brown</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. groin</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5684</td> +<td class="indent05">" Hetherston</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. chest</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>6333</td> +<td class="indent05">" Newsome</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. left arm</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>3631</td> +<td class="indent05">" McDonald</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. left shoulder</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>1997</td> +<td class="indent05">" Brady</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td> </td> +<td>5th R.D. Fus.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>6110</td> +<td class="indent05">" Kelly</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>2387</td> +<td class="indent05">" Strain</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. buttock</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>3068</td> +<td class="indent05">" Adams</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5069</td> +<td class="indent05">" Lee</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4424</td> +<td class="indent05">" Mulvaney</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4621</td> +<td class="indent05">" Hyland</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. left thigh</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5836</td> +<td class="indent05">" Cullen</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. right wrist</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>3313</td> +<td class="indent05">" Concannon</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">" </td> +<td>g.s. right shoulder</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>6498</td> +<td class="indent05">" Flannagan</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. chest</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>1741</td> +<td class="indent05">" Burke</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. left arm</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>2422</td> +<td class="indent05">" Morgan</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>2787</td> +<td class="indent05">" Brien</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. left knee</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4325</td> +<td class="indent05">" Curran</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. left leg</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>6108</td> +<td class="indent05">" Bernes</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5908</td> +<td class="indent05">" McDonald</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>1881</td> +<td class="indent05">" Reynolds</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td> </td> +<td>4th R.D. Fus.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4015</td> +<td class="indent05">" Lynch</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>2348</td> +<td class="indent05">" Maddox</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. left shoulder</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4029</td> +<td class="indent05">" Quirk</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>6217</td> +<td class="indent05">" Valentine</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>3881</td> +<td class="indent05">" Talbot</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>6314</td> +<td class="indent05">" Early</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5224</td> +<td class="indent05">" McNeill</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4277</td> +<td class="indent05">" Mack</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4994</td> +<td class="indent05">" Knoctor</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. right leg</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>3441</td> +<td class="indent05">" O'Grady</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. left hand</td> +<td>4th R.D. Fus.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5982</td> +<td class="indent05">" Tighe</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. head</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>347</td> +<td class="indent05">" Doyle</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. left hand</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>6130</td> +<td class="indent05">" Mason</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td> </td> +<td>3rd R.D. Fus.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5141</td> +<td class="indent05">" Kirwan</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. right foot</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4569</td> +<td class="indent05">" Gorman</td> +<td class="center">27/2/00</td> +<td class="center">Pieter's Hill</td> +<td>g.s. shoulder</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5399</td> +<td class="indent05">" Connor</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5828</td> +<td class="indent05">" Kegney</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>847</td> +<td class="indent05">" Mangan</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td> </td> +<td>3rd R.D. Fus.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>1716</td> +<td class="indent05">" Quinn</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td> </td> +<td class="center">"</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5716</td> +<td class="indent05">" Leahy</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5981</td> +<td class="indent05">" Broad</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5698</td> +<td class="indent05">" Toomey</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>350</td> +<td class="indent05">" Murphy</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td> </td> +<td>3rd R.D. Fus.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>1846</td> +<td class="indent05">" Kealey</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td> </td> +<td class="center">"</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4741</td> +<td class="indent05">" Moore</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4903</td> +<td>Cpl. Marshall</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5379</td> +<td>Pte. Pryor </td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>2368</td> +<td class="indent05">" Byrne</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4878</td> +<td class="indent05">" Clark</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>6524</td> +<td class="indent05">" Quaid</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>1554</td> +<td class="indent05">" Brennan</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td> </td> +<td>5th R.D. Fus.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5757</td> +<td class="indent05">" Kelly</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5284</td> +<td class="indent05">" Farrell</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td> </td> +<td>5th R.D. Fus.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>3361</td> +<td class="indent05">" Brady</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td> </td> +<td class="center">"</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>1765</td> +<td class="indent05">" Fagan</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>6429</td> +<td class="indent05">" Fox</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4777</td> +<td class="indent05">" Mullane</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>3253</td> +<td class="indent05">" Mellington</td> +<td class="center">" </td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td> </td> +<td>5th R.D. Fus.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5280</td> +<td class="indent05">" Daly</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>639</td> +<td class="indent05">" Whelan</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">" </td> +<td> </td> +<td>5th R.D. Fus.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>6139</td> +<td class="indent05">" Dignam</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>2917</td> +<td class="indent05">" Ferris</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td> </td> +<td>5th R.D. Fus.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>3242</td> +<td class="indent05">" McHale</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td> </td> +<td class="center">"</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>3266</td> +<td class="indent05">" Evans</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>1377</td> +<td class="indent05">" Farrell</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4474</td> +<td class="indent05">" McLoughlin</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>6113</td> +<td class="indent05">" McCormack</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>1651</td> +<td class="indent05">" Kinsella</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td> </td> +<td>5th R.D. Fus.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>3639</td> +<td class="indent05">" Brien</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td> </td> +<td class="center">"</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>3282</td> +<td class="indent05">" O'Brien</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. hand</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>1846</td> +<td class="indent05">" Gradwell</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td> </td> +<td>5th R.D. Fus.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>174</td> +<td class="indent05">" Lawless</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. foot, right hand</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>1284</td> +<td class="indent05">" Molloy</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td> </td> +<td class="center">"</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>1508</td> +<td class="indent05">" Donnelly</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5704</td> +<td class="indent05">" Kennedy</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>2236</td> +<td class="indent05">" Tuite</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center"> "</td> +<td>g.s. right heel</td> +<td>5th R.D. Fus.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4317</td> +<td class="indent05">" Carpenter</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>3231</td> +<td class="indent05">" Mallon</td> +<td class="center">21/7/00</td> +<td class="center">Zuikerbosch</td> +<td>g.s. right thigh</td> +<td>4th R.D. Fus.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>2853</td> +<td class="indent05">" O'Brien</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. left thigh</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td><span class="pagenum"><a id="page249" name="page249"></a>(p. 249)</span> + 1143</td> +<td>Pte. Stanton</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td> </td> +<td>4th R.D. Fus.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>2961</td> +<td>Col.-Sgt. Cossey</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td> </td> +<td>Maj. English</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>slight shell splinter, eye</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>6786</td> +<td>Pte. Reilly</td> +<td class="center">15/9/00</td> +<td class="center">Nr. Frdkstdt.</td> +<td> </td> +<td>On convoy duty</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>2392</td> +<td>Sgt. James</td> +<td class="center">21/9/00</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>very slight g.s. leg</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>6070</td> +<td>Pte. Angleton</td> +<td class="center">2/10/00</td> +<td class="center">Near Irene</td> +<td>g.s. foot</td> +<td>With M.I.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td> </td> +<td>Lieut. Haskard</td> +<td class="center">27/2/00</td> +<td class="center">Pieter's Hill</td> +<td>right elbow</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td> </td> +<td>2nd Lieut. Bradford</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>shoulder</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>2692</td> +<td>Pte. Doyle</td> +<td class="center">31/12/00</td> +<td class="center">Nr. Krugersdorp</td> +<td>g.s. buttock</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5767</td> +<td class="indent05">" Lang</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">Nooitgedacht</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>2052</td> +<td class="indent05">" Armstrong</td> +<td class="center">2/2/01</td> +<td class="center">Gatsrand</td> +<td>g.s. left arm, very slight</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>6265</td> +<td class="indent05">" Roach</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. right leg, slight</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4981</td> +<td class="indent05">" Sheehan</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">Nr. Carolina</td> +<td>g.s. neck</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5718</td> +<td class="indent05">" Kavanagh</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. left knee</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4365</td> +<td class="indent05">" Moran</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. left shoulder</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4680</td> +<td class="indent05">" Fitzgerald</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. left arm</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>6057</td> +<td class="indent05">" Goff</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. chest</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5433</td> +<td class="indent05">" Holmes</td> +<td class="center">28/8/01</td> +<td class="center">Gaskraal</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4840</td> +<td class="indent05">" Nolan</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4858</td> +<td class="indent05">" Butler</td> +<td class="center">27/7/01</td> +<td class="center">Nr. Wonderfontein</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4680</td> +<td class="indent05">" Fitzgerald</td> +<td class="center">25/10/01</td> +<td class="center">Swartzfontein</td> +<td>g.s. hand, severe</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5706</td> +<td class="indent05">" McEvoy</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. buttock, groin</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>3761</td> +<td>Sgt. Carroll</td> +<td class="center">30/10/01</td> +<td class="center">Bakenlaagte</td> +<td>g.s. leg, very slight</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4473</td> +<td>Pte. Hand</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. knee, severe</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4448</td> +<td class="indent05">" Murphy</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">" </td> +<td>g.s. foot, slight</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4513</td> +<td class="indent05">" Connor</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. hip, severe</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5706</td> +<td class="indent05">" Moran</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. hand, severe</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>6347</td> +<td class="indent05">" Nugent</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. abdomen</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4686</td> +<td>Cpl. Curtis</td> +<td class="center">15/12/99</td> +<td class="center">Colenso</td> +<td>g.s. hand</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5548</td> +<td>Pte. Metcalf</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. left leg</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4453</td> +<td class="indent05">" White</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">" </td> +<td>g.s. both legs</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>6330</td> +<td>L.-Cpl. Matthews</td> +<td class="center">21/1/00</td> +<td class="center">Vent. Spruit</td> +<td>g.s. leg</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5330</td> +<td>Pte. Holohan</td> +<td class="center">27/2/00</td> +<td class="center">Pieter's Hill</td> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5973</td> +<td>Cpl. Gaffney</td> +<td class="center">7/10/03</td> +<td class="center">Aden Hntlnd.</td> +<td>g.s. severe, foot</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>6367</td> +<td>Pte. Daly</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. very slight</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5584</td> +<td class="indent05">" Carr</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td class="center">"</td> +<td>g.s. severe, chest</td> +<td> </td> +</table> +<p class="right"><a href="#toc"><span class="small">[Back to Contents]</span></a></p> + +<p class="section"><span class="pagenum"><a id="page250" name="page250"></a>(p. 250)</span> V.<br> + + <span class="smcap">Battle of Talana</span>.<br> + + <span class="smcap">Reported Missing since October 21st, 1899.</span></p> + +<table border="0" cellpadding="1" summary="Reported Missing since October 21st, 1899."> +<colgroup> + <col width="10%"> + <col width="30%"> + <col width="10%"> + <col width="10%"> + <col width="30%"> +</colgroup> + +<tr class="bold smaller"> +<td>Reg. No.</td> +<td>Rank and Name.</td> +<td> </td> +<td>Reg. No.</td> +<td>Rank and Name.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>2615</td> +<td>Clr.-Sgt. Gage</td> +<td> </td> +<td>5489</td> +<td>Pte. Geoghegan</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>2078</td> +<td>Sgt. Martin</td> +<td> </td> +<td>6019</td> +<td class="indent05"> " Curran</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4388</td> +<td class="indent05"> " Guilfoyle</td> +<td> </td> +<td>5918</td> +<td class="indent05">" Callaghan</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>3761</td> +<td class="indent05">" Carroll</td> +<td> </td> +<td>4411</td> +<td class="indent05">" Cooney</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5328</td> +<td>L.-Sgt. Payne</td> +<td> </td> +<td>5706</td> +<td class="indent05">" McEvoy</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5178</td> +<td class="indent05">" Crean</td> +<td> </td> +<td>5600</td> +<td class="indent05">" Gleeson</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5094</td> +<td>Cpl. Corrigan</td> +<td> </td> +<td>5000</td> +<td class="indent05">" Nulty</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5544</td> +<td class="indent05">" Richards</td> +<td> </td> +<td>4974</td> +<td class="indent05">" Costello</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>6028</td> +<td class="indent05">" Pearson</td> +<td> </td> +<td>5889</td> +<td class="indent05">" Keogh</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5004</td> +<td class="indent05">" Kiernan</td> +<td> </td> +<td>5501</td> +<td class="indent05">" Mannix</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5601</td> +<td>L.-Cpl. Lee</td> +<td> </td> +<td>5127</td> +<td class="indent05">" Battersby</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5143</td> +<td class="indent05">" Flynn</td> +<td> </td> +<td>5352</td> +<td class="indent05">" White</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5304</td> +<td class="indent05">" Whelan</td> +<td> </td> +<td>4864</td> +<td class="indent05">" Byrne</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4812</td> +<td class="indent05">" Lyons</td> +<td> </td> +<td>5390</td> +<td class="indent05">" Doyle</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4868</td> +<td class="indent05">" Green</td> +<td> </td> +<td>5126</td> +<td class="indent05">" Farrell</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5033</td> +<td class="indent05">" Byrne</td> +<td> </td> +<td>5714</td> +<td class="indent05">" Finnigan</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4947</td> +<td class="indent05">" Harper</td> +<td> </td> +<td>5055</td> +<td class="indent05">" Reidy</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4638</td> +<td>Pte. Mahon</td> +<td> </td> +<td>5345</td> +<td class="indent05">" Dunne</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4966</td> +<td class="indent05">" Murphy</td> +<td> </td> +<td>5789</td> +<td class="indent05">" Flood</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4359</td> +<td class="indent05">" Hall</td> +<td> </td> +<td>4964</td> +<td class="indent05">" Gibney</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4655</td> +<td class="indent05">" Cullen</td> +<td> </td> +<td>5987</td> +<td class="indent05">" Mahoney</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5175</td> +<td class="indent05">" Reddy</td> +<td> </td> +<td>5030</td> +<td class="indent05">" Callaghan</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5143</td> +<td class="indent05">" Flynn</td> +<td> </td> +<td>5126</td> +<td class="indent05">" Delaney</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5759</td> +<td class="indent05">" Dowling</td> +<td> </td> +<td>4692</td> +<td class="indent05">" McGuinness</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5070</td> +<td class="indent05">" Angleton</td> +<td> </td> +<td>6018</td> +<td class="indent05">" McDonagh</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5402</td> +<td class="indent05">" Rourke</td> +<td> </td> +<td>5693</td> +<td class="indent05">" Keating</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5209</td> +<td class="indent05">" Dunne</td> +<td> </td> +<td>4532</td> +<td class="indent05">" Kirwan</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5793</td> +<td class="indent05">" Murphy</td> +<td> </td> +<td>6866</td> +<td class="indent05">" Molloy</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4513</td> +<td class="indent05">" Connor</td> +<td> </td> +<td>5427</td> +<td class="indent05">" Carr</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5055</td> +<td class="indent05">" Reidy</td> +<td> </td> +<td>4142</td> +<td class="indent05">" Lyons</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5609</td> +<td class="indent05">" Connor</td> +<td> </td> +<td>6120</td> +<td class="indent05">" Cullen</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5162</td> +<td class="indent05">" Macken</td> +<td> </td> +<td>4927</td> +<td class="indent05">" Kane</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5929</td> +<td class="indent05">" Carroll</td> +<td> </td> +<td>5545</td> +<td class="indent05">" Reilly</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5956</td> +<td class="indent05">" Rourke</td> +<td> </td> +<td>5702</td> +<td class="indent05">" Byrne +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4498</td> +<td class="indent05">" Watts</td> +<td> </td> +<td>5724</td> +<td class="indent05">" Dempsey +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4884</td> +<td class="indent05">" Kenny</td> +<td> </td> +<td>5218</td> +<td class="indent05">" Reilly +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5876</td> +<td class="indent05">" Molloy</td> +<td> </td> +<td>5880</td> +<td class="indent05">" Carroll +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5647</td> +<td class="indent05">" Harrison</td> +<td> </td> +<td>5144</td> +<td class="indent05">" Williams +</tr> +<tr> +<td>6087</td> +<td class="indent05">" Tyrrell</td> +<td> </td> +<td>5027</td> +<td class="indent05">" Doody +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4788</td> +<td class="indent05">" Toomey</td> +<td> </td> +<td>4473</td> +<td class="indent05">" Hand +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4366</td> +<td class="indent05">" Doyle</td> +<td> </td> +<td>4566</td> +<td class="indent05">" Glynn +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5931</td> +<td class="indent05">" Bracken</td> +<td> </td> +<td>5184</td> +<td class="indent05">" Dowler +</tr> +<tr> +<td>3752</td> +<td class="indent05">" Travers</td> +<td> </td> +<td>5551</td> +<td class="indent05">" Finn +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5733</td> +<td class="indent05">" Kavanagh</td> +<td> </td> +<td>5912</td> +<td class="indent05">" Kavanagh +</tr> +<tr> +<td>6055</td> +<td class="indent05">" Gough</td> +<td> </td> +<td>5182</td> +<td class="indent05">" Cavanagh +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5266</td> +<td class="indent05">" Bigley</td> +<td> </td> +<td>5350</td> +<td class="indent05">" Farrell +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5479</td> +<td class="indent05">" Brien</td> +<td> </td> +<td>4692</td> +<td class="indent05">" McGann</td> +</table> +<p class="right"><a href="#toc"><span class="small">[Back to Contents]</span></a></p> + +<p class="section"><span class="pagenum"><a id="page251" name="page251"></a>(p. 251)</span> VI.<br> + + <span class="smcap">Reported Missing since October 22nd, 1899.</span></p> + +<table border="0" cellpadding="1" summary="Reported Missing since October 22nd, 1899."> +<colgroup> + <col width="10%"> + <col width="30%"> + <col width="10%"> + <col width="10%"> + <col width="30%"> +</colgroup> +<tr class="bold smaller"> +<td>Reg. No.</td> +<td>Rank and Name.</td> +<td> </td> +<td>Reg. No.</td> +<td>Rank and Name.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5022</td> +<td>Pte. Rourke</td> +<td> </td> +<td>5246</td> +<td>Pte. McGuinness +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4998</td> +<td class="indent05">" Hawthorn</td> +<td> </td> +<td>5321</td> +<td class="indent05">" Moran</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4327</td> +<td class="indent05">" Neill</td> +<td colspan="3"> </td> +</tr> +</table> +<p class="right"><a href="#toc"><span class="small">[Back to Contents]</span></a></p> + +<p class="section">VII.<br> + + <span class="smcap">Reported Missing since October 30th, 1899.</span></p> + +<table border="0" cellpadding="1" summary="Reported Missing since October 30th, 1899."> +<colgroup> + <col width="10%"> + <col width="30%"> + <col width="10%"> + <col width="10%"> + <col width="30%"> +</colgroup> +<tr class="bold smaller"> +<td>Reg. No.</td> +<td>Rank and Name.</td> +<td> </td> +<td>Reg. No.</td> +<td>Rank and Name.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5524</td> +<td>Pte. Wall</td> +<td> </td> +<td>5503</td> +<td>Pte. Hennessey</td> +</tr> +</table> +<p class="right"><a href="#toc"><span class="small">[Back to Contents]</span></a></p> + +<p class="section">VIII.<br> + + <span class="smcap">Reported Missing since November 15th, 1899</span><br> + (<span class="smcap">Armoured Train Disaster</span>).</p> + +<table border="0" cellpadding="1" summary="Reported Missing since November 15th, 1899."> +<colgroup> + <col width="10%"> + <col width="30%"> + <col width="10%"> + <col width="10%"> + <col width="30%"> +</colgroup> +<tr class="bold smaller"> +<td>Reg. No.</td> +<td>Rank and Name.</td> +<td> </td> +<td>Reg. No.</td> +<td>Rank and Name.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>3672</td> +<td>Sgt. Hassett</td> +<td> </td> +<td>3715</td> +<td>Sgt. Osborne</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5114</td> +<td>Cpl. Hallahan</td> +<td> </td> +<td>5795</td> +<td>Pte. Balfe</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5800</td> +<td>Pte. Buckley</td> +<td> </td> +<td>5316</td> +<td class="indent05"> " Daly</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>6293</td> +<td class="indent05">" Kempster</td> +<td> </td> +<td>5516</td> +<td class="indent05"> " Scully</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5499</td> +<td class="indent05">" Byrne</td> +<td> </td> +<td>4443</td> +<td class="indent05">" Hoey</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4497</td> +<td class="indent05">" Barry</td> +<td> </td> +<td>5031</td> +<td class="indent05">" Bierney</td> +<tr> +<td>5755</td> +<td class="indent05">" Collins</td> +<td> </td> +<td>5697</td> +<td class="indent05">" Davis</td> +<tr> +<td>6140</td> +<td class="indent05">" Dunphy</td> +<td> </td> +<td>5297</td> +<td class="indent05">" Drew</td> +<tr> +<td>5741</td> +<td class="indent05">" Dwyer</td> +<td> </td> +<td>5841</td> +<td class="indent05">" Hoy</td> +<tr> +<td>5256</td> +<td class="indent05">" Kavanagh</td> +<td> </td> +<td>5287</td> +<td class="indent05">" Lynch</td> +<tr> +<td>5691</td> +<td class="indent05">" O'Rourke</td> +<td> </td> +<td>5908</td> +<td class="indent05">" Murphy</td> +<tr> +<td>5626</td> +<td class="indent05">" Buckley</td> +<td> </td> +<td>6308</td> +<td class="indent05">" Connell</td> +<tr> +<td>5968</td> +<td class="indent05">" Glynn</td> +<td> </td> +<td>6116</td> +<td class="indent05">" Harty</td> +<tr> +<td>5057</td> +<td class="indent05">" Kirwan</td> +<td> </td> +<td>6228</td> +<td class="indent05">" Meehan</td> +<tr> +<td>5017</td> +<td class="indent05">" Pakenham</td> +<td> </td> +<td>5297</td> +<td class="indent05">" Doogan</td> +<tr> +<td>5239</td> +<td class="indent05">" Herbert</td> +<td> </td> +<td>6319</td> +<td class="indent05">" Burke</td> +<tr> +<td>6283</td> +<td class="indent05">" Cragg</td> +<td> </td> +<td>4676</td> +<td class="indent05">" Driscoll</td> +<tr> +<td>5790</td> +<td class="indent05">" Murray</td> +<td> </td> +<td>4865</td> +<td class="indent05">" Reynolds</td> +<tr> +<td>5210</td> +<td class="indent05">" Rice</td> +<td> </td> +<td>6354</td> +<td class="indent05">" Sheridan</td> +<tr> +<td>5329</td> +<td class="indent05">" Stanton</td> +<td> </td> +<td>5861</td> +<td class="indent05">" McGuire</td> +<tr> +<td>4680</td> +<td class="indent05">" Fitzgerald</td> +<td> </td> +<td>4542</td> +<td class="indent05">" Flannagan</td> +<tr> +<td>5548</td> +<td class="indent05">" Metcalf</td> +<td colspan="3"> </td> +</tr> +</table> +<p class="right"><a href="#toc"><span class="small">[Back to Contents]</span></a></p> + +<p class="section"><span class="pagenum"><a id="page252" name="page252"></a>(p. 252)</span> IX.<br> + +<span class="smcap">List of Officers in Natal Campaign</span>.</p> + +<table border="0" cellpadding="1" summary="List of Officers in Natal Campaign."> +<colgroup> + <col width="20%"> + <col width="30%"> + <col width="50%"> +</colgroup> +<tr class="bold smaller"> +<td colspan="2">Rank and Name.</td> +<td>Remarks.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>Col.</td> +<td>Cooper</td> +<td>Commanding 2nd Royal Dublin Fusiliers.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>Maj.</td> +<td>Bird</td> +<td>2nd in command.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="indent05">"</td> +<td>English, A Company</td> +<td>Wounded at Venter's Spruit and Zuikerbosch.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>Capt.</td> +<td>Hensley, G Company</td> +<td>Killed at Venter's Spruit.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="indent05">"</td> +<td>Weldon, E Company</td> +<td>Killed at Talana.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="indent05">"</td> +<td>Fetherstonhaugh, D Coy.</td> +<td>Acted as Adjutant after Capt. Lowndes was wounded.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="indent05">"</td> +<td>Dibley, B Company</td> +<td>Wounded at Talana, and sent into Intombi Hospital.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="indent05">"</td> +<td>Lonsdale, M.I. Company</td> +<td>Captured at Talana.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>Lieut.</td> +<td>Shewan, H Company</td> +<td>Wounded at Colenso.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="indent05">"</td> +<td>Perreau</td> +<td>Wounded at Talana, and sent into Intombi Hospital.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="indent05">"</td> +<td>Le Mesurier</td> +<td>Captured at Talana. Escaped from Pretoria.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="indent05">"</td> +<td>Grimshaw</td> +<td>Captured at Talana.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="indent05">"</td> +<td>Cory</td> +<td>Was sent with M.I. Section to Dundonald's Brigade.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="indent05">"</td> +<td>Renny</td> +<td>Transport Officer. Left in Ladysmith.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>2nd Lieut.</td> +<td>Haskard</td> +<td>Wounded at Pieter's Hill.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="indent05">"</td> +<td>Henry</td> +<td>Killed at Colenso.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="indent05">"</td> +<td>Frankland</td> +<td>Captured in Armoured Train.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="indent05">"</td> +<td>Genge</td> +<td>Killed at Talana.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>Capt.</td> +<td>Lowndes (Adjutant)</td> +<td>Wounded at Talana, and sent into Intombi Hospital.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>Lieut. and Qtmr.</td> +<td>Rowland</td> +<td>Went to S. A. C.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>Lieut.</td> +<td>Garvice</td> +<td>Joined battalion at Dundee; captured at Talana.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>2nd Lieut.</td> +<td>Ely</td> +<td>Joined battalion at Dundee, and died of enteric, 1900.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>Lieut.</td> +<td>H. W. Higginson</td> +<td>Joined on posting, and shared in siege of Ladysmith.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>Capt.</td> +<td>Romer</td> +<td>Joined from Staff College on Oct. 30th.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>Capt.</td> +<td>Haldane and Lieut. Maitland (of Gordon Highlanders)</td> +<td>The former was captured in the Armoured Train, and escaped from +Pretoria with Lieut. Le Mesurier; the latter killed at Hart's Hill.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>2nd Lieut.</td> +<td>Britton</td> +<td>Joined on November 5th. After Colenso he acted as Transport Officer.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>Brevet-Lieut.-Col.</td> +<td>Sitwell</td> +<td>Joined on November 8th, and commanded C Company. He was killed at Hart's Hill.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>2nd Lieut.</td> +<td>Lane</td> +<td>Joined on December 6th. He was wounded at Hart's Hill.</td> +</tr> +</table> +<p class="right"><a href="#toc"><span class="small">[Back to Contents]</span></a></p> + +<p class="section"><span class="pagenum"><a id="page253" name="page253"></a>(p. 253)</span> X.<br> + +<span class="italic">The following Officers of the 1st Battalion and other corps joined on +December 7th and subsequent dates:—</span></p> + +<table border="0" cellpadding="1" summary="Joined on December 7th and subsequent dates."> +<colgroup> + <col width="20%"> + <col width="30%"> + <col width="50%"> +</colgroup> +<tr class="bold smaller"> +<td colspan="2">Rank and Name.</td> +<td>Remarks.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>Maj.</td> +<td>Hicks</td> +<td>Returned to 1st Battalion after Colenso. Succeeded Col. Cooper in +command of 2nd Battalion, March 1900.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="indent05">" Gordon</td> +<td>Wounded at Colenso.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>Capt.</td> +<td>Bacon</td> +<td>Killed at Colenso.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>2nd Lieut.</td> +<td>De Salis</td> +<td>Promoted into another regiment.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="indent05">" Brodhurst Hill</td> +<td>Wounded at Hart's Hill.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="indent05">" Halahan</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="indent05">" Macleod</td> +<td>Wounded at Colenso.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="indent05">" Winnington</td> +<td>(Worcestershire Regiment). Attached.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="indent05">" Wheeler</td> +<td>Joined December 23rd.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="indent05">" Dennis</td> +<td>Joined December 27th, and died of enteric at Aliwal North.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>Capt.</td> +<td>Venour </td> +<td>Joined on January 30th.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>Lieut.</td> +<td>Hill</td> +<td>Joined on January 30th. Wounded at Hart's Hill.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>2nd Lieut.</td> +<td>Bradford</td> +<td>Joined on January 30th. Wounded at Pieter's Hill.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>Capt.</td> +<td>Sir Frederick Frankland, Bart.</td> +<td>(3rd Bedford Regiment). Joined on March 2nd.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>Lieut.</td> +<td>G. S. Higginson</td> +<td>Joined on March 11th.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>Lieut.</td> +<td>Nelson, R.M.L.I.</td> +<td>Joined on March 29th.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>Capt.</td> +<td>Clark, <span class="add2em">"</span></td> +<td>Joined on April 1st.</td> +</tr> +</table> + +<p>Col. C. D. Cooper took over a brigade, with Lieut. Renny as his +A.D.C., early in 1900. It will thus be seen that Capt. Fetherstonhaugh +was the only officer who was with the regiment from start to finish +who was not hit.<a href="#toc"><span class="small">[Back to Contents]</span></a></p> + +<p class="section"><span class="pagenum"><a id="page254" name="page254"></a>(p. 254)</span> XI.<br> + +<span class="smcap">Total Casualties of Officers of the 1st and 2nd Battalions Royal +Dublin Fusiliers.</span></p> + +<table border="0" cellpadding="1" summary="Total Casualties of Officers of the 1st and 2nd Battalions."> +<colgroup> + <col width="35%"> + <col width="30%"> + <col width="35%"> +</colgroup> +<tr class="bold smaller"> +<td>Name.</td> +<td>Nature of Casualty.</td> +<td>Place.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>Capt. Weldon</td> +<td>Killed</td> +<td>Talana.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>Lieut. Genge</td> +<td class="indent1">"</td> +<td class="indent1">"</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>Capt. Bacon</td> +<td class="indent1">"</td> +<td>Colenso.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>Lieut. Henry</td> +<td class="indent1">"</td> +<td class="indent1">"</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>Capt. Hensley</td> +<td class="indent1">"</td> +<td>Venter's Spruit.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>Lt.-Col. Sitwell</td> +<td class="indent1">"</td> +<td>Hart's Hill.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>Capt. Maitland (Gordon Highlanders, attached) </td> +<td class="indent1">"</td> +<td class="indent1">"</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>Capt. Macbean</td> +<td class="indent1">"</td> +<td>Nooitgedacht.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="indent05">" Watson</td> +<td class="indent1">"</td> +<td>Western Transvaal.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>Lieut. Ely</td> +<td>Died of disease</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="indent05">" Dennis</td> +<td class="indent1">"</td> +<td class="indent1">"</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>Capt. Dibley</td> +<td>Wounded</td> +<td>Talana.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="indent05">" Lowndes</td> +<td class="indent1">"</td> +<td class="indent1">"</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>Lieut. Perreau</td> +<td class="indent1">"</td> +<td class="indent1">"</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>Maj. Gordon</td> +<td class="indent1">"</td> +<td>Colenso.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>Capt. Shewan</td> +<td class="indent1">"</td> +<td class="indent1">"</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>Lieut. Macleod</td> +<td class="indent1">"</td> +<td class="indent1">"</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>Maj. English</td> +<td class="indent1">"</td> +<td>Venter's Spruit and Zuikerbosch.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>Capt. Hill</td> +<td class="indent1">"</td> +<td>Pieter's Hill.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>Lieut. Brodhurst Hill</td> +<td class="indent1">"</td> +<td class="indent1">"</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="indent05">" Lane</td> +<td class="indent1">" </td> +<td>Hart's Hill.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="indent05">" Dennis</td> +<td class="indent1">"</td> +<td class="indent1">"</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="indent05">" Bradford.</td> +<td class="indent1">"</td> +<td>Pieter's Hill.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="indent05">" Haskard</td> +<td class="indent1">"</td> +<td class="indent1">"</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>Capt. Carington Smith</td> +<td class="indent1">"</td> +<td class="indent1">Sanna's Post and Heidelberg.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>Lt.-Col. Mills</td> +<td class="indent1">"</td> +<td>Alleman's Nek.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>Lieut. Seppings</td> +<td class="indent1">"</td> +<td class="indent1">"</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="indent05">" Taylor</td> +<td class="indent1">"</td> +<td>Parys.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>Capt. Kinsman</td> +<td class="indent1">"</td> +<td>Near Mafeking.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="indent05">" Chapman</td> +<td class="indent1">"</td> +<td>Itala.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>Lieut. Lefroy</td> +<td class="indent1">"</td> +<td class="indent1">"</td> +</tr> +</table> +<p class="right"><a href="#toc"><span class="small">[Back to Contents]</span></a></p> + +<p class="section"><span class="pagenum"><a id="page255" name="page255"></a>(p. 255)</span> XII.<br> + +<span class="smcap">Honours and Rewards of Officers of the 2nd Royal Dublin Fusiliers.</span></p> + +<table border="0" cellpadding="1" summary="Honours and Rewards of Officers."> +<colgroup> + <col width="50%"> + <col width="50%"> +</colgroup> +<tr class="bold"> +<td>C.B.</td> +<td>BREVETS.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>Colonel C. D. Cooper.</td> +<td>Major F. P. English.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="indent05">" G. A. Mills.</td> +<td>Brevet-Major Godley.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="indent05">" H. T. Hicks.</td> +<td>Captain McBean.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td> </td> +<td>Major A. W. Gordon.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="bold">D.S.O.</td> +<td>Captain E. Fetherstonhaugh.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>Major S. G. Bird.</td> +<td class="indent05">" C. F. Romer.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="indent05">" W. H. O. Neill.</td> +<td class="indent05">" P. Maclear.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>Brevet-Major A. F. Pilson.</td> +<td class="indent05">" H. Carington Smith.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="indent05">" W. J. Venour.</td> +<td>Major A. J. Chapman.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>Captain H. M. Shewan.</td> +<td>Captain M. Lowndes.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="indent05">" G. N. Cory.</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>Lieutenant E. A. A. De Salis.</td> +<td class="bold">SPECIAL PROMOTIONS.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="indent05">" C. Garvice.</td> +<td>Lieutenant Watson.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="indent05">" Lefroy.</td> +<td class="indent05">" E. A. A. De Salis.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="indent05">" W. F. Stirling.</td> +<td class="indent05">" Lefroy.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="indent05">" C. T. W. Grimshaw.</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="indent05">" A. Moore.</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>Captain-Quartermaster R. Baker.</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +</table> +<p class="right"><a href="#toc"><span class="small">[Back to Contents]</span></a></p> + +<p class="section">XIII.<br> + +<span class="smcap">N.C.O.'s and Men of 2nd Royal Dublin Fusiliers Awarded Distinguished +Conduct Medal.</span></p> + +<table border="0" cellpadding="1" summary="Distinguished Conduct Medal."> +<colgroup> + <col width="15%"> + <col width="60%"> + <col width="25%"> +</colgroup> +<tr class="bold smaller"> +<td>Reg. No.</td> +<td>Rank and Name.</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>3423</td> +<td>Sgt. M. Connor</td> +<td rowspan="6">A.O. 163 of 1901</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4290</td> +<td class="indent05">" Hunt</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>1664</td> +<td class="indent05">" Sheridan</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td> </td> +<td>L.-Cpl. J. Kelly</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td> </td> +<td>Pte. W. Holmes</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td> </td> +<td class="indent05">" P. Kelly</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td> </td> +<td class="indent05">" E. Reid</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td colspan="3"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td> </td> +<td>Sgt.-Mj. F. A. Whalen 5th R.D. Fus.</td> +<td rowspan="15">A.O. 15 of 1902</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td> </td> +<td>Qmr.-Sgt. B. T. Bruen 5th R.D. Fus.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td> </td> +<td>Col.-Sgt. F. Gage</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td> </td> +<td>Arm.-Sgt. T. H. Ford, attached R.D. Fus.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td> </td> +<td>Sgt. W. Brown</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>2892</td> +<td class="indent05">" J. Ryan</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td> </td> +<td>Cpl. G. F. Frost, 1st Batt. R.D. Fus.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td> </td> +<td>L.-Cpl. Melia</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td> </td> +<td>Pte. W. Connell</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td> </td> +<td class="indent05">" W. Cullen</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td> </td> +<td class="indent05">" A. Dowling</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td> </td> +<td class="indent05">" M. Farrelly</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td> </td> +<td class="indent05">" M. Kavanagh</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td> </td> +<td class="indent05">" J. McCormack</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>6642</td> +<td class="indent05">" C. N. Wallace</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td colspan="3"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>43</td> +<td>Sgt.-Maj. J. Burke</td> +<td rowspan="6">A.O. 10 of 1903</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4637</td> +<td>Col.-Sgt. J. Ambrose</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5178</td> +<td class="indent05">" T. Crean</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td> </td> +<td class="indent05">" M. Dunne</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td> </td> +<td>Cpl. P. Flannery</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td> </td> +<td>Pte. P. Furlong</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td colspan="3"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td> </td> +<td>Col.-Sgt. J. H. Robinson, 1st Batt. R.D. Fus.</td> +<td>A.O. 172 of 1903</td> +</tr> +</table> +<p class="right"><a href="#toc"><span class="small">[Back to Contents]</span></a></p> + +<p class="section"><span class="pagenum"><a id="page256" name="page256"></a>(p. 256)</span> XIV.<br> + +<span class="smcap">An Address Presented by the Natal United Irish Association.</span></p> + +<p class="center italic">The Officers, Non-commissioned Officers, and Men of the 2nd Battalion +Royal Dublin Fusiliers.</p> + +<p>The recent war, from which we welcome you back, marks another epoch of +glory in the annals of your distinguished battalion. It was our +privilege on several occasions to be favoured at social functions with +the presence of officers and men of the <span class="smcap">Dublin Fusiliers</span>, and we felt +assured that the goodness of character and disposition which shed +their radiance at those gatherings, would shine with added lustre when +in the face of danger and death. The popularity of your regiment in +Natal has only been exceeded by your distinguished gallantry in the +field, and as we followed your fortunes with feelings of deepest +interest throughout the campaign, our hearts thrilled with pride as we +read of your gallant and heroic deeds. As you held the position of +honour at the march to Lucknow, so were you by the unanimous consent +of the army awarded a similar position in the entry to Ladysmith. The +marvellous bravery displayed by your regiment in the terrible fighting +between Talana Hill and Tugela, forms a fitting sequel to your +magnificent record in the Indian Peninsula; and we as Irishmen can +take a legitimate pride in the fact that your muster-roll of glory is +replete with familiar names which abound throughout the hills and +valleys of our far-off motherland. The name and fame of your regiment +are world-wide; and whether on frozen shores or in tropical climes, a +light-heartedness, an uncomplaining endurance of hardship and fatigue, +and a ready adaptability to circumstances, afford abundant proof that +the best traditions of our race have been maintained by the <span class="smcap">Dublin +Fusiliers</span>. In the vast territories of Hindustan as in South Africa, +you have shown the world the material of which an Irish soldier is +made. In the many engagements in which you have taken part, you have +seen your enemies fall thick around you, and seen, too, the crimson +tide ebb from the heart of many a brave comrade, whose last good-bye +will <span class="pagenum"><a id="page257" name="page257"></a>(p. 257)</span> remain for ever hallowed in your memory. You have +returned triumphant from this WAR, and though, alas! your numbers are +fewer, your hearts are as stout and your spirits as intrepid as ever. +The land which claims you as her sons has in proportion to her +capabilities given more hostages to glory than any land beneath the +sun, and well and nobly have you upheld that national renown. You have +won a name and <span class="italic">éclat</span> that will go down through the ages, and with +the hope that countless honours are yet in store to further illumine +the aureole of your prestige,</p> + +<p>We are yours faithfully,</p> +<table border="0" class="left30" style="width: 50%"cellpadding="1" summary="Names."> +<colgroup> + <col width="30%"> + <col width="20%"> +</colgroup> +<tr> +<td colspan="2" class="center"><span class="smcap">Chas. Donnelly</span>, <span class="italic">President</span>.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td colspan="2" class="center"><span class="smcap">James P. Donnelly</span>, <span class="italic">Hon. Treasurer</span>.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td colspan="2" class="center"><span class="smcap">E. G. O'Flaherty</span>, <span class="italic">Hon. Secretary</span>.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td colspan="2" class="center italic">Vice-Presidents:</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="smcap">Crawford Lindsay.</td> +<td class="smcap">Thos. Kelly.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="smcap">A. Trimble.</td> +<td class="smcap">J. F. E. Barnes.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td colspan="2"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td colspan="2" class="center italic">Committee:</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="smcap">W. P. Bowen.</td> +<td class="smcap">C. W. Kay Evans.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="smcap">W. J. Lyons.</td> +<td class="smcap">R. S. W. Barnes.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="smcap">P. O'Neill.</td> +<td class="smcap">J. J. O'Neill.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="smcap">E. Butler.</td> +<td class="smcap">D. Lane.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td colspan="2" class="center smcap">N. F. Black.</td> +</tr> +</table> +<p class="right"><a href="#toc"><span class="small">[Back to Contents]</span></a></p> + +<p class="section">XV.<br> + +<span class="smcap">Address From the European Inhabitants of Aden To The Members of the +Sergeants' Mess, 2nd Royal Dublin Fusiliers.</span></p> + +<p class="center italic">To the Members of the Sergeants' Mess, 2nd Battalion Royal Dublin +Fusiliers.</p> + +<p>We, the undersigned, take advantage of this occasion, the eve of your +departure from among us, to place on record our very high esteem of +the many sociable qualities displayed by you since your battalion +arrived in this station from South Africa in February, 1902.</p> + +<p>Coming to Aden at a time when, after the brilliant services you had +rendered to your Sovereign and country in that uncertain field of the +reputation of battalions as <span class="pagenum"><a id="page258" name="page258"></a>(p. 258)</span> well as individuals—South +Africa, you had every reason to expect a far better station, a union +with those near and dear to you, and therefore every reason to be +despondent. Instead, you threw yourselves into the social life of this +place in such a way that, before you were here many weeks, it was felt +that you, who had displayed the brilliant qualities so characteristic +of your race on many a hard-fought field in South Africa, were not +lacking in those social qualities which tend to enhance the popularity +of His Majesty's forces, and make life a little less irksome in what +all must admit is not a pleasant spot.</p> + +<p>Words fail to express what we all feel at being compelled to say +good-bye to you, who have been more than friends to so many of us, and +in leaving Aden for return to your homeland, we assure you that you +carry with you the sincerest good wishes of all.</p> + +<p>We shall always have a kindly feeling for you, and watch your future +with great interest, and, above all, we trust that you will find those +from whom you have so long been separated in the best of health, and +that a long life and prosperity is before you.</p> + +<table border="0" class="left40 smcap" style="width: 50%;" cellpadding="1" summary="Names."> +<colgroup> + <col width="30%"> + <col width="30%"> +</colgroup> +<tr> +<td>W. Smith.</td> +<td>F. Wiseman.</td> +</tr> +<tr class="smcap"> +<td>C. Elliott.</td> +<td>G. C. Kennedy.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>W. Willows.</td> +<td>R. Thorlin.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>E. B. Batchelor.</td> +<td>H. M. Hanley.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>T. Graves.</td> +<td>E. B. Owen.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>R. Griffiths.</td> +<td>J. A. Rupert Jones.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>A. Handy.</td> +<td>J. R. Deane.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>C. A. Holland.</td> +<td>T. W. Twaddle.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>C. J. Hocking.</td> +<td>C. O. Craven.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>J. M. Giltinan.</td> +<td>J. Mallia.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>F. C. Brewin.</td> +<td>J. Inglott.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>F. Wells.</td> +<td>G. Noel.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>E. Hall.</td> +<td>J. F. Field.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>F. J. Clay.</td> +<td>E. Hessleton.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>G. R. Chamarett.</td> +<td>F. Penha.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>P. C. Kelly.</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +</table> +<p class="right"><a href="#toc"><span class="small">[Back to Contents]</span></a></p> + +<p class="section"><span class="pagenum"><a id="page259" name="page259"></a>(p. 259)</span> XVI.<br> + +<span class="smcap">Extract From Battalion Orders Issued At Ladysmith, 27/10/99.</span></p> + +<p>Para. 2. Strength.—The following officers and men, killed in action +on the 20th inst. at the Battle of Talana, are struck off the +strength:—</p> + +<table border="0" cellpadding="1" summary="Struck off the strength."> +<colgroup> + <col width="5%"> + <col width="5%"> + <col width="5%"> + <col width="20%"> + <col width="10%"> + <col width="5%"> + <col width="5%"> + <col width="5%"> + <col width="20%"> +</colgroup> +<tr> +<td colspan="9" class="center">Capt. G. A. Weldon.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>No.</td> +<td>5103</td> +<td>Pte.</td> +<td>P. Cahill, A Coy.</td> +<td> </td> +<td>No.</td> +<td>5931</td> +<td>Pte.</td> +<td>P. Crotty, E Coy.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="indent05">"</td> +<td>5794</td> +<td class="indent05">"</td> +<td>A. Merrill, E Coy.</td> +<td> </td> +<td class="indent05">"</td> +<td>5918</td> +<td class="indent05">"</td> +<td>P. Callaghan, H Coy.</td> +</tr> +</table> + +<p>Died of wounds received in action on 21st:—</p> + +<p class="center smaller">2nd Lieut. C. J. Genge.<br> + No. 1166 Col.-Sgt. F. Anderson, F Coy.</p> + +<p>The Commanding Officer, while expressing his deep regret at these +casualties, can fully testify to the gallant manner in which each and +all met their death, fighting for their Queen and upholding the +regimental honour.<a href="#toc"><span class="small">[Back to Contents]</span></a></p> + +<p class="section">XVII.<br> + +<span class="smcap">Extract From Battalion Orders, Dated Frere, 18/12/99.</span></p> + +<p>Para. 3. Strength.—The following officers, N.C.O.'s, and men, having +been killed in action at Colenso on the 15th inst., are struck off the +strength of the battalion from that date:—</p> + +<table border="0" cellpadding="1" summary="Struck off the strength."> +<colgroup> + <col width="10%"> + <col width="20%"> + <col width="5%"> + <col width="10%"> + <col width="20%"> + <col width="5%"> + <col width="10%"> + <col width="20%"> +</colgroup> +<tr> +<td colspan="8" class="center smcap">2nd Battalion.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td colspan="8" class="center">Lieut. Robert Clive Bolton Henry.</td> +</tr> +<tr class="bold small"> +<td>Reg. No.</td> +<td>Rank and Name.</td> +<td> </td> +<td>Reg. No.</td> +<td>Rank and Name.</td> +<td> </td> +<td>Reg. No.</td> +<td>Rank and Name.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>3441</td> +<td>Sgt. Hayes.</td> +<td> </td> +<td>5833</td> +<td>Pte. Dillon.</td> +<td> </td> +<td>6134</td> +<td>Pte. Pearse.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>6287</td> +<td>L.-Cpl. Gibson.</td> +<td> </td> +<td>4795</td> +<td class="indent05">" Murphy.</td> +<td> </td> +<td>4560</td> +<td class="indent05">" Clifford.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>6044</td> +<td class="indent05">" Cathcart.</td> +<td> </td> +<td>4380</td> +<td class="indent05">" Doolan.</td> +<td> </td> +<td>4838</td> +<td class="indent05">" Flood.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5123</td> +<td>Pte. Broderick.</td> +<td> </td> +<td>4299</td> +<td class="indent05">" McAlpine.</td> +<td> </td> +<td>5319</td> +<td>L.-Cpl. Coyne.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4488</td> +<td class="indent05">" Smith.</td> +<td> </td> +<td>5044</td> +<td class="indent05">" Moore.</td> +<td> </td> +<td>6165</td> +<td>Pte. Bennett.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5930</td> +<td class="indent05">" Sinnott.</td> +<td> </td> +<td>4462</td> +<td class="indent05">" Murphy.</td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td colspan="8"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td colspan="8" class="center smcap">1st Battalion.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td colspan="8" class="center">Capt. Arthur Henry Bacon.</td> +</tr> +<tr class="bold small"> +<td>Reg. No.</td> +<td>Rank and Name.</td> +<td> </td> +<td>Reg. No.</td> +<td>Rank and Name.</td> +<td> </td> +<td>Reg. No.</td> +<td>Rank and Name.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>3993</td> +<td>Col.-Sgt. Magee.</td> +<td> </td> +<td>6472</td> +<td>Pte. Hayes.</td> +<td> </td> +<td>4095</td> +<td>Pte. Usher.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>3514</td> +<td>Sgt. Flynn.</td> +<td> </td> +<td>4192</td> +<td class="indent05">" Neill.</td> +<td> </td> +<td>3108</td> +<td class="indent05">" Connell.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4869</td> +<td class="indent05">" Callan.</td> +<td> </td> +<td>3906</td> +<td class="indent05">" Walsh.</td> +<td> </td> +<td>6002</td> +<td class="indent05">" Wisdom.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5505</td> +<td>Pte. Cole.</td> +<td> </td> +<td>4273</td> +<td class="indent05">" Nolan.</td> +<td> </td> +<td>4387</td> +<td class="indent05">" Toole.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>4301</td> +<td class="indent05">" Carroway.</td> +<td> </td> +<td>3273</td> +<td class="indent05">" Costello.</td> +<td> </td> +<td>4242</td> +<td class="indent05">" Joyce.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>2943</td> +<td class="indent05">" O'Keefe.</td> +<td> </td> +<td>2504</td> +<td class="indent05">" Bissett.</td> +<td> </td> +<td>4672</td> +<td class="indent05">" Maddox.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>?</td> +<td class="indent05">" O'Keefe.</td> +<td> </td> +<td>4193</td> +<td class="indent05">" Deevey.</td> +<td> </td> +</table> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page260" name="page260"></a>(p. 260)</span> The Commanding Officer, whilst deeply regretting, in common +with all ranks, the severe loss the regiment has sustained in the +deaths of Captain Bacon and Lieutenant Henry and the N.C.O.'s and men +killed in action at Colenso on Friday last, desires to place on record +his high appreciation of the admirable spirit displayed by all ranks +in unflinching pressing forward under a very heavy fire to the attack +of a practically impregnable position.</p> + +<p>The names of the officers, N.C.O.'s, and men who fell will, he feels +sure, be honoured in the annals of the regiment, as having set a noble +example of fearless courage and devotion to duty.<a href="#toc"><span class="small">[Back to Contents]</span></a></p> + +<p class="section">XVIII.</p> + +<p class="right"><span class="italic">Colenso, 18/12/99</span> (5).</p> + +<p class="center smcap">Telegram re Decease Sergeant Linehan.</p> + +<p class="center italic">'From Censor to G.O.C. L. of Comn.</p> + +<p>'No. 5514 Cable from Lorenzo Marquez says that Sergeant Linehan, +Fusiliers, died Racecourse, Pretoria, of Dysentery, Friday last. +Buried Catholic Cemetery.'<a href="#toc"><span class="small">[Back to Contents]</span></a></p> + +<p class="section">XIX.</p> + +<p class="right"><span class="italic">Frere, 25/12/99</span> (3).</p> + +<p class="center smcap">The Queen's Message, Christmas, 1899.</p> + +<p>'I wish you and all my brave soldiers a happy Christmas. God protect +and bless you all.—V.R.I.'<a href="#toc"><span class="small">[Back to Contents]</span></a></p> + +<p class="section">XX.</p> + +<p class="right"><span class="italic">Spearman's Camp, 29/1/00</span> (6).</p> + +<p class="center smcap smaller">Captain C. A. Hensley died of Wounds 21/1/00; struck + off Strength; Order regretting his Loss.</p> + +<p>The following Officer and N.C.O. having been killed in action and died +of wounds on the dates opposite their names, are struck off the +strength of battalion accordingly:—</p> + +<p class="center smaller"> + Captain C. A. Hensley, died of wounds 21/1/00.<br> + No. 5668 Lance-Sergeant Taylor, D company, killed in action 20/1/00.</p> + +<p>Whilst in common with all ranks deeply deploring the severe loss the +battalion has sustained by the death of Captain Hensley, the +Commanding Officer desires to place on record <span class="pagenum"><a id="page261" name="page261"></a>(p. 261)</span> his great +appreciation of the services rendered on all occasions by the late +Captain Hensley, whose zeal, devotion to duty, and gallantry in action +was ever conspicuous since the present war began. He feels sure he is +but expressing the sentiments of all ranks in saying that his name +will always be handed down in honour to future generations of the +regiment as one of those who have nobly striven to shed additional +lustre on the regiment's reputation.<a href="#toc"><span class="small">[Back to Contents]</span></a></p> + +<p class="section">XXI.</p> + +<p class="right"><span class="italic">Spearman's Camp, 31/1/00</span> (3)</p> + +<p class="center smcap">Present of Tobacco from past Officers, and + Letter, &c.</p> + +<p>The following letter, accompanying a present of 400 pounds of tobacco +sent to the N.C.O.'s and men of the battalion by some former officers +of the battalion, has been received to-day:—</p> + +<p>'From the old Officers of the 2nd Battalion Royal Dublin Fusiliers to +the N.C.O.'s, rank and file of the 2nd Royal Dublin Fusiliers, in +token of their high appreciation of the conspicuous gallantry +displayed by the battalion during the campaign, now in progress in +South Africa, in which they have so brilliantly maintained the ancient +traditions of the "Old Toughs."'</p> + +<p>The following names are appended to the above:—Colonel R. Taylor, +Colonel Colville Frankland, Colonel C. E. Glasse, Colonel W. Holmes, +Colonel F. Taylor, Colonel W. C. Riddell, Lieut.-Colonel Reeves, +Lieut.-Colonel F. W. Graham, Lieut.-Colonel A. A. Godwin, +Lieut.-Colonel R. H. Mansel, Lieut.-Colonel M. J. Hickley, +Lieut.-Colonel J. R. Povah, Major the Hon. H. M. Hobart Hampden, Major +R. L. Shaw, Major S. J. Wynne, Major E. Pearse, Captain A. M. +Horrocks, Captain R. D. Vincent, Captain H. J. Guyon, Lieutenant W. S. +Burmester.</p> + + +<p class="center smcap">Reply.</p> + +<p>'Colonel Cooper, the Officers, N.C.O.'s and men of the 2nd Battalion +the Royal Dublin Fusiliers desire to return their very heartfelt +thanks to Colonel Frankland and the old Officers of the battalion for +their kind thoughtfulness in providing the men with tobacco.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page262" name="page262"></a>(p. 262)</span> 'They beg to assure the old Officers that their gift is most +thoroughly appreciated, as also the expression of goodwill and +admiration of the battalion's services in the present campaign which +accompanies it.</p> + +<p>'To know that the old Officers still continue to follow with interest +and admiration the fortunes and doings of the "Old Toughs" will ever +be an incentive to all ranks to do all that lies in their power to +maintain the reputation which the old Officers helped to win for the +corps in days gone by.'<a href="#toc"><span class="small">[Back to Contents]</span></a></p> + +<p class="section">XXII.</p> + +<p class="right"><span class="italic">Spearman's Camp, 1/2/00</span> (5).</p> + +<p class="center smcap">Lance-Sergeant Merry promoted for Gallantry.</p> + +<p>The Commanding Officer has been pleased to specially promote the +undermentioned N.C.O. to the rank of Sergeant from January 12th for +meritorious service in the field:—</p> + +<p class="center smaller">No. 4441 Lance-Sergeant J. Merry, H company.<a href="#toc"><span class="small">[Back to Contents]</span></a></p> + +<p class="section">XXIII.</p> + +<p class="right"><span class="italic">Ladysmith, 5/3/00</span> (2).</p> + +<p class="center smcap">Losses in Action, including Colonel Sitwell and Captain + Maitland, noted and deplored.</p> + +<p>The following Officers, N.C.O.'s and men having been killed in action +on the dates opposite their names, are struck off the strength of the +battalion, or cease to be attached to it as the case may be, from +those dates accordingly:—</p> + +<table border="0" cellpadding="1" summary="Struck off the strength."> +<colgroup> + <col width="5%"> + <col width="8%"> + <col width="5%"> + <col width="25%"> + <col width="3%"> + <col width="5%"> + <col width="8%"> + <col width="5%"> + <col width="30%"> +</colgroup> +<tr> +<td class="center" colspan="9">Major and Brevet-Lieut.-Colonel +C. H. G. Sitwell, D.S.O., 24/2/00.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="center" colspan="9">Captain S. C. Maitland, 2nd Gordon +Highlanders (attached), 24/2/00.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>No.</td> +<td>4871</td> +<td>Pte.</td> +<td>J. White.</td> +<td> </td> +<td>No.</td> +<td>4743</td> +<td>Pte.</td> +<td>T. Reid (attached). 24.2.00</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="indent05">"</td> +<td>4262</td> +<td>Cpl.</td> +<td>J. Seymour.</td> +<td> </td> +<td class="indent05">"</td> +<td>5073</td> +<td class="indent05">"</td> +<td>Kinsella.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>"</td> +<td>5359</td> +<td>Pte.</td> +<td>Galbraith.</td> +<td> </td> +<td class="indent05">"</td> +<td>6296</td> +<td class="indent05">"</td> +<td>Allen.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="indent05">"</td> +<td>2872</td> +<td class="indent05">"</td> +<td>Wade.</td> +<td> </td> +<td class="indent05">"</td> +<td>5618</td> +<td class="indent05">"</td> +<td>T. Purcell.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="indent05">"</td> +<td>4012</td> +<td class="indent05">"</td> +<td>J. Armstrong.</td> +<td> </td> +<td class="indent05">"</td> +<td>1717</td> +<td class="indent05">"</td> +<td>Sherwin.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="indent05">"</td> +<td>2037</td> +<td class="indent05">"</td> +<td>Whelan.</td> +<td> </td> +<td class="indent05">"</td> +<td>2327</td> +<td class="indent05">"</td> +<td>Grimes.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="indent05">"</td> +<td>3303</td> +<td class="indent05">"</td> +<td>Timmins.</td> +<td> </td> +<td class="indent05">"</td> +<td>1749</td> +<td>Sgt.</td> +<td>T. Brennan.</td> +</tr> +</table> + +<p>Died of wounds 2/3/00:—</p> + +<p class="center smaller">No. 5745 Pte. Brady.</p> + +<p>Whilst in common with the rest of the battalion deeply deploring the +loss of so many brave Officers, N.C.O.'s and <span class="pagenum"><a id="page263" name="page263"></a>(p. 263)</span> men, and +sympathising with those who have been wounded, the Commanding Officer +wishes to place on record his high appreciation of the services +rendered to the battalion on all occasions by the late Major and +Brevet-Lieut.-Colonel Sitwell, whose distinguished career hitherto +tended to the honour and reputation of the regiment. All ranks of the +battalion join with him, he is sure, in lamenting the loss of such a +distinguished soldier and comrade, and a brilliant career thus +suddenly though gloriously cut short.</p> + +<p>To the late Captain Maitland's sterling qualities as an officer and +comrade he would also wish to bear testimony. His services to the +battalion during a very trying and critical time were most valuable. +On behalf of the battalion he offers the late Captain Maitland's +relatives and brother-officers his deepest sympathy.<a href="#toc"><span class="small">[Back to Contents]</span></a></p> + + +<p class="section">XXIV.</p> + +<p class="right"><span class="italic">5/3/00</span> (4).</p> + +<p class="center smcap">The Queen's Message re Relief of Ladysmith.</p> + +<p>The following telegram, received by the Commander-in-Chief on the +relief of Ladysmith from Her Most Gracious Majesty the Queen, is +published for information of all ranks:—</p> + +<p>'Thank God for news you have telegraphed to me. Congratulate you with +all my heart.—V.R.I.'<a href="#toc"><span class="small">[Back to Contents]</span></a></p> + +<p class="section">XXV.</p> + +<p class="right"><span class="italic">Ladysmith, 5/3/00</span> (3).</p> + +<p class="center smcap">The Queen's Message—'My Brave Irish.'</p> + +<p>The Commanding Officer has much pleasure in publishing for the +information of all ranks, the following message from Her Majesty the +Queen, to the 5th Brigade, which was recently received by the G.O.C. +in Chief in Natal.</p> + +<p class="center italic">'To General Buller, Natal.</p> + +<p>'I have heard with the deepest concern of the heavy losses sustained +by my brave Irish soldiers. I desire to express my admiration of the +splendid fighting qualities which they have exhibited throughout these +trying operations.—V.R.I.'</p> + +<p class="center smcap"><span class="pagenum"><a id="page264" name="page264"></a>(p. 264)</span> The following Reply was sent by Sir Redvers Buller:—</p> + +<p>'Sir Redvers Buller has, on the part of the Irish Brigade, to thank +the Queen for her gracious telegram of sympathy and encouragement.'<a href="#toc"><span class="small">[Back to Contents]</span></a></p> + +<p class="section">XXVI.</p> + +<p class="right"><span class="italic">5/3/00</span> (5).</p> + +<p class="center smcap">Letter to Gordon Highlanders, re Captain Maitland.</p> + +<p>The Commanding Officer has, on behalf of the battalion, forwarded the +following letter to the Officer Commanding the 2nd Gordon Highlanders.</p> + +<p class="right p2">'<span class="italic">Ladysmith, 5/3/00.</span></p> + +<p>'<span class="smcap">Dear Major Scott</span>,—</p> + +<p>'On behalf of myself and the officers of the battalion, I write to +offer you all our very deepest sympathy in the severe loss your +battalion has sustained by the death of Captain Maitland.</p> + +<p>'I find it hard to adequately express to you how very deeply the whole +of my battalion laments his loss, and I know I am only expressing the +sentiments of all ranks when I assure you that his memory will ever be +cherished in the battalion.</p> + +<p>'A better or more conscientious officer I have never had under my +command. We would all esteem it a very great favour if you could send +us a photograph of our late dear comrade, and might I also so far +trespass on your kindness, as to ask for one for his company (G) as +well, which I need hardly say will be highly prized by them.</p> + +<p><span class="add4em">'Yours, &c.</span> +<span class="add3em">(Signed)</span> <span class="add2em smcap">C. D. Cooper.'</span><a href="#toc"><span class="small">[Back to Contents]</span></a></p> + +<p class="section">XXVII.</p> + +<p class="right"><span class="italic">Ladysmith, 14/3/00</span> (3).</p> + +<p class="center smcap">Natal Army Orders. The Wearing of Shamrock + on St. Patrick's Day.</p> + +<p>The following extracts from Natal Army Orders are published for +information:—</p> + +<p>'(1) The General Commanding has to communicate to the troops the +following telegram he has received from the C. in C. viz.</p> + +<p>'Her Majesty the Queen is pleased to order that in <span class="pagenum"><a id="page265" name="page265"></a>(p. 265)</span> future on +St. Patrick's Day all ranks in Her Majesty's Irish regiments shall +wear as a distinction a sprig of shamrock in their head-dress to +commemorate the gallantry of Her Irish soldiers during the recent +battles in South Africa.</p> + +<p class="left50 smcap">'Wolseley.'<a href="#toc"><span class="small">[Back to Contents]</span></a></p> + +<p class="section">XXVIII.</p> + +<p class="right italic">Ladysmith, 18/3/00.</p> + +<p class="center smcap">Winston Churchill's Telegram to Regiment.</p> + +<p>The following telegrams received yesterday, and replies thereto, are +published for information:—</p> + +<p class="center italic">'To Colonel, Dublin Fusiliers, Ladysmith.</p> + +<p>'My earnest congratulations on the honour the Dublin Fusiliers more +than any other regiment have won for the land of their birth. We are +all wearing the shamrock here.</p> + +<p class="left40">'(Signed) +<span class="add4em smcap">Winston Churchill.'</span></p> + +<p class="center smcap">Reply.</p> + +<p class="center italic">'To Winston Churchill, Lord Dundonald's Brigade.</p> + +<p>'Many thanks for your kind message received yesterday, all ranks +appreciate your kind expressions.</p> + +<p class="left40">'(Signed) +<span class="add4em smcap">Colonel, Dublin Fusiliers.'</span><a href="#toc"><span class="small">[Back to Contents]</span></a></p> + +<p class="section">XXIX.</p> + +<p class="right"><span class="italic">18/3/00</span> (1).</p> + +<p class="center smcap">Colenso Railwaymen's Telegram to Regiment.</p> + +<p class="center italic">'To Brigadier-General Cooper, Commanding Irish Brigade, Ladysmith.</p> + +<p>'On St. Patrick's Day the railway men of Colenso respectfully wish to +convey to the officers and men of Her Majesty's Dublin Fusiliers their +best wishes for a speedy termination of the present war, in which the +Dublins have borne so glorious a part. The whole of South Africa rings +with praise of the gallant Irish Brigade. We mourn with you the loss +of so many gallant men of your command. They have fallen in their +defence of a united South Africa, over which, please God, Her Most +Gracious Majesty's flag will fly from Cape Town to the Zambesi.</p> + +<p class="left40">'(Signed) +<span class="add4em smcap">Inspector Campbell.'</span></p> + +<p class="center"><span class="pagenum"><a id="page266" name="page266"></a>(p. 266)</span> <span class="smcap">Reply.</span></p> + +<p class="right">18/3/00 (1).</p> + +<p class="center italic">'To Inspector Campbell, Colenso.</p> + +<p>'On behalf of the officers and men under my command, please accept our +heartfelt thanks for your kind message and expressions of sympathy.</p> + +<p class="left40">(Signed) +<span class="add4em smcap">Colonel Cooper.'</span><a href="#toc"><span class="small">[Back to Contents]</span></a></p> + +<p class="section">XXX. + +<p class="right"><span class="italic">5th Brigade Orders, 18/3/00</span> (1).</p> + +<p class="center smcap">Cape Town Irishmen send Telegram.</p> + +<p>The following telegram has been received by General Sir Redvers +Buller:—</p> + +<p>'Cape Town Irishmen wish the gallant Irish officers and men under your +command many returns of St. Patrick's Day, and would express their +heartfelt admiration for the way in which they have maintained +unsullied the splendid military traditions of Ireland and the Empire +under your gallant leadership.'<a href="#toc"><span class="small">[Back to Contents]</span></a></p> + +<p class="section">XXXI.</p> + +<p class="right"><span class="italic">Ladysmith, 20/3/00</span> (2).</p> + +<p class="center smcap">The Queen sends Telegram of Thanks.</p> + +<p>The following reply to telegram sent by Colonel Cooper on behalf of +the battalion to Her Majesty the Queen on Shamrock Day was received +yesterday:—</p> + +<p>'The Queen thanks her Dublin Fusiliers for loyal message. Windsor +Castle, 18th.'<a href="#toc"><span class="small">[Back to Contents]</span></a></p> + +<p class="section">XXXII.</p> + +<p class="right"><span class="italic">Elandslaagte, 3/4/00</span> (7).</p> + +<p class="center smcap">Colonel Saunderson's Letter.</p> + +<p>The following letter was received to-day by the Commanding Officer +from Colonel Saunderson, M.P.:—</p> + +<p class="right italic">'Castle Saunderson, Belturbet, 1/3/00.</p> + +<p class="smcap">'Dear Sir,</p> + +<p>'I cannot help writing to you to express on my part, and on the part +of every loyal Irishman, the pride and sympathy we take in the heroic +deeds of the Dublin Fusiliers in South Africa. Your gallant regiment +has shed a lustre on the army to which they belong and on the country +from which they come.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page267" name="page267"></a>(p. 267)</span> 'No words of mine can express the admiration we feel for +their loyalty, their courage, and their indomitable determination. I +hope they realise how our hearts are with them.'</p> + +<p>A reply thanking Colonel Saunderson has been sent by the Commanding +Officer.<a href="#toc"><span class="small">[Back to Contents]</span></a></p> + +<p class="section">XXXIII.</p> + +<p class="right"><span class="italic">Fourteen Streams, 12/5</span> (3).</p> + +<p class="center smcap">Death of Second Lieutenant J. T. Dennis at Aliwal North, May 2nd. +Enteric.</p> + +<p>The Commanding Officer deeply regrets to announce the death of Second +Lieutenant J. T. Dennis, which occurred at Aliwal North on May 2nd of +enteric.<a href="#toc"><span class="small">[Back to Contents]</span></a></p> + +<p class="section">XXXIV.</p> + +<p class="right"><span class="italic">17/5/00</span> (4).</p> + +<p class="center smcap">General Hart congratulates 1st Borders and 2nd Royal Dublin Fusiliers +on their Marching.</p> + +<p>Major-General Hart congratulates the 1st Border Regiment and 2nd Royal +Dublin Fusiliers upon the recent instance of their marching powers. +For military reasons it was needful after the march forward yesterday +to march back at once to Fourteen Streams. As far as he can arrive at +a tolerably accurate estimate of the ground gone over, these two +battalions in the course of yesterday and last night marched +twenty-six miles in the space of nineteen hours. And the strong point +is that they arrived at the end of it in compact formation, still +going a good pace, and without any straggling or falling out. The +Major-General accordingly puts this event on record.<a href="#toc"><span class="small">[Back to Contents]</span></a></p> + +<p class="section">XXXV.</p> + +<p class="right"><span class="italic">Heidelberg, 2/7/00</span> (5).</p> + +<p class="center smcap">Colonel Cooper's Farewell Order.</p> + +<p>The following farewell order by Major-General C. D. Cooper is +published for information. The Commanding Officer regrets that its +publication has been unavoidably postponed till now:—</p> + +<p>'In bidding farewell to the battalion in which I have <span class="pagenum"><a id="page268" name="page268"></a>(p. 268)</span> served +for so many years, I wish to thank all ranks from the bottom of my +heart for the kind and efficient support accorded to me during the +period of my command—close on five years. It was always my ambition +to command the battalion, and on active service, and I feel very +thankful that my wish was granted. We have fought together and worked +hard for our noble Queen and country, and all ranks have shown that +good spirit and bravery that has made the battalion what it is. You +may rest assured that I will always take the greatest interest in the +doings of the battalion, and I shall never forget the happy days spent +amongst you. I much regret that I was unable to wish you Godspeed in +person, but I sincerely hope I shall soon see you all again. My very +sincere sympathy and regret at our very heavy losses. May God bless +you all.</p> + +<p><span class="add3em">'(Signed)</span><br> +<span class="left50"><span class="smcap">C. D. Cooper</span>,</span><br> +<span class="left40"><span class="italic">Major-General Commanding 4th Brigade</span>.'</span><a href="#toc"><span class="small">[Back to Contents]</span></a></p> + +<p class="section">XXXVI.</p> + +<p class="right"><span class="italic">Heidelberg, 24/7/00</span> (6).</p> + +<p class="center smcap">General Buller's Telegram re Zuikerbosch.</p> + +<p>The following telegram received by the G.O.C. is published for +information:—</p> + +<p class="center italic">'from Sir Redvers Buller.</p> + +<p>'So glad to hear of your fight. Good old Dublins, and tell them so +from me, and well done you.'<a href="#toc"><span class="small">[Back to Contents]</span></a></p> + +<p class="section">XXXVII.</p> + +<p class="right"><span class="italic">Krugersdorp, 4/10/00</span> (8).</p> + +<p class="center"><span class="smcap">A Patrol under Lieutenant Garvice</span>, &c.</p> + +<p>A patrol under Lieutenant Garvice, Commanding Virginia Railway +Station, came in contact with some Boers on the 1st. We had one man +wounded, Boers three, whom they had to leave on the ground. The +casualties in the 2nd Coldstream Guards near Pan were caused by the +enemy's fire, the majority of the wounds were caused by explosive +bullets: the men behaved very well, and everybody kept their heads, +otherwise the loss would have been greater, as the Boers opened fire +at sixty yards range.<a href="#toc"><span class="small">[Back to Contents]</span></a></p> + +<p class="section"><span class="pagenum"><a id="page269" name="page269"></a>(p. 269)</span> XXXVIII.</p> + +<p class="right"><span class="italic">Krugersdorp, 4/10/00</span> (8).</p> + +<p class="center smcap">Colonel Rochford's Attack.</p> + +<p>Colonel Rochford attacked a small Boer laager between Pretoria and +Johannesburg before dawn yesterday, with Royal Dublin Fusiliers and +M.I. Fusiliers. He rushed the position with the bayonet. Nine +prisoners were captured, most of them men of importance, who have been +troubling the district for some time. A small party of Boers made +their way to Dewetsdorp and Wepener. General Kelly Kenny has sent +troops to occupy both these places.<a href="#toc"><span class="small">[Back to Contents]</span></a></p> + +<p class="section">XXXIX.</p> + +<p class="right"><span class="italic">Krugersdorp, 16/12/00</span> (8).</p> + +<p class="center smcap">Commanding Officer's Remarks on Trek.</p> + +<p>The Commanding Officer is very well pleased with the way the men +marched in this trip, doing 102 miles in six days, an average of +seventeen miles a day; also with their excellent conduct and the +cheerful way in which all difficulties were met. The results of the +trip were over 1000 head of sheep and cattle and seven waggons +captured, thirty barns of forage burnt, and innumerable stocks of oat +hay, some of which concealed ammunition.<a href="#toc"><span class="small">[Back to Contents]</span></a></p> + +<p class="section">XL.</p> + +<p class="center smcap">Letter from General Hart.</p> + +<p class="center italic">Lieut.-Colonel Hicks, Commanding 2nd Battalion + Royal Dublin Fusiliers.</p> + +<p>The manner in which the encampment of your battalion is arranged +deserves my special commendation. On very bad camping-ground, beset +with rocks and bush, and afflicted with dust between, I find your +companies excellently established by ingenious and industrious +adaptation to circumstances. The regularity and tidiness are +conspicuous, and have been noted by me with great satisfaction. I need +not say how much neatness of arrangements must conduce to quickness +and good quality of soldier work.</p> + +<p><span class="add3em">(Signed)</span><br> +<span class="left50 smcap">A. Fitzroy Hart,</span><br> +<span class="left40 italic">Major-General Commanding Irish Brigade.</span></p> +<p class="italic">Fourteen Streams, May 20th 1900.<a href="#toc"><span class="small">[Back to Contents]</span></a></p> + +<p class="section"><span class="pagenum"><a id="page270" name="page270"></a>(p. 270)</span> XLI.</p> + +<p class="right"><span class="italic">Krugersdorp, 25/1/01</span> (4).</p> + +<p class="center smcap">General Hart's Farewell.</p> + +<p>The following Farewell Order by Major-General A. Fitzroy Hart, C.B., +is published for information:—</p> + +<p>'In leaving to take another command, I wish you, my brother soldiers +of my force, farewell.</p> + +<p>'It is an article of my faith, that you would go anywhere and do +anything required in battle.</p> + +<p>'I leave you with deep regret, and of course I must feel this +particularly for the last of my old Irish brigade with which I began +the war.</p> + +<p>'In departing, I give you this scrap of advice: Be individually, +whenever opportunity offers personally, not only kind but generous to +the inhabitants of this country which we have taken from them, and +among whom so many of our countrymen and countrywomen will have to +dwell. It will not diminish your soldierly strength, and it will +hasten a welcome for the pleasant government of peace.'<a href="#toc"><span class="small">[Back to Contents]</span></a></p> + +<p class="section">XLII.</p> + +<p class="right"><span class="italic">Fort Kilmarnock, 25/9/01</span> (6).</p> + +<p class="center smcap">Letter from Captain Anley.</p> + +<p>The following extracts from a letter received from Brevet-Major Anley, +Commanding 3rd M.I., are published for information:—</p> + +<p>'The behaviour of your M.I. company continues to be very good. +Lieutenant Garvice and thirty men of the company did excellent service +the other day, when acting as rearguard to a convoy which was leaving +Carolina. It was reported that it was due to the steadiness of the men +of the Royal Dublin Fusiliers, and the able manner they were handled +by Lieutenant Garvice, that the convoy got in without loss.</p> + +<p>'The Inspector-General M.I. wrote and asked me to congratulate +Lieutenant Garvice on the behaviour of his men. No. 4701, Private +Kelly, R.D.F., was recommended for gallantry on this occasion.</p> + +<p><span class="add3em">'(Signed)</span><br> +<span class="left50 smcap">F. Gore Anley,</span><br> +<span class="left40 italic">Brevet-Major Commanding 3rd Battalion M.I.'</span><a href="#toc"><span class="small">[Back to Contents]</span></a></p> + +<p class="section"><span class="pagenum"><a id="page271" name="page271"></a>(p. 271)</span> XLIII.</p> + +<p class="center smcap">Conspicuous Gallantry at Gaskraal On August 28th, &c.</p> + +<p>The following extract from Army Order No. 418, dated Pretoria, +September 28th, 1901, is published for information:—</p> + +<p>'No. 1. The following have been brought to notice of the General +Officer Commanding-in-Chief, for gallantry and good service:</p> + +<p class="center smaller">2nd Royal Dublin Fusiliers: No. 6491, Lce.-Cpl. T. O'Connor + (killed).</p> + +<p>For great and conspicuous gallantry when very closely engaged with +enemy at Gaskraal on 28th Aug. 1901.'<a href="#toc"><span class="small">[Back to Contents]</span></a></p> + +<p class="section">XLIV.</p> + +<p class="center smcap">Lord Kitchener's Wire.</p> + +<p>'I know I am speaking for the whole army in South Africa, when I wish +the Dublin Fusiliers Godspeed, and congratulate them on the fine +record they have established during their services in the country.'</p> + +<p class="center smcap">Answer.</p> + +<p>'I beg to thank your Lordship in the name of the regiment for your +very kind and congratulatory telegram, which is much appreciated by +all ranks.'<a href="#toc"><span class="small">[Back to Contents]</span></a></p> + +<p class="section">XLV.</p> + +<p class="center smcap">Roll of Officers, 2nd Royal Dublin Fusiliers, who embarked at Durban +on s.s. 'Sicilia,' on the 29/1/02, en route for Aden.</p> + +<table border="0" cellpadding="1" summary="Roll of Officers on s.s. 'Sicilia"> +<colgroup> + <col width="15%"> + <col width="30%"> + <col width="5%"> + <col width="15%"> + <col width="30%"> +</colgroup> +<tr> +<td colspan="2" class="bold small">Rank and Name.</td> +<td> </td> +<td colspan="2" class="bold small">Rank and Name.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>Col.</td> +<td>H. T. Hicks, C.B.</td> +<td> </td> +<td> Lieut.</td> +<td>A. de B. W. W. Bradford.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>Maj.</td> +<td>S. G. Bird, D.S.O.</td> +<td> </td> +<td class="indent05"> "</td> +<td>S. G. De C. Wheeler.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>Capt. and Bt.-Maj.</td> +<td>E. Fetherstonhaugh.</td> +<td> </td> +<td> 2nd Lieut.</td> +<td>A. W. Newton.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>Capt. and Bt.-Maj.</td> +<td>M. Lowndes.</td> +<td> </td> +<td class="indent05"> " </td> +<td>E. St. G. Smith</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>Capt.</td> +<td>H. W. Higginson.</td> +<td> </td> +<td class="indent05">" </td> +<td>R. F. B. Knox.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="indent05">" </td> +<td>G. N. Cory, D.S.O.</td> +<td> </td> +<td class="indent05">" </td> +<td>J. P. Tredennick.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>Lieut.</td> +<td>C. Garvice, D.S.O.</td> +<td> </td> +<td class="indent05"> " </td> +<td>B. Maclear.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="indent05">" </td> +<td>L. F. Renny.</td> +<td> </td> +<td class="indent05"> " </td> +<td>J. P. B. Robinson.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="indent05">" </td> +<td>J. McD. Haskard.</td> +<td> </td> +<td class="indent05"> " </td> +<td>E. F. E. Seymour.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="indent05">" </td> +<td>A. H. D. Britton.</td> +<td> </td> +<td class="indent05"> " </td> +<td>H. St. G. M. S. Scott.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td colspan="3"> </td> +<td>Lieut.</td> +<td>J. Burke (Quartermaster).</td> +</table> +<p class="right"><a href="#toc"><span class="small">[Back to Contents]</span></a></p> + +<p class="p4 center italic">Printed by Strangeways & Sons, Tower Street, +Cambridge Circus, London, W.C.</p> + + + +<p class="p4"><a id="footnote1" name="footnote1"></a> +<strong>Footnote 1:</strong> It was at Ladysmith that the battalion adopted the green +tops on the helmets, a distinguishing badge which was worn throughout +the war. The 1st Battalion painted theirs blue on account of the +historic nickname, 'Blue-caps,' acquired by them at the time of the +Mutiny.<a href="#footnotetag1"><span class="small">[Back to Main Text]</span></a></p> + +<p><a id="footnote2" name="footnote2"></a> +<strong>Footnote 2:</strong> A great friendship sprang up between this celebrated +regiment and ourselves.<a href="#footnotetag2"><span class="small">[Back to Main Text]</span></a></p> + +<p><a id="footnote3" name="footnote3"></a> +<strong>Footnote 3:</strong> He had been wounded at Elandslaagte, and, being unable to +rejoin his corps in Ladysmith, was attached to the battalion.<a href="#footnotetag3"><span class="small">[Back to Main Text]</span></a></p> + +<p><a id="footnote4" name="footnote4"></a> +<strong>Footnote 4:</strong> Poor Hensley was not only one of the most popular +officers in the regiment, but also one of the best and bravest. All +his life he had been devoted to field sports, and his fame as a plucky +big-game hunter and skilful shot was well known in many a Central +Indian village and Cashmere valley. Educated at the Canadian Military +College, he was a master of his profession, while the long months +spent in Indian jungles had turned him into a handy man indeed. +Wonderful and varied were the uses to which he could put an empty +paraffin-tin or biscuit-box, and excellent were the stews he could +produce out of a mess-tin. On one occasion in India a wounded panther +was mauling one of his beaters. His rifle was empty, but without a +moment's hesitation he dashed in, and drove the animal away by beating +it over the head. Alas! poor Hensley, we could spare him ill, but, +after all, we know he died the death he would have chosen.<a href="#footnotetag4"><span class="small">[Back to Main Text]</span></a></p> + +<p><a id="footnote5" name="footnote5"></a> +<strong>Footnote 5:</strong> The Borders had been left behind at Chieveley. In their +place General Hart received half a battalion of the newly-raised +Imperial Light Infantry.<a href="#footnotetag5"><span class="small">[Back to Main Text]</span></a></p> + +<p><a id="footnote6" name="footnote6"></a> +<strong>Footnote 6:</strong> There were, of course, many narrow escapes, but none +narrower than that of Major Romer, whose modesty forbids him to allude +to it. His helmet was shot through by a bullet which actually parted +his hair in its passage, a feat never before accomplished.—A. E. M.<a href="#footnotetag6"><span class="small">[Back to Main Text]</span></a></p> + +<p><a id="footnote7" name="footnote7"></a> +<strong>Footnote 7:</strong> This regiment had joined the 5th Brigade after the relief +of Ladysmith in place of the Inniskilling Fusiliers.<a href="#footnotetag7"><span class="small">[Back to Main Text]</span></a></p> + +<p><a id="footnote8" name="footnote8"></a> +<strong>Footnote 8:</strong> Border Regiment, Royal Dublin Fusiliers, Bearer Company, +and Supply Detachment.<a href="#footnotetag8"><span class="small">[Back to Main Text]</span></a></p> + +<p><a id="footnote9" name="footnote9"></a> +<strong>Footnote 9:</strong> <span class="italic">Vide</span> General Hart's letter in Appendix.<a href="#footnotetag9"><span class="small">[Back to Main Text]</span></a></p> + +<p><a id="footnote10" name="footnote10"></a> +<strong>Footnote 10:</strong> 130 Somersets, 2 guns, 1 pompom, 140 Marshall's Horse.<a href="#footnotetag10"><span class="small">[Back to Main Text]</span></a></p> + +<p><a id="footnote11" name="footnote11"></a> +<strong>Footnote 11:</strong> South Wales Borderers, Royal Dublin Fusiliers, +half-battalion Somersetshire Light Infantry, 4·7 Naval Gun, 28th +Battery Royal Field Artillery, Marshall's Horse, and Yeomanry.<a href="#footnotetag11"><span class="small">[Back to Main Text]</span></a></p> + +<p><a id="footnote12" name="footnote12"></a> +<strong>Footnote 12:</strong> That minor operations such as these should receive but +scant recognition at the hands of historians is not to be wondered at, +but neither the official nor the <span class="italic">Times</span> histories in their accounts +of this surprise of Pochefstroom found space to mention the length of +this march, an omission which is very greatly to be wondered at.<a href="#footnotetag12"><span class="small">[Back to Main Text]</span></a></p> + +<p><a id="footnote13" name="footnote13"></a> +<strong>Footnote 13:</strong> Royal Dublin Fusiliers, 100 cavalry, two guns.<a href="#footnotetag13"><span class="small">[Back to Main Text]</span></a></p> + +<p><a id="footnote14" name="footnote14"></a> +<strong>Footnote 14:</strong> Royal Dublin Fusiliers, two guns, twenty-five Yeomanry.<a href="#footnotetag14"><span class="small">[Back to Main Text]</span></a></p> + +<p><a id="footnote15" name="footnote15"></a> +<strong>Footnote 15:</strong> Half-battalion Royal Dublin Fusiliers, one company +Somerset Light Infantry, two guns 28th Battery Royal Field Artillery, +and twenty Marshall's Horse.<a href="#footnotetag15"><span class="small">[Back to Main Text]</span></a></p> + +<p><a id="footnote16" name="footnote16"></a> +<strong>Footnote 16:</strong> The writer was recently dining with Colonel—now +Major-General—Rochfort, when that officer particularly asked him to +mention how splendidly the party of Dublin Fusiliers under his command +had behaved on this occasion, and his admiration of their soldierly +conduct at all times while serving under him.<a href="#footnotetag16"><span class="small">[Back to Main Text]</span></a></p> + +<p><a id="footnote17" name="footnote17"></a> +<strong>Footnote 17:</strong> 600 Strathcona's Horse, 160 Brabant's Horse, 2 Elswick +guns, 1 pompom, Essex Regiment, ½-battalion Royal Dublin Fusiliers.<a href="#footnotetag17"><span class="small">[Back to Main Text]</span></a></p> + +<p><a id="footnote18" name="footnote18"></a> +<strong>Footnote 18:</strong> South Wales Borderers, Royal Dublin Fusiliers, 28th +Battery, R.F.A., 4·7 inch gun, mounted details.<a href="#footnotetag18"><span class="small">[Back to Main Text]</span></a></p> + +<p><a id="footnote19" name="footnote19"></a> +<strong>Footnote 19:</strong> 400 Royal Dublin Fusiliers, 200 cavalry, two guns.<a href="#footnotetag19"><span class="small">[Back to Main Text]</span></a></p> + +<p><a id="footnote20" name="footnote20"></a> +<strong>Footnote 20:</strong> 400 Royal Dublin Fusiliers, 100 Worcestershire Regiment, +200 S.A.C., 220 Scottish Horse, two guns.<a href="#footnotetag20"><span class="small">[Back to Main Text]</span></a></p> + +<p><a id="footnote21" name="footnote21"></a> +<strong>Footnote 21:</strong> 'To her brave soldiers Dublin has dedicated this +Monument. 1906.'<a href="#footnotetag21"><span class="small">[Back to Main Text]</span></a></p> + +<p> </p> +<p> </p> +<hr class="full" noshade> +<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE SECOND BATTALION ROYAL DUBLIN FUSILIERS IN THE SOUTH AFRICAN WAR***</p> +<p>******* This file should be named 25618-h.txt or 25618-h.zip *******</p> +<p>This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:<br> +<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/2/5/6/1/25618">http://www.gutenberg.org/2/5/6/1/25618</a></p> +<p>Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed.</p> + +<p>Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules, +set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to +copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to +protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project +Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you +charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you +do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the +rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose +such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and +research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do +practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is +subject to the trademark license, especially commercial +redistribution.</p> + + + +<pre> +*** START: FULL LICENSE *** + +THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE +PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK + +To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free +distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work +(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project +Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project +Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at +<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/license">http://www.gutenberg.org/license)</a>. + + +Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm +electronic works + +1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm +electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to +and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property +(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all +the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy +all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession. +If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project +Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the +terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or +entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8. + +1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be +used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who +agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few +things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works +even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See +paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project +Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement +and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic +works. See paragraph 1.E below. + +1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation" +or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project +Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the +collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an +individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are +located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from +copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative +works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg +are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project +Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by +freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of +this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with +the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by +keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project +Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others. + +1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern +what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in +a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check +the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement +before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or +creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project +Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning +the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United +States. + +1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg: + +1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate +access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently +whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the +phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project +Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed, +copied or distributed: + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + +1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived +from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is +posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied +and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees +or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work +with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the +work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 +through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the +Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or +1.E.9. + +1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted +with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution +must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional +terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked +to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the +permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work. + +1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm +License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this +work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm. + +1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this +electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without +prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with +active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project +Gutenberg-tm License. + +1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary, +compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any +word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or +distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than +"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version +posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org), +you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a +copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon +request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other +form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm +License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1. + +1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying, +performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works +unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9. + +1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing +access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided +that + +- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from + the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method + you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is + owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he + has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the + Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments + must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you + prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax + returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and + sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the + address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to + the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation." + +- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies + you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he + does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm + License. You must require such a user to return or + destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium + and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of + Project Gutenberg-tm works. + +- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any + money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the + electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days + of receipt of the work. + +- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free + distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works. + +1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm +electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set +forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from +both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael +Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the +Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below. + +1.F. + +1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable +effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread +public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm +collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic +works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain +"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or +corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual +property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a +computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by +your equipment. + +1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right +of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project +Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project +Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project +Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all +liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal +fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT +LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE +PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH F3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE +TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE +LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR +INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH +DAMAGE. + +1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a +defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can +receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a +written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you +received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with +your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with +the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a +refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity +providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to +receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy +is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further +opportunities to fix the problem. + +1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth +in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS,' WITH NO OTHER +WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO +WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE. + +1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied +warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages. +If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the +law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be +interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by +the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any +provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions. + +1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the +trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone +providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance +with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production, +promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works, +harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees, +that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do +or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm +work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any +Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause. + + +Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm + +Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of +electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers +including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists +because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from +people in all walks of life. + +Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the +assistance they need, is critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's +goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will +remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project +Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure +and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations. +To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation +and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4 +and the Foundation web page at http://www.gutenberg.org/fundraising/pglaf. + + +Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive +Foundation + +The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit +501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the +state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal +Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification +number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg +Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent +permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws. + +The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S. +Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered +throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at +809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email +business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact +information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official +page at http://www.gutenberg.org/about/contact + +For additional contact information: + Dr. Gregory B. Newby + Chief Executive and Director + gbnewby@pglaf.org + +Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg +Literary Archive Foundation + +Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide +spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of +increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be +freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest +array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations +($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt +status with the IRS. + +The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating +charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United +States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a +considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up +with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations +where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To +SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any +particular state visit http://www.gutenberg.org/fundraising/pglaf + +While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we +have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition +against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who +approach us with offers to donate. + +International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make +any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from +outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff. + +Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation +methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other +ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations. +To donate, please visit: http://www.gutenberg.org/fundraising/donate + + +Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic +works. + +Professor Michael S. Hart is the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm +concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared +with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project +Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support. + +Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed +editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S. +unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily +keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition. + +Each eBook is in a subdirectory of the same number as the eBook's +eBook number, often in several formats including plain vanilla ASCII, +compressed (zipped), HTML and others. + +Corrected EDITIONS of our eBooks replace the old file and take over +the old filename and etext number. The replaced older file is renamed. +VERSIONS based on separate sources are treated as new eBooks receiving +new filenames and etext numbers. + +Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility: + +<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org">http://www.gutenberg.org</a> + +This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm, +including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary +Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to +subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks. + +EBooks posted prior to November 2003, with eBook numbers BELOW #10000, +are filed in directories based on their release date. If you want to +download any of these eBooks directly, rather than using the regular +search system you may utilize the following addresses and just +download by the etext year. + +<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/etext06/">http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/etext06/</a> + + (Or /etext 05, 04, 03, 02, 01, 00, 99, + 98, 97, 96, 95, 94, 93, 92, 92, 91 or 90) + +EBooks posted since November 2003, with etext numbers OVER #10000, are +filed in a different way. The year of a release date is no longer part +of the directory path. The path is based on the etext number (which is +identical to the filename). The path to the file is made up of single +digits corresponding to all but the last digit in the filename. For +example an eBook of filename 10234 would be found at: + +http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/1/0/2/3/10234 + +or filename 24689 would be found at: +http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/2/4/6/8/24689 + +An alternative method of locating eBooks: +<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/GUTINDEX.ALL">http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/GUTINDEX.ALL</a> + +*** END: FULL LICENSE *** +</pre> +</body> +</html> diff --git a/25618-h/images/img001.jpg b/25618-h/images/img001.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..aec9126 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img001.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img002.jpg b/25618-h/images/img002.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..03e6e20 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img002.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img003a.jpg b/25618-h/images/img003a.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..2b3678e --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img003a.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img003b.jpg b/25618-h/images/img003b.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..4d37125 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img003b.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img003c.jpg b/25618-h/images/img003c.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..122dfe4 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img003c.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img003d.jpg b/25618-h/images/img003d.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..1ff93e5 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img003d.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img003e.jpg b/25618-h/images/img003e.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..9538a6e --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img003e.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img003f.jpg b/25618-h/images/img003f.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..c4c5edc --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img003f.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img004.jpg b/25618-h/images/img004.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..dce2c4d --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img004.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img005.jpg b/25618-h/images/img005.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..eba1f9a --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img005.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img006.jpg b/25618-h/images/img006.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..5529e98 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img006.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img007.jpg b/25618-h/images/img007.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..675bfc6 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img007.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img008.jpg b/25618-h/images/img008.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..8153578 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img008.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img009.jpg b/25618-h/images/img009.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..496a171 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img009.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img010.jpg b/25618-h/images/img010.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..8736047 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img010.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img011a.jpg b/25618-h/images/img011a.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..2efd22f --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img011a.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img011b.jpg b/25618-h/images/img011b.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..58fe807 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img011b.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img011c.jpg b/25618-h/images/img011c.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..a568cfb --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img011c.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img011d.jpg b/25618-h/images/img011d.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..11fed17 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img011d.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img011e.jpg b/25618-h/images/img011e.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..43b889f --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img011e.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img012.jpg b/25618-h/images/img012.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..9efb502 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img012.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img013.jpg b/25618-h/images/img013.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..c366091 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img013.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img014a.jpg b/25618-h/images/img014a.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..ec88364 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img014a.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img014b.jpg b/25618-h/images/img014b.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..c03d21a --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img014b.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img014c.jpg b/25618-h/images/img014c.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..1234713 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img014c.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img014d.jpg b/25618-h/images/img014d.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..65616d6 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img014d.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img014e.jpg b/25618-h/images/img014e.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..efed9ba --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img014e.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img015a.jpg b/25618-h/images/img015a.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..da9eb10 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img015a.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img015b.jpg b/25618-h/images/img015b.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..1a594ba --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img015b.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img015c.jpg b/25618-h/images/img015c.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..21098f9 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img015c.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img015d.jpg b/25618-h/images/img015d.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..2101185 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img015d.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img015e.jpg b/25618-h/images/img015e.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..0d41a9f --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img015e.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img016.jpg b/25618-h/images/img016.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..0f3b9ba --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img016.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img017.jpg b/25618-h/images/img017.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..f3a08d0 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img017.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img018.jpg b/25618-h/images/img018.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..2969f64 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img018.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img019.jpg b/25618-h/images/img019.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..328c170 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img019.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img020.jpg b/25618-h/images/img020.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..e0b96ff --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img020.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img021.jpg b/25618-h/images/img021.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..bbf535d --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img021.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img022.jpg b/25618-h/images/img022.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..5326213 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img022.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img023.jpg b/25618-h/images/img023.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..79d0964 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img023.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img024.jpg b/25618-h/images/img024.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..f4283ac --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img024.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img025.jpg b/25618-h/images/img025.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..e5cd88b --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img025.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img026.jpg b/25618-h/images/img026.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..17da66f --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img026.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img027.jpg b/25618-h/images/img027.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..a2e3efa --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img027.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img028.jpg b/25618-h/images/img028.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..b7136e1 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img028.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img029.jpg b/25618-h/images/img029.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..f172700 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img029.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img030.jpg b/25618-h/images/img030.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..9f3fbfc --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img030.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img031.jpg b/25618-h/images/img031.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..67868cd --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img031.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img032.jpg b/25618-h/images/img032.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..106d46f --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img032.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img033a.jpg b/25618-h/images/img033a.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..5589f12 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img033a.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img033b.jpg b/25618-h/images/img033b.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..7fff714 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img033b.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img033c.jpg b/25618-h/images/img033c.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..9f13ee4 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img033c.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img033d.jpg b/25618-h/images/img033d.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..68a6404 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img033d.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img033e.jpg b/25618-h/images/img033e.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..a42cb4e --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img033e.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img033f.jpg b/25618-h/images/img033f.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..bd719b8 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img033f.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img034.jpg b/25618-h/images/img034.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..81cd1f1 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img034.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img035.jpg b/25618-h/images/img035.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..8fdfbbe --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img035.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img036.jpg b/25618-h/images/img036.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..79f9efe --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img036.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img037.jpg b/25618-h/images/img037.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..0e7de10 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img037.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img038.jpg b/25618-h/images/img038.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..5caf43d --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img038.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img039.jpg b/25618-h/images/img039.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..df7042d --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img039.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img040.jpg b/25618-h/images/img040.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..27e818a --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img040.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img041.jpg b/25618-h/images/img041.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..bfb6954 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img041.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img042.jpg b/25618-h/images/img042.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..95d8af0 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img042.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img043.jpg b/25618-h/images/img043.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..150cdfd --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img043.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img044.jpg b/25618-h/images/img044.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..82a2038 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img044.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img045.jpg b/25618-h/images/img045.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..86a1974 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img045.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img046.jpg b/25618-h/images/img046.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..b6b2497 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img046.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img047.jpg b/25618-h/images/img047.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..048997d --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img047.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img048.jpg b/25618-h/images/img048.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..2c09bd8 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img048.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img049.jpg b/25618-h/images/img049.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..4d01caa --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img049.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img050.jpg b/25618-h/images/img050.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..52e5bfb --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img050.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img051.jpg b/25618-h/images/img051.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..5e784db --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img051.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img052.jpg b/25618-h/images/img052.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..65dca0c --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img052.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img052tb.jpg b/25618-h/images/img052tb.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..e1ac408 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img052tb.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img053.jpg b/25618-h/images/img053.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..1434613 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img053.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img054.jpg b/25618-h/images/img054.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..8631cae --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img054.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img055.jpg b/25618-h/images/img055.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..dba9fc6 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img055.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img056.jpg b/25618-h/images/img056.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..f2c9c0a --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img056.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img057.jpg b/25618-h/images/img057.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..6634c5a --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img057.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img057tb.jpg b/25618-h/images/img057tb.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..785946b --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img057tb.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img058.jpg b/25618-h/images/img058.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..301a6d5 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img058.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img059.jpg b/25618-h/images/img059.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..9eaca4b --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img059.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img060.jpg b/25618-h/images/img060.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..0da519f --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img060.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img061.jpg b/25618-h/images/img061.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..cae5ef7 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img061.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img062.jpg b/25618-h/images/img062.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..ac0207b --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img062.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img063.jpg b/25618-h/images/img063.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..432758b --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img063.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img064.jpg b/25618-h/images/img064.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..8ff14ed --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img064.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img065.jpg b/25618-h/images/img065.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..3675ada --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img065.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img066.jpg b/25618-h/images/img066.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..adcbb02 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img066.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img067.jpg b/25618-h/images/img067.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..9958768 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img067.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img068.jpg b/25618-h/images/img068.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..554b12c --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img068.jpg diff --git a/25618-h/images/img069.jpg b/25618-h/images/img069.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..e1a13ec --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-h/images/img069.jpg diff --git a/25618-page-images/f0001.png b/25618-page-images/f0001.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..8db7aed --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/f0001.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/f0002-image.png b/25618-page-images/f0002-image.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..0e9e9ba --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/f0002-image.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/f0002.png b/25618-page-images/f0002.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..8464f5b --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/f0002.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/f0003.png b/25618-page-images/f0003.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..75401ff --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/f0003.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/f0004.png b/25618-page-images/f0004.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..a2e43c4 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/f0004.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/f0005.png b/25618-page-images/f0005.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..1b6b5c8 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/f0005.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/f0006.png b/25618-page-images/f0006.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..ac59ae5 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/f0006.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/f0007.png b/25618-page-images/f0007.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..1cadb67 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/f0007.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/f0008.png b/25618-page-images/f0008.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..a723a98 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/f0008.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/f0009.png b/25618-page-images/f0009.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..8e97396 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/f0009.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/f0010.png b/25618-page-images/f0010.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..50f23e2 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/f0010.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/f0011.png b/25618-page-images/f0011.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..0733941 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/f0011.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/f0012.png b/25618-page-images/f0012.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..c203260 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/f0012.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0001.png b/25618-page-images/p0001.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..976951f --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0001.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0002-blank.png b/25618-page-images/p0002-blank.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..e872915 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0002-blank.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0003.png b/25618-page-images/p0003.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..44f137f --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0003.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0004.png b/25618-page-images/p0004.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..122e59c --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0004.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0005.png b/25618-page-images/p0005.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..7bdecbb --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0005.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0006.png b/25618-page-images/p0006.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..d35f192 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0006.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0007.png b/25618-page-images/p0007.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..07628fb --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0007.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0008-insert.png b/25618-page-images/p0008-insert.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..6a1b1c9 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0008-insert.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0008.png b/25618-page-images/p0008.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..a228e72 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0008.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0009.png b/25618-page-images/p0009.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..2c79442 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0009.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0010-image.png b/25618-page-images/p0010-image.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..381c6cc --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0010-image.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0010.png b/25618-page-images/p0010.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..af2a61a --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0010.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0011.png b/25618-page-images/p0011.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..f075205 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0011.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0012.png b/25618-page-images/p0012.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..e8baaaa --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0012.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0013.png b/25618-page-images/p0013.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..3486391 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0013.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0014.png b/25618-page-images/p0014.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..eb38c9a --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0014.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0015.png b/25618-page-images/p0015.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..3e21f31 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0015.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0016.png b/25618-page-images/p0016.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..cc06a1c --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0016.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0017.png b/25618-page-images/p0017.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..ab9ddca --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0017.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0018-image.png b/25618-page-images/p0018-image.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..67d6759 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0018-image.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0018.png b/25618-page-images/p0018.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..014cea9 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0018.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0019.png b/25618-page-images/p0019.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..98c0f0e --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0019.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0020.png b/25618-page-images/p0020.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..34c3100 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0020.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0021.png b/25618-page-images/p0021.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..35a68ee --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0021.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0022.png b/25618-page-images/p0022.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..3b7f094 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0022.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0023-image.png b/25618-page-images/p0023-image.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..bcc000d --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0023-image.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0023.png b/25618-page-images/p0023.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..a307591 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0023.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0024-image.png b/25618-page-images/p0024-image.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..fc19a5a --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0024-image.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0024.png b/25618-page-images/p0024.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..b5a5587 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0024.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0025.png b/25618-page-images/p0025.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..6e01df7 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0025.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0026.png b/25618-page-images/p0026.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..38c064b --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0026.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0027.png b/25618-page-images/p0027.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..6ad7903 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0027.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0028.png b/25618-page-images/p0028.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..70ae48d --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0028.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0029.png b/25618-page-images/p0029.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..e14b08f --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0029.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0030.png b/25618-page-images/p0030.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..8d2ad3d --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0030.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0031.png b/25618-page-images/p0031.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..ca9bb06 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0031.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0032-insert.png b/25618-page-images/p0032-insert.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..00366c0 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0032-insert.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0032.png b/25618-page-images/p0032.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..d041c2b --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0032.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0033.png b/25618-page-images/p0033.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..194925c --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0033.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0034-insert.png b/25618-page-images/p0034-insert.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..92b6377 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0034-insert.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0034.png b/25618-page-images/p0034.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..e969289 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0034.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0035.png b/25618-page-images/p0035.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..da89b23 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0035.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0036-image.png b/25618-page-images/p0036-image.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..878c095 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0036-image.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0036-insert.png b/25618-page-images/p0036-insert.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..45a16dd --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0036-insert.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0036.png b/25618-page-images/p0036.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..5e5b5c1 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0036.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0037.png b/25618-page-images/p0037.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..3524557 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0037.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0038.png b/25618-page-images/p0038.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..0ce847a --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0038.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0039.png b/25618-page-images/p0039.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..f628199 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0039.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0040-insert.png b/25618-page-images/p0040-insert.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..a9e6058 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0040-insert.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0040.png b/25618-page-images/p0040.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..50dbc5e --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0040.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0041-image.png b/25618-page-images/p0041-image.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..c92a763 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0041-image.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0041.png b/25618-page-images/p0041.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..945b184 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0041.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0042.png b/25618-page-images/p0042.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..6dec83e --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0042.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0043.png b/25618-page-images/p0043.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..1dc8a10 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0043.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0044.png b/25618-page-images/p0044.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..3c80745 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0044.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0045.png b/25618-page-images/p0045.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..948bd84 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0045.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0046.png b/25618-page-images/p0046.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..c16990b --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0046.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0047.png b/25618-page-images/p0047.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..21a69eb --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0047.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0048.png b/25618-page-images/p0048.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..95cd39d --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0048.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0049.png b/25618-page-images/p0049.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..34dce94 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0049.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0050.png b/25618-page-images/p0050.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..f02fdaf --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0050.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0051.png b/25618-page-images/p0051.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..bd5e155 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0051.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0052.png b/25618-page-images/p0052.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..bf3b557 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0052.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0053.png b/25618-page-images/p0053.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..5b8abce --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0053.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0054.png b/25618-page-images/p0054.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..57e4464 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0054.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0055.png b/25618-page-images/p0055.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..8d1b2c3 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0055.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0056-insert.png b/25618-page-images/p0056-insert.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..eb41472 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0056-insert.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0056.png b/25618-page-images/p0056.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..97832b8 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0056.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0057.png b/25618-page-images/p0057.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..2444e69 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0057.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0058.png b/25618-page-images/p0058.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..46f94d1 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0058.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0059.png b/25618-page-images/p0059.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..00513ba --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0059.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0060.png b/25618-page-images/p0060.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..a000aae --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0060.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0061.png b/25618-page-images/p0061.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..bdabc9c --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0061.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0062.png b/25618-page-images/p0062.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..b39591a --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0062.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0063.png b/25618-page-images/p0063.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..5ebf1d7 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0063.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0064-insert.png b/25618-page-images/p0064-insert.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..0ecfc53 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0064-insert.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0064.png b/25618-page-images/p0064.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..73d5604 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0064.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0065-image.png b/25618-page-images/p0065-image.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..ee2c16c --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0065-image.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0065.png b/25618-page-images/p0065.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..e1cdb3b --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0065.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0066.png b/25618-page-images/p0066.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..8c6bc3f --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0066.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0067-image.png b/25618-page-images/p0067-image.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..fa78e4f --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0067-image.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0067.png b/25618-page-images/p0067.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..57c3dd6 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0067.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0068.png b/25618-page-images/p0068.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..9bbd9ab --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0068.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0069-image.png b/25618-page-images/p0069-image.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..83115a1 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0069-image.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0069.png b/25618-page-images/p0069.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..8562365 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0069.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0070-image.png b/25618-page-images/p0070-image.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..ce102f9 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0070-image.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0070.png b/25618-page-images/p0070.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..d10101d --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0070.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0071.png b/25618-page-images/p0071.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..f2e2032 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0071.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0072-image.png b/25618-page-images/p0072-image.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..fc0e0ce --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0072-image.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0072.png b/25618-page-images/p0072.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..379583e --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0072.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0073-image.png b/25618-page-images/p0073-image.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..4572e28 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0073-image.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0073.png b/25618-page-images/p0073.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..3f54bae --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0073.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0074-image.png b/25618-page-images/p0074-image.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..5456ff7 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0074-image.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0074.png b/25618-page-images/p0074.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..f8a42ea --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0074.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0075-image.png b/25618-page-images/p0075-image.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..383f148 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0075-image.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0075.png b/25618-page-images/p0075.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..25502ae --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0075.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0076.png b/25618-page-images/p0076.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..e1b0a70 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0076.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0077.png b/25618-page-images/p0077.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..8d50b8c --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0077.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0078.png b/25618-page-images/p0078.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..ca2c242 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0078.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0079.png b/25618-page-images/p0079.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..4e27f48 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0079.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0080.png b/25618-page-images/p0080.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..e016b5b --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0080.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0081.png b/25618-page-images/p0081.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..9f0edba --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0081.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0082.png b/25618-page-images/p0082.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..5c559d5 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0082.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0083-image.png b/25618-page-images/p0083-image.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..ff108f9 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0083-image.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0083.png b/25618-page-images/p0083.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..578bd0c --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0083.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0084-image.png b/25618-page-images/p0084-image.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..48d6847 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0084-image.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0084.png b/25618-page-images/p0084.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..f38c6fa --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0084.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0085.png b/25618-page-images/p0085.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..5da2879 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0085.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0086.png b/25618-page-images/p0086.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..ce9309b --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0086.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0087-image.png b/25618-page-images/p0087-image.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..cfe21da --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0087-image.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0087.png b/25618-page-images/p0087.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..8fde637 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0087.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0088-insert.png b/25618-page-images/p0088-insert.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..d2df8a0 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0088-insert.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0088.png b/25618-page-images/p0088.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..d5ffaf1 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0088.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0089-image.png b/25618-page-images/p0089-image.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..d9090ab --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0089-image.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0089.png b/25618-page-images/p0089.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..80b8557 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0089.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0090.png b/25618-page-images/p0090.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..e3b092c --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0090.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0091-image.png b/25618-page-images/p0091-image.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..406267e --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0091-image.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0091.png b/25618-page-images/p0091.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..671a5ec --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0091.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0092.png b/25618-page-images/p0092.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..8cb0187 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0092.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0093-image.png b/25618-page-images/p0093-image.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..05c3dea --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0093-image.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0093.png b/25618-page-images/p0093.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..346fb7c --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0093.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0095.png b/25618-page-images/p0095.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..ccd4a85 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0095.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0096-blank.png b/25618-page-images/p0096-blank.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..ba0a63f --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0096-blank.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0097.png b/25618-page-images/p0097.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..904038f --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0097.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0098.png b/25618-page-images/p0098.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..84d5d5a --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0098.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0099-image.png b/25618-page-images/p0099-image.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..8881121 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0099-image.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0099.png b/25618-page-images/p0099.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..c5e3949 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0099.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0100.png b/25618-page-images/p0100.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..10638fe --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0100.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0101.png b/25618-page-images/p0101.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..7c321b2 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0101.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0102.png b/25618-page-images/p0102.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..b2a69d1 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0102.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0103.png b/25618-page-images/p0103.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..1d4bf28 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0103.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0104-image.png b/25618-page-images/p0104-image.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..6b83977 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0104-image.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0104-insert.png b/25618-page-images/p0104-insert.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..ab5a306 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0104-insert.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0104.png b/25618-page-images/p0104.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..6a9b062 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0104.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0105.png b/25618-page-images/p0105.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..787ad81 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0105.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0106-image.png b/25618-page-images/p0106-image.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..35768c1 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0106-image.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0106.png b/25618-page-images/p0106.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..73051c1 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0106.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0107-image.png b/25618-page-images/p0107-image.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..961b4f8 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0107-image.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0107.png b/25618-page-images/p0107.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..4b7a109 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0107.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0108-image.png b/25618-page-images/p0108-image.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..b2f67e6 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0108-image.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0108.png b/25618-page-images/p0108.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..7f558b7 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0108.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0109.png b/25618-page-images/p0109.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..a127568 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0109.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0110-image.png b/25618-page-images/p0110-image.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..ee42768 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0110-image.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0110.png b/25618-page-images/p0110.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..08511ca --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0110.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0111.png b/25618-page-images/p0111.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..ceb8b56 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0111.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0112-insert.png b/25618-page-images/p0112-insert.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..c8a56db --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0112-insert.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0112.png b/25618-page-images/p0112.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..0b65ba6 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0112.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0113.png b/25618-page-images/p0113.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..eda13fe --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0113.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0114.png b/25618-page-images/p0114.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..2f56898 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0114.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0115.png b/25618-page-images/p0115.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..0a40762 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0115.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0116.png b/25618-page-images/p0116.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..5df925b --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0116.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0117.png b/25618-page-images/p0117.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..b4d242e --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0117.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0118.png b/25618-page-images/p0118.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..dff6c2f --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0118.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0119.png b/25618-page-images/p0119.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..a6edfe4 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0119.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0120-image.png b/25618-page-images/p0120-image.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..ffe5f46 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0120-image.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0120-insert.png b/25618-page-images/p0120-insert.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..0ae4562 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0120-insert.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0120.png b/25618-page-images/p0120.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..85ce288 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0120.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0121.png b/25618-page-images/p0121.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..98b9b70 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0121.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0122.png b/25618-page-images/p0122.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..f061caf --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0122.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0123-image.png b/25618-page-images/p0123-image.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..446caf5 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0123-image.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0123.png b/25618-page-images/p0123.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..b4245e5 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0123.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0124.png b/25618-page-images/p0124.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..bfcc531 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0124.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0125-image.png b/25618-page-images/p0125-image.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..bf89eaa --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0125-image.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0125.png b/25618-page-images/p0125.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..423e55d --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0125.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0126.png b/25618-page-images/p0126.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..3b2e041 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0126.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0127-image.png b/25618-page-images/p0127-image.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..e52909a --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0127-image.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0127.png b/25618-page-images/p0127.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..cb96b84 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0127.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0128.png b/25618-page-images/p0128.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..f14ef62 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0128.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0129.png b/25618-page-images/p0129.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..bfa1ecb --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0129.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0130.png b/25618-page-images/p0130.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..df964a5 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0130.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0131.png b/25618-page-images/p0131.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..df92e3a --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0131.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0132.png b/25618-page-images/p0132.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..dda9223 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0132.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0133-image.png b/25618-page-images/p0133-image.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..1f94741 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0133-image.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0133.png b/25618-page-images/p0133.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..3140583 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0133.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0134.png b/25618-page-images/p0134.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..32482cb --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0134.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0135.png b/25618-page-images/p0135.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..33c2ae3 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0135.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0136-image.png b/25618-page-images/p0136-image.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..2d68ca3 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0136-image.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0136.png b/25618-page-images/p0136.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..5a65db3 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0136.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0137.png b/25618-page-images/p0137.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..cf5f477 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0137.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0138.png b/25618-page-images/p0138.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..88d87df --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0138.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0139.png b/25618-page-images/p0139.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..191ff43 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0139.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0140.png b/25618-page-images/p0140.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..72ccff6 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0140.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0141.png b/25618-page-images/p0141.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..7417b56 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0141.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0142-image.png b/25618-page-images/p0142-image.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..83bfd1b --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0142-image.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0142.png b/25618-page-images/p0142.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..5b7f2ce --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0142.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0143.png b/25618-page-images/p0143.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..3250a7d --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0143.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0144.png b/25618-page-images/p0144.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..0df83f6 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0144.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0145.png b/25618-page-images/p0145.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..1bb7a58 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0145.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0146.png b/25618-page-images/p0146.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..86efd7e --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0146.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0147.png b/25618-page-images/p0147.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..29ac1dc --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0147.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0148.png b/25618-page-images/p0148.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..7c3d4cd --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0148.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0149-image.png b/25618-page-images/p0149-image.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..bd911f8 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0149-image.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0149.png b/25618-page-images/p0149.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..69a79ff --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0149.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0150.png b/25618-page-images/p0150.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..c596d2a --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0150.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0151.png b/25618-page-images/p0151.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..7eb7228 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0151.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0152-image.png b/25618-page-images/p0152-image.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..b3f6bb0 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0152-image.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0152.png b/25618-page-images/p0152.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..be14f8c --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0152.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0153.png b/25618-page-images/p0153.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..d70de20 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0153.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0154-image.png b/25618-page-images/p0154-image.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..3ac0e93 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0154-image.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0154.png b/25618-page-images/p0154.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..0c8ebf9 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0154.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0155-image.png b/25618-page-images/p0155-image.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..71257d7 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0155-image.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0155.png b/25618-page-images/p0155.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..cc3d03c --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0155.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0156.png b/25618-page-images/p0156.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..1670f26 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0156.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0157.png b/25618-page-images/p0157.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..a66b24e --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0157.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0158.png b/25618-page-images/p0158.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..5e5fe27 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0158.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0159.png b/25618-page-images/p0159.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..8ee0db3 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0159.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0160.png b/25618-page-images/p0160.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..ce79051 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0160.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0161.png b/25618-page-images/p0161.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..43f50bf --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0161.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0162.png b/25618-page-images/p0162.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..d34f394 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0162.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0163-image.png b/25618-page-images/p0163-image.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..51a521f --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0163-image.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0163.png b/25618-page-images/p0163.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..6907a94 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0163.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0164.png b/25618-page-images/p0164.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..8ddb4d9 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0164.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0165.png b/25618-page-images/p0165.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..5154433 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0165.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0166.png b/25618-page-images/p0166.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..7572510 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0166.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0167.png b/25618-page-images/p0167.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..a2ea73d --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0167.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0168-insert.png b/25618-page-images/p0168-insert.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..2321527 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0168-insert.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0168.png b/25618-page-images/p0168.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..fced4b1 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0168.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0169.png b/25618-page-images/p0169.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..095d604 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0169.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0170-image.png b/25618-page-images/p0170-image.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..571f032 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0170-image.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0170.png b/25618-page-images/p0170.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..0136bd4 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0170.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0171.png b/25618-page-images/p0171.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..ed492dc --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0171.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0172.png b/25618-page-images/p0172.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..317e849 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0172.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0173-image.png b/25618-page-images/p0173-image.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..1ecb70a --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0173-image.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0173.png b/25618-page-images/p0173.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..f148546 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0173.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0174.png b/25618-page-images/p0174.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..29e029b --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0174.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0175.png b/25618-page-images/p0175.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..d97a40b --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0175.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0176.png b/25618-page-images/p0176.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..0d58f04 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0176.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0177.png b/25618-page-images/p0177.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..b41a5c7 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0177.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0178-image.png b/25618-page-images/p0178-image.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..336d984 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0178-image.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0178.png b/25618-page-images/p0178.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..dfd5a0f --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0178.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0179.png b/25618-page-images/p0179.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..d712946 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0179.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0180.png b/25618-page-images/p0180.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..9bad945 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0180.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0181-image.png b/25618-page-images/p0181-image.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..c7c2c52 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0181-image.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0181.png b/25618-page-images/p0181.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..5a10bc6 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0181.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0182.png b/25618-page-images/p0182.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..74d5dbc --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0182.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0183.png b/25618-page-images/p0183.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..db85ebc --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0183.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0184-insert.png b/25618-page-images/p0184-insert.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..526988f --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0184-insert.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0184.png b/25618-page-images/p0184.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..e743e53 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0184.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0185.png b/25618-page-images/p0185.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..1e10bad --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0185.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0186.png b/25618-page-images/p0186.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..516dc99 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0186.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0187.png b/25618-page-images/p0187.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..1952f16 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0187.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0188.png b/25618-page-images/p0188.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..9fd498b --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0188.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0189.png b/25618-page-images/p0189.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..86c334c --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0189.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0190.png b/25618-page-images/p0190.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..9274eee --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0190.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0191.png b/25618-page-images/p0191.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..1c12282 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0191.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0192-image.png b/25618-page-images/p0192-image.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..77b1c19 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0192-image.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0192.png b/25618-page-images/p0192.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..3575f67 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0192.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0193-image.png b/25618-page-images/p0193-image.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..cd5e309 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0193-image.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0193.png b/25618-page-images/p0193.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..4222f40 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0193.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0194.png b/25618-page-images/p0194.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..38a0384 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0194.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0195.png b/25618-page-images/p0195.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..ae7836c --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0195.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0196-image.png b/25618-page-images/p0196-image.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..6e150e0 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0196-image.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0196.png b/25618-page-images/p0196.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..6767d11 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0196.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0197.png b/25618-page-images/p0197.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..af37d8c --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0197.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0198.png b/25618-page-images/p0198.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..9e6f545 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0198.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0199.png b/25618-page-images/p0199.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..8f5d4dc --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0199.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0200-insert.png b/25618-page-images/p0200-insert.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..9116105 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0200-insert.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0200.png b/25618-page-images/p0200.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..1a0fc93 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0200.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0201-image.png b/25618-page-images/p0201-image.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..606fa8f --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0201-image.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0201.png b/25618-page-images/p0201.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..5dd78a8 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0201.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0202.png b/25618-page-images/p0202.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..efe7513 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0202.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0203.png b/25618-page-images/p0203.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..5dd9866 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0203.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0204-blank.png b/25618-page-images/p0204-blank.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..fa92547 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0204-blank.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0205.png b/25618-page-images/p0205.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..09f1da7 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0205.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0206.png b/25618-page-images/p0206.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..dae8c0b --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0206.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0207.png b/25618-page-images/p0207.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..4d9f17e --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0207.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0208.png b/25618-page-images/p0208.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..6796e5e --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0208.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0209.png b/25618-page-images/p0209.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..0c5cb12 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0209.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0210-image.png b/25618-page-images/p0210-image.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..1e7d47d --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0210-image.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0210.png b/25618-page-images/p0210.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..3e4f46c --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0210.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0211-image.png b/25618-page-images/p0211-image.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..50cec2c --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0211-image.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0211.png b/25618-page-images/p0211.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..4beb459 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0211.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0212.png b/25618-page-images/p0212.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..d6c3b51 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0212.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0213-image.png b/25618-page-images/p0213-image.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..2e02ed8 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0213-image.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0213.png b/25618-page-images/p0213.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..2494a2d --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0213.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0214.png b/25618-page-images/p0214.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..bb85e1f --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0214.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0215.png b/25618-page-images/p0215.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..a33dbf8 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0215.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0216-insert.png b/25618-page-images/p0216-insert.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..fc39fa4 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0216-insert.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0216.png b/25618-page-images/p0216.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..3ba17ab --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0216.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0217.png b/25618-page-images/p0217.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..d89dd97 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0217.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0218.png b/25618-page-images/p0218.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..31b1d58 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0218.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0219-image.png b/25618-page-images/p0219-image.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..2b62e0d --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0219-image.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0219.png b/25618-page-images/p0219.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..8486e62 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0219.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0220.png b/25618-page-images/p0220.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..88ddd26 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0220.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0221.png b/25618-page-images/p0221.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..511f62c --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0221.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0222.png b/25618-page-images/p0222.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..ebb414a --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0222.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0223.png b/25618-page-images/p0223.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..e2b4607 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0223.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0224.png b/25618-page-images/p0224.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..fa66c36 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0224.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0225.png b/25618-page-images/p0225.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..237989f --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0225.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0226.png b/25618-page-images/p0226.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..7ce8817 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0226.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0227.png b/25618-page-images/p0227.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..850f482 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0227.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0228.png b/25618-page-images/p0228.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..dfbaa3a --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0228.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0229.png b/25618-page-images/p0229.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..a579126 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0229.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0230.png b/25618-page-images/p0230.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..9de9d8c --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0230.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0231.png b/25618-page-images/p0231.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..48df03a --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0231.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0232-insert.png b/25618-page-images/p0232-insert.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..83eedff --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0232-insert.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0232.png b/25618-page-images/p0232.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..418566d --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0232.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0233.png b/25618-page-images/p0233.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..4cc5336 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0233.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0234.png b/25618-page-images/p0234.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..d3662f4 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0234.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0235.png b/25618-page-images/p0235.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..5652af6 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0235.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0236.png b/25618-page-images/p0236.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..6c6dd66 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0236.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0237.png b/25618-page-images/p0237.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..c10fc56 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0237.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0238-insert.png b/25618-page-images/p0238-insert.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..72f28d8 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0238-insert.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0238.png b/25618-page-images/p0238.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..ba18d62 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0238.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0239.png b/25618-page-images/p0239.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..29f2bf5 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0239.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0240-blank.png b/25618-page-images/p0240-blank.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..dc37745 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0240-blank.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0241.png b/25618-page-images/p0241.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..1fa966f --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0241.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0242.png b/25618-page-images/p0242.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..cd5ef1b --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0242.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0243.png b/25618-page-images/p0243.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..dbe4e2a --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0243.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0244.png b/25618-page-images/p0244.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..f11b792 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0244.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0245.png b/25618-page-images/p0245.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..c0765fa --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0245.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0246.png b/25618-page-images/p0246.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..d4bc328 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0246.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0247.png b/25618-page-images/p0247.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..4e0a690 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0247.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0248.png b/25618-page-images/p0248.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..011a5a2 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0248.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0249.png b/25618-page-images/p0249.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..2e2b478 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0249.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0250.png b/25618-page-images/p0250.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..7ce0c19 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0250.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0251.png b/25618-page-images/p0251.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..35ae6b2 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0251.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0252.png b/25618-page-images/p0252.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..95aaaf2 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0252.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0253.png b/25618-page-images/p0253.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..ab47d7b --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0253.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0254.png b/25618-page-images/p0254.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..ec204ef --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0254.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0255.png b/25618-page-images/p0255.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..9b17c29 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0255.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0256.png b/25618-page-images/p0256.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..cace2ab --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0256.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0257.png b/25618-page-images/p0257.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..b96e2f2 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0257.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0258.png b/25618-page-images/p0258.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..0e2d923 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0258.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0259.png b/25618-page-images/p0259.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..5817fee --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0259.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0260.png b/25618-page-images/p0260.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..742ee75 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0260.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0261.png b/25618-page-images/p0261.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..0fcd51c --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0261.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0262.png b/25618-page-images/p0262.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..973a316 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0262.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0263.png b/25618-page-images/p0263.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..87e5966 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0263.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0264.png b/25618-page-images/p0264.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..e0137d7 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0264.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0265.png b/25618-page-images/p0265.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..e2a567b --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0265.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0266.png b/25618-page-images/p0266.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..d85f160 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0266.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0267.png b/25618-page-images/p0267.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..cc8823e --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0267.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0268.png b/25618-page-images/p0268.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..0282fe5 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0268.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0269.png b/25618-page-images/p0269.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..146d478 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0269.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0270.png b/25618-page-images/p0270.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..f55ea17 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0270.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0271.png b/25618-page-images/p0271.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..a23ce2c --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0271.png diff --git a/25618-page-images/p0272.png b/25618-page-images/p0272.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..68b96d7 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618-page-images/p0272.png diff --git a/25618.txt b/25618.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..b398288 --- /dev/null +++ b/25618.txt @@ -0,0 +1,9665 @@ +The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Second Battalion Royal Dublin Fusiliers +in the South African War, by Cecil Francis Romer and Arthur Edward +Mainwaring + + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + + + + +Title: The Second Battalion Royal Dublin Fusiliers in the South African War + With a Description of the Operations in the Aden Hinterland + + +Author: Cecil Francis Romer and Arthur Edward Mainwaring + + + +Release Date: May 26, 2008 [eBook #25618] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII) + + +***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE SECOND BATTALION ROYAL DUBLIN +FUSILIERS IN THE SOUTH AFRICAN WAR*** + + +E-text prepared by Jonathan Ingram, Christine P. Travers, and the Project +Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team (https://www.pgdp.net) + + + +Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this + file which includes the original illustrations. + See 25618-h.htm or 25618-h.zip: + (https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/2/5/6/1/25618/25618-h/25618-h.htm) + or + (https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/2/5/6/1/25618/25618-h.zip) + + +Transcriber's note: + + Obvious printer's errors have been corrected. All other + inconsistencies are as in the original. The author's spelling + has been maintained. + + + + + +THE SECOND BATTALION ROYAL DUBLIN FUSILIERS IN THE SOUTH AFRICAN WAR + +With a Description of the Operations in the Aden Hinterland + +by + +MAJORS C. F. ROMER & A. E. MAINWARING + + + + + + + +[Illustration: _W. & D. Downey._ + +H.R.H. The Duke of Connaught and Strathearn, K.G., +Commander-in-Chief of The Mediterranean Forces, and Colonel-in-Chief +of The Royal Dublin Fusiliers.] + + + +[Illustration: E Libris, The Royal Dublin Fusiliers.] + + +London: A. L. Humphreys, 187 Piccadilly, W. +1908 + + + + +PREFACE + + +The 2nd Battalion Royal Dublin Fusiliers is one of the oldest +regiments in the service. It was raised in February and March, 1661, +to form the garrison of Bombay, which had been ceded to the Crown as +part of the dowry of the Infanta of Portugal, on her marriage with +King Charles II. It then consisted of four companies, the +establishment of each being one captain, one lieutenant, one ensign, +two sergeants, three corporals, two drummers, and 100 privates, and +arrived at Bombay on September 18th, 1662, under the command of Sir +Abraham Shipman. Under various titles it took part in nearly all the +continuous fighting of which the history of India of those days is +principally composed, being generally known as the Bombay European +Regiment, until in March, 1843, it was granted the title of 1st Bombay +Fusiliers. In 1862 the regiment was transferred to the Crown, when the +word 'Royal' was added to its title, and it became known as the 103rd +Regiment, The Royal Bombay Fusiliers. In 1873 the regiment was linked +to the Royal Madras Fusiliers, whose history up to that time had been +very similar to its own. By General Order 41, of 1881, the titles of +the two regiments underwent yet another change, when they became known +by their present names, the 1st and 2nd Battalions Royal Dublin +Fusiliers. + +The 2nd Battalion first left India for home service on January 2nd, +1871, when it embarked on H.M.S. _Malabar_, arriving at Portsmouth +Harbour about 8 a.m. on February 4th, and was stationed at Parkhurst. +Its home service lasted until 1884, when it embarked for Gibraltar. In +1885 it moved to Egypt, and in 1886 to India, where it was quartered +until 1897, when it was suddenly ordered to South Africa, on account +of our strained relations with the Transvaal Republic. On arrival at +Durban, however, the difficulties had been settled for the time being, +and the regiment was quartered at Pietermaritzburg until it moved up +to Dundee in 1899, just previous to the outbreak of war. + +The late Major-General Penn-Symons assumed command of the Natal force +in 1897, and from that date commenced the firm friendship and mutual +regard between him and the regiment, which lasted without a break +until the day when he met his death at Talana. The interest he took in +the battalion and his zeal resulted in a stiff training, but a +training for which we must always feel grateful, and remember with +kind, if sad, recollections. It was his custom to see a great deal of +the regiments under his command, and he very frequently lunched with +us, by which means he not only made himself personally acquainted with +the characters of the officers of the regiment, but also had an +opportunity of seeing for himself the deep _esprit de corps_ which +existed in it, and without which no regiment can ever hope to +successfully overcome the perils and hardships incidental to active +service. + +As the shadow of the coming war grew dark and ever darker on the +Northern horizon, the disposition of the Natal troops underwent some +change, and General Penn-Symons' brigade, of which the regiment formed +part, was moved up to Dundee, and was there stationed at the time of +the outbreak of hostilities. In spite of the long roll of battle +honours, of which both battalions are so justly proud, the South +African Campaign was the first active service either had seen under +their present titles, and the first opportunity afforded them of +making those new titles as celebrated as the old ones which had done +so much towards the acquisition of our Indian Empire. Imbued with +these feelings the regiment lay camped within full view of Talana +Hill, waiting the oncoming of the huge wave of invasion which was so +shortly to sweep over the borders, engulf Ladysmith, and threaten to +reach Maritzburg itself. But that was not to be. Its force was spent +long ere it reached the capital, and a few horsemen near the banks of +the Mooi River marked the line of its utmost limit in this direction. + +The present work only claims to be a plain soldier's narrative of the +part taken by the 2nd Battalion Royal Dublin Fusiliers in stemming +this rush, and its subsequent efforts, its grim fights on the hills +which fringe the borders of the River Tugela, its long and weary +marches across the rolling uplands of the Transvaal, and its +subsequent monotonous life of constant vigil in fort and blockhouse, +and on escort duty. + +All five battalions took part in the war. The 1st sailed from Ireland +on November 10th, 1899, and sent three companies under Major Hicks to +strengthen the 2nd Battalion. They arrived in time to share in the +action at Colenso on December 15th, and all the subsequent fighting +which finally resulted in the relief of Ladysmith, after which they +returned to the headquarters of the 1st Battalion, which formed part +of the Natal army under General Sir Redvers Buller, and later on +advanced through Laing's Nek and Alleman's Nek into the Transvaal. The +3rd Battalion sent a very strong draft of its reserve, and the 4th and +5th Battalions volunteered and came out to the front, where they +rendered most excellent service. In addition to the battalions there +were a good many officers of one or other battalion employed in +various ways in the huge theatre of operations. Major Godley and Major +Pilson had been selected for special service before the war, and the +former served in Mafeking during the siege, while the latter served +under General Plumer in his endeavours to raise it. Captain Kinsman +also served with the latter force. Major Rutherford, Adjutant of the +Ceylon Volunteers, arrived in command of the contingent from that +corps. Lieutenants Cory and Taylor served with the Mounted Infantry +most of the time, as did Lieutenants Garvice, Grimshaw, and Frankland, +after the capture of Pretoria, while Captain Carington Smith's share +in the war is briefly stated later on. Captain MacBean was on the +staff until he was killed at Nooitgedacht. The M.I. of the regiment +served with great distinction, and it is regretted that it is +impossible to include an account of the many actions and marches in +which they took part, but the present volume deals almost exclusively +with the battalion as a battalion. + +The authors are desirous of expressing their most hearty and cordial +thanks to all those who have assisted them in the preparation of this +volume. They are especially indebted to Colonel H. Tempest Hicks, +C.B., without whose co-operation the work could not have been carried +out, for the loan of his diary, and for the sketches and many of the +photographs. To Colonel F. P. English, D.S.O., for the extracts from +his diary containing an account of the operations in the Aden +Hinterland and photographs. To Captain L. F. Renny for his Ladysmith +notes. Also to Sergeant-Major C. V. Brumby, Quartermaster-Sergeant +Purcell, and Mr. French (late Quartermaster-Sergeant), for assistance +in collecting data, compiling the appendix, and for photographs, +respectively. + + C. F. ROMER. + + A. E. MAINWARING. + + + + +CONTENTS + + +PART I.--FIGHTING. + + CHAP. Page + + I. Talana 3 + + II. The Retreat from Dundee 16 + + III. From Colenso to Estcourt 22 + + IV. Estcourt and Frere 28 + + V. The Battle of Colenso 34 + + VI. Venter's Spruit 42 + + VII. Vaal Krantz 55 + + VIII. Hart's and Pieter's Hills--The Relief of Ladysmith 61 + + IX. The Siege of Ladysmith 76 + + X. Aliwal North and Fourteen Streams 83 + + +PART II.--TREKKING. + + I. From Vryburg to Heidelberg 97 + + II. Heidelberg 111 + + III. After De Wet 121 + + IV. September in the Gatsrand 141 + + V. Frederickstadt--Klip River--The Losberg 164 + + VI. Buried Treasure--The Eastern Transvaal--The + Krugersdorp Defences 182 + + VII. The Last Twelve Months 193 + + +PART III. + + I. The Aden Hinterland 205 + + II. The Return Home and Reception 217 + + III. The Memorial Arch 229 + + +APPENDIX 239 + + + + +ILLUSTRATIONS + + +FULL-PAGE PLATES. + + H.R.H. The Duke of Connaught and Strathearn, + K.G., Commander-in-chief of the + Mediterranean Forces, and Colonel-in-chief + of the Royal Dublin Fusiliers _Frontispiece_ + + Regimental Book-Plate _Title-page_ + + Casualties at Talana _Facing page_ 8 + + Major-General C. D. Cooper, C.B., commanding + 2nd Royal Dublin Fusiliers in Natal " " 24 + + Captain C. F. Romer and Captain E. Fetherstonhaugh " " 32 + + General Hart's Flank Attack from the + Boers' Point of View (Plan) " " 34 + + Casualties at Colenso " " 36 + + Group of twenty Sergeants taken after the + Battle of Colenso, all that remained + of Forty-Eight who left Maritzburg " " 40 + + Casualties at Tugela Heights " " 56, 64 + + Taking Fourteen Streams (Plan) " " 88 + + Miscellaneous Casualties " " 104 + + Colonel H. Tempest Hicks, C.B., commanding + 2nd Royal Dublin Fusiliers, March, 1900--March, + 1904 _facing Page_ 112 + + Plan of Position at Zuikerbosch " " 120 + + Plan of Battle of Frederickstadt " " 168 + + Sketch Plan of Kilmarnock House and Fortifications " " 184 + + Krugersdorp from Kilmarnock House " " 200 + + Officers of the 2nd Battalion Royal Dublin + Fusiliers who embarked for Aden " " 216 + + The Memorial Arch, Dublin " " 232 + + The South African Memorial, Natal " " 238 + + +ILLUSTRATIONS IN TEXT. + + The Last Rites 10 + + Armourer-Sergeant Waite--'Delenda Est Carthago' 18 + + Railway Bridge at Colenso 23 + + Boer Trenches, Colenso 36 + + Bringing down the Wounded 41 + + After the Fight 65 + + The Grave of Colonel Sitwell and Captain Maitland, + Gordon Highlanders (attached), near Railway + at Pieter's Hill 67 + + Pieter's Hill, Feb. 27th, 1900 69 + + Pontoon Bridge, River Tugela, Feb. 28th, 1900 70 + + 2nd Royal, Dublin Fusiliers, heading Relief Troops, + marching into Ladysmith, March, 1900, 72 + + General Sir Redvers Buller, V.C., entering Ladysmith 73 + + The Dublins are coming--Ladysmith 74 + + Sir George White watching Relief Force entering + Ladysmith 75 + + Sergeant Davis in Meditation over 'Long Cecil' at + Kimberley. 'Shall I Take it for the Officers?' 83 + + St. Patrick's Day in Camp. Private Monaghan, the + Regimental Butcher, in Foreground 84 + + A Wash in hot Water--Aliwal North 87 + + The Regimental Maxim in Action at Fourteen + Streams 89 + + Captain Jervis, General Fitzroy Hart, C.B., C.M.G., + and Captain Arthur Hart 91 + + Issuing Queen Victoria's Chocolate. Colour-Sergeant + Connell, 'G' Company, on left 93 + + First Entry into Krugersdorp. Captain and Adjutant + Fetherstonhaugh in Foreground 99 + + 'Speed, Dead Slow' 104 + + Hoisting the Union Jack at Krugersdorp 106 + + Johan Meyer's House, five Miles outside Johannesburg 107 + + Sergeant Davis, evidently with all we wanted 108 + + Paardekraal Monument, Krugersdorp 110 + + The Officers' Mess 120 + + Corporal Tierney and Chef Burst 123 + + Fourth Class on the Z.a.s.m. 125 + + Fifth Class on the Z.a.s.m. 127 + + The Vaal River, Lindeque Drift 133 + + The R.D.F. Bathing in Mooi River, Potchefstroom 136 + + Father Mathews 142 + + Funeral of Commandant Theron and a British + Soldier, Sept. 6th, 1900 149 + + Buffelsdoorn Camp, Gatsrand Hills 152 + + A Group of Boer Prisoners taken at the Surprise + of Pochefstroom 153 + + Colour-Sergeant Cossy issuing Beer 154 + + 'Come to the Cook-house Door, Boys!' 163 + + Sergeant French and the Officers' Mess, Nachtmaal 170 + + 4.7 crossing a Drift, assisted by the Dublin Fusiliers 172 + + Boy Fitzpatrick waiting at Lunch 178 + + 'The Latest Shave.' Captain G. S. Higginson (mounted) + and Major Bird 181 + + The Hairdresser's Shop 192 + + Kilmarnock, Krugersdorp 193 + + A Blockhouse 196 + + The 'Blue Caps' relieving the 'Old Toughs' 201 + + Dthala Camp 210 + + Dthala Village, From Camp 211 + + A Frontier Tower--Abdali Country 213 + + Homeward bound at last, after twenty Years' + Foreign Service 219 + + + + +PART I. + +FIGHTING. + + + + +THE 2ND BATTALION + +ROYAL DUBLIN FUSILIERS + + + + +CHAPTER I. + +TALANA. + + 'The midnight brought the signal sound of strife, + The morn the marshalling in arms, the day-- + Battle's magnificently stern array.' + + _Byron._ + + +The 2nd Battalion of the Royal Dublin Fusiliers left India for +Maritzburg, Natal, in 1897, and therefore, on the outbreak of the war +between Great Britain and the South African Republics, had the +advantage of possessing some acquaintance with the topography of the +colony, and of a two years' training and preparation for the long +struggle which was to ensue. + +The political situation had become so threatening by July, 1899, that +the military authorities began to take precautionary measures, and the +battalion was ordered to effect a partial mobilisation and to collect +its transport. On September 20th it moved by train to Ladysmith,[1] +and four days later proceeded to Dundee. Here Major-General Sir W. +Penn-Symons assumed the command of a small force, consisting of 18th +Hussars, 13th, 67th, and 69th Batteries R.F.A., 1st Leicestershire +Regiment, 1st King's Royal Rifles, and 2nd Royal Dublin Fusiliers. +Each infantry battalion had a mounted infantry company. The brigade +was reinforced on October 16th by the 1st Royal Irish Fusiliers. + + [Footnote 1: It was at Ladysmith that the battalion adopted + the green tops on the helmets, a distinguishing badge which + was worn throughout the war. The 1st Battalion painted theirs + blue on account of the historic nickname, 'Blue-caps,' + acquired by them at the time of the Mutiny.] + +The country was still nominally at peace, but the Dundee force held +itself ready for emergencies, and sent out mounted patrols by day and +infantry piquets by night, while the important railway junction at +Glencoe was held by a company. The General utilised this period of +waiting in carrying out field-firing and practising various forms of +attack. As he was a practical and experienced soldier, he succeeded in +bringing his command to a high state of efficiency, and the battalion +owed much to his careful preparation. It was due largely to his +teaching that the men knew how to advance from cover to cover and +displayed such ready 'initiative' in the various battles of the Natal +Campaign. The opportunity of putting into practice this teaching soon +presented itself, for on October 12th news was received that the South +African Republics had declared war on the previous day. + +Consideration of the advisability of pushing forward a small force to +Dundee, and of the reasons for such a movement, does not fall within +the scope of this work; but a glance at the map will show that Sir W. +Penn-Symons had a wide front to watch, since he could be attacked from +three sides. Although precise information regarding the Boer forces +was lacking, it was known that commandoes were assembling at +Volksrust, along the left bank of the Buffalo River, and on the far +side of Van Reenan's Pass. + +Early in the morning of October 13th a telegram was received from Sir +G. White, asking General Penn-Symons to send a battalion to Ladysmith +at once, as the Boers were reported to be advancing on that town. The +General paid the 2nd Royal Dublin Fusiliers the compliment of +selecting them for this duty, and they entrained accordingly, about +4.30 a.m., reaching Ladysmith some four hours later. They detrained +with the utmost haste and marched at once towards Dewdrop, whither the +Ladysmith garrison had been sent; but the report of a Boer advance was +discovered to be without foundation, and the battalion was halted five +miles outside Ladysmith, and ordered to return. It did not reach the +camp at Dundee until 11 p.m. + +On the following day Sir W. Penn-Symons moved his detachment closer to +the town of Dundee, and placed his camp three or four hundred yards +north of the road to Glencoe Junction. It soon became clear that the +Boers meant to invade Natal, and Newcastle was occupied by them on the +15th, while the mounted patrols of the Dundee force were already in +touch with the commandoes on the left bank of the Buffalo. The +detached company at Glencoe was withdrawn on the 18th, and on the 19th +three companies of the regiment, under Major English, were sent to the +Navigation Colliery in order to bring away large quantities of mealie +bags stored there. + +Colonel Cooper, commanding the 2nd Battalion Royal Dublin Fusiliers, +had been given an extension of his command, and was hurrying back from +a short period of leave in England, so the battalion was at this time +under the command of Major S. G. Bird. + +It was now evident to every one that we were on the eve of +hostilities, and a spirit of keen excitement and anticipation ran +through all ranks. After a long tour of foreign service, during which +the regiment had not had the good fortune to see active service, +though on three occasions they had been within measurable distance of +it, they were now to have the long-wished-for chance of showing that, +in spite of altered denominations and other changes, they were +prepared to keep their gallant and historical reputation untarnished. +Our advanced patrols had already seen the first signs of the coming +torrent of invasion, and one and all were seized with that feeling, +common to all mankind, of longing to get the waiting and the +preparation over, and to commence the real business for which they had +been so carefully and so thoroughly prepared. Full of the most +implicit confidence in their brave leader, the regiment knew to a man +that they would soon be at hand-grips, and their two years' residence +in the country and knowledge of the history of the last Boer War, and +the stain to be rubbed out, made every pulse tingle with the desire to +show that the past had been but an unfortunate blunder, and that the +British soldier of the present day was no whit inferior to his +predecessors of Indian, Peninsular, Waterloo, and Crimean fame. + +On the night of the 19-20th October, Lieutenant Grimshaw was sent with +a patrol of the Mounted Infantry company of the battalion to watch the +road to Vant's and Landsman's Drifts, ten miles east of Dundee. About +2 a.m. on October 20th this officer reported that a Boer commando was +advancing on the town. At a later hour he forwarded a second message +to the effect that he was retiring before superior numbers, one man of +his party having been wounded, and that the enemy were in occupation +of the hills to the east of the town. On the receipt of this message +General Penn-Symons ordered two companies of the Dublin Fusiliers to +support Lieutenant Grimshaw. 'B' and 'E' companies, under Captains +Dibley and Weldon, accordingly left camp at 4 a.m., and, moving +through the town, took up a position in Sand Spruit, which runs along +the eastern edge of Dundee. The whole brigade stood to arms, as usual, +at 5 a.m., but was dismissed at 5.15 a.m. At about 5.30 a.m. the mist +lifted, and everybody's gaze was directed on Talana Hill, where +numbers of men in black mackintoshes could be seen. The general +impression was that they were members of the town guard, but the +arrival of the first shell soon dispelled this illusion. + +Soon after 5.30 a.m. the Boer artillery opened fire on the camp. Their +fire was accurate enough, considering that the range was near 5400 +yards, but the damage done was practically nothing, as very few shells +burst, and these only on impact. Our own artillery (13th and 69th +Field Batteries, with 'D' company of the battalion as escort) did not +immediately respond, as they were at the time engaged in watering +their horses; but as soon as possible they were in position to the +east of the camp, and began to shell the crest of Talana Hill. They +obtained the range almost immediately, and in a short time overpowered +the hostile guns, which were thus prevented from playing an important +part in the day's battle. + +As soon as the Boers started shelling the camp, the battalion fell in +on its parade-ground in quarter-column and waited for orders. But when +a shell fell just behind the ranks, Major Bird moved it at the double +through the camp to a donga which afforded good cover. The men then +removed their great-coats, and stayed for some minutes watching the +Boer shells passing over their heads. Eventually the King's Royal +Rifles, Royal Irish Fusiliers, and the battalion were ordered by the +General to move in extended order through the town, and to concentrate +in the spruit already occupied by 'B' and 'E' companies. The +Leicesters and 67th Battery were left near the camp to watch Impati +Mountain, since it was probable that the Boer force which had occupied +Newcastle would appear from that direction. The mounted troops (18th +Hussars and the Mounted Infantry company of the Dublin Fusiliers, +under Captain Lonsdale, less Lieutenant Cory's section, which, +fortunately for it, was sent off in another direction), under the +command of Colonel Moeller, were sent to turn the right flank of the +Boers' position on Talana Hill and so threaten their rear. + +As the extended lines of the infantry moved through the town they were +greeted by pompom fire, which, however, did no damage. It was their +first introduction to this hated and under-rated weapon, whose moral +effect is so great that, even if the casualties it inflicts are small +in number, it is always likely to exercise a marked influence, more +especially on young troops and at the commencement of a campaign. Men +heard it in wonder, asking each other what it was, and why had we +nothing like it, and similar questions. By 6.30 a.m. the three +battalions were assembled in the bed of the spruit, and the General +rode up with the Staff in order to give his orders for the attack. The +2nd Royal Dublin Fusiliers were to form the firing line, with the 60th +Rifles in support and the Royal Irish Fusiliers in reserve. Under +Talana Hill is a wood surrounding a small house known as Smith's Farm. +Between this wood and Sand Spruit is a long stretch of veld, which on +the day of the battle was intersected by several wire fences. The +battalion received orders to cross this open ground by successive +companies, 'H' company, under Lieutenant Shewan, formed the right of +the line, and was the first company to leave the shelter of the +spruit. It made for the south-east corner of the wood, where it was +afterwards joined by the maxims, and at once opened fire on Talana and +Dundee Hills. 'B' company under Captain Dibley, 'A' company under +Major English, and 'E' company under Captain Weldon extended to ten +paces, and followed in succession. The enemy had by this time +developed a vigorous fire, but the range was long and the casualties +small. The advancing companies moved on steadily, reached the edge of +the wood, and entered it. They now became somewhat separated. 'A,' 'G' +(Captain Perreau), and 'F' inclined to the left, 'C' and 'E' remained +in the centre with 'B' on their right, while 'H' was held back at the +corner of the wood. The latter was bounded on the far side by a stone +wall, beyond which stretched an open piece of ground until, further up +the hill, there was a second wall. At this point there was a sudden +change in the slope of the ground, which rose almost precipitously to +the crest. Immediately opposite the point where 'B' company issued +from the wood a third wall ran up the hill, connecting the two already +mentioned. When the attackers reached the far end of the wood, they +came under such a well-directed and heavy fire that their progress was +at first checked, in spite of the support afforded by our artillery, +which rained shrapnel on the hostile position. The Boers, lying behind +the boulders on the crest of Talana Hill, found excellent cover; while +from Dundee Hill they could bring an effective enfilade fire on the +open space between the two parallel walls. Opposite 'A' company a +donga ran up the hill, and at first sight seemed to offer an excellent +line of approach for an attacking force. Major English, in command of +the company, rushed forward and, in spite of a heavy fire, succeeded +in cutting a wire fence which closed the mouth of the donga. He then, +at about 8 a.m., led his company into the latter, and was followed by +'G' and 'F' (Captain Hensley) companies; but the donga proved almost a +death-trap, since it was swept by the rifles of some picked marksmen +on the right of the Boer position. + +[Illustration: Casualties at Talana. + + Capt. G. A. WELDON. _Killed._ + Second Lieut. GENGE. _Died of Wounds._ + Capt. A. DIBLEY. _Wounded._ + Major LOWNDES. _Wounded._ + Lieut. C. N. PERREAU. _Wounded._ + Ser.-Maj. (Now Qr.-Mr) BURKE. _Wounded._] + +It was impossible for these three companies to advance any further, +and they were therefore forced to limit their efforts to an attempt to +keep down the Boer fire. Meanwhile, General Penn-Symons had, about +9.15 a.m., come up to the far edge of the wood, and crying, 'Dublin +Fusiliers, we must take the hill!' crossed the wall. Shortly +afterwards he received a mortal wound. Captain Weldon was also killed +near the same spot in a gallant effort to help a wounded comrade, No. +5078 Private Gorman. Captain Weldon, together with several men of his +company, had surmounted the wall in face of a heavy fire, and had +taken cover in a small depression on its further side. Private Gorman +was hit in the very act of surmounting the obstacle, and was falling +backwards, when Captain Weldon, rushing out from his cover, seized him +by the arm, and was pulling him into safety when he himself was +mortally wounded. Privates Brady and Smith dragged him in under cover, +but he only lived a few minutes. His dog, a fox-terrier named Rose, +had accompanied him through the fight, and when his body was later on +recovered, the faithful little animal was found beside it, and was +afterwards taken care of by the men of 'E' company. There was no more +popular officer in the regiment than George Weldon, and his loss was +deeply felt by all ranks. He was the first officer of the Dublin +Fusiliers to fall in the war, which thus early asserted its claim to +seize the best. He was buried that same afternoon in the small +cemetery, facing the hill on which he had met his death. + +[Illustration: The Last Rites.] + +By this time, 9.30 a.m., the Rifles and Irish Fusiliers had closed up +and become merged in the firing line. Slowly, and by the advances of +small parties at a time, the attackers gained ground, principally by +creeping along the transverse wall which afforded cover from the enemy +on Dundee Hill, Helped by the incessant fire of the artillery, which +at 11.30 a.m. moved up to the coalfields railway, the infantry +gradually collected behind the second wall. They were now within 150 +yards of the crest, and the roar of battle grew in intensity. About +11.30 a.m. Colonel Yule came up and ordered the hill to be assaulted, +directing the battalion to charge the right flank of the hill, and the +Rifles the centre. Captain Lowndes, who was with the companies on the +right, led them across the wall and over an open piece of ground. He +gave the command 'Right incline,' and so well were the men in hand +that the order was promptly obeyed, shortly after which he was badly +wounded. Meanwhile, in the centre, men of all three regiments, led by +the Staff and regimental officers, dashed over the wall and began to +clamber up the steep and rocky slope. The artillery quickened its fire +and covered the crest with shrapnel. But the Boers still remained +firm. Many of them stood up, their mackintoshes waving in the wind, +and poured a deadly fire on the assaulting infantry. Though most of +these brave burghers paid for their daring with their lives, they +repulsed this first gallant charge. The Dublin Fusiliers suffered many +casualties in this first assault. Captain Lowndes, the Adjutant, had +his leg practically shattered, as he, with the other officers, ran +ahead to lead the charge. Captain Perreau was shot through the chest; +Captain Dibley was almost on the top of the hill when hit. He had a +dim recollection of the gallant Adjutant of the Royal Irish Fusiliers +racing up almost alongside him and within a few paces of the summit, +when he suddenly saw an aged and grey-bearded burgher drawing a bead +upon him at a distance of a few paces only. He snapped his revolver at +him, but only to fall senseless next moment with a bullet through his +head. Marvellous though it seems he made a comparatively speedy +recovery, and was able to ride into Ladysmith, at the head of his +company, in the following February, having been in the hospital in the +besieged town in the interval. Evidence of the temporary nature of +the discomfort caused by a bullet through the head is afforded by the +fact that he is to-day one of the best bridge-players in the regiment. +Poor young Genge, who had only recently joined, was mortally wounded, +and died shortly after the battle, killed in his first fight and in +the springtime of life. + +Sergeant-Major Burke's (now Quartermaster) experiences may be best +told in his own words: 'It must have been shortly after poor Weldon +was killed that I came across "E" company; finding no officer with +them I assumed command, and on arrival at the donga handed them over +to Major Bird, and accompanied Colonel Yule, who had just arrived, and +was ascending the hill. We had only gone a few yards, and were about +six paces from the top wall, when I was bowled over, hit in the leg. +It was a hot place, for as I lay there another bullet hit me in the +shoulder. I crawled as well as I could to a rock, and sitting up +underneath it lit a pipe. Scarcely had I got it to draw when a bullet +dashed it out of my hand, taking a small piece of the top of my thumb +with it. Two men were shot dead so close that they fell across my +legs, effectually pinning me to the ground, while two more were +wounded and fell alongside of me. At this juncture Colour-Sergeants +Guilfoyle (now Sergeant-Major) and James dashed out of cover, and, +picking me up, carried me to a more sheltered position, whence I could +see what was going on all round, without myself being seen.' He was +left at Dundee with the wounded, and subsequently taken to Pretoria +with other prisoners of war. + +Whilst the men and officers were thus recovering their breath for a +renewed attack, a large number were undoubtedly hit by our own +shrapnel, as they clung closely to the hillside to avoid coming under +fire from the enemy, who still held the top. It was imperative to draw +our gunners' attention to their situation, to effect which purpose, an +intrepid signaller, Private Flynn, Royal Dublin Fusiliers, jumped +up, and at the imminent risk of his own life freely exposed himself in +his endeavour to 'call up' the guns. Finding, after repeated attempts, +that he could not attract their attention, he boldly walked back down +the hillside, torn as it was by mauser fire, and personally delivered +his message, a glorious and courageous example of that devotion to +duty which proved so strongly marked a characteristic of our N.C.O.'s +and privates throughout the war. + +Major English now extricated his company from the donga and managed to +reach the second wall, where he collected all available men, including +'F' and 'G' companies, and maintained an incessant fire on Dundee and +Talana Hills. The artillery behind had never slackened in their +efforts to support the infantry, and their shrapnel searched the whole +length of the crest line. This combined fire began at last to tell. +The rattle of the enemy's musketry, which had lasted since 6.30 a.m., +gradually grew feebler, until about 1 p.m. our infantry made a second +dash across the wall and this time reached the top of the hill. Below +them they saw the stream of flying Boers hurrying across the veld. It +was the moment for a vigorous outburst of musketry, but 'some one +blundered,' and the fleeting moment sped without being taken advantage +of. It is true that those men who first arrived on the summit were +firing away, and were joined in doing so by every other man who +breathlessly arrived. The company officers had just got their men well +in hand, and were directing the fire, when to every one's disgust, and +sheer, blank amazement, the 'Cease fire' sounded clear above the din +of the fight. There was nothing for it but to stop, but the sight of +the enemy streaming away in dense masses just below them, that enemy +who had up to now been pouring a relentless hail of bullets on them +for hours, was too much. Captain Hensley rushed up to Major English, +and after a brief conference, feeling certain the call must have been +blown in error, the latter gave the command to re-open fire. Barely +was it obeyed when the imperative bugle once more blared forth its +interference, and the company officers, the commanders of the +recognised battle-units, had nothing left them but compliance. + +The guns with 'D' company as escort had come to the neck between +Talana and Dundee Hills, but did not fire. The fight was over and +Major English formed up the battalion. It then marched back as a +rearguard to the brigade, through Dundee to the camp, much as if after +a field-day, halting half-way to receive an issue of rations sent out +by the A.S.C. It had lost two officers and six men killed, and three +officers and fifty-two men wounded. As the troops passed through the +town they were warmly cheered by the inhabitants. Late in the +afternoon news reached the camp that the Mounted Infantry company, +together with a squadron of the 18th Hussars, had been captured, but +this was kept from the rank and file of the battalion. As already +stated above, Colonel Moeller had been sent with the mounted troops +round the right flank of the Boers. He succeeded in his task, but +proceeded too far, and when the enemy retreated from Talana Hill he +found himself with some 200 rifles attempting to stop a force of 4000 +Boers. He was roughly handled, but managed to get clear. Then, +unluckily misled by the mist, he lost his way, and, instead of +returning to camp, moved towards Impati Mountain, where he stumbled +into the Boer main commando advancing from Newcastle. He took up a +defensive position, placing the cavalry in a kraal and the mounted +infantry on some rising ground near. The enemy brought up artillery +and soon surrounded him, finally forcing him to surrender. + +Talana Hill, in point of numbers, may not rank as a great battle, but +its moral effect can scarcely be exaggerated. It was the first +conflict of the war. It was Majuba reversed, and the issue had +far-reaching consequences. The news of the victory spread quickly +through South Africa, and had considerable influence on the Dutch +Colonists, who were, to use an expressive colloquialism, 'sitting on +the fence,' and kept them sitting there, at a time when had they +descended on the wrong side their action could not have failed to be +extremely prejudicial to the interests of the Empire; but over and +above all else it showed to the world that the British infantry could +still attack and carry a position in face of modern rifle-fire, a +lesson which was never forgotten by Boer or Briton, in spite of after +events. Moreover, Talana must ever be a memorable name in the annals +of the Royal Dublin Fusiliers, since it was the first battle in which +they had fought under their new title, which was from that day on to +become as well known as that of any regiment in the army. + +The other regiments engaged had also suffered very severely, the 60th +Rifles losing, amongst other officers, their gallant chief, Colonel +Gunning. It was curious that on the last occasion the 2nd Royal Dublin +Fusiliers had seen active service--the siege and capture of +Mooltan--they should then have fought alongside the 60th, as they did +in the present instance. + + + + +CHAPTER II. + +THE RETREAT FROM DUNDEE. + + 'I am ready to halt.'--_Ps._ xxxviii. 17. + + +On the morning of October 21st, Colonel Yule, who, as senior officer, +had taken over command of the brigade, received the news that a Boer +commando, under General Joubert, was advancing by the Newcastle road. +As the camp was within long-range artillery fire from Impati Mountain, +the brigade moved off at a moment's notice to the south and took up a +defensive position. The tents were left standing, but each man carried +a waterproof sheet, a blanket, and great-coat, while the waggons, +massed in rear, had three to four days' supplies. Soon after 4:30 p.m. +the enemy appeared on Impati, and at once opened fire with a big gun, +probably a forty-pounder. The shells at first fell in the vacated +camp, but the Boer artillerymen quickly discovered the brigade, and +made good practice, although they caused but slight damage. Our +batteries attempted to reply, but were outranged, their shells falling +far short. Luckily for us a mist came on, and the Boer gun ceased +firing. + +As soon as night fell the troops began to entrench themselves, for the +situation of the brigade was sufficiently unpleasant. In front was an +enemy with superior numbers and heavier artillery, and in rear, +between Dundee and Ladysmith, another hostile force of unknown +strength. To make matters worse, it rained persistently and the night +was cold. About 3 a.m. the brigade retreated to Indumana Kopje, some +one and a half miles to the south-east of the camp. Here a new +position was taken up before dawn, the guns and transport being massed +behind the hill in order to be out of sight from Impati. + +Early in the morning of the 22nd, the spirits of the small force were +raised by the news of the victory at Elandslaagte. This caused great +delight among the men: they were proud of their own victory at Talana, +and this further success roused them to a still higher pitch of +enthusiasm. The strategic side of the situation seldom appeals to the +rank and file, and the consequence was that when the retreat was +commenced they were under the impression that they were being led to +yet another victory. When they were undeceived, they were undoubtedly +very savage, especially so at, what seemed to them, the callous +desertion of their wounded comrades in Dundee. + +Since it was possible that some of the defeated Boers might be +retreating through the Biggarsberg, a demonstration towards Glencoe +Junction was ordered, the troops detailed being the 2nd Royal Dublin +Fusiliers, the 60th Rifles, one battery, and some cavalry. No time was +given for breakfasts, but the detachment moved off at 8 a.m. with the +battalion as advance guard. On arriving within 1500 yards of the +Junction, the battery shelled a party of the enemy on a hill to the +west of the railway, a proceeding which promptly provoked an answer +from the Boer gun on Impati, but another timely mist and rain saved +the detachment from this unwelcome attention. No Boers were seen in +the pass, so the force, with the battalion as rearguard, returned to +Indumana Kopje at 12.30 p.m., when they were able to obtain dinners, +the majority of the men having been without food for twenty-four +hours. + +At 9 p.m. that evening orders were issued for the reoccupation of +Talana Hill by the whole force, but the various commanding officers +were informed confidentially that Colonel Yule's real intention was a +retreat to Ladysmith by the Helpmakaar road. It was an extremely dark +night, and the battalion occupied nearly two hours in collecting the +companies and reaching the place of assembly at the foot of the +kopje. It was not until after 11 p.m. that the brigade actually +started on the retreat in the following order: 1st 60th Rifles +(advance-guard), 1st Royal Irish Fusiliers, 13th Battery, Mounted +Infantry, Transport, 67th and 69th Batteries, 2nd Royal Dublin +Fusiliers, 18th Hussars, 1st Leicestershire Regiment (rearguard). The +force occupied about four miles of road. The route was through Dundee, +over Sand Spruit, and down the Helpmakaar road through the Coalfields +village. It was impossible to find an opportunity for a return to the +camp, which was left standing. All the tents, stores, and baggage, +together with the wounded, were left to the enemy. The battalion thus +lost its band instruments and camp equipment, while the officers had +to sacrifice all their personal kit, and many articles belonging to +the mess. The waggons carried nothing but supplies, and no one in the +force was able to take away anything beyond what he carried on his +person. + +[Illustration: Armourer-Sergeant Waite. 'Delenda Est Carthago.'] + +The column marched throughout the night, and far into the morning of +the 23rd, only halting at 10 a.m., when dinners were eaten on the +high ground south of Blesbok Pass, about fifteen miles from Dundee. +That the Boers were watching the retreat was proved by one of their +heliographs trying to 'pick up' the column. The march was resumed +after a two hours' rest, and continued to Beith (twenty-one miles from +Dundee), where, at 3 p.m., another halt was made. The men cooked their +teas, and had a chance of a brief sleep, but at 11 p.m. they had to +start again. The road, a very bad one, lay through the pass leading to +the Waschbank River. The battalion formed the advance-guard, with two +Natal mounted policemen as guides. It was a weary tramp, for, owing to +the wretched road, long halts were necessary in order to allow the +waggons to close up. At dawn, the 18th Hussars took over the duties of +advance-guard, and were supported by 'F' company, under Captain +Hensley. + +During the night a mysterious heliograph was seen twinkling and +blinking away on the left flank. After some difficulty it was +ascertained that it was communicating with the farm of a man named +Potgieter, professedly a British subject. He was, in fact, caught _in +flagrante delicto_ in full communication with the unknown Boer +signaller, and paid for his crime with his life. + +At 10 a.m. on the 24th, the head of the column reached the Waschbank +(thirty-six miles), crossed, and halted on the south side of the +river. The waggons were not over until 12.30 p.m. A welcome meal and a +bathe in the stream refreshed the men, some of whom had had no proper +sleep for three nights. Heavy firing was heard from the direction of +Ladysmith, and the mounted troops, with the artillery, were sent off +to reconnoitre and see if they could render any assistance to Sir +George White. They met with nothing, however, and returned before 5 +p.m. Meanwhile the infantry had also been disturbed, for at 2 p.m. +they recrossed the river in order to occupy a better position to +oppose a rumoured pursuit of the Boers. As the latter did not appear, +the river was again forded at 4 p.m., and only just in time. A violent +thunderstorm burst, and the water rose ten feet in two hours. 'H' +company, under Lieutenant Shewan, and a patrol of the 18th Hussars +were left on the north bank, and were thus cut off from the main body +for several hours. + +It rained in torrents until 11 p.m., and the battalion, formed in +quarter-column, had to lie down in pools of water, and get what sleep +it could. At 5 a.m. on the 25th, in bright sunshine, the retreat was +resumed. 'H' company crossed to the south bank a few minutes before +the column moved off, although the water was still up to the men's +waists. The Dublin Fusiliers formed the rearguard, and marched till +mid-day, when Sunday's River (forty-eight miles) was reached. 'A' +company remained on the north bank to cover the crossing of the +waggons, and at 2.30 p.m. the column went on, only halting at 4.30 for +tea. Everybody hoped to have a long rest here, but at 6.30 p.m. Major +Bird was sent for, and informed that, as the Boers were in close +pursuit, a night march was necessary. + +The brigade accordingly started at 7 p.m., at the same moment that +heavy rain began to fall. The road quickly became inches deep in mud, +every one was soon wet to the skin, and the night was so dark that a +man in each section of fours had to hold on to the canteen strap of +the man in front in order to keep the proper direction. As an +additional evil, the battalion was still rearguard, which is generally +the most tiring position in a column. Halts were frequent, and the men +were so exhausted that many of them, when they stopped for a moment, +fell down in the mud and slept. Soon after midnight the 18th Hussars, +who were keeping connection between the Irish Fusiliers and the +rearguard, disappeared. It was so dark that the latter could have no +certainty of being on the right road, but was obliged to struggle on +blindly. Majors Bird and English established a code of signals by +whistle, in order to keep the companies closed up. Dawn still found +the battalion marching, dead tired, but luckily in its proper place +behind the column, and without a man missing. It was not until 8 a.m. +on the 26th that this wearisome march ended. Then Modderspruit, seven +miles north of Ladysmith, and sixty-five from Dundee, was reached, and +the men sank down, too weary to care about anything. After a brief +interval, however, they recovered sufficiently to eat their bully beef +and biscuits. It had been a trying march for all, although the column +had accomplished only twelve miles in eleven hours. As an instance of +the general weariness, it is recorded that a subaltern, during the +meal, was asked to pass the mustard, and fell asleep with his arm +outstretched and the mustard-pot in his hand. + +But the brigade was still not allowed to rest. At 11 a.m. it was on +the 'trek' again, and marched till 2 p.m., when the long retreat came +to an end, and Ladysmith was entered. Here the Devonshire and +Gloucestershire Regiments earned the undying gratitude of the regiment +by providing officers and men with a meal, as well as by pitching a +camp for them. + +On arriving at Ladysmith, tents, equipment, mules, and, in fact, all +that had been lost at Dundee, were issued, and the battalion went into +camp near the cemetery. + +The column was fortunate in having Colonel (now General) Dartnell with +it. This officer, after serving with distinction for many years in the +regular army, had, on retirement, settled down in Natal, where he was, +previous to the war, in command of the Natal Police. A great hunter +and fisherman, he knew every inch of the country, knowledge which +proved of invaluable assistance in the trying march. + + + + +CHAPTER III. + +FROM COLENSO TO ESTCOURT. + + 'If thou hope to please all, thy hopes are vaine; + If thou feare to displease some, thy feares are idle.' + + _Francis Quarles._ + + +On October 28th Colonel Cooper arrived at Ladysmith from England and +took over the command from Major Bird. The battalion was able to rest +from the 27th to the 29th, and recover from the fatigue of the retreat +to Ladysmith. + +The Headquarter Staff issued orders on the 29th for a general +movement, to take place the next day, against the enemy, who were +closing in on the town. The Dublin Fusiliers formed part of Colonel +Grimwood's brigade, which also included the 1st and 2nd King's Royal +Rifles, the Leicesters, and the Liverpools. The task assigned to +Colonel Grimwood was the capture of Long Hill. + +In order to be in position for the assault by dawn, it was necessary +for the brigade to make a night march, and the battalion paraded about +9.30 p.m. on Sunday evening, the 29th October. It formed the rear of +the brigade, to which was attached a brigade of artillery. 'F' and 'B' +companies were left behind on piquet duty. + +Owing to the difficulties inherent in a night march, and, perhaps, +also to faulty staff management, the artillery, the Dublin Fusiliers, +and Liverpool Regiment diverged from the route followed by the rest of +the brigade. As a result of this mistake the battalion took +practically no part in the battle of the 30th, but, after a vain +endeavour to find Colonel Grim wood's force, spent the morning lying +on the crest of a small ridge near Lombard's Kop. It came under shell +and long-range rifle fire, but lost no men. The attempt to drive back +the Boers was a failure, and the army fell back on Ladysmith about +mid-day. The battalion reached camp at 2 p.m. and was dismissed. All +ranks were somewhat tired, for the sun had been hot, and after dinner +sleep reigned supreme. + +[Illustration: Railway Bridge at Colenso.] + +But about 4 p.m. Colonel Cooper received from Headquarters an order to +proceed by train to Colenso, with the object of protecting the +important railway bridge which crosses the Tugela at that place. The +Natal Field Artillery, in addition to his own unit, was placed under +his command. On the receipt of this order, camp was struck, and the +tents and baggage sent down to the station. The piquets found by the +Dublin Fusiliers were ordered to be relieved by other corps, but +although 'F' company, under Captain Hensley, came in, Lieutenant H. W. +Higginson's piquet, on the ridge to the east of the cemetery, could +not rejoin in time, principally owing to the fact that the greater +part of the Gloucestershire Regiment, which had been detailed to find +the relief, had been captured at Nicholson's Nek. Lieutenant Higginson +and his men were thus left to share in the siege of Ladysmith. The +battalion transport, under Lieutenant Renny, also had to remain +behind. An account of their experiences during the siege is given by +Lieutenant Renny in Chapter IX. + +With these exceptions the whole battalion marched down to the station +soon after 11 p.m., and was dispatched in two trains. As Boers had +been reported on Bulwana Hill during the afternoon, a certain amount +of risk seemed to attend the journey. There was nothing to prevent the +enemy from cutting the line at any point in the hilly country between +Ladysmith and Pieter's Station, while even a small hostile force could +have played havoc with the crowded trucks. + +However, the enemy had luckily not penetrated to the railway line, and +after an uneventful, though unpleasant, journey, Colenso was reached +at 4.30 a.m. on the 31st. + +The two railway bridges over the Tugela and Onderbrook Spruit were +already protected by a small force, consisting of the Durban Light +Infantry, a squadron of the Imperial Light Horse, and a detachment of +the Natal Naval Volunteers, with a gun. These units had made good +defensive works, notably Forts Wylie and Molyneux, guarding the +railway bridges over the Tugela and Onderbrook Spruit respectively. + +We encamped some 300 yards south-west of Colenso, and the day (October +31st) was spent in making further defences, and dividing the garrison +into sections. Colenso was not, however, an easy place to defend. It +was commanded by the lofty hills on the left bank of the Tugela, and +by Hlangwane Hill on the right bank to the east of the village. The +garrison, moreover, was lacking in artillery, having only some +muzzle-loading guns with a very limited range. Colonel Cooper +telegraphed to Maritzburg asking for a naval twelve-pounder, which, +however, could not be obtained. + +[Illustration: Major-General C. D. Cooper, C.B. Commanding 2nd Royal +Dublin Fusiliers in Natal.] + +The necessity for such an addition soon arose. At 8.15 a.m. on +November 1st, the staff at Ladysmith sent a wire to say that a Boer +force had moved at daybreak towards Colenso. On receipt of this news +the garrison was warned to be ready, and patrols of the Imperial Light +Horse and the Mounted Infantry section of the battalion were +dispatched towards Ladysmith, Springfield, and the country beyond +Hlangwane. These patrols returned soon after 1 p.m., and the party +which had reconnoitred towards Ladysmith reported that it had come +into touch and exchanged shots with the enemy. Later on in the +afternoon, Lieutenant Cory, commanding the Mounted Infantry section, +went out again and reported that he had seen a hostile force, +estimated at 2000 men, which was off-saddled near the main Ladysmith +road, some six miles out. He had skirmished with the scouts of this +commando and had lost one man. Another wire came from Ladysmith at the +same time announcing that the enemy had guns. Our piquets were, in +consequence of these events, pushed forward to the horseshoe ridge on +the left bank of the Tugela, while the parties guarding the two +bridges (road and railway) over this river were reinforced. The night, +however, passed quietly. + +Mounted patrols were sent out at dawn of the 2nd, and Lieutenant Cory +was able to report, at 6.45 a.m., that the Boers were still in the +same position. But two hours later he forwarded another message to the +effect that the enemy was advancing on Grobelaar's Kloof. Soon +afterwards distant rifle-shots were heard, and the Mounted Infantry +retired into camp. About 10 a.m. parties of the enemy appeared on the +top of Grobelaar's Mountain, and by the aid of a good telescope it +could be seen that they were busily engaged in digging. Their +intention was not long in doubt, for a thin cloud became visible on +the sky-line, and the next moment a shell buried itself in the +river-bank. + +Colonel Cooper at once ordered the tents to be lowered and the +trenches to be manned. But the enemy made no signs of attacking +Colenso, and contented themselves by occasionally firing shells which +invariably fell short. The interruption of telegraphic communication +with Ladysmith soon after 3 p.m. proved, however, that the enemy was +not being idle. Groups of Boers could be seen on the hills overhanging +the railway, and a train carrying General French was shelled after +leaving Pieters. The activity of our foes assumed a more aggressive +character when, about 5 p.m., they began to bombard Fort Molyneux. +From Colenso the shrapnel could be plainly seen bursting over the +work, and the piquets on the left bank of the Tugela reported that +heavy rifle-fire was in progress. As the garrison of the fort +consisted only of eighty men of the Durban Light Infantry, some +anxiety was felt regarding their safety, and this uneasiness was +intensified by the arrival of one of the defenders, who announced that +the redoubt was hard pressed. Lieutenant Shewan, with one hundred men +mostly from 'E' company, was promptly dispatched to reinforce them in +the armoured train. He found that the fort had been evacuated, but +managed to pick up several of the garrison in spite of the enemy's +rifle and shrapnel fire. Captain Hensley, who was holding the +horseshoe ridge, also advanced with 'F' company, and, by firing +long-range volleys, helped to cover the retirement of the remainder of +the garrison, the whole of which reached Colenso in the night. Colonel +Cooper telegraphed an account of these events to Brigadier-General +Wolfe-Murray at Maritzburg, who replied at nightfall that, since the +safety of Colenso bridge was very important, he would send the Border +Regiment next day to reinforce the garrison. But no mention was made +of any artillery. + +Colonel Cooper had now a difficult decision to arrive at. In front of +him lay a superior force of the enemy with guns far outranging his own +obsolete muzzle-loaders, and during the afternoon disquieting rumours, +which might be true, of another commando at Springfield had reached +him. Ladysmith was invested, and the small garrisons of Colenso and +Estcourt alone stood between the Boers and Maritzburg. Having +consulted the senior officers of the garrison, Colonel Cooper sent +another wire to General Wolfe-Murray explaining the situation, and in +reply was authorised to fall back to Estcourt if he could not hold +Colenso. About 10 p.m. he reluctantly determined to retire. + +The mounted troops and the Natal Field Artillery went by road, +starting at midnight. It was decided to send the rest of the garrison +by railway, and the stationmaster at Colenso, with great energy, +succeeded in obtaining three trains which arrived in the early hours +of November 3rd. + +The operation of entraining was at once commenced. The night was dark, +and the packing of all the tents, supplies, and equipment in the +trucks proceeded but slowly. The Natal Naval Volunteers had to bring +their nine-pounder gun down the steep slope of Fort Wylie, a task +requiring great care and time; the piquets on the left bank of the +river had to be withdrawn, and the two bridges guarded up to the very +last moment. Although everything was done in the utmost possible +silence, it yet seemed that the necessary shunting of the trains must +warn the Boers of the evacuation, and bring on an attack. But there +was no interruption, and the last train steamed out of Colenso station +half an hour before dawn. + +Estcourt was reached two hours later. The little town was already +occupied by a detachment of the Imperial Light Horse and Natal Mounted +Rifles. During the morning there also arrived from Maritzburg the 2nd +Border Regiment,[2] afterwards to be the comrades of the battalion in +the 5th Brigade. + + [Footnote 2: A great friendship sprang up between this + celebrated regiment and ourselves.] + +Colonel Cooper took over the command of the garrison and immediately +set to work on the arrangement of the defences. The next day, however, +General Wolfe-Murray and his staff appeared on the scene. Estcourt had +thus the honour of having three different commandants in two days. + + + + +CHAPTER IV. + +ESTCOURT AND FRERE. + + 'Great men are not always wise: neither do the aged understand + judgment.'--_Job_, xxxii. 9. + + +The stay at Estcourt (November 3rd to 26th) was a period of great +anxiety and hard work. That there was cause for anxiety may be easily +understood when the state of affairs is remembered. The Army Corps had +not yet arrived from England, nor could any fresh troops be expected +before the 10th. The Boers had invaded Natal, had shut up in Ladysmith +the only British army in the field, and could still afford to send +five or six thousand men against Maritzburg. The Estcourt garrison +alone stood in their way. + +There were necessarily many outposts, and tours were long and +frequent. Thunderstorms, Natal thunderstorms, visited the town with +painful regularity, and rendered piquet work even more uncomfortable +than usual. It was a period of strained waiting, when every one +wondered whether a Boer commando or a British brigade would be the +first arrival. Reliable news was scarce, though rumours of every kind +were rife. + +The battalion was encamped in the market square, while the officers +inhabited a small room encumbered with planks. Trenches covered the +town to the north and north-east, and were pushed forward some two +miles on the Weenen road. The citadel, so to speak, was the sugar-loaf +hill, on which Lieutenant James, R.N., constructed, towards the middle +of the month, emplacements for his two naval twelve-pounders. These +guns arrived on November 14th, a welcome addition to the garrison, +which had been strengthened on the 13th by the West Yorkshire +Regiment. These reinforcements came at an opportune moment, for the +Boers had at last moved forward and on November 14th their patrols +were close to Estcourt. Their approach caused a certain amount of +alarm, and at first the evacuation of the town was proposed. The camp +was even struck, and a great part of the baggage was put on to trains +which were kept ready in the station. Later on other counsels +prevailed, and tents were raised again. It had rained most of the day, +and a general wetting was the chief result of this 'scare.' The Boers +quickly made their presence felt, and the next day inflicted a severe +blow on the garrison. + +Our mounted troops had been busily engaged in reconnaissance work, and +in an evil hour it occurred to the authorities that the armoured train +was also an excellent means of gaining news. Captain Hensley had taken +it to Colenso on the 5th and 6th, and on the latter day surprised a +party of Boers engaged in looting the village. The dispatch of the +train, unsupported by any mounted troops, soon became almost a matter +of daily routine. This defiance of common sense could have only one +result. On November 15th, Captain Haldane,[3] of the Gordon +Highlanders, went out in the train with 'A' company and some men of +the Durban Light Infantry. He reached Frere and, learning from a Natal +policeman that the front was clear, pushed on to Chieveley. Here he +saw in the distance a small body of the enemy moving southwards, and, +having telegraphed the information to Estcourt, turned back. But as +the train was running down a steep gradient the Boers suddenly opened +fire with two guns from a ridge to the west of the line. Almost +immediately afterwards the train was derailed by stones placed on the +line, and the leading truck upset, thus stopping the engine. + + [Footnote 3: He had been wounded at Elandslaagte, and, being + unable to rejoin his corps in Ladysmith, was attached to the + battalion.] + +It was a predicament trying to the nerves of even the bravest. The +Boer shells were well aimed, and came in quick succession. But Captain +Haldane and his men did all that could be done. Lieutenant Frankland +directed from the rear truck a vigorous fire, which kept the enemy at +a respectful distance, and even made them shift their gun. Meanwhile +Mr. Winston Churchill, who had accompanied the expedition as a Press +correspondent, collected some men and set to work to push the derailed +truck off the line. They were exposed to a heavy fire, but eventually +succeeded in their task. The train began to move again; luck did not, +however, favour them, for the coupling between the engine and rear +truck was broken by a shell. Then Captain Haldane ordered the engine +to return to Estcourt with as many wounded men as possible, while he +attempted with the remainder of the force to reach Frere station. The +engine reached Estcourt, but Captain Haldane was not so fortunate. The +men left the trucks and started to run along the line. No sooner did +our rifle-fire cease than the Boers galloped down the hill and, before +Captain Haldane could realise the danger, they were among the men, and +he had no course open but to surrender. The casualties of 'A' company +were three men killed, four or five wounded, and forty-two prisoners. +Private Kavanagh afterwards received the Distinguished Conduct Medal +for his gallantry on this occasion. The sound of the Boer guns could +be distinctly heard at Estcourt, and great anxiety was felt. A little +group of officers assembled in the trenches to the west of the +station, and eagerly scanned the country through their glasses. +Nothing could be seen, and the firing had ceased. Suddenly through the +air rang the shrill whistle of an engine, and at the sound every one +gave a sigh of relief. It was the armoured train, and all was well. +Another whistle, and round a sharp curve steamed the engine--but, +alas! without the trucks. It was evident that a disaster had occurred, +although particulars were not received until late in the afternoon; +while it was weeks later before the list of casualties could be +ascertained. Luckily this mishap occurred when the situation had in +other respects improved. The Army Corps was landing, and troops were +being pushed forward as quickly as possible. On the 16th, Estcourt was +reinforced by the 2nd Queen's and 2nd East Surreys of General +Hildyard's brigade, and General Barton's Fusilier brigade was +assembling at Mooi River. + +The Boers were thus too late, and so lost the opportunity of capturing +Maritzburg. Although they doubtless knew of the arrival of fresh +troops, they still advanced, and, moving round Estcourt, appeared on +the hills to the north-west of Mooi River station. A detachment +reconnoitred Estcourt on the 18th, but a couple of shells from +Lieutenant James's naval guns induced them to stay at a distance. + +The telegraph line south of the town was interrupted on the 22nd, and +for a brief period the garrison was cut off from the rest of the +world. But the action of Willow Grange, in which the battalion took no +part, caused a retirement of the enemy, who retreated through Weenen +on the 24th. + +Their retreat was in no degree molested by our troops; but on November +26th the long-desired advance took place. It was an exhilarating +feeling to leave Estcourt, and lose sight of those hills and trenches, +the scene of so many weary vigils. The army did not, however, make a +big stride forward. The advance was only to Frere, some ten miles +nearer the Tugela. + +As the column started at 8 a.m. there seemed every prospect of an easy +day. But on active service it is never safe to assume anything. +Although no opposition was met with, and the mounted troops hardly saw +a Boer, the progress was very slow, and sunset found the rear of the +column still three miles distant from Frere. The battalion had the +ill-luck to be in the rearguard, behind a seemingly interminable line +of transport. Then the inevitable drift intervened, and waggon after +waggon broke down. Finally, part of the transport decided to halt till +the morning, and the unfortunate rearguard was obliged to form a line +of outposts. As the battalion transport was some distance in front, +this meant no blankets, no food, nothing save a limited amount of +Natal water. The men were not allowed to consume the emergency +rations, and therefore had to suffer from cold and hunger. The night +passed somehow, however, and with the break of day we marched into +Frere, to find our waggons and obtain food. + +Another monotonous fortnight was spent at Frere, the only excitement +being the arrival of fresh troops and the building of a temporary +railway bridge over the Blaukranz. The arrival of Sir Redvers Buller +and his staff gave hopes of an early advance, and everybody discussed +what our General ought to do, strategical plans becoming as numerous +as sandstorms. + +Since leaving Ladysmith, the 2nd Dublin Fusiliers had not been +attached to a brigade, and now that the Army Corps had come there were +not wanting pessimists who foretold that as the battalion was nobody's +child it would be sent to guard the lines of communication. Early in +December, however, it was assigned to General Hart's 5th, or Irish, +Brigade, in place of the 1st Battalion. The latter was ordered to send +three companies, with a total strength of 287 men, to make up for the +wastage of six weeks' operations. These companies, which were +commanded by Major Tempest Hicks, arrived on December 7th, and were +allowed at first to maintain a separate organization, so that the 2nd +Battalion had eleven companies. + +[Illustration: Capt. C. F. ROMER (standing) and Capt. E. +FETHERSTONHAUGH.] + +The 5th Brigade was encamped close behind the ridge which lies to the +north-west of the railway station. General Hart utilised the fortnight +at Frere in making his battalions accustomed to his methods. Every +day the whole brigade stood to arms an hour before dawn, and advanced +up the slope of the ridge, where it stayed until scouts had reported +the front all clear. The General was also very particular about the +cleanliness of the camp, and made it a rule to go through the lines +every morning. + + + + +CHAPTER V. + +THE BATTLE OF COLENSO. + + 'Never shame to hear what you have nobly done.'--_Coriolanus._ + + +On December 12th, the 6th and Naval Brigades marched from Frere to +Chieveley, and the rest of the army followed the next day. The +battalion happened to be finding the outposts, and could not march +with the 5th Brigade. Some delay in collecting the companies was +experienced, so it was not until 1 p.m. that a start was made, and +darkness came on before Chieveley was reached. It was, however, a +glorious moonlight night, and marching across the veld had a charm +which even the dust could not quite destroy. But romance soon gave way +to more worldly feelings when, on arriving at Chieveley about 8 p.m., +it became necessary to find the brigade camp among the hundreds of +tents already pitched. + +On the evening of the 14th, it was known that the army was to advance +next day, and attempt the passage of the Tugela. Colonel Cooper +assembled his officers in order to explain the Divisional and Brigade +orders. He stated that the 5th Brigade would cross the river at a +drift two miles west of Colenso, then move down the left bank so as to +take in rear the Boers defending Colenso bridge, which would be +attacked by the 2nd Brigade. The Brigade orders detailed the Dublin +Fusiliers to lead the advance to the river, and afterwards to cover +the rear of the brigade when it moved down the left bank. General Hart +urged in addition the necessity of keeping the men well in hand. They +were to cheer in the event of a charge, but were not to be allowed to +make a wild rush. + +[Illustration: 2 miles West of Colenso. Genl. Hart's flank attack from +the Boer Point of View. 15th Dec/99. From a sketch by Col. H. Tempest +Hicks, C.B.] + +Every one was early astir on December 15th. Breakfasts were at 3 a.m., +but before that hour tents had been struck and packed in the +waggons, on which great-coats, blankets, and mess-tins were also +placed, so that the men only carried their haversacks, water-bottles, +rifles, and 150 rounds. The brigade fell in at 3.30 a.m. It was still +quite dark, and the Brigadier spent the ensuing half-hour in drilling +his command. The advance was commenced just as the eastern horizon +grew grey with the dawn. + +The battalion, which led the brigade, deployed into line to the right, +and then advanced by fours from the right of companies. In front rode +the General with his staff and a Kaffir guide; behind came the other +three battalions of the brigade in mass. The deployment of the +battalion had brought 'A' on the left, and 'H' and the three companies +of the 1st Battalion on the right. + +In this order the brigade moved across the broad expanse of veld, +leading to the banks of the Tugela. In front, beyond the river, rose +tier on tier of ridges and kopjes, backed by the towering mass of +Grobelaar's Kloof. In the morning light they looked strangely quiet +and deserted. Only on a spur to the left front could be seen a few +black specks, the figures of watching Boers. + +Soon the naval guns in front of Chieveley opened fire, dropping their +shells on the horseshoe ridge to the north of Colenso, and into a +kraal further to the west. But no answer came. The brigade moved on, +tramping through the long grass, wet with the dew. There was a +momentary halt in order to cross a spruit running diagonally across +the line of march. The ridges in front grew nearer and plainer. They +still seemed deserted, although the eyes of many foes might be +watching the advancing khaki-clad troops. Behind came the thunder of +the big guns, and the shells screamed in the air overhead. It was past +6 a.m. Suddenly the hiss of a shell sounded marvellously close, there +was a metallic clang, and a cloud of dust arose some hundred yards in +front. It was a Boer shrapnel, and the battle had begun. + +Each company of the battalion, without waiting for orders, +'front-formed,' and doubled forward. The mounted officers at once +dismounted, Major Hicks' horse being shot under him as he was in the +very act of getting off its back. Somehow it did not seem a bit +strange to him at the time that his horse should be down, and it never +occurred to him then that it had been shot. Another shrapnel burst +over the line and then the enemy's musketry blazed forth, finding an +excellent target in the massed brigade, which was deploying as best it +could. + +[Illustration: Boer Trenches, Colenso.] + +The battalion was dangerously crowded together, for it had been +advancing as if drilling on the barrack square, although Colonel +Cooper had tried to open out to double company interval, a proceeding +which the General had promptly counter-ordered. But all did their +best. The men rushed forward after their officers, and at their signal +lay down in the long grass, whence fire was opened at the invisible +foe. + +It was very difficult to discover the Boer positions. There was one +long trench near the kraal which the naval guns had been shelling, +and further to the west could be seen another parapet from which came +an occasional puff of smoke betraying a Martini rifle and black +powder. But if the Boers could not be seen, they could be both heard +and felt. There was one ceaseless rattle of mausers, and a constant +hum of bullets only drowned by the scream of the shells. + +[Illustration: Casualties at Colenso. + + Capt. BACON. _Killed._ + Lieut. HENRY. _Killed._ + Capt. H. M. SHEWAN. _Wounded._ + Major GORDON (_1st Battalion, attached_). _Wounded._ + Second Lieut. MACLEOD (_1st Battalion, attached_). _Wounded._] + +Short rushes were made as a rule, and the flank companies edged away +in order to give room for a more reasonable extension. But no sooner +had the battalion opened out than it was reinforced by companies of +the Connaught Rangers, and, later, of the Inniskilling Fusiliers and +the Border Regiment. In a comparatively short time, after the first +Boer shell, the 5th Brigade had been practically crowded into one +line. Officers led men of all the four regiments, and encouraged them +with the cry, 'Come on, the Irish Brigade!' + +There was no control, no cohesion, no arrangement in the attack. No +attempt was made to support, by the careful fire of one part of the +line, the advance of the remainder; nor did any order from the higher +ranks reach the firing line. Small groups of men, led by an officer, +jumped up, dashed forward a few scores of yards, and then lay down. +Nobody knew where the drift was, nobody had a clear idea of what was +happening. All pushed forward blindly, animated by the sole idea of +reaching the river-bank. + +On the left, part of the battalion was almost on the river when the +Boers first opened fire, and quickly reached the bank. After a short +halt they turned to their right and moved in single file along the +river, being exposed all the time to a heavy fire. They passed through +a kraal, and eventually, not being able to find the drift, assembled +in a hollow, where they stayed until orders to retire reached them. +The centre and right advanced through low scrub into a loop of the +river. Some sections of the 1st Battalion, on the extreme right, came +upon a spruit, and, under shelter of its banks, pushed ahead of the +line. + +Thus, by short and constant rushes, the assailants worked their way +forward. A brigade of field artillery was supporting the attack from +behind, but they found it as difficult as the infantry did to locate +the Boers, and most of their shells were quite harmless to the enemy, +while a few dropped close to the attacking infantry. They aided the +latter indirectly, however, since the Boer guns turned their attention +to them. + +General Sir Redvers Buller had early recognised the difficulties of +the 5th Brigade, and sent orders for it to retire. But it is easier to +send a force into a battle than to draw it back. The great difficulty +at Colenso was to communicate with the company officers, who had to be +left entirely to their own 'initiative.' Finally an officer of the +Connaught Rangers volunteered to take to the firing line General +Hart's written order to retire. He succeeded in reaching the front, +but then, thinking he had struck the right of the line, turned to his +left. In reality he had gone to the centre of the attack, and, +consequently, the retirement was carried out partially and by +fractions. The left fell back about 10 a.m. in good order, though the +Boers, as usual, redoubled their fire when they saw their foes begin +to retreat. The centre and right, having received no order nor +warning, clung to their ground, and in some cases even made a further +advance. Section after section, however, gradually realised that their +left flank was uncovered and a general retreat of the brigade in +progress. A score of men, under the command of an officer, would rise +up and double back, causing, as they did so, an instant quickening of +the enemy's fire. All around the running figures the bullets splashed, +raising little jets of dust. Occasionally a man would stumble forward, +or sink down as if tired, but it seemed wonderful that the rain of +bullets did not claim more victims. They claimed enough, however, of +the unfortunate three companies of the 1st Battalion, whom the order +to retire never reached. Till 1 p.m., and the arrival of the Boers, +they lay where they were, suffering a loss of some 60 per cent. When +at last Major Hicks realised the situation, he touched with his stick +the man on his right, to tell him to pass the word to retire, but he +touched a dead man; he turned to the left, only to touch another +corpse. One company was brought out of action by a lance-corporal. +Then the Boers arrived, and began making prisoners. One shouted to +Major Hicks for his revolver; he replied that he had not got one--it +was in his holsters on his dead horse--and stalked indignantly off the +battlefield, without another question being put to him. + +Major Gordon, who was commanding one of the three companies of the 1st +Battalion, had been shot through the knee early in the day by a rifle +bullet. He lay for two hours or so momentarily expecting to be hit +again. After a time he noticed that as long as he lay still no bullets +came in his direction, but that the moment he attempted to move there +would be a vicious hiss and spurt of sand and dust close beside him. +In spite of this he managed to crawl through a pool of blood to a +neighbouring ant-heap, which offered some sort of protection, and into +which a bullet plunged just as he reached it. Here he remained till +the retirement, when, assisted by two sergeants of the regiment, +Keenan and Dillon, he managed to hobble away. Even then he noticed +that as long as they kept away from the troops who were still actively +engaged few bullets came their way, as though the Boers were purposely +not firing at the wounded. + +The Boer heavy artillery pursued the retiring troops with shells, +which made a prodigious noise, and raised clouds of dust, but seldom +did any damage. Gradually a region of comparative peace was reached, +where the ground was not being continually struck by bullets, and only +an occasional shell fell. The extended lines of the 4th Brigade, +ordered to cover the retirement, came into view, and behind them the +men of the Irish Brigade collected again in companies and battalions. +Then, although the artillery was still roaring fiercely, and the +mausers rattled with tireless persistence, the brigade trudged back to +its former camping-ground, pitched tents, and began to cook dinners. A +prosaic but practical ending to an impossible attack. + +But there was still one task to accomplish--the preparation of the +casualty list: The regiment had suffered heavily. Two officers, +Captain Bacon (1st Battalion) and Lieutenant Henry, had been killed, +and three, Major Gordon (1st Battalion), Captain Shewan, and +Lieutenant Macleod (1st Battalion), wounded. The total casualties were +219, of whom 52 were killed. Among the latter were Colour-Sergeant +Gage (mortally wounded) and Sergeant Hayes. + +Captain Bacon (1st Battalion) was killed by a bullet, and must have +died immediately. He had previously served for a short time with the +2nd Battalion, in which he had many friends, and his loss was bitterly +deplored by Officers, N.C.O.'s, and Privates alike. + +Lieutenant Henry had scarcely two years' service, but had in that +short space of time endeared himself to every one in the regiment, and +was as smart and efficient a young officer as ever joined it. His +death must also have been mercifully instantaneous, as he was hit by a +shell. + +Second Lieutenant Macleod had only joined the 1st Battalion a few days +before it left the Curragh on November 10th. He was very severely +wounded, his thigh being broken, and although his leg was saved, it +was left two inches shorter than it had been, and in the end he had to +leave the service on this account. + +Major Gordon (1st Battalion), who received a Brevet +Lieutenant-Colonelcy for his services, was invalided home, but came +out again later on; while Captain Shewan, who had been shot through +the leg by a bullet, was back at work again in twelve days, a sterling +proof of that devotion to duty which was later on rewarded by the +well-merited distinction of the D.S.O. + +[Illustration: Group of Twenty Sergeants taken after the Battle of +Colenso. All that remained of forty-eight who left Maritzburg. + +The names reading from left to right in rows are:--(back row) Sergt. +Hanna; Band-Sergt. Cragg; Sergt. Davis; Lance-Sergt. Cullen; Sergt. +Rooney; Arm.-Sergt. Waite; Col.-Sergt. Cossey; Sergt. Smith; Sergt. +Sheridan. (2nd row) Sergt. Keenan; Sergt. French; Col.-Sergt. Ambrose; +Capt. Fetherstonhaugh; Col. Cooper; Col.-Sergt. Guilfoyle: Sergt. +McNay; Sergt. Hobson; Pioneer-Sergt. Duncan. (3rd row) Sergt. +Moriarty; Sergt. Purcell; Col.-Sergt. Connell; Sergt. Beatty.] + +The three companies of the 1st Battalion had been the greatest +sufferers. Being on the right, they were the last to retire; in fact, +some of the men did not get in till 5 p.m., while a few were taken +prisoners on the banks of the river. + +[Illustration: Bringing down the Wounded.] + +Amongst a host of others who showed their worth under the trying +circumstances of this unfortunate day, was Bugler Dunne, a small boy +who did his duty well, and had the good fortune to be received by Her +Majesty the Queen on his return home. His father was also in South +Africa, a Colour-Sergeant in the 5th Battalion. Isolated cases must +always receive undue prominence--it is the way of the world--but the +spirit of the men was quite remarkable throughout, and made officers +and N.C.O.'s proud to command and lead them. Instead of depressing +them, the reverse seemed to have a contrary effect, and merely +hardened their determination to succeed. + + + + +CHAPTER VI. + +VENTER'S SPRUIT. + + 'Now no chastening for the present seemeth to be joyous, but + grievous.'--_Heb._ xii. 11. + + +The greater part of December 16th was spent in burying the dead. At +nightfall orders were received to strike camp, and the brigade marched +back to Frere, which was reached in the early morning of the 17th, +when we occupied our former camping-ground. + +Another weary wait followed. Frere at the best of times is an +uninteresting spot, but it became absolutely repulsive as the grass +disappeared and mud and flies reigned supreme. Life in the camp was +monotonous, only slightly preferable to the long tours of outpost +duty, and a bathe in the river, varied by a walk round the lines, +formed the only amusement. + +General Hart did not relax any of his precautions, and his command +still stood to arms every morning. The rest of the army assembled at +Frere seemed, so far as could be seen, to rely on the 5th Brigade, for +no other unit followed the latter's example. + +Our listlessness was broken on January 6th, when the thunder of the +guns around Ladysmith was so distinct that it seemed as if Chieveley +must be attacked. Everybody soon learned that the Boers were making a +desperate attempt to capture the town, and there was naturally some +anxiety as to the result. + +A few days afterwards, signs of another forward movement became +apparent. One cheerful omen was the arrival of the doctors, whose duty +it was to convey the wounded back to the base, and of a large body of +civilian stretcher-bearers. General Warren's Division, fresh from +England, marched in, and the second effort to relieve Ladysmith was +begun. + +The 5th Brigade left Frere at daybreak on January 11th, and, covered +by the 'Royals,' took the Springfield road. It had been raining +heavily, and the road, never good, soon became execrable. The column +was followed by a long line of waggons carrying baggage, supplies, +ammunition, pontoons, &c. On arriving at Pretorius' Farm, the brigade +halted and pitched camp. The battalion found the outposts, which were +especially ordered to protect themselves by building 'sangars' or +digging trenches. + +Meanwhile the apparently endless line of waggons had been blocked by a +bad drift below the camp, and the brigade was called upon to help. The +road was somewhat improved by throwing into the soft mud stones +obtained from a wall, and many waggons had to be hauled by ropes +through the spruit. For over forty-eight hours did that collection of +vehicles continue to cross and require help. + +On Thursday, January 12th, the 4th Brigade and General Warren's +Division passed through the camp and went straight on to Springfield, +since the cavalry had ascertained that there were no Boers south of +the Tugela in that direction. The 5th Brigade followed on the +afternoon of the 15th, crossing the Little Tugela by a foot +trestle-bridge made of spars cut by the Engineers from trees on the +bank. As the battalion approached Springfield, the sound of +artillery-fire greeted it, and our shrapnel could be seen bursting +against a hill which was evidently on the left bank of the Tugela. It +was clear that the army was again in touch with the enemy, but nobody +knew what Sir Redvers Buller had decided upon, although everybody, of +course, dogmatised on what he ought to do. + +On the afternoon of the 16th, orders were issued for the brigade to +march that night, although nothing was stated regarding its +destination. Vigorous operations were plainly intended, since the +force was to move as lightly as possible. No tents or blankets were +allowed, and the great-coats were carried by the regimental transport, +in which officers were permitted to pack twenty pounds of baggage. Six +days' rations were also taken. + +The army moved from Springfield at dusk, leaving the camp standing in +charge of a few details (cooks, &c.), who had strict orders to light +fires and walk about, so that the vigilant burgher might not discover +that the army had slipped away. The general direction of the march was +north-west. It was a bright moonlight night, but the column moved +slowly, for the numerous waggons took up the centre of the road, while +the troops moved on the side. About midnight it began to rain, which +made everybody cold and uncomfortable, especially as halts were long +and frequent. It was not easy to see where the army was going, +although the Tugela could not be far off. Nobody knew the plan of +operations, which, however, evidently aimed at a surprise crossing of +the river, and it seemed as if the enemy must hear the noise of the +creaking transport and tramping men. + +About 2 a.m. there came a halt on the top of a ridge, where General +Hart formed up his brigade. Each regiment deployed into line, and then +lay down one behind the other in the following order: Royal +Inniskilling Fusiliers, Connaught Rangers, Royal Dublin Fusiliers, and +Border Regiment. Fatigued by a long night-march, every one soon fell +asleep. Unfortunately, however, the slumbers of the brigade were +disturbed by an incident which shows how easily confusion can arise in +night operations. A horse from somewhere in front broke loose and +galloped over the veld, straight into the ranks of the sleeping +regiments. For a moment everything was in confusion, and a general +panic nearly took place. Luckily the first glimmer of dawn had come, +and the company officers soon regained control of their men, but it +might have been a different tale had darkness still prevailed. + +When daylight came, it showed the army to be on the top of a hill +overlooking Trichardt's Drift. On the other side of the river the +ground rose to a long ridge flanked on the east by a steep mountain, +and on the west by a bastion-like hill. Nobody then knew the country, +but that mountain was Spion Kop, and the ridge lying so calmly in the +morning light was to be the scene of six days' continuous fighting. At +dawn of January 17th, however, the ridge, which the natives called +Tabanyama, seemed deserted, and not a Boer was to be seen. + +It was now learnt that Sir Redvers Buller had divided his forces, +sending two brigades, under General Lyttelton, to Potgieter's Drift, +while the remainder of the army, under General Warren, was assembled +ready to cross the river at Trichardt's Drift. + +The battalion breakfasted quietly, and then 'H' company was sent down +to the drift in order to help in the construction of a bridge. As the +company descended the steep slope, the artillery from the heights +began to shell a farm on the far side of the river, whence a Boer +patrol had been sniping. The Engineers had massed the pontoon waggons +round a farm by the drift, and were looking for a suitable point for +the bridge. The pontoons were launched, and by 11.30 a.m. the first +bridge was ready. The infantry immediately began to cross, but the +artillery and transport had to wait for a second bridge, which was not +completed until after dark. + +The 5th Brigade marched down to the river at 2 p.m. and crossed. On +reaching the left bank the battalion deployed into line, with four or +five paces between the men, and slowly moved up the slope in support +of the widely-extended lines of the Lancashire Brigade. Except for an +occasional shot from the artillery at Potgieter's Drift, everything +was still and peaceful; although, as the army moved away from the +river, most of the officers expected to be greeted by the familiar +'pick-pock' of the enemy's mausers. + +The brigade in front eventually halted on the top of a minor ridge, +some three thousand yards or more from the crest-line of Tabanyama, +and separated from it by open and gently-sloping ground. The Dublin +Fusiliers formed quarter-column immediately behind the Lancashire +Brigade, and prepared to bivouac. Many of the officers strolled higher +up in order to look at the country through their glasses. The main +crest-line was evidently occupied, for men could be seen busily +digging. It was somewhat trying to think that precious time was being +wasted, while the burghers were preparing a defensive position. + +Our transport was still on the other side of the Tugela, and +consequently we had to do without blankets, great-coats, and kettles. +The officers' mess was saved by a subaltern, who succeeded in +procuring a Kaffir cooking-pot and some very tough fowls, which +Captain Hensley boiled with great skill. The night was unpleasant, for +khaki drill is but an inefficient protection against the cold and +heavy dew. The experience proved too much for Major Butterworth, +R.A.M.C., who had to go on the sick list soon afterwards. He had been +with the battalion since Ladysmith, and his coolness and devotion at +the battle of Colenso had made him popular with all ranks. + +The next day, January 18th, was spent in idleness, and the different +corps remained in their bivouacs. There was nothing to do except watch +the Boers still digging on the crest-line, and the shells fired by the +guns of General Lyttelton, who was apparently making a reconnaissance. +The greater part of General Warren's artillery crossed to the left +bank and took up a position close to the battalion. + +On the 19th the regiment took part in the movement which was +initiated with the evident purpose of turning the Boer right by the +Acton Holmes road. Leaving the artillery and the Lancashire Brigade on +the ridge, the remainder of the army descended into the plain, and +moved up the left bank of the Tugela. The column marched along the +base of the main ridge, and was carefully watched by the Boer patrols +from Bastion Hill. + +After fording Venter's Spruit the battalion halted about 2 p.m. on +some rising ground, whence a good view of the surrounding country was +obtained. As there seemed every prospect of a long halt, the men began +to take off their boots and putties, in order to dry them, but they +had to put them on again hurriedly enough, since the guns suddenly +opened fire. At first everybody imagined that the Boers were attacking +the artillery and Lancashire Brigade. Soon, however, it was seen that +the latter were making a reconnaissance. Not much opportunity for +looking at the spectacle was afforded, since we received an order to +recross Venter's Spruit and bivouac. The movement by Acton Holmes had +been given up for some reason which was unknown, and it was not +difficult to see that the alternative was a frontal attack on the +position which everybody had watched being fortified. + +The battalion halted close to Venter's Spruit, and had a piquet ('H' +company) on the Trichardt's Drift road. The transport succeeded in +reaching the brigade that night, and the men were thus able to have +their great-coats. Not much sleep was, however, allowed. At a very +early hour, long before daylight, on the 20th, the brigade was +aroused. Great-coats were again packed on the waggons, and then, +without breakfast or any opportunity of issuing rations, the battalion +fell in and marched off. Owing to darkness and the rough track by +which the column marched, progress was at first very slow. When the +feeble light of early dawn enabled the country to be seen, the +regiment was crossing a spruit near Fairview Farm, lying at the foot +of the ridge. It then ascended a small valley leading to Three Tree +Hill, where the Field Artillery had concentrated. + +The latter soon afterwards opened the battle, and fired on the Boer +trenches, which stood out more prominently than usual on the crest of +the ridge. The enemy's artillery did not reply, although a vigorous +rifle-fire was directed on the skirmishers of the Lancashire Brigade. + +The Connaught Rangers had been temporarily detached on escort duty, +and General Hart now moved his three remaining battalions to the left +in line of quarter-columns. It was a hot day, and the men, who had +eaten nothing that morning, suffered some discomfort from such a close +formation. The ground, too, was broken and covered with long grass and +scrub, so that it was no easy matter to satisfy the General's +injunctions in the matter of 'dressing.' The brigade moved in full +view of the enemy, and so compact a body of men must have been a great +temptation to the Boer gunners, who, however, were either not ready or +exercised much self-restraint. After scrambling through a remarkably +steep valley, the brigade halted in a gentle depression, where it was +safe from the random bullets that were falling near. A long pause +ensued, and the men were able to obtain some much-needed water. + +It was past noon before the infantry, in this part of the field, +advanced in earnest. Then the York and Lancaster Regiment and +Lancashire Fusiliers were sent forward as the firing-line against the +centre of the Boer position, and were supported by the Borders and 2nd +Royal Dublin Fusiliers. The formation adopted by General Hart for the +support was two lines. The first line, which was two deep, consisted +of the right half-battalions of the two regiments, the Borders being +on the right, and was followed at a distance of about two hundred +yards by a similar line, composed of the left half-battalions. + +On emerging from the depression where it had been resting, the support +came under rifle-fire. The range must, however, have been a long one, +and the casualties were few. The attack was moving astride of a spur +which ran from the Boer position to the Tugela, a little distance to +the west of Three Tree Hill. At first this spur was broad, forming +almost a plateau, but further on it narrowed, and consequently the +left of the two lines advanced up a narrow valley, which afforded +excellent cover. + +Led by General Hart, the brigade advanced at a steady pace and, after +a time, closed up on the firing-line. It then halted, and from a +slight elevation opened fire in order to support the Lancashire +Regiments, who, having taken the enemy's advanced position, found that +some thousand yards of very open and almost-level ground lay between +them and the Boer trenches, which lined the northern edge of the +summit of the ridge. The attack could now only advance slowly, since +it was exposed to a cross-fire from both flanks. Hitherto it had only +faced rifle-fire, but about 1.45 p.m. the Boer guns, posted somewhere +near Spion Kop, came into action. They were able to rake the whole +assaulting line, and, in fact, many officers thought at first that the +shells were 'short' ones from our own artillery. The Boers on this +occasion managed to burst their shrapnel with some accuracy, and it +was fortunate that the attack could find good cover. + +This artillery and the increased rifle-fire on the right flank caused +the line to swing round in that direction, but any further advance was +suspended by superior orders soon after 4.30 p.m. The Borders, who had +pushed ahead, were ordered back, and the other regiments took cover +among the rocks, and maintained a vigorous fire. The rattle of +musketry gradually died away as the light failed, until after +nightfall the battalion assembled behind a wall and bivouacked. + +By great efforts the regimental transport had succeeded in getting +touch with the battalion, which was thus able to obtain rations. But +it was not until 8 p.m. that the men could get anything to eat. + +Thus ended the fight of January 20th. It had cost the regiment one of +its most efficient officers, Captain Hensley, who was mortally +wounded.[4] Major English had been hit in the leg--he was back within +a fortnight--and of the rank and file four were killed and twenty +wounded--among the former being Lance-Sergeant Taylor, a most +excellent N.C.O. Although the opposing forces were so close, the night +passed quietly. With daylight (January 21st), however, the rifle-fire +at once broke out. The battalion had just managed to have a scratch +meal when orders were received to move to the support of the 2nd +Brigade, which was away to the left. General Hart ordered Colonel +Cooper to move by the straightest line, first down a ravine across a +spruit, and then over a hill. While climbing the latter, the battalion +was in full view of the enemy, who at once opened fire with guns and +rifles. Each company extended in succession, and doubled, so far as +possible, over the exposed ground. Once over the hill a region of +comparative safety was reached, and General Hart finally formed up his +command behind a rocky ridge overlooking the position held by the 2nd +Brigade. The latter were having a rifle duel with the Boer trenches +but did not advance. The 5th Brigade played a very passive part, and +spent the day behind the rocks. Bullets continually whistled overhead, +and the hostile artillery near Spion Kop burst an occasional shrapnel +along the position. Otherwise there was no excitement. + + [Footnote 4: Poor Hensley was not only one of the most + popular officers in the regiment, but also one of the best + and bravest. All his life he had been devoted to field + sports, and his fame as a plucky big-game hunter and skilful + shot was well known in many a Central Indian village and + Cashmere valley. Educated at the Canadian Military College, + he was a master of his profession, while the long months + spent in Indian jungles had turned him into a handy man + indeed. Wonderful and varied were the uses to which he could + put an empty paraffin-tin or biscuit-box, and excellent were + the stews he could produce out of a mess-tin. On one occasion + in India a wounded panther was mauling one of his beaters. + His rifle was empty, but without a moment's hesitation he + dashed in, and drove the animal away by beating it over the + head. Alas! poor Hensley, we could spare him ill, but, after + all, we know he died the death he would have chosen.] + +Towards evening, the regiment received orders to move some few hundred +yards to the right, and bivouac. Colonel Cooper directed the companies +to close in succession, and march from the rocks to the new position. +This movement almost escaped the notice of the Boer artillery, and it +was not until the last company ('H') moved that two shells were fired. +They fell to the right and in front of the leading fours, and did no +damage. The battalion assembled in a narrow amphitheatre just below +the southern crest, and at the head of a valley leading to Fairview +Farm. Although the bivouac could not be seen by the enemy, except from +Spion Kop, it was not altogether sheltered from fire, for every now +and then a bullet would clear the crest-line and strike the ground +below. + +In this amphitheatre we perforce remained for three days, having a far +from pleasant time. From sunrise to sunset the rattle of musketry +practically never ceased, only at intervals the hum of the passing +bullets was drowned by the clang of bursting shrapnel. The Boer guns, +posted both directly in front and on the right flank, burst their +shells just over the crest, and fired intermittently all day. There +were four battalions crowded in the amphitheatre, and each one +occupied in turn the crest, whence an uninterrupted fire was directed +on the Boer trenches opposite. The enemy's marksmen had the range of +this crest-line, and it was a dangerous matter to stand up even for a +minute. Stone sangars were built and the companies relieved each other +by the men crawling up the slope. The enemy's artillery near Spion Kop +could rake the line of sangars, thus necessitating numerous +traverses. When not in the firing line, we lay behind the slope in +column, each company being protected by a parapet of earth or stone. +Immediately below the amphitheatre the ground fell steeply, forming a +ravine in which the cooks set up their field kitchens in comparative +security. It was characteristic of the British soldier that whereas +during the greater part of the day he crouched behind his cover, the +sight of a fatigue party with the kettles made him forget the shells +and bullets, and he dashed off for his food regardless of danger. + +On Tuesday night (January 22nd) the proposed assault on Spion Kop was +announced, and every one hoped that a general advance would be the +result. + +The morning of January 23rd dawned with a thick white mist, which hid +everything from view. It was our turn to occupy the ridge, and the +companies lay there for nearly an hour before the usual exchange of +rifle-fire began. No news of the capture of Spion Kop had reached the +amphitheatre, but the fact could be guessed from the absence of the +Boer guns in that direction. Only the artillery in front of the +battalion's position fired in the morning, and even that ceased during +the afternoon. The enemy was evidently concentrating the greater part +of his forces against Spion Kop, and parties of mounted burghers could +be seen moving from their extreme right. On Spion Kop hung the white +clouds of bursting shrapnel, and the stuttering sound of the pompom +scarcely ceased for a moment, but the 5th Brigade made no advance. The +companies behind the sangars fired hundreds of rounds at the Boer +trenches, while their comrades below ate and slept. + +At dawn of the 25th, glasses and telescopes were turned on to the +summit of the mountain, and it was a bitter blow when the moving +figures there were seen to be Boers. It was not until late in the +forenoon, however, that the evacuation of Spion Kop was officially +communicated. But the renewal of the Boer artillery fire against the +crest-line had been a sufficiently eloquent announcement of the fact. + +As there seemed no reason why the regiment should remain in the +amphitheatre when it was not required to man the sangars, Colonel +Cooper obtained permission that afternoon to move down the valley +below Bastion Hill. The new bivouac was more sheltered, although an +occasional Boer shell still fell near. + +It was now evident that the second attempt to relieve Ladysmith had +failed, and that the army would have to recross the Tugela. On the +afternoon of the 25th, fatigue parties were sent by the battalion to +improve the track leading to Fairview Farm, and it was rumoured that +the retreat would take place that night. At 10.30 p.m. 'H' company was +sent to the farm, with orders to hold it during the retirement. But +the army did not move until Friday night, January 26th. At 10 p.m. on +that date, General Hart's command began to descend the valley in heavy +rain, which rendered the track extremely greasy. + +Only a short distance had been covered when there was an outburst of +rifle-fire from the rearguard, which was still holding the sangars. +For a moment it seemed as if the Boers had anticipated the retreat and +were attacking. The battalion halted, but the firing soon ceased, and +the march was continued, the men stumbling down the track as quickly +as the many boulders would permit. At Fairview Farm the column halted +for a considerable period, in order to let the rearguard close up. By +this time every one was wet to the skin, and the enforced rest was +somewhat trying, owing to the cold. + +However, after a wait of about an hour, the retirement was resumed. +The track was marked by orderlies and tins, but even with this help it +was difficult to find the way in the utter darkness. The surface of +the road, too, had become so slippery that falls were frequent. +Altogether, progress was painfully slow and the march a very +fatiguing one. It was past 4 a.m., January 27th, before the pontoon +bridge at Trichardt's Drift was reached. The column had another +prolonged wait here, and so tired were the men that many of them +dropped to the ground and slept in the mud. Early dawn had come when +the brigade recrossed the Tugela and toiled up the steep slope on the +other side. A Boer gun sent a parting shell just as the column reached +the summit. + +It was a great relief to look back towards Tabanyama, where the +discarded biscuit tins were gleaming in the morning light, and say +good-bye to that long line of sangars and trenches. The men's spirits +were, moreover, cheered up by the sight of the 'Scotch' cart with the +kettles and rations. Breakfasts were cooked, and after a short rest +the brigade moved to the camping-ground selected for it. But it +arrived only to find that the position was within view and artillery +range of Spion Kop. So once more it had to trudge over the veld, +General Hart moving it in line of quarter-columns, and being as +particular about the 'dressing' as if he were on Laffan's Plain. His +command hardly appreciated this smartness at the time. But all were +finally rewarded by the arrival of the transport with tents and +baggage, and every one spent the night in comparative luxury. + + + + +CHAPTER VII. + +VAAL KRANTZ. + + 'The best laid schemes o' mice and men + Gang aft agley. + And lea'e us naught but grief and pain + For promised joy.' + + _Burns._ + + +On January 30th we were reinforced by a draft of 400 men, principally +militia reservists, who were brought up by Captain Venour. They were a +welcome addition, being a physically fine body of men, and, although +their training was naturally not so good as that of their 'regular' +comrades, they proved equally brave and ready to follow their +officers. + +The battalion shifted its camp on January 29th to Spearman's Hollow, +where it stayed a week. It was here that Sir Redvers Buller visited +every brigade in turn, and made his speech stating that the fighting +around Spion Kop had enabled him to discover the key to Ladysmith. He +had earned the gratitude of the men by putting them on extra rations, +and was always a warm favourite with the rank and file, who love a +brave man and instinctively know one. + +On February 2nd the regiment left Spearman's Hollow for Spearman's +Hill, and, on the afternoon of Sunday, February 4th, marched with the +rest of the brigade towards Potgieter's Drift. The trek was a short +one, and at 6 p.m. we bivouacked behind Swaartz Kop. At nightfall the +officers were assembled and informed of the proposed operations for +the next day. The idea was to make a feint attack on Brakfontein and +then assault Vaal Krantz, the capture of which, it was thought, would +break the enemy's line. + +We rose at dawn on the 5th, had a comfortable breakfast, and only +moved off about 7 a.m., just as the heavy artillery on Mount Alice and +Swaartz Kop began the fight by shelling Brakfontein. The hills around +rolled with the thunder of the guns, while the faint echoes of the +lyddite explosions on the distant ridges formed a piano accompaniment. +With this music in its ears, the battalion marched through the gap +between Mount Alice and Swaartz Kop by the road leading to Potgieter's +Drift. There was a short halt made at the gap, from which a splendid +view of the battlefield was obtainable. Immediately below stretched +the silver line of the Tugela, with all its many loops and twistings +visible. Beyond came a small brown ridge, which had evidently been +held by our troops, since a few biscuit-tins glistened on the near +slope. Further away was the background formed by the Boer position, +extending in a gigantic curve from Spion Kop on the spectator's left +to the lofty mass of Doorn Kloof on his right, the centre being formed +by Brakfontein and Vaal Krantz, over both of which heavy columns of +smoke were hanging. The Lancashire Brigade had commenced the feint +attack, and its extended lines could be plainly seen as they advanced +slowly in succession, while behind them the batteries of field +artillery had unlimbered on the plain, and were already shelling the +Boer trenches. + +After a short pause the regiment began to descend the hill. The 5th +Brigade was following the 4th, both of them marching in 'fours.' +Before reaching the drift, the head of the column wheeled to the right +and proceeded along the narrow plain between the Tugela and Swaartz +Kop. The sight of that long winding line must have been a great +temptation to the Boer gunners, but they remained silent. Not even a +rifle had spoken. It was only when the Lancashire Brigade began to +retire that the enemy disclosed himself. Then Brakfontein spluttered +with musketry, and the Boer artillery vented its wrath on the +batteries dotted over the plain. But both our infantry and gunners +seemed to treat the fusillade with contempt. The former marched +back without apparently quickening their pace, and the latter, +limbering up, trotted off to support the attack on Vaal Krantz. This +hill was being literally covered with shells, and soon had the +appearance of a smoking volcano. + +[Illustration: Casualties at Tugela Heights. + + Second Lieut. LANE. _Wounded at Hart's Hill._ + Lieut. J. MCD. HASKARD. _Wounded at Pieter's Hill._ + Second Lieut. BRADFORD. _Wounded at Pieter's Hill._ + Capt. A. V. HILL (_1st Battalion, attached_). _Wounded at Pieter's + Hill._ + Second Lieut. BRODHURST HILL (_1st Battalion, attached_). _Wounded + at Pieter's Hill._] + +About 1 p.m. the Durham Light Infantry filed over the pontoon under +Swaartz Kop, and extended for the attack. At the same time we were +moved to a position below the southern end of the Kop in order to +cover by long-range rifle-fire the right of the 4th Brigade. 'B' +company fired a few volleys at some invisible snipers on the slopes of +Doorn Kloof, but with this exception we did not come into action. + +Watched by the whole army the Durhams advanced against Vaal Krantz, +which they took about 4 p.m. amidst the cheers of the onlookers. But +with this success the operations practically ended for the day. + +The battalion remained all the afternoon in the same position, and +then finally bivouacked there, having luckily succeeded in +communicating with the transport, so that the men had blankets. Its +outposts were pushed well round the southern slopes of Swaartz Kop, +thus overlooking the Tugela. A reconnoitring patrol was fired on from +the left bank, but otherwise the night passed without incident. + +We did not move on the 6th, and had practically nothing to do. The +artillery on both sides fired continually, although the damage done +must have been very small in proportion to the noise and expenditure +of ammunition. + +Every one watched with special interest a duel between our heavy +artillery and a large Boer gun which had suddenly been unmasked on +Doorn Kloof. This gun fired black powder, and its discharge could be +plainly seen, but it was apparently run up for every round behind a +parapet. It displayed absolute impartiality in its attentions. One +round would be directed against the infantry on Vaal Krantz, another +covered with dust a field battery on the plain, a third just missed +the battalion, while a fourth shell would crash among the trees on +Swaartz Kop. All our heavy guns had a try at silencing it, and their +efforts sometimes met with partial success. The Boer gun would cease +firing for a time, but it always re-appeared when least expected. +Towards the evening it became quite lively and put a shell through the +pontoon bridge. + +The night of February 6th-7th was spent in comparative peace, although +the Boer artillery somewhat spoiled the first part of the night by +shelling Vaal Krantz. February 7th was a repetition of the 6th, except +that the gun on Doorn Kloof paid slightly more attention to our +position. The Colonel found it necessary to post a man on the +look-out, whose duty it was, on seeing the white puff of smoke, to +blow a whistle, whereupon everybody sought the shelter of the nearest +and largest boulder. But although, when the huge shell burst, the air +seemed unpleasantly full of whizzing iron fragments, no damage was +done, and the gun merely mitigated, to some extent, the monotony of +idleness. + +By this time it was clear that Sir Redvers Buller did not intend to +press the attack home, and no one was surprised to find the army in +retreat on the morning of the 8th. The battalion acted as rearguard +and marched back between the river and Swaartz Kop in widely extended +lines. The Boer guns on Doorn Kloof, the shoulder of Spion Kop, and +Brakfontein shelled us on our way, and one man of the rear company +('H') was killed, this being our only casualty between February 5th +and 8th. The heavy artillery on Mount Alice covered the retreat and +prevented the enemy's guns from being too attentive. + +The 5th Brigade halted at Springfield, and two days later went on to +Pretorius' Farm. On the 18th it made a march of fourteen miles to the +Blaukranz River, starting about 3.30 a.m. The day was hot, and as +there was no water on the route the newly-joined militia reservists +suffered considerably. After a rest of two days the brigade moved to +a camp near Gun Hill at Chieveley, where the naval six-inch gun was in +position. + +The rest of the army was now engaged in the operations against Cingolo +and Hlangwane, and the battalion occupied itself in guarding +Chieveley, in beginning the construction of a railway to Hussar Hill, +and in convoying ammunition to the latter place. This was a somewhat +trying task, as during part of the way the convoy became the object of +many a Boer shell. The operations against Cingolo and Hlangwane proved +successful, and these positions were captured on the 19th. The next +day General Hart took the regiment on a reconnaissance towards +Colenso. It advanced cautiously on the west of the railway in column +of extended companies. The village was found unoccupied, but a party +of Boers, holding the horseshoe ridge on the left bank of the Tugela +opened a vigorous fire. The leading companies at once doubled forward +and lined the right bank, whence they answered the Boer marksmen. The +left half-battalion remained in support behind the village. A +detachment of Thorneycroft's Mounted Infantry appeared on the scene, +and having forded the Tugela above the road bridge, turned the Boers +out of their position. Later on in the afternoon a train steamed into +Colenso station from Chieveley, and took us back just before dusk. + +At 6 a.m. on February 21st, the Connaught Rangers and the Dublin +Fusiliers went by train to Colenso, where they were joined by a +battery. The horseshoe ridge on the left bank was being held by a +detachment of Thorneycroft's Mounted Infantry, but General Hart was +desirous of crossing the river with at least part of his force. For +this purpose he had brought on the train a boat, which was promptly +launched. As, however, the boat was small, and hardly capable of +holding more than four men, the General gave orders for the +construction of a raft. After some trouble this was ready by 4 p.m., +and some two hours later about seven companies of the Connaught +Rangers had succeeded in reaching the left bank. + +General Hart now received an order to cross early next morning, with +three battalions of his brigade, the pontoon bridge, which had been +constructed under Hlangwane. The regiment bivouacked in Colenso, and +at 5 a.m. on February 22nd marched down the right bank and crossed the +bridge. One company had been sent back to Chieveley for the purpose of +striking the camp, and with the transport rejoined the battalion about +7 a.m., after the latter had crossed the bridge and taken up a +position on the western side of the horseshoe ridge. + +Here it stayed the whole day, all ranks passing the time in examining +the Boer trenches, and picking up more or less worthless loot. Heavy +fighting was taking place in front, but only an occasional shell fell +near the ridge. + + + + +CHAPTER VIII. + +HART'S AND PIETER'S HILLS--THE RELIEF OF LADYSMITH. + + 'But since I knew + No rock so hard but that a little wave + May beat admission in a thousand years, + I re-commenced.' + + _Tennyson._ + + +Late on February 22nd, orders were issued for the brigade[5] to be +ready to move at an early hour next morning. Breakfasts were eaten +before 4 a.m., and the battalion fell in at about 4.15 on February +23rd. The brigade was to move from the left to the right of the army, +and it was probably the intention of the Headquarter Staff for the +march to take place during darkness. But there was a hitch in the +distribution of biscuits, and it was already broad daylight when we +started. + + [Footnote 5: The Borders had been left behind at Chieveley. + In their place General Hart received half a battalion of the + newly-raised Imperial Light Infantry.] + +General Hart moved his command in column of route, and the long line +soon attracted the notice of the enemy's artillery. It was somewhat +trying to the nerves to hear the whistle of a shell coming nearer and +nearer, until finally it struck the ground within a few yards of the +column. Luckily, the Boers were either using common shell or their +shrapnel did not burst, and the battalion had no casualties. Finally +the railway was reached, and the brigade turned to the left, each +battalion forming column of companies in succession. A halt was made +close to the railway line and a short distance to the south of the +viaduct over the Onderbrook Spruit. But as a few shells fell +dangerously near, and showed that the enemy could still see the +brigade, it was moved to the left behind a rocky ridge. The battalion +stayed here for the rest of the morning. The Boer gunners fired +frequently at the ridge, but the slope of the ground saved us from any +losses. Sir Redvers Buller and his staff rode up about mid-day in +order to explain to General Hart what was required of him. This was +the capture of the hill known as Inniskilling, or Hart's Hill. It +could be plainly seen from the summit of the ridge behind which we +lay, and all officers and section commanders were called up in order +to have a look at it. They were told that it formed the extreme left +of the Boer position, and that its capture meant the relief of +Ladysmith. General Hart desired all officers to inform their men of +the necessity for a resolute assault. Our heavy artillery on the right +bank of the Tugela now began to shell the hill, which was quickly +covered by the smoke and dust of the lyddite explosions. + +Meanwhile, the 2nd Brigade was preparing the way by an assault on a +ridge some 1000 yards to the front. They had a tough fight, and their +wounded were soon being brought down the railway in trucks and +stretchers. + +The afternoon was well advanced when the 5th Brigade moved to the +attack. The hill to be assaulted lay some 3000 yards to the north-east +of the ridge which had been sheltering us, and the nature of the +intervening ground forbade a direct advance, which would dangerously +expose the left flank. It was necessary to hug the river-bank until a +position from which a direct attack became possible was reached. + +The brigade at first moved along the railway line in file in the +following order: Royal Inniskilling Fusiliers, Connaught Rangers, +Royal Dublin Fusiliers, and Imperial Light Infantry. The battalion +moved with the left in front. A brigade in file takes up a +considerable space, and by the time the regiment could start, a heavy +outburst of firing showed that the Inniskilling Fusiliers were already +engaged. + +The advance along the railway line, through a cutting and over the +Onderbrook Spruit, was very slow, since checks were frequent. The Boer +artillery missed this favourable opportunity of shelling their foes, +luckily for the latter. After crossing Onderbrook Spruit, the column +turned to the right and crept along the river. The enemy were sweeping +the bank with pompoms and a heavy rifle-fire, but by crouching under +the bank the column obtained good cover for the greater part of the +way. But every now and then there came an exposed bit of ground over +which it was necessary to double, and so narrow was the track that men +had often to jump over the wounded or killed. + +The Langverwacht Spruit had to be crossed by the railway bridge. As +the latter was in full view of the enemy and was being raked by pompom +shells and bullets, it proved a great delay to the progress of the +column. It was only possible to cross at more or less long intervals. +Each man was forced to run the gauntlet by himself, and had to double +over as hard as he could. Beyond the bridge complete cover was +obtained except for a small stretch of ground by the Boer bridge. +Below the latter, the river ran between high hills, and the column was +therefore screened from view. + +By the time that the leading company of the battalion had cleared +'Pompom' bridge, the Inniskilling Fusiliers were advancing against the +Boer position on Hart's Hill. It was about 5 p.m., and the General +could not wait until his brigade had concentrated, but sent his troops +forward as they arrived. The left half-battalion of the Royal Dublin +Fusiliers formed up near a deserted Boer bivouac overlooking the +river, and then, without stopping for the right half, advanced to +where General Hart was standing. + +Lieutenant-Colonel Sitwell was in command of the left half-battalion, +and in a short time he was sent for by the General, who told him to +advance and help the Inniskilling Fusiliers to capture the hill. + +The leading company ('H') was directed to extend to six paces and move +forward, the remaining companies ('G,' 'F,' and 'E') following at a +distance of 100 yards. No sooner had 'H' company cleared the crest of +the hill on which General Hart was standing, than it came under a +heavy rifle-fire, principally from the direction of Railway Hill. +Lieutenant Lane fell badly wounded--shot clean through the head from +one side to another, a wound from which he made a marvellous +recovery--and three or four men were hit. The company received the +order to double, no easy task down a steep slope strewn with rocks and +boulders. The railway line at the bottom of the slope was crossed, and +the opposite side of the valley, which was dotted with small trees, +ascended. The company had now caught up the lines of the Connaught +Rangers, and all climbed up the hill, the crest of which had been +gained by the Inniskilling Fusiliers. Although the attacking infantry +could not be seen from the Boers on Hart's or Railway Hill, they were +still exposed to an enfilade fire from the left. + +On arriving with 'H' company at the top of the hill, +Lieutenant-Colonel Sitwell found the Inniskilling Fusiliers lying +along the crest-line and facing the Boer trenches, which ran at about +three hundred yards distance on the far side of the flat plateau. The +Inniskillings had already suffered serious casualties, but, on +Lieutenant-Colonel Sitwell stating that he had been ordered to charge, +claimed the right of leading the assault. To this Colonel Sitwell +agreed, but it was decided to wait until the remaining companies of +the left half-battalion of the Royal Dublin Fusiliers were up. +Meanwhile our guns and the cavalry maxims on the right bank of the +Tugela were directing against the enemy's trenches a stream of bullets +and shrapnel shells, the latter seeming to burst immediately over the +infantry. + +[Illustration: Casualties at Tugela Heights (_continued_). + + Capt. A. HENSLEY. _Killed at Venter's Spruit._ + Lieut.-colonel SITWELL. _Killed at Hart's Hill._ + Capt. MAITLAND. (_Gordon Highlanders, attached_) _Killed at + Hart's Hill._ + Major F. P. ENGLISH. _Wounded at Venter's Spruit and Zuikerbosch._ + Second Lieut. DENNIS. _Wounded at Hart's Hill. Died of Enteric at + Aliwal North._] + +The sun had set, and the light was already failing by the time that +the four companies of the left half-battalion had come up, principally +on the left of the Inniskilling Fusiliers. Then the signal to charge +was given, and the whole line rose up, and with a yell dashed forward. +But it was met by a murderous fire. In the gathering darkness the Boer +trenches quivered with the rifle-flashes, and the bullets struck out +sparks as they hit the rocks. At such a short range the enemy's +marksmen could hardly miss, and the line of charging infantry was +almost mowed down. The assault was checked, and the attackers flung +themselves on the ground and sought what little cover there was. + +[Illustration: After the Fight.] + +Luckily night intervened, and, although the Boers never for a moment +ceased their fire, the survivors of that charge managed to creep back +to the crest. Here Colonel Brooke, of the Connaught Rangers, and +Lieutenant-Colonel Sitwell collected them, and took steps to guard +against a counter-attack. A low stone wall was built below the crest, +and behind this the night was spent. + +It was very dark, and the ground, covered with boulders, most +difficult to move over. Wounded men lay all over the hill, but there +were no doctors, no stretcher-bearers, and no water. It was impossible +to help or to move them. Their groans, combined with the intermittent +rifle-fire, made sleep difficult. + +We had three officers wounded (Lieutenants Lane, Hill, and Dennis), +and some twenty casualties. Lieutenant Hill was again hit as he lay, +and subsequently lost his foot in consequence. + +The infantry crouching behind the stone wall were unable to +communicate with the rest of the army. At dawn, however, Major +McGrigor, the Brigade-Major, came up to the line and told Colonel +Brooke that General Hart wished him to hold on to his position, to +which reinforcements would be sent. Colonel Brooke explained that food +and water would have to be sent also, and, above all, that his left +must be protected. Having promised to do what he could, Major McGrigor +returned to his General. With daylight the battle recommenced. The +Boers, from their trenches on Hart's and Railway Hills, kept up a +vigorous rifle-fire, and were answered as far as possible by the men +of the 5th Brigade behind the wall. Our artillery shelled Hart's Hill, +and many of their shrapnel which burst short hit the unlucky wounded +who were still lying on the plateau. + +But the Boers were not content to remain on the defensive. Gradually +their skirmishers worked round the left of the hill, moving by the +dongas which ran down to the railway line, and were able to fire up +into the rear of the defenders of the wall. Part of the latter were +extended at right angles to the wall, and endeavoured to drive off the +enemy. But the Boers had excellent cover, whereas the infantry crowded +together on the hill presented an easy target. Casualties became +numerous. The morning wore on, and there were no signs of the promised +reinforcements or of the much-needed water and food. It seemed useless +to stay on the hill, and about 8 a.m. Colonel Brooke gave the order +to retire. As the men rose to their feet and ran down the hill, the +rattle of the Boer musketry increased in volume, and the bullets +whistled among the retreating soldiers. Lieut.-Colonel Sitwell was +killed as he descended the slope, and Captain Maitland, of the Gordon +Highlanders, who had been in command of 'G' company since November, +was mortally wounded almost at the same time. Luckily, the distance +was not very great, and once over the railway line the stream of +bullets ceased. + +[Illustration: The Grave of Colonel Sitwell and Captain Maitland, +Gordon Highlanders (attached), near Railway at Pieter's Hill.] + +Lieut.-Colonel Sitwell's loss was severely felt. Though he had only +recently joined us, he had given numerous proofs of his soldierly +ability. He had the benefit of considerable previous war service, and +had he lived would doubtless have risen to high rank. Captain +Maitland, Gordon Highlanders, had been unable to join his regiment in +Ladysmith, and had been attached to the battalion since Estcourt. Over +and over again he had proved himself to be a most gallant soldier, and +had endeared himself to all his temporary comrades (see Appendix). He +commanded 'G' company, which was most unfortunate in respect of its +commanders, having no less than six during the war. Colour-Sergeant +Connell, however, than whom no braver man lives, was with it +throughout. + +As the retiring infantry climbed up the slope of Hart's Hollow they +met the advancing lines of the 4th Brigade, who had been sent to +reinforce the 5th. The latter quickly re-formed--there were not many +of the Inniskilling Fusiliers left to re-form--and were able to obtain +food after a fast of nearly twenty-four hours. + +The casualties of the left half-battalion amounted to two officers +killed and three wounded, and eleven killed and fifty-six wounded of +the rank and file.[6] + + [Footnote 6: There were, of course, many narrow escapes, but + none narrower than that of Major Romer, whose modesty forbids + him to allude to it. His helmet was shot through by a bullet + which actually parted his hair in its passage, a feat never + before accomplished.--A. E. M.] + +The right half-battalion, under Major English, had, during the assault +of Hart's Hill, watched the right flank towards Pieter's Hill. General +Hart proposed that they should attack the Boers in that quarter, but +Colonel Cooper, who was with the right half-battalion, pointed out +that the day was too far advanced. The right half-battalion spent the +night of the 23rd-24th February among the rocks on the hill whence +General Hart had directed the attack. About 8 a.m. on February 24th, +'B' company was sent to drive off small parties of the enemy who had +crept down the dongas and reached the railway on the left. This +company came under a severe fire, and Lieutenant Brodhurst Hill was +wounded in the leg, but the Boers were driven back. The 24th was spent +in a ceaseless rifle-duel with the enemy, who had brought a gun to +bear on the hill. During the afternoon, preparations were made for a +fresh attack on Hart's Hill, to be undertaken by Colonel Cooper with +two battalions, while General Hart, with the remainder of the force +at hand, assaulted Railway Hill. The attack was, however, postponed. + +The enemy evidently feared another assault, for in the course of the +night of February 24th-25th, they opened a vigorous fire, which +disturbed the slumbers of General Hart's force, and created some +excitement. + +During all this time the unlucky wounded, who had been hit on the +23rd, had been left lying in front of the Boer trenches. It was +impossible to help them, since all attempts in that direction had been +frustrated by the enemy. But on the morning of Sunday, February 25th, +a partial armistice was agreed upon in order to bring in the wounded +and to bury the dead. The armistice ended at 6 p.m., and both sides +commenced firing immediately afterwards. + +[Illustration: Pieter's Hill. February 27th, 1900.] + +Meanwhile, Sir Redvers Buller had evolved a new plan of operations, +and decided to attack with his combined force the three +hills--Pieter's, Railway, and Hart's. For this purpose the greater +part of the artillery was brought from the left bank and concentrated +on the right bank, opposite the points to be assaulted. It was in +position by the 26th, and began a slow bombardment of the Boer +trenches. During the night, the pontoon bridge under Hlangwane was +dismantled, and carried down to a point below the Boer bridge, where +it was relaid, an operation which was not concluded until 10 a.m. on +the 27th. + +On the day before, the Dublin Fusiliers had been ordered to join +temporarily General Barton's Brigade. It left its position among the +rocks of Hart's Hollow about 7 a.m. on February 27th, and, moving down +the hill through the deserted Boer laager, halted by the pontoon +bridge. Here it was joined soon after 9 a.m. by the Irish and Scots +Fusiliers, and came under the command of General Barton. + +[Illustration: Pontoon Bridge, River Tugela. February 28th, 1900.] + +The battalion followed the Scots Fusiliers, and moved along the left +bank of the Tugela at the foot of a steep ridge, being covered by +infantry and maxim fire from the right bank. + +After a march of two miles, and at the point where the Klip River +joins the Tugela, the 6th Brigade turned to its left and prepared to +attack the Boer position, which, lying some two miles from the river, +stretched from the ridges north of Eagle's Nest to the various kopjes +constituting Pieter's Hill. General Barton directed the Royal Irish +Fusiliers to assault the western end of Pieter's Hill and the Scots +Fusiliers the eastern, while the 2nd Royal Dublin Fusiliers formed the +reserve. + +The assault was successful, and the greater part of Pieter's Hill fell +into our hands, but the Boers still held a kopje to the north of the +hill, and maintained a heavy fire. General Barton, anxious to complete +his victory, directed three companies of the battalion and one company +of the Scots Fusiliers to advance against the kopje. 'B,' 'C,' and 'H' +were the three companies selected, the first named being on the right +and the latter on the left, connecting with the Scots Fusiliers. +Guided by Captain MacBean, Royal Dublin Fusiliers, Brigade-Major 6th +Brigade, the detachment advanced about 2.30 p.m., and came at once +under a heavy rifle and pompom fire. The companies pushed forward, +however, by successive rushes until they reached a donga some three +hundred yards from the kopje. Here further progress was checked for a +time, and General Barton ordered forward three companies of the Royal +Irish Fusiliers. The latter came up about 5.30 p.m., and, supported by +the covering fire of 'B,' 'C,' and 'H' companies, rushed the left of +the hill, when the above-mentioned companies of the battalion, led by +Captain Venour, assaulted the right. The attack was successful, and +the kopje was captured. + +During the advance Lieutenants Haskard and Bradford, in command of 'C' +and 'H' companies, were wounded, and the engagement cost the regiment +nine killed and forty-three wounded. 'D' company, under Lieutenant +Ely, towards the close of the afternoon came up on the left of 'H' +company, in order to fill the gap between the latter and the Scots +Fusiliers. + +[Illustration: 2nd Royal Dublin Fusiliers, heading Relief Troops, +marching into Ladysmith, March, 1900.] + +The three companies which had made their attack on the kopje spent the +night on the captured position. Captain Venour, who was the senior +officer present, re-formed the men of the Irish and Dublin Fusiliers, +and constructed sangars, with a view of warding off a Boer +counter-attack. In the meantime 'A,' 'E,' 'F,' and 'G' companies--with +whom was Colonel Cooper--were directed to the right, in order to guard +the flank of the brigade against the Eagle's Nest position. These +companies gained about 2 p.m. a ridge opposite the Eagle's Nest, and +overlooking the extensive plain which stretches up to Bulwana +Mountain. The enemy opened a well-aimed fire on this ridge, and also +brought into action a gun which was placed on the shoulder to the +north of the Nest. As the right of the four companies was thrown back +towards the Tugela, this Boer gun could nearly enfilade part of the +line. Sangars were built, however, and there were not more than three +or four casualties in this part of the field. The firing ceased at +dusk, but otherwise the night was unpleasant, for it rained, and the +waggons could not get near the fighting line, so that the men had to +do without their great-coats. + +Before daybreak on February 28th the battalion collected its scattered +companies and was ready for action. There was no reliable news of what +had happened on other parts of the field during the 27th, and the full +extent of the victory was still unknown. When daylight came it was +evident that the Boers had evacuated the Eagle's Nest, and small +parties of them could be seen retiring, while the tents of their +laager under Bulwana were gradually diminishing. But even then few +could believe that the relief of Ladysmith was practically +accomplished. + +[Illustration: General Sir Redvers Buller, V.C., entering Ladysmith.] + +Before mid-day an order came, directing the Dublin Fusiliers to move +after dinner and join the 11th Brigade, the position of which was not +indicated. Major English rode on ahead in order to discover its +whereabouts, but by the time he found it, the battalion had gone two +miles out of its way. The 11th Brigade was joined about 4 p.m., and +the regiment bivouacked between Hart's and Railway Hills. A heavy +thunderstorm burst over the country soon after 8 p.m., and made +everybody somewhat miserable, although the officers had been cheered +by the arrival of the invaluable Corporal Tierney, who, as usual, +succeeded in giving them food. + +The services of this N.C.O. (now Mess-Sergeant) will never be +forgotten by the regiment, as long as an officer who was present with +it in South Africa remains in it. Over and over again he brought up +food to the officers under heavy fire, and through those desperate +thunderstorms. Always cheery, ever ready, there he was in his +shirt-sleeves, with a drink and a snack, just as one had resigned +oneself to going without anything. A word must also be said in praise +of our French _chef_, M. Burst, who cooked for the officer's mess +throughout, and proved himself on all occasions a brave man. + +[Illustration: The Dublins are coming--Ladysmith.] + +After breakfast on March 1st, the 11th Brigade advanced along the +railway towards Ladysmith. It was thought that the Boers would be +holding Bulwana, and the brigade had orders to attack the hill. But it +was soon learnt that the enemy had retired, and we eventually reached +Nelthorpe Station about mid-day and bivouacked. Major English and +Captain Venour took the opportunity of riding into Ladysmith. + +March 2nd was spent at Nelthorpe. On the 3rd, Sir Redvers Buller's +army entered Ladysmith, and the honour of leading the army fell to the +2nd Battalion Royal Dublin Fusiliers--an honour which nobody grudged +them, on account of the constant fighting they had taken part in since +the beginning of the war, and the heavy casualties they had suffered. +The route was by the railway bridge, and the streets of the little +town were lined by the garrison, who, emaciated but clean, presented a +startling contrast to their war-stained relievers. + +[Illustration: Sir George White watching Relief Force entering +Ladysmith.] + +The entry into Ladysmith, with its enthusiasm and meeting of old +friends, formed a fitting ending to the battalion's Natal campaign. +Hardly any other unit in the army had suffered such casualties. Only +five company officers marched through Ladysmith with it. The others +had been killed, wounded, or disabled. + + + + +CHAPTER IX. + +THE SIEGE OF LADYSMITH. + + 'I am shut up.'--_Ps._ lxxxviii. 8 and _Jer._ xxxvi. 5. + + +_Chronicle of the part taken by the detachment 2nd Battalion Royal +Dublin Fusiliers in the Siege of Ladysmith from November 1st, 1899, to +February 28th, 1900._ _By_ LIEUT. L. F. RENNY, _2nd Batt. Royal Dublin +Fusiliers_. + + +The detachment which was left behind in Ladysmith when the battalion +was ordered to Colenso consisted of two officers, three +non-commissioned officers and fifty-one men. The latter were made up +by a section of 'G' company which was left on piquet because they +could not be relieved in time, and the men of the regimental +transport, which had been left behind owing to there being no facility +for sending the waggons and animals by train with the battalion. + +The morning after the departure of the latter I was ordered by the +D.A.A.G. of the divisional troops to proceed to the various camps in +Section A, and find convenient space for the transport waggons. I +found the necessary ground in rear of the camp of the 1st Battalion +Gloucester Regiment, behind the railway cutting leading to the Orange +Free State Junction. Here we were joined in the afternoon by +Lieutenant H. W. Higginson, who took command, and the section of 'G' +company, when the Gloucesters helped us in every way, and made us as +comfortable as they possibly could. All that day we were left in +comparative peace, there being no firing on either side; but the next +morning about 5 a.m. the Boers opened with 'Long Tom' from Pepworth +Hill, and commenced a duel of some hour's duration with our naval 4.7, +which was placed on Junction Hill. They also kept up a continual +cannonade with their long-range twelve-pounders, but did little or no +damage, as they had not yet discovered the exact location of our +camps. + +For the next three or four days we remained in the Gloucester's camp +and aided in starting the trenches which eventually formed the fort +known as 'Tunnel Hill.' This was by no means pleasant work, as it was +carried out under fire, the enemy being very quick at spotting our +working parties and remarkably so at obtaining our range. We used to +watch with great interest the duel every morning between the two big +guns. Once the Boers hoisted a large white flag over their epaulement +and proceeded to repair some small damage to their gun--they have very +weird ideas about the white flag. + +On November 7th our detachment was suddenly ordered to proceed to +'Bell's Spruit,' and form the guard there. I was ordered to hand over +our transport to the Army Service Corps, so we took away the majority +of the men and brought the strength of our piquet up to thirty-one +men; the transport was sent to the railway station yard for the use of +the Army Service Corps, where it remained throughout the siege. We +were stationed at the mouth of the spruit just where it runs through +the ridge opposite the cemetery. Our fortifications consisted of a +thick wall with sandbag loopholes running right across the spruit; +about fifty yards in front were strips of high and low wire +entanglement, making it practically impossible for the enemy to rush +the post at night. By night we had to man two sangars placed on the +hills on each side of the spruit. I know nothing more productive of +bad language than visiting the sentries on those hills in the dark, +scrambling over the hugest boulders up a hill like the side of a +house. We were not very comfortable at first, there being absolutely +no shelter from sun or rain, but after about a week we managed to +obtain a couple of railway tarpaulins, and rigged up shelters on the +sides of the spruit. We were all very lucky in not getting hit, as +the enemy had a nasty habit of bursting shrapnel over the place and +sending common shell on to the crests, which produced a shower of +rocks, splinters and stones; but although we were in the spruit for +seven weeks with absolutely no cover, not a man in the detachment was +hit. During our stay in the spruit our rations were exceptionally +good, as we got extras in the way of bacon, jam, chocolate, &c. + +The night-work at this time was very hard, as everybody not actually +on outpost duty had to work at the trenches from 6.30 in the evening +till 3 a.m. the next morning. Sleep being impossible in the day-time +owing to the heat and a plague of flies, this continual night-work +told on the men severely. On November 9th the enemy made a feeble +attempt at capturing the place, and came on in considerable numbers +against Observation Hill, but were easily repulsed. On the night of +December 7th-8th an attack was made on Gun Hill, where the Boers had a +'Long Tom' and a five-inch howitzer, besides one or two small guns. +These guns had been annoying us very greatly for the past three weeks, +and we were all delighted in the early morning when we heard the +attack had been successful, and the guns blown up. We none of us knew +anything about this affair till it was over. I was visiting our posts +about 2.30 a.m. when I saw two large flashes on Gun Hill; on listening +I could not hear any shells travelling or bursting, so concluded the +enemy were amusing themselves by firing blank charges. It was not till +we saw our column returning at dawn that we solved the problem. We +found the spruit very unpleasant in wet weather, as the water used to +come down like a mountain torrent and wash away bits of our wall and +shelters; after wet nights we used to spend our time in digging our +belongings out of the sand, having spent the night sitting on the +rocks. + +About December 18th, after the failure of General Buller's first +attempt to relieve us, there was a general interchange of posts +amongst the troops of our section, and the detachment received orders +to proceed to the Newcastle Road examining guard. We were all heartily +sick of the spruit, and glad of the change. It was about this time +that our rations began to be diminished, and we had completely run out +of all extras. The post of the examining guard was on the road just +inside the ridge which formed our general line of defence, but by +night we moved out as a piquet about half a mile on to the veld into a +spruit which ran under the Harrismith line, whence we patrolled out to +Brooke's Farm, and the surrounding country. I think this was the worst +post we had throughout the siege, as we came in for a long spell of +wet weather, and night after night had to lie out on the open veld +from 8 p.m. till 4 a.m., wet to the skin and miserably cold. The +duties on this post came very hard on our men, as we had to find a +double and single sentry by day, so that they never got a night in +bed, and only about one day in three off duty. + +On Christmas Eve the men came into possession of a fine pig, so that +we all had pork for our Christmas dinner, a great change from eternal +'trek ox,' but unfortunately nothing stronger to drink than tea. I'm +sure it was the first Christmas any of us had spent in such an +uncongenial way. + +On January 6th the enemy made their desperate attack on Waggon Hill +and Caesar's Camp. They seem to have completely surprised our +outposts, as they succeeded in crawling up the hill in the dark, and +the fighting commenced at 3 a.m. The cannonade all day was something +tremendous, 'Long Tom' firing 125 rounds. They kept us pretty busy on +our side of the defences as well, but never developed any serious +attack. Whilst on this post we were subjected to a continuous and +daily course of sniping, the enemy getting on the kopjes behind +Brooke's Farm, and firing all day at a range of 2800 yards. At this +range the bullets used to whiz over the hill and drop amongst us, +although we were only a few yards behind the crest. Higginson and I +used to spend hours lying on the crest with rifles and glasses trying +to spot them, but never succeeded in doing so, as they used to take up +their position before dawn and never move all day. + +It was about this time that our men began to show the effects of +exposure and constant sentry-go, and several of them went down with +fever and rheumatism; but we were extremely lucky throughout the +siege, having only one casualty: Private Ward, 'G' company, a +reservist, who died of enteric at Intombi Camp. + +I forgot to mention that on January 6th our section had to be entirely +denuded of supports and reserves in order that they might be sent to +Waggon Hill, so that if the enemy had attacked us seriously we should +have had a hard job to keep them back. + +On January 25th the detachment was ordered to garrison Liverpool +Castle, a fort overlooking the Newcastle Road, but we had not been +there twelve hours before we were ordered to Tunnel Hill. This latter +post consisted of a large main fort capable of holding two hundred +men, and two small works about a quarter of a mile on each flank, in +all of which we had to find a guard. Our fighting strength was at this +time reduced to twenty-seven men, so that they did guard and patrol +alternate nights. We had to send out five of the latter during the +night about half a mile to the front and a mile laterally along the +valley. The confinement in this fort was rather trying, and the +eternal manning of the trenches at 4 a.m. very monotonous. After about +three weeks on this post I was suddenly seized with a 'go' of fever, +and was sent down to a room in one of the houses. When I rejoined the +detachment, after a fortnight on the sick list, they had moved to the +railway station as guard over the bridge across the Klip River. Here +we had to endure rather a severe dose of 'Long Tom'--this gun never +missed a day without dropping shells into and round the station, it +was one of its favourite spots, and all the tin buildings about bore +evidence of its attentions. One shell, pitching in the parcels office, +blew the roof off and the floor in, having first penetrated +half-a-dozen walls to get there. We had trenches on our side of the +river, which we manned, as usual, at 4 a.m. We also had to man them in +the afternoon about 5 o'clock, when the train from Intombi Camp was +due. This used to be rather a comic proceeding: a 'key' was made in +the line about half a mile outside the station, where the train was +brought to a standstill, then either Higginson or myself had to walk +out and inspect the train to see there were no Boers inside it. We +often used to wonder what would have been our lot if the train had +been full of them. On our reporting 'all correct' to the Railway Staff +Officer (Captain Young, R.E.), the train was allowed to proceed into +the station, and the little play was over till the next day. This was +undoubtedly the most comfortable job we had, as the men lived in a +shed, whilst Higginson and I had a railway carriage. + +On the afternoon of February 28th we heard the joyful tidings of +General Buller's victory at Pieter's Hill, and in the evening descried +Lord Dundonald and his men crossing the plain; our wild excitement may +be left to the imagination. I'm sure we all put on about seven pounds +of our lost weight at the mere thought of our being at last relieved. +Our troubles were not over yet, however, as the next morning we were +ordered back to Tunnel Hill, a spot we had learned to loathe with a +truly deep loathing. This move was due to our flying column going out +to hurry the enemy's retreat, most of the troops in our section taking +part in it. For some unknown reason we were kept four or five days in +that smelly fort, and it was not till March 7th that we received +orders to rejoin the battalion, which was encamped about two miles out +of Ladysmith. We all felt as though we had begun a new life; but it +was heartbreaking to see the havoc in our regiment; one had to look +about to find faces that one recognised. + +Our rations were pretty well reduced towards the end of the siege: one +biscuit, one pound of horseflesh, two teaspoonfuls of sugar, and a +pinch of tea is not much to keep body and soul together, and we were +all pretty feeble and pulled down. I think we must have done the +record piquet duty of any men in any service, as we were never +relieved throughout the whole siege; I suppose this was on account of +being left as a separate unit all through, but we certainly thought it +rather hard work. It is a wonder that our little detachment stuck out +four months' constant exposure with so little sickness, whilst our +luck in sitting under that constant shelling without a man being hit +was nothing short of providential. + +I have merely chronicled the chief moves and duties of the detachment +throughout the siege: it would take a small book to set down all our +little experiences, details, and troubles. + + + + +CHAPTER X. + +ALIWAL NORTH AND FOURTEEN STREAMS. + + 'But thus much is certain: that he that commands the + sea is at great liberty, and may take as much, + and as little of the war, as he wish.' + + _Bacon._ + + +After marching through Ladysmith, the battalion proceeded with the +11th Brigade to a camp about three miles to the north of the town and +on the left bank of the Klip River. It remained here until March 7th, +when it rejoined the 5th Brigade, which was encamped on the south side +of the Klip River, and about one mile nearer Ladysmith. On the same +date, Colonel Cooper was given the command of the 4th Brigade, and +accordingly handed over the battalion to Major Bird. + +[Illustration: Sergeant Davis in Meditation over 'Long Cecil' at +Kimberley. 'Shall I take it for the Officers?'] + +There was another change of camping-ground on March 12th, the brigade +moving to the north-east of Ladysmith, under Surprise Hill. It was an +uneventful time, although outpost duties were somewhat severe. + +In recognition of the gallantry displayed by the Irish regiments in +the Natal campaign, the Queen had directed that the shamrock should be +worn by all ranks on St. Patrick's Day. Accordingly, on March 17th, +every man wore a piece of green, since shamrock was unobtainable, and +the tents were decorated with boughs. A telegram was dispatched to the +Queen, who sent the following message in reply:-- + +'The Queen desires to thank her Dublin Fusiliers for their expression +of loyalty.' + +[Illustration: St. Patrick's Day in Camp. Private Monaghan, the regimental +Butcher, in foreground.] + +The battalion also received many congratulatory telegrams from Irish +associations and individuals in various parts of the world. + +The detachment of the 1st Battalion was sent back to Colenso on March +21st. It had been just over four months with the 2nd Battalion, and +had borne its full share of the casualties. Originally numbering +eight officers and 287 rank and file, it returned with only two +officers and 92 rank and file. + +The 5th Brigade moved on the 23rd to Modderspruit, and thence on the +next day to Elandslaagte, where it encamped a short distance to the +west of the battlefield. Here it stayed for ten days, and, as there +was little to do beyond outpost work, the battalion resumed ordinary +parades and route marching. + +On April 4th, General Warren's Division relieved General Hunter's at +Elandslaagte, and the brigade marched back to Modderspruit. The 10th +Division (General Hunter), which consisted of the 5th and 6th +Brigades, was to proceed to Cape Colony for the relief of Mafeking. + +On April 7th, Major Tempest Hicks, 1st Battalion Royal Dublin +Fusiliers, arrived from Colenso, and assumed command of the battalion. +The 5th Brigade began to move by train to Durban on the 9th, and we +were ordered to entrain at 1.45 p.m. on the 10th. But during the +morning, heavy firing broke out at Elandslaagte, and, as the enemy +seemed aggressive, the troops at Modderspruit were directed to be +ready to move to Elandslaagte. + +We had struck camp and packed all the baggage in the train, and had, +therefore, to lie out in the hot sun for several hours, and await with +patience the development of events. The Boers apparently contented +themselves by a demonstration, and at 6 p.m. the battalion was allowed +to depart. The train reached Colenso at 9 p.m., where the 1st +Battalion was encamped, and Maritzburg about 4 a.m. Here, in spite of +the early hour, a number of friends, together with a band, were on the +platform, and the regiment received a warm greeting. The men were +given cigarettes and tobacco. + +Durban was reached about 10 a.m. on April 11th, and the battalion at +once commenced to embark. The headquarters and about six companies +were carried by the _Cephalonia_, while the remaining two companies +went in the _Jamaica_. They were both slow ships, but the absolute +peace, the good food, the clean baths, and many other luxuries, made +everybody regret that they were not even slower. + +East London was reached on the 12th, and the battalion was ordered to +disembark, since the 5th Brigade was urgently required to relieve +Wepener, which was surrounded by the enemy. General Hart, with the +Border Regiment and Somersetshire Light Infantry[7] started for Aliwal +North at once, but the battalion remained on board during the whole of +the 13th, although 'H' company, under Captain Romer, disembarked in +the afternoon, and was at once dispatched by train. The other +companies landed on the 14th, and left East London in two trains, +starting at 4 and 6 p.m. + + [Footnote 7: This regiment had joined the 5th Brigade after + the relief of Ladysmith in place of the Inniskilling + Fusiliers.] + +Lieutenant Le Mesurier, who had been captured on October 20th, but +had, with Captain Haldane (Gordon Highlanders), effected a plucky +escape from Pretoria, rejoined us at East London. Unluckily he at once +developed typhoid fever, and had to be left behind. + +Aliwal North was not reached until 10.30 a.m. on April 16th. 'H' +company had arrived the previous afternoon, and was encamped near the +station, but the remainder of the battalion crossed the Orange River, +and pitched camp about 600 yards from the bridge, with its outpost +line pushed forward on the high ground to the north. + +Major Hicks became commandant of Aliwal North, and had no easy task. +The town was General Hart's base during the operations for the relief +of Wepener, and there was consequently much to be done. Moreover, the +surrounding country was disturbed, the Dutch population had to be +watched, and there were constant rumours of the approach of +commandoes. In the early hours of the 21st, a report reached the +commandant that a large body of Boers was marching on the town. He +therefore decided to bring the regiment back to the south side of the +river, only leaving the piquets on the north bank. We therefore at +once struck camp, and, crossing the river, bivouacked near the bridge. +But as the report proved to be misleading, camp was re-pitched on a +square in the middle of Aliwal North. The outskirts of the town were +put into a state of defence, and a series of trenches covered the +approaches to the bridge. Although this necessitated much labour, +everybody enjoyed their stay at Aliwal. It was a pretty place, with +trees and gardens full of roses, with plenty of water, including a hot +stream running through the camp, with a well-stocked library, and +lastly, but by no means leastly, with a hotel possessing excellent +lager beer. + +[Illustration: A Wash in hot Water. Aliwal North.] + +The time passed, in fact, too quickly, for on the 26th news was +received of the relief of Wepener, and orders were issued for our +movement to Kimberley. We started at once in two trains, the first +leaving at midnight the second at 1 a.m. on the 27th. It was a long +and monotonous journey, the only breaks in which were stops for the +purpose of cooking meals. Kimberley was reached at 10 p.m. on the +28th, and the train stopped the night in the station, going on at 6 +a.m. on the 29th to Doornfield, about eight miles north of Kimberley, +where the Connaught Rangers and the 6th Brigade were already encamped. +Since General Hart, with the Borders and Somersetshire Light Infantry +were still near Wepener, Colonel Brooke assumed the command of the +brigade. + +General Hunter's division had been ordered to relieve Mafeking, and +the General decided to cross the Vaal near Windsorton with the 6th +Brigade, and to advance up the right bank; while General Paget with +the Royal Munster Fusiliers, Connaught Rangers, and Royal Dublin +Fusiliers, faced the Boer position at Fourteen Streams. Colonel +Mahon's mounted column was to move by Barkley West, and reach Mafeking +by sweeping round the Boer flank. + +The battalion accordingly left Doornfield by train at 9 a.m. on May +2nd, and about mid-day reached Content, where it detrained and +encamped. The next day it marched with the Connaught Rangers to a +position about two miles south of Warrenton. The opposite bank of the +Vaal was held by the Boers, who were strongly entrenched and had +field-guns. On the south bank of the Vaal were the Munster Fusiliers, +a battery of field artillery, a six-inch gun mounted on a railway +truck, and a balloon, the whole detachment being under Major-General +Paget. + +[Illustration: Taking XIV STREAMS on 7th May 1900 at 9.30 a.m. very +bad ford. _From a sketch by Col. H. Tempest Hicks, C.B._] + +As all tents had been left at Content, the regiment bivouacked, and +remained more or less idle. The Munsters were holding Warrenton, and +there was constant sniping between their posts and the Boer trenches. +The balloon ascended daily, and the six-inch gun fired an occasional +shot, while the enemy's field-guns came into action at intervals. It +was a monotonous and unpleasant time for the Connaught Rangers and +ourselves, since there was nothing to do, while it was very hot by day +and cold by night. + +[Illustration: The regimental Maxim in Action at Fourteen Streams.] + +A little excitement was afforded on May 6th, when the Connaught +Rangers and half the battalion made a demonstration against a drift to +the east of Fourteen Streams. The object apparently was to draw the +Boers' attention from the 6th Brigade, who, after a victory at Rooi +Dam, were moving up the right bank. The movement caused a slight +amount of sniping, and the detachment returned to the bivouac soon +after 2 p.m. + +The approach of the 6th Brigade, aided, perhaps, by this +demonstration, caused the enemy to evacuate hurriedly their trenches +during the afternoon of the 6th. Early on the morning of the 7th, the +Connaught Rangers and the right half-battalion started to ford the +Vaal at Warrenton. + +The river at this point was broad and swift. The ford was a difficult +one, being beset by rocks and holes, and it took a considerable time +for the column to cross, since the water was up to the men's waists. +The left half-battalion under Major Bird moved one and a half miles up +the river near Fourteen Streams, where there was a ferry-boat. The +latter had been rendered useless by the Boers, but as they had left +the wire hawser, it was easy for the Royal Engineers to construct a +raft, on which the left half-battalion crossed comfortably and +quickly. + +The right half-battalion joined the left half at the ferry, and +breakfasts were cooked. Before leaving the river-bank everybody made +an inspection of the Boer trenches, which formed an exceedingly strong +position. They were very deep, and so well adapted to the ground, that +it was no easy matter to discover them from the opposite bank. +Evidences of the hurried Boer retreat were plentiful in the shape of +full ammunition-boxes, half-cooked food, blankets, and kettles. One +Boer, who was too ill to march, was captured in the trenches. + +After breakfasts, the battalion moved through a piece of ground +thickly covered with bush, and eventually bivouacked about one mile +from the Vaal, near the railway line. The 6th Brigade halted near the +same place, and the whole force was occupied for the next fortnight in +covering Fourteen Streams. The important railway bridge at this point +had been destroyed by the Boers, and the Royal Engineers, aided by +large working parties from the infantry, at once commenced to +construct a deviation bridge. This necessitated a great amount of +labour, and since, in addition, defensive works had to be made, we +were all kept very busy. + +The stay at Fourteen Streams was interrupted on May 15th by a movement +on Christiana, a town in the Transvaal, reported to be held by a +strong party of Boers. The whole of the 10th Division took part in the +operations, and were thus the first regular troops to enter the +Transvaal. The frontier was crossed at 9 a.m. The advance was through +an undulating country, at times thickly covered by bush. Towards the +afternoon the brigade halted, as news was received that the mounted +troops had entered Christiana. A bivouac was formed in a clearing +among the bush, and dinners were cooked. + +The next day the brigade marched back to Fourteen Streams, and reached +that place early on May 17th, having done some twenty-six miles in +nineteen hours. Work on the railway bridge was resumed, and, as the +6th Brigade had not returned, the battalion had to watch a more +extensive area. Each company was given a section, and constructed a +redoubt. + +[Illustration: Captain Jervis, General Fitzroy Hart, C.B., C.M.G., and +Captain Arthur Hart.] + +About May 24th, Second Lieutenant Bradford, with twenty-nine men, was +sent up the line to garrison Border Siding, where they were picked up +three days later. + +The deviation bridge over the Vaal having been completed, the +battalion was sent forward by train to Vryburg, travelling in two +trains. Camp was pitched just outside the station, and for the next +two days every one spent their time in buying _karosses_ and in +shooting partridges. + +The 10th Division, when Mafeking had been relieved by Colonel Mahon, +was ordered to march to Johannesburg via Lichtenburg. As the first +part of the route lay through a country very deficient in water, the +division marched in several columns, which followed each other at a +day's interval. The battalion left Vryburg on May 30th at 7.30 a.m., +and proceeded to Devondale, and on the next day made a march of +twenty-two miles to Dornbult, where Captain Mainwaring, with Second +Lieutenants Newton and Smith, joined. + +Their wanderings before they succeeded in doing so are sufficient +evidence how little was known, even to our own staff officers of the +whereabouts of the several columns. On arrival at Cape Town in the +s.s. _Oratava_, they were transhipped to the s.s. _Ranee_ and sent to +Port Elizabeth. On reporting themselves there they were entrained and +sent to Bloemfontein. No one there seemed to know where the regiment +was, but at that very time the report arrived of the march on +Christiana. Captain Mainwaring then met Captain Carington Smith of the +regiment, who was at that time serving in Roberts' Horse (which he +later on commanded), and as that officer was shortly going north with +some men of his corps, it seemed to both that the speediest way to get +to the Dublin Fusiliers was for Captain Mainwaring to be attached to +Roberts' Horse. An application to that effect was made to the staff +and granted, but shortly afterwards the news of the Christiana +column's return to the railway came to hand, so the three officers +once more entrained, and proceeded via De Aar to Kimberley. + +Although Captain Carington Smith did not serve with either battalion +during the war, it would not be out of place here to mention the great +part he took in it. He commenced by serving in Roberts' Horse, and was +with them throughout Lord Roberts' advance to Bloemfontein. In the +action at Sanna's Post he was shot through the knee, but resolutely +refused to be invalided home. His recovery from this severe wound was +little short of marvellous, and he actually managed to rejoin the +headquarters of his corps in time to share in the entry into +Pretoria. Shortly after this he was again shot at Heidelberg, this +time through the other knee, and again made a second and equally +marvellous recovery. Towards the end of the war he commanded Roberts' +Horse, and later on the South African Light Horse, and his trekking +during the campaign amounted to no less than 9000 miles. + +[Illustration: Issuing Queen Victoria's Chocolate. Colour-Sergeant +Connel, 'G' Company, on left.] + + + + +PART II. + +TREKKING. + + + + +CHAPTER I. + +VRYBURG TO HEIDELBERG. + + 'None of us put off our clothes.' + + _Neh._ iv. 23. + + +Now commenced a different phase of warfare. If, in the constant +fighting of the Natal campaign, the regiment had been called upon to +prove its fighting capabilities--a call to which their noble response +earned them encomiums wherever they went--they were now to be called +upon to prove another essential of the true soldier--their mobility. +And well they proved it. Day after day, week after week, the tired, +footsore, but stout-hearted column-of-route made its slow and +wearisome way over the apparently limitless expanse of the swelling +veld. And how monotonous that veld can be none can appreciate save +those who have experienced its deadly sameness. Ahead, behind, all +round, nothing but veld, veld, veld. No trees, no hills, no rivers, no +lakes, no houses, no inhabitants! Here and there, perhaps, a miserable +shanty of the sealed-pattern South African type: rough stone walls and +corrugated-iron roof, a room on each side of the door, a narrow +verandah--occasionally occupied by a quiet, peaceful-looking old +patriarch, with a grey beard, and an air savouring rather of the +pulpit than the sheltered side of a boulder--a scraggy tree or two, +and a lick of water in a 'pan'--or pond as we should call it--hard by; +a woman, some children, and a couple of goats; a few mealie cobs +yellowing on the roof, and a scared, indignant, and attenuated fowl. + +Alas! how those quiet-looking, quiet-spoken old gentlemen, open Bible +on knee, deceived us. Oh, no! they had never wished for war. Fight? +yes; they had fought, and surrendered, and taken the oath, and hoped +never to fight again. Peace? yes; they wanted peace, and urged us to +hasten on and conclude it. The same story everywhere: in the villages +as in the solitary hamlets. A vast, empty, forsaken wilderness, with +nothing more bellicose than a lean and hungry boar-hound or two. And +yet for two long years to come this very country, over which the +battalion trekked so peacefully, fifes and drums playing, officers out +on the flanks shooting, mess-president cantering miles away in quest +of eggs and their producers, was to be the scene of many a hard-fought +fight and many weary nights of outposts. Indeed, it never really +succumbed to the very end; the happy hunting-ground of the gallant De +la Rey, it was a thorn in the side of our leaders up to the day the +Delegates came in. + +One day's march varied little from another. Up at dawn, and off after +the scantiest of scrappy breakfasts. Good marching while the dew was +on the grass, and the sun a welcome ally after the clear, crisp, +frosty nights; soon, however, to get hot enough, until the welcome +mid-day halt and meal, after which tighten up belts once more and on, +and on, one horizon following another with wearisome regularity, and +never a sign of the long-looked-for water, till at last, as the sun +set behind our backs, its last rays would glint on the miserable 'pan' +by whose side we were to halt for the night. And then what bitter +feelings of depression and disgust when sometimes the fiat would go +forth 'Water for cooking purposes only,' and one had to turn into +one's blankets grimy, dusty, clammy, and miserable. + +On May 31st, the regiment, having arrived at the railway, was told +they would halt there next day. But on the morning of June 1st, the +order was given for the column[8] to march at 2 p.m. to Marigobo Pan, +a distance of eight miles only, but quite ten by the route taken. The +evenings soon close in at this time of year in South Africa, and it +was almost dark when the column arrived. As it was a fine mild night, +every one hoped to be allowed to bivouac, but tents were pitched after +all, and naturally enough pitched anyhow. + + [Footnote 8: Border Regiment, Royal Dublin Fusiliers, Bearer + Company, and Supply Detachment.] + +In this matter of pitching tents, the battalion particularly prided +itself. On arrival at the selected site of the camp the Sergeant-Major +blew a whistle, when all those whose duty it was to assist ran towards +him, the men to mark the tent-poles, bayonets in hand, and two others +with the mekometer, to ensure a true right-angle. Every one knew his +particular job, so no time was wasted, while the symmetrical lines +obtained by the use of the instrument were a joy to the General's +eye.[9] + + [Footnote 9: _Vide_ General Hart's letter in Appendix.] + +[Illustration: First Entry into Krugersdorp. Captain and Adjutant +Fetherstonhaugh in foreground.] + +In the same way, whenever a halt was ordered, it was the regiment's +custom to lay out their kits, mess-tins, belts, &c., in lines outside +their tents. Each Colour-Sergeant had a ball of string, which was +stretched between a couple of pegs; the kits were laid along it, the +string was rolled up and pitched into a tent, and neatness and +regularity prevailed without any extra trouble to any one. This +neatness in camp, in addition to its other soldierly qualities, +endeared the battalion in the eyes of General Hart, a soldier of the +old school, to whom order and regularity particularly appealed. + +On the 2nd the column made another short march to Greysdorp, where +there were two or three good wells, but where the water in the pan was +of a most peculiar green colour. + +The Mafeking relief column was met on the way, and very hard and +serviceable they looked, while several officers met old friends, +amongst others Prince Alexander of Teck, whom we had known at +Maritzburg before the war. + +A longish march of nineteen or twenty miles on the 3rd, with a halt +midway, brought us in the evening to a place called Barber's Pan, +somewhat superior to the generality of these places. There was a +certain amount of water in the pan, but brackish and unpleasant to +drink. Round it were scattered some half-dozen houses, but the most +remarkable thing in connection with it was the sunset. As the light +faded, a mist rose from the veld, which after a few minutes began to +change colour, until at last it settled down to a most beautiful shade +of light green. None of us had seen anything similar before, nor did +we ever see anything like it again. + +A march of about fourteen or fifteen miles on the 4th brought us to a +most uncomfortable camp. On the way, Captain Fetherstonhaugh (acting +Adjutant since Captain Lowndes was hit at Talana) rode off some +distance to a flank to try and get some supplies. He returned with a +great story of his reception by crowds of women and one or two men; +the latter stated they had been reluctantly compelled to fight against +us at Modder River, on pain of being shot, but that their sympathies +were entirely with us, &c. They even gave him a pound of butter. And +we believed this story at the time. + +But, for that matter, who would not have been taken in? Every one +coming up the line brought better and better news. Lord Roberts was +close to the capital, and, thought we in our simplicity, that of +course must end the war. No one guessed there was extra time--two +solid years extra time--to be played. So we enjoyed the butter, and +said they were sensible people after all, and hoped we'd be in time +for the siege of Pretoria. + +The next day's march was a pleasanter one than usual, the halts being +better arranged, with the result that the troops and transport got +into camp quite as early as they would have done under the ordinary +circumstances, but very much fresher and fitter. The fact is, staff +officers do not understand marching. They go tittuping gaily past long +straggling columns, passing the time of day cheerily to friends, and +momentarily halting to deliver some ironical knock to acquaintances on +the subject of their transport, or their sections of fours, or +something of the sort. But the regimental officer, who foots it +alongside his company, he understands marching right enough. He will +tell you when the going is good, and when it only looks good; he will +tell you the effects of five-minute halts, and how much benefit the +closing-up rear of the column derives from them; he will tell you when +a steady, swinging pace is being set that the men could keep up for +ever; and he will also tell you when some long-legged officer in front +is going four miles an hour, till some one suggests it is too fast, +and he sinks into a slow and tiring two and a half. Colonel Hicks +commanded the column on the 5th, and let us march our own way, with +the beneficial results already recorded. + +And that cheery rumour about Pretoria. French reported to be there, +and Mr. Kruger gone off with a couple of millions. What did we care +about the latter? We should not have got any of it. + +Another short march of a little over ten miles brought us to a camp +where there was actually a stream. Here the men got the chance of a +much-needed bathe, and how they enjoyed it! Every one, in fact, was in +excellent spirits, for the news about Pretoria turned out to be true, +and though some of us were disappointed at not being up in time to +share in the triumphant entry into the capital, the majority were all +for England, home, and beauty. + +On the 7th we arrived at Lichtenburg, a small town or village that was +to see some heavy fighting later on in the war. On the present +occasion all seemed most peaceful. The houses were of the stereotyped +South African pattern, with the invariable half-stoep, half-verandah +running half-way along their fronts. Clear streams of water ran coolly +and pleasingly by the sides of the streets, shaded by the ubiquitous +weeping-willow. There was nothing to be bought, and no one to be seen, +however, and those of us who went into the town next morning were very +soon satisfied, returning to camp minus the various articles we had +set forth to buy. It was interesting, however, to see the Boers +handing in their rifles and taking the oath of allegiance. + +Captain MacBean, who was now on General Hunter's staff, turned up +here, and dined with the regiment, and very glad we were to see him. +He gave us all sorts of news, too, which we were very deficient of, as +the system of daily bulletins had not then started. + +After having halted for the 8th and 9th, we resumed our desert march +on the 10th, but only made some ten miles. It was most bitterly cold +all the way. + +The next day proved far pleasanter, and another short, easy march of +about ten miles saw us in camp by 1.30 p.m. + +On the 12th we made a march of sixteen miles. We were then within +about thirty-three miles of the railway from Johannesburg to +Potchefstroom, and, when a wire came ordering us to do it in two days, +we thought a lot of the task, whereas a few months later we were doing +that distance in one day, and, curiously enough, almost in the same +neighbourhood. + +In consequence of this we marched right through Ventersdorp, to our +regret, as it looked quite a nice place, and there was a regular +trout-stream flowing past it, in which a bathe would have been most +welcome. We did eighteen miles before halting. + +As indicative of the curious state of the war even in these early +days, General Hunter's experience at Vryburg was a good example. He +had ridden on with only thirty cavalrymen to Ventersdorp, when +suddenly some two hundred and fifty of the enemy appeared on the +scene. Fortunately for the General, their only object was to give up +their arms and take the oath. + +Starting at 7.30 a.m. next day, we made short work of the march to the +railway, which we struck at Frederickstadt, a place that many of us +were destined to become very well acquainted with before we had done. +It is rather prettier than most Boer villages, being situated on the +pleasant little Mooi River, whose clear, rapid current reminded us of +our home streams. There are a few trees in the vicinity, whilst on the +further bank and beyond the railway rise the serrated, well-wooded, +and extremely picturesque Gatsrand Hills. + +There was only one man to be seen, peacefully hoeing his potato-patch. +But if the men were scarce and polite, the same could not be said for +the fair sex, who, despite the fact that their knowledge of English +was only to be compared with our ignorance of Dutch, did not fail to +let us know their opinions of things generally. Indeed, the +mess-president, who had gone on ahead on a pony in search of +farmyard products, had a battle-royal with an elderly Dutch lady who +asked six shillings a dozen for her eggs. + +We heard more detailed accounts here of the relief of Mafeking, and of +the gallant part Major Godley of ours had taken in its defence, while +Major Pilson and Captain Kinsman (also Royal Dublin Fusiliers) had +assisted in the relief. As Carington Smith had arrived in Kimberley +with the cavalry, we were able to claim representation in all three of +the great sieges and reliefs of the war. + +[Illustration: 'Speed Dead Slow.'] + +But a disappointment was in store for us all the same. The column did +not move next day (the 15th), but although engine after engine came +puffing up from Potchefstroom they all failed to bring the carriages +which our aching legs made us so anxiously look for. We heard of the +strike of forty engine-drivers at Potchefstroom, but as they had all +been cast into durance vile, and the engines still continued to +arrive, that could not have been the reason. However, any doubts we +entertained were soon set at rest by an order to continue our march to +Johannesburg next day. + +[Illustration: Miscellaneous Casualties. + + Lieut. ELY. _Died at sea of Enteric._ + Capt. H. CARINGTON SMITH. _Wounded at Sanna's Post and Heidelberg._ + Capt. WATSON. (_Attached to Scottish Horse_). _Killed at Moedwil._ + Capt. H. J. KINSMAN. _Wounded in Transvaal._ + Capt. J. A. MACBEAN. _Killed at Nooitgedacht._ + Lieut. ADRIAN TAYLOR. _Severely wounded when serving with M.I. near + Parys._] + +Starting on the 16th, an uneventful march of twelve miles brought us +to Wolverdiend, a place which had not then attained the importance it +afterwards assumed. + +It was another fifteen on to Blauw Bank Station next day. This march +was remarkable in that it was the first occasion since this trek +started that the column moved with any military precautions worth +mentioning. + +Leaving Bank, as it got to be called later on, we struck off from the +railway, left shoulders up, in a bee-line for Johannesburg, the city +of our dreams, which it was hard to believe was not paved with gold, +if one listened to the reports of those who had been there before the +war. After a short march of ten miles we halted at a farm called +Gemsbokfontein, and looked with longing eyes at the distant ridge, +peeping over which could plainly be seen the huge mine-chimneys, like +sentinels along the hills, duly noting our arrival. + +A fierce grass-fire broke out here, which necessitated the active +co-operation of all hands, and all blankets, to oppose it, one +too-adventurous officer getting rather scorched for his pains. + +As we sat at lunch we could see General Mahon's mounted column +ascending the long rise to Randfontein, on our left front, and heard +they had gone to Krugersdorp. + +'Krugersdorp! Where's that?' 'Let's look at your map,' and so on. +Well, we undoubtedly knew where it was a few weeks later. Moreover, +there must be Boers there, for had not a party on an engine come out +that very day, and after destroying a small bridge, and firing a +couple of shots, snorted their way back to the Dorp. + +The Royal Dublin Fusiliers supplied the advanced guard on the 19th, +and duly started for Johannesburg, but a message very shortly came +ordering a left incline, and nominating Krugersdorp as our objective. +It was disappointing, but General Mahon had reported the +Krugersdorpers 'truculent,' and we had to make a demonstration. This +we most certainly did, halting above the railway, just outside the +town, and then--producing drums and fifes--forming up and marching +through to 'St. Patrick's Day' and the 'British Grenadiers.' But, +unlike the peaceful and amiable agriculturist, these townsfolk had no +smiles of reciprocation to our advances, and we marched through long +lines of scowling male faces, with here and there one or two of the +fair sex, but also, alas! sombre to a degree. + +[Illustration: Hoisting The Union Jack at Krugersdorp.] + +After emerging on the far side of the town we passed the famous +Paardekraal Monument on our right, and finally camped about half a +mile further on. It appears it was a very close thing whether they +opposed us or not, and the peaceful solution that eventually took +place was largely due to the tactful intervention and determination of +an Englishman, Mr. W. Bruce Honman, who had considerable influence +amongst the Dutch. + +The troops halted at Krugersdorp next day, and the town was formally +taken over in the Queen's name, an impressive parade for that purpose +being held in the market square. Each regiment furnished a Guard of +Honour of 100 men. The Royal Dublin Fusilier Guard was under the +command of Major English, with Captain Higginson and Lieutenant +Haskard. It was extremely interesting for those of us who were not on +duty to watch the faces of the large numbers of Boers, male and +female, who watched this ceremony and the hoisting of the Union Jack. +On the whole they took it extremely well, and for the most part +behaved like brave men, who, having fought and lost, were content to +make the best of the situation. + +[Illustration: Johan Meyer's House, five Miles outside Johannesburg.] + +The trek commenced again on the 22nd, and this time we felt convinced +our destination must be Johannesburg, as we were marching along the +Witwaters Rand straight for it. A halt was made after some ten miles, +at Florida, rather a pleasant sort of Saturday-to-Monday resort of +Johannesburgers, with a nice lake and pleasant woods. + +At last we seemed about to receive our reward, only to have our hopes +dashed rudely to the ground. True, we marched to Johannesburg, and +even through it, but only through the most miserable of its slums, +seeing nothing of its fine buildings, nothing of the wealth and +magnificence we had confidently expected. But, indeed, even the +finest part of it was only a sorry spectacle in those days, and for +many a weary month afterwards. Skirting the racecourse, we marched on +to a spot some six miles from the town, near the house of Johan Meyer, +a brother of Lucas Meyer. Colonel Hicks and Captain Fetherstonhaugh +called on this gentleman, and got a lot of interesting information +from him. His house was one of the finest we saw in the whole +Transvaal, and from its site--at the head of a fine valley--commanded +a magnificent view of the country almost as far as Heidelberg. + +But, as some set-off to our disappointment and long, tiring march of +fifteen miles, Captain Sir Frederick Frankland, who had gone on to +Joh'burg, as it is universally called, to buy what stores he could, +turned up just before dinner, not only with a large amount of +provisions, but also with a case of excellent champagne, which he +presented to the mess, God bless him! We were very proud of our noble +Baronet that night, and he had to reply to the toast of his health +over and over again. + +[Illustration: Sergeant Davis, evidently with All we wanted.] + +Sergeant Davis, champion forager of the Army, also put in an +appearance here, having met with no end of adventures and +misadventures since the Colonel had sent him back to the +Kimberley-Mafeking Railway. As usual, he had a fine lot of stores, +and, also as usual, just what we wanted: baccy, chocolate, biscuits, +sjamboks, stamps, etc., etc. + +An uneventful march of fifteen miles, with a halt at Reitfontein, was +only noticeable for a particularly cold night and the final splitting +up of the Irish Brigade, the Connaughts and Borders being ordered to +Pretoria. + +On the 25th our long march came to an end with a twelve-mile step into +Heidelberg. The band of the Derbyshire Regiment played us in, while +our old friend, General Bruce Hamilton, rode out to meet us. We halted +on a slope about three-quarters of a mile outside the town, which in +its essential features is remarkably like Krugersdorp, the streets +being lined with tall blue-gum trees, and the plan of course +rectangular, with the usual market square in the centre. + +There had been a fight here, and we found Captain Carington Smith +again amongst the wounded; this time, as already mentioned, with a +bullet through his other knee, but as cheery as ever, and smiling away +at seeing us all again. Lieutenant Adrian Taylor, of the regiment, was +also here, and very glad we were to see him once more. Like Captain +Carington Smith he was detached from the regiment throughout the +campaign, serving with the M.I., and was about a month later very +severely wounded near Parys when De Wet crossed the Vaal with Lord +Kitchener at his heels. Still another Dublin Fusilier met us at +Heidelberg--Major Rutherford, Adjutant of the Ceylon Volunteers, who +had come over in command of a detachment of that corps. + +In addition to all these, General Cooper (our late C.O.) and his +A.D.C., Lieutenant Renny, R.D.F., were also coming up from the south, +while the 1st Battalion, who had helped to win Alleman's Nek, were not +far off. + +On arrival at Heidelberg we had marched just 300 miles in +twenty-seven days, and although we had not pressed in any way, we had +come along fairly well seeing that we were not bound on any specific +object, such as the relief of a town, or the participation in a siege +or battle. We averaged just over eleven miles a day, including halts +at Lichtenburg (two days), Frederickstadt and Krugersdorp (two days), +or just a shade under fourteen miles for each marching day. + +[Illustration: Paardekraal Monument, Krugersdorp.] + + + + +CHAPTER II. + +HEIDELBERG. + + 'Wherever a man's post is, whether he has chosen it of his own + will, or whether he has been placed at it by his commander, there + it is his duty to remain and face the danger, without thinking of + death, or of any other thing except dishonour.'--_Socrates._ + + 'Such officers do the King best service in the end.'--_Hamlet._ + + +A considerable force had now assembled at Heidelberg, but it was not +to remain there long. General Hunter took over command from General +Ian Hamilton, who had had a bad fall from his horse, and shortly moved +off to the Free State, where he and his men soon covered themselves +with distinction by the rounding-up of Prinsloo's commandoes near +Golden Gate, on the Basuto border. + +The 2nd Royal Dublin Fusiliers, a half-battalion Somersetshire Light +Infantry, and the 28th Field Battery Royal Artillery, with some +details, were left to garrison Heidelberg. + +The battalion was soon split up into a number of small detachments, +and posted at various places along the railway line, which had +suffered considerably at the hands of the Boers. Scarcely a bridge +remained intact, while the presence of wandering bodies of the enemy +in the neighbourhood necessitated the utmost caution and continual +vigilance on the part of the companies, half-companies, and even +sections, into which some of the companies were at length subdivided. + +Headquarters and those companies not on detachment in the meantime had +plenty of work cut out for them too. In order to defend the place two +hills to the west of the town were occupied, one by the Royal Dublin +Fusiliers, known as Dublin Hill, and the other by the Somersetshire +Light Infantry. Our hill was put into a most thorough state of +defence by many hours of hard labour and efficient work under the +direction of Colonel Hicks. Sangars were built on every spur and knoll +which afforded a good field of fire; traverses and shelters were +numerous; in case of a night attack whitened stones along well-made +tracks showed the nearest way to the various posts; while not only +every company, but every section, had its well-defined trench or wall +to rally on and hold. + +To some of us, indeed, all these precautions at the time seemed +somewhat excessive, and it is true that no attack was ever made; but +just as example is better than precept and practice better than +theory, so prevention is better than cure, and there is little doubt +that the fortification of that hill, in full view of many a Boer +field-glass in the town, whence our movements were of course fully +reported as frequently as possible to the enemy in the field, had a +deterrent effect on any designs our very active foes might otherwise +have contemplated. + +On the morning of the 26th the left half-battalion, under Major Bird, +was suddenly ordered off to Nigel Road Station, about three miles out +on the railway to Johannesburg. The Boers having blown up a bridge +between this station and Heidelberg, all stores, &c., arriving from +Johannesburg had to be dumped down on the veld here, and it was +necessary to have a force on the spot to load them into waggons, as +well as to guard them and the trains. These soon began to arrive in +large numbers, and as each came up the sides of the railway waggons +were opened, and their heterogeneous contents chucked out anyhow into +a huge mass. In the mean time R.E. construction trains also arrived, +and the quiet little siding was soon a scene of wild bustle and +excitement. The R.E. went to work on the broken bridge, and made a +most excellent job of it in a surprisingly short time, though a casual +inspection of the temporary structure they built for trains to +pass over gave the lay mind the impression that an extra strong puff +of wind would blow the whole thing over. However, it answered its +purpose very thoroughly, and reflected much credit on its +constructors. + +[Illustration: Colonel H. Tempest Hicks, C.B. Commanding 2nd Royal +Dublin Fusiliers March 1900 to March 1904.] + +In the meantime Major Bird soon produced law and order out of chaos. +The coolies were made to put mealie-bags in one place and +biscuit-boxes in another, while the soldiers built both up into a very +serviceable sort of fort for the time being, an example of soldierly +adaptability which was not lost on any one who saw it or took part in +its erection. + +We spent two or three very cheery days at Nigel Siding, the +stationmaster's house (two rooms) forming an ideal officers' mess, but +on the 28th 'E' and 'F' companies, under Captains Shewan and G. S. +Higginson, were recalled to headquarters, 'H' company, under Captain +Romer, was sent nine miles nearer Johannesburg to guard Reit Vlei +Bridge, while 'G' company remained at Nigel Road to watch over such +stores as had not yet been removed. This company was shortly further +subdivided by the left half-company, under Lieutenant E. St. G. Smith, +being sent to guard a culvert half-way to Reit Vlei Bridge. + +In the meantime Colonel Hicks never for a moment relaxed the soldierly +precautions which it was his custom to observe, whether the Boers were +reported in the neighbourhood or not; and several times rumours of +intended attacks did arrive, though they invariably proved false. + +The town of Heidelberg itself was very Dutch and seething with +malcontents and treachery. One could easily forgive them for not being +exactly content, but what one could not forgive was their slimness, +their plausible exterior, and their inner mass of falsehood. No class +were more bitter than the clergymen, and one of these gentry was +strongly suspected of being in constant communication with the Boers +in the field, though his oath of neutrality was taken and he was +availing himself of our hospitality. On one occasion Captain G. S. +Higginson spent the night in an empty house in the town in an attempt +to mark this fox to ground, but unfortunately his vigil was +unproductive of result. + +Lieutenant Haskard was now acting as Railway Staff Officer, and having +a very busy time of it, as in addition to hundreds of other duties he +had to send rations up and down the line to the various detachments. + +On the 9th, Sergeant-Major Burke rejoined the regiment, having been a +prisoner since he was wounded at Talana, and left at Dundee. During +this time his duties had been ably performed by Colour-Sergeant C. +Guilfoyle, now Sergeant-Major, 2nd Battalion Royal Dublin Fusiliers. +Lieutenants Marsh and Weldon also joined here, as Lieutenant Supple +had done a few days before. The two former had followed the regiment +up the line to Mafeking, and thence across the Western Transvaal in a +cape-cart, following very nearly in our tracks. They had an +adventuresome journey, and were delighted to reach us at last. Captain +Clarke, R.M.L.I., who was attached to the regiment, escorted an +important Boer commander, named Van Rensburg, to Johannesburg, on his +way to St. Helena. + +It is necessary to explain briefly here the situation of the three +companies, 'A,' 'E,' and 'F,' under Major English, Captain Shewan, and +Captain G. S. Higginson, which had been sent out to guard various +points on the line from Heidelberg to Standerton. + +'A' and 'E' companies had originally gone out, and were posted at +Botha's Kraal. Later on it became necessary to hold Zuikerbosch as +well. Major English, with Lieutenant Newton as his subaltern, was sent +to garrison it. Taking 'E' company with him and leaving Captain +Higginson at Botha's Kraal, Major English, with some 110 Royal +Engineers, occupied the post, and at once set about to put it into a +thorough state of defence. He fully recognised the inherent weaknesses +of his situation, and saw that unless well entrenched he was +practically at the mercy of an enemy armed with artillery, as he had +none to reply with, while the nearest reinforcements were miles away, +and liable themselves to be attacked in force at any moment. He +therefore spared no ingenuity in strengthening the position. Having +Royal Engineers and a considerable number of Kaffirs at his disposal, +he very soon effected his purpose and dug himself comfortably in. + +In the meantime signs were not wanting of approaching Boer activity. A +large commando, under Hans Botha, was known to be hovering about the +neighbourhood, and as it was also known that Botha was occasionally in +the habit of spending a night under his own roof--not three miles +away--Captain G. S. Higginson made two efforts to catch him napping. +But on neither occasion was the chieftain at home, and the unfortunate +Higginson, who had selected the darkest and wildest nights as most +suitable for his purpose, was foiled each time, and had to withdraw +somewhat crestfallen, under a fire of raillery from the ladies of the +establishment. He collected some valuable information, nevertheless, +and sent in reports of Boers in the vicinity, which, however, were not +sufficient to induce General Hart to take any extra precautions. + +Such was the situation of affairs when, on the misty morning of July +21st, we at Heidelberg heard the hoarse barking of the accursed +pompom, varied by the duller and more menacing note of heavier guns. +Anxiously we asked each other what it could be, and reluctantly we +came to the conclusion that our comrades were being submitted to +shell-fire with no possible chance of reprisal. As the sun rose, the +mist did the same, and very soon cheerful messages came twinkling over +'the misty mountain-tops,' announcing that a considerable force of +Boers were attacking them, but that they had little fear of not being +able to keep them off. + +General Hart hastily assembled a small column[10] and marched to Major +English's assistance, leaving Colonel Hicks in command of the camp, +and as it was quite possible the main attack might be intended for +Heidelberg, we took all necessary precautions for the safety of the +town. + + [Footnote 10: 130 Somersets, 2 guns, 1 pompom, 140 Marshall's + Horse.] + +Before General Hart's force arrived, the Boers had commenced to +withdraw, having discovered that on this occasion they had attacked a +veritable hornet's nest. + +The hill on which Major English had dug his entrenchments is situated +in the angle made by the Zuikerbosch River where it turns sharply to +the south, and was on the left bank of the stream. On the other side +of the river was the hill occupied by the Royal Engineers. Between +these two was the new deviation bridge then under construction. The +Kaffirs lived in the hollow between the hills, as did also the +Yeomanry, of whom there were about ten, under a very young officer. +Major English had given this officer orders that, on any attack taking +place, he should at once lead his horses down to the river, where +there was a kind of hollow place which would have afforded them +excellent cover. This order, however, probably from the suddenness of +the attack, was not complied with in time, and the horses were in +consequence stampeded almost immediately. The natives also were not +long in effecting a rapid southerly movement, for which, of course, +they cannot be blamed, and the Boers shelled them lustily as they +streamed away. + +The Royal Dublin Fusiliers' camp was on the southern slope of the +hill, the summit being occupied at night by alternate companies, who +stood to arms shortly before dawn. Captain Shewan was on the hill, and +on the point of letting the men fall out, when the attack commenced. +The trenches were at once manned without the slightest noise or +confusion, and the Boers' rifle-fire vigorously replied to. + +The two Boer guns were in position on the hills to the north, some +3400 yards off, while the pompom came into action near the Fortuna +coal-mine. Owing to the excellent disposition and construction of the +defences, the enemy's fire made little or no impression, until after a +time they began to move round to the flanks of the position. Their +rifle-fire then began to have some effect, but at the same time the +fire of the defence had a better target, and after a short time the +burghers commenced to withdraw from the rear face of the work. In the +meantime they had swung round to the west of the Engineers' hill, and +under cover of a grass fire, which was lighted by them and spread +right up to the trenches, endeavoured to attack this part of the +position, in which, however, they also failed. The enemy continued his +endeavours until mid-day, when he commenced to withdraw, his movement +being somewhat expedited by the arrival of the reinforcements under +the General. + +Considering the numbers of the attacking force, and the resolute +manner in which they had persevered, the casualties were +extraordinarily small, two officers and three men wounded, one of the +former being Major English himself; he was struck by a shell splinter +in the eye, but most fortunately did not lose the sight of it. + +This gallant defence called forth a most eulogistic order from the +Commander-in-Chief. The success had come at a time when it was badly +needed. The guarding of the railways necessitated the splitting-up of +forces, and in more than one recent instance a commander of less +foresight than Major English had failed to realise the responsibility +of his position, with the result that more additions were made to the +already-far-too-long list of 'regrettable incidents.' + +The following telegrams passed between General Hart and Major +English:-- + +Helio message received at Zuikerbosch Fort on July 22nd, 1900, from +General Hart: 'Received following wire from Lord Roberts. +Begins--"Please convey my congratulations to Major English, and all +concerned on the gallant manner in which they defended their post on +the Zuikerbosch."' + +Major English made the following reply:--'All in the Zuikerbosch +command thank our General for forwarding Lord Roberts' telegram, which +they consider a great honour.' + +The following is an extract from Army Orders in South Africa, dated +Pretoria, July 26th, 1900:-- + +'_Engagement._--The Field-Marshal Commanding-in-Chief desires that the +following account from Major-General A. Fitzroy Hart, C.B., Commanding +5th Brigade, of the successful defence of a post by a small force of +infantry against a determined attack of the enemy with guns, be +published as an example of what can be accomplished by a small body of +resolute men, well commanded and skilfully and judiciously +entrenched:-- + +'From General Hart, Zuikerbosch, to Lord Roberts, Pretoria, July 21st: +"Enemy made a determined attempt to destroy my advanced post at +Railhead, Zuikerbosch, to-day. Major English, Royal Dublin Fusiliers, +commands the post, with two companies of Dublins, ten Yeomanry, and +110 Royal Engineer reparation party, defending the new railway bridge +which replaces destroyed one. Boers began attack at daybreak with two +or three guns and a pompom, shelling the position hard. They then +advanced, and completely surrounded him with mauser fire, keeping it +up from 6.20 a.m. to 11.45 a.m., and it was hotly returned. English +signalled early to me at Heidelberg, thirteen miles off, that he was +surrounded, and holding his own confidently. I started from Heidelberg +with two guns, a pompom, 130 Somersets, and 140 Marshall's Horse and +Yeomanry, and, on approaching English's position, found he had already +beaten off the enemy, and saw them assembled on the heights N.E. of +his position, and beginning to ride off N.E. My guns opened fire, and +Boers broke into a gallop. The complete repulse of the Boer attack is +entirely due to the skill with which Major English had fortified his +position, his vigilant arrangements, and the good fighting of the +garrison. Casualties: wounded--Lieutenant Greig, severely; Privates +Mallon, Stanton, and O'Brien, slightly. The bridge and train not +injured. Line only injured to the extent of three rails taken up. +Numbers of enemy's casualties not known. Boers sent out an ambulance +for wounded, and were seen burying dead."' + +The following extracts from a letter from Sapper F. Adcock, published +in a home newspaper, are also of interest. After a brief description +of the situation, he continues:--'It was at this time that the +heliographers of the Dublin's showed their pluck, for, fixing up their +stand amidst shot and shell, they got their message through to +Heidelberg.... We could watch every move of the Dublins, as the ditch +ran in the line of their kopje.... Another bit of pluck well worth +seeing happened just as there was a lull in the firing. Two of the +Dublins ran from their entrenchments to their tents, quite a quarter +of a mile, and carried all their bread in a blanket between them to +the entrenchments. The Boers fired three shells at them when they were +going back, but two fell short, and the other was right between them.' + +The sapper was right, and it is pleasant to read letters like the +above when emanating from an entirely independent source. Major +English reported most favourably of the signalling, which was +necessarily conducted practically in the open, the enemy's projectiles +falling all round the operator and Major English, who stood close +beside him. For this service Private Farrelly, who sent the message, +was awarded the distinguished conduct medal. The two brave men who +went out for the bread were Privates Hayes ('A' company) and Townsell +('E' company). + +The remainder of our stay at Heidelberg was uneventful except for what +might very easily have been a most unpleasant accident. We were all +seated at lunch one day when there was a sudden and loud report close +at hand. Investigation proved that it came from Captain Pomeroy's +revolver (an officer belonging to a West Indian Regiment who was +attached to us). He had carelessly left it in his tent loaded, while +his servant had still more carelessly fired it off. The only sufferer +was an unfortunate animal, Major Bird's charger, which was shot in the +hoof. + +On our departure on the 27th, Major-General Cooper's Brigade took over +the defence of the town. + +[Illustration: The Officers' Mess.] + +[Illustration: Position at Zuikerbosch. 12 m. below Heidleburg; +attacked on 21st July by 1000 Boers with 4 guns. Defended by 180. 2 +R.D.F, 110 Engineers, 10 Yeomen, no guns. + +Under Major English 2 R.D.F. + +_From a sketch by Col. H. Tempest Hicks, C.B._] + + + + +CHAPTER III. + +AFTER DE WET. + + 'It is vain for you to rise up early.'--_Ps._ cxxvii. 2. + + +Having been for a month at Heidelberg, we had begun to quite make it +our own, and felt as if we should finish the war where we were. And +although there were still any amount of commandoes in the field, we +could scarcely be blamed for thinking that the back of the business +was broken, and that a few weeks, or at the outside months, must see +us returning to England. Well, we reckoned without our host, or rather +the hosts of Messrs. Botha, De Wet, De la Rey, & Co., and if we made a +mistake we made it in good company. + +The Colonel had never ceased fortifying and improving Dublin Hill, and +there is no doubt that at the end of July his efforts had resulted in +a very sound and efficient post. + +Everything pointed to peace and quiet when, late on the afternoon of +July 27th, the ominous 'order' call broke the stillness of the crisp +wintry evening. + +'Come for orders! Come for orders! Hurry up, hurry up; come for +orders!' + +Who, that soldiered through those long weary months, but must remember +that infernal call? For it was characteristic of the war, and owing, +doubtless, to the immense tract of country over which it was waged, +that not only the rank and file, but even the officers, with one or +two exceptions, knew little or nothing of what was going on. +Consequently one never knew what the next minute would bring forth, +and waited accordingly with ears at tension for the strains of the +bugle, whose notes might portend nothing or everything. + +On this occasion they were the prelude to one of the most stirring +periods in the history of the war--the first great De Wet hunt. It is +beside the purport of this volume to discuss the advantages of British +infantry pursuing mounted Boers. It has often been maintained that the +result of such an apparently hopeless hare-and-tortoise sort of +procedure would have been successful on this occasion but for the fact +of the unblocking of Olifant's Nek. On the other hand, there are not +wanting many who are equally prepared to argue that, although this +bolt-hole being open may have facilitated the guerilla's escape, that +astute leader would easily have found some other nook or cranny quite +sufficient for his purpose had it been shut; while, if the worst had +come to the worst, from his point of view, he could, at the sacrifice +of his waggons and guns, have dissolved his commando in the night, +only to unite again at some more suitable and less column-infected +time and place. + +At the time we knew nothing of all this; all we knew was that some big +move was in progress, for, as we neared the railway next day, train +after train steamed through, reminiscent of the vicinity of Epsom on a +Derby Day, but that was all. Where we were going, when we were going, +why we were going, were all questions quite beyond our ken--not to be +answered, indeed, until some days later, when an officer on General +Hunter's Staff told us what it was all about. + +Our march to the railway on the 28th was a long and trying one, +variously computed at from twenty-one to twenty-three miles. Whatever +its exact length may have been is immaterial; it was the method in +which it was conducted that was so desperately trying. After the usual +sketchy apology for a breakfast, the column moved off with the +Somersets as advance-guard, and 'F' and 'G' company of the Dublins as +rearguard. From a variety of causes the progress was uncommonly slow, +and, no halt being made of greater length than a few minutes, the men +of the rearguard had a trying time, for any one who has marched +behind a column of waggons, &c., miles in length, knows that one +practically gets no halt at all from these five-minute snatches, owing +to the necessity of continually closing up. It was quite dark when the +rearguard hove in sight of the passing trains, and then, to make +matters thoroughly uncomfortable, some half-dozen waggons stuck firmly +in a snipe-bog, scarcely a mile from their destination. + +[Illustration: Corporal Tierney and Chef Burst.] + +It looked uncommonly as if the unfortunate rearguard would have to +bivouac in that miserable marsh. As everybody was pouring with +perspiration from their endeavours with the waggons, and as it was +beginning to freeze, while there was no chance of getting at +great-coats, blankets, or food unless the waggons came out, out they +jolly well had to come--and came. It was ten o'clock before the men +got anything to eat, and 11.30 p.m. before our arrangements for the +night were completed. Our invaluable French 'chef' had kept some hot +soup for the rearguard, and seldom was soup more appreciated than by +those famished and frozen warriors. + +We now heard that we were going south, and going south by train, and +that at all events was something to look forward to. At least it was a +change--something to look forward to with anticipation; and certainly +it is something to look back upon with a certain amount of amusement, +but at the time that railway journey was certainly the reverse of +comfortable. + +We could not get off as early as we expected to on the 29th. The first +train started all right, but owing to the amount of work to be done in +getting kit over a small drift that lay between our bivouac of the +night before and the station, the second train did not follow it till +3.30 p.m. + +After this the difficulty of dispatch increased with each succeeding +train, until when it came to entraining reluctant horses and still +more reluctant mules practically in the dark, for there was no other +light but the dim glimmer of two candle-lamps, the task became +herculean, and required an infinity of patience and tact. The General +and his staff having gone by the first excursion, the task of bringing +along the remainder of the column devolved on Colonel Hicks, with +Captain Fetherstonhaugh as his staff officer. They did not complete +the entraining until the early hours of the 30th, and then only to +find the line blown up in front of them. The fact that no disaster +occurred here was owing to Colonel Hicks' determination not to try to +get through that night, as he clearly foresaw what actually took +place, and that there was nothing to prevent the enemy blowing up the +line. + +It is necessary now to turn our attention to the second train, which +conveyed most of the regiment, under command of Major Bird. Some forty +men with their arms and accoutrements were told off to each open +truck, necessitating the tightest packing, which, however, had a +beneficial effect in so far as it took off the worst part of the +constant succession of jerks and jolts which the journey consisted of. +But everybody was full of fun, and the men as merry as crickets at the +change from the long days of uninteresting 'foot-slogging' and the +prospect of a brush with the elusive De Wet. + +The officers--about twenty in number--travelled in the guard's van, on +the floor of which they made themselves as comfortable as possible +under the circumstances. + +[Illustration: Fourth Class on the Z.A.S.M.] + +After passing Vereeniging and duly admiring the excellent work of the +sappers, the mess-president proposed that they should sample the +hampers he had provided for them. This was carried unanimously, but at +that moment the train began to slow up, and, anxious to see every new +place, we determined to wait until the train started again, and then +enjoy our dinner in peace and comfort. + +The sudden explosion of a shell from 'Long Tom' in our midst could not +have had a more demoralising effect than the news which greeted us +when we came to a standstill. It arrived in the shape of a telegram +from the General, ordering the officers to ride in the trucks with the +men, and to keep a sharp look-out for attacks from both sides. So +there was no chance of any dinners after all, and all our visions of +chicken and tongue, whisky and sparklets, and a hot cup of tea or +chocolate resolved themselves into a lump of chocolate out of one's +haversack and a pull at one's water-bottle. The mess-president proved +himself a man of resource on this trying occasion. With hunger gnawing +at his vitals he saw a beautiful dinner laid out in a waiting-room for +some staff officers. Unable to satisfy his comrades he saw no reason +why he himself should go unsatisfied, and in the three or four minutes +occupied by the engine in watering he hastily bolted a fine plate of +roast beef and potatoes, not omitting a bottle of beer standing hard +by, and jumped into the train at the last moment, thanking his +astonished host and friend, Major Hickie of the 7th Fusiliers, as the +train moved off into the darkness. + +Anything more cheerless than the remainder of that night journey it +would be hard to conceive. In the first place, when there are forty +men in an open truck, it is very difficult to find room for two more. +In the second place, it was bitterly cold, and a pitch-dark night. In +the third place, the even-money chance of a slab or two of gun-cotton +on the line ahead was not a pleasing one to contemplate. In the fourth +place, the men were ordered to 'charge magazines,' and to spend +several hours jolting along with the cold barrel of a loaded rifle +poking one in the ribs, or insinuatingly tucking itself into the nape +of one's neck, could by no stretch of imagination or fire-eating +ambition be called comforting. However, there was one fine piece of +news at any rate to act as a compensation, the surrender of Commandant +Prinsloo and three or four thousand men to General Hunter. + +[Illustration: Fifth Class on the Z.A.S.M.] + +Once or twice ghostly forms on horseback loomed suddenly out of the +blackness of the veld, momentarily lit up by the glare from the +engine. On each occasion they shouted some warning, but what it was +nobody could make out. Our engine-driver fully expected to be blown +up, and had taken the bit between his teeth, cracking on at a pace +that stirred up the living contents of the trucks behind him, until +if any one of them had had a spare morsel of fat on him, he must +inevitably have been churned into butter. Carrying on at this rate, we +soon arrived at our destination, a small station called Kopjes. And +when very shortly after our arrival two or three dull explosions in +the direction whence we had come signified that the line had been +blown up right enough, our gratitude to the engine-driver was +considerably increased. Nor did his solicitude for our welfare end +even then, for having effected his object, he said we could have as +much boiling water out of the engine as we liked, and in less than +sixty seconds we were drinking steaming hot chocolate, and returning +grateful thanks to our host. If any one class more than another +deserved special recognition during this war, it was the railway +staff--the drivers, stokers, and guards. It is no exaggeration to say +that during the whole war no train was ever run at night but that +these men did not run the risk of being blown sky-high, in addition to +all the other incidental dangers of their hazardous calling. + +The break in the line necessitated our waiting some two or three days +at the station, until the remainder of the column got through. When it +was at last assembled, we marched off due west, towards the sound of +heavy firing in the distance. A march of fourteen miles brought us +within sight and almost within range of a long, low line of kopjes, +and here, we were informed on our arrival, was the famous guerilla +chief, surrounded--so we were informed--at last, and only awaiting the +arrival of our column to be finished off altogether. Without going so +far as some of the subalterns, who on hearing he was surrounded seemed +to anticipate the sight of De Wet in the middle of a sort of cock-pit, +with the British forces sitting round, there still seemed a +considerable number of sufficiently large gaps in the chain of columns +and brigades slowly and ponderously extending round either flank of +the Boer position. The firing we had heard had been from the Boer +guns, they having shelled the Derbyshire Regiment out of their camp, +which had been pitched imprudently close to the harmless-looking +kopjes. Needless to say, there was not a move of any sort to be seen, +and how on earth three or four thousand men managed to conceal +themselves so absolutely must ever remain a marvel. True, their camp +was beyond the crest-line, but it is certain they had outposts and +sentries on the look-out, and these must of necessity have been posted +where they could see us; but certain it was we could not see them, +carefully as telescopes and Zeiss glasses swept every inch of the +hills. + +Unfortunately we had to leave eighty-nine men behind at the railway, +as they had no boots, a serious matter with every probability of a +stiff fight on our hands: for General Hart's orders were to prevent De +Wet going south; to attack, if necessary, to make him go north, but +not to allow him to go in any other direction. This being so, our +object was effected, as will appear later on. + +Another and equally sudden interruption to a meal took place on +August 1st. Marshall's Horse, a Colonial corps of whom we saw a good +deal, had gone out on a reconnaissance in the morning, and had some +scrapping with the enemy's patrols, &c. But now word suddenly came +that they were surrounded, and in a tight corner. Hastily dropping +knives and forks, we fell in almost at the double, and, though +somewhat struck by the incongruity and apparent anomaly in the fact of +our cavalry being surrounded by the Boers when we had been distinctly +informed that it was we who were surrounding them, set off as hard as +we could lay legs to the ground. After marching between four and five +miles, well within the hour, we met the doctor of our mounted corps, +who said he had been taken prisoner and released, and that there was +no necessity for going any further, as our friends had beaten off our +enemies and were on their way back. So back we trudged too, meeting on +the way what most of us thought was a squadron of cavalry, but which +turned out to be Brigadier-General Little's cavalry brigade. The sight +of the attenuation of this force afforded us food for reflection, and +made some of us begin to understand a little how it was that, in spite +of our magnificent paper forces, we still found such difficulty in +rounding-up our foes. + +The next three or four days were uneventful. Lord Kitchener arrived +and took over the chief command of all the forces, which now really +seemed to be closing in on De Wet. The noose was being drawn tighter +and tighter daily, and the Boers' position became more and more +precarious. What would have happened but for Lord Kitchener's arrival +it is hard to say, as General Hart, ever impatient of passivity, a +very Ney for pertinacity of attack, personal bravery, and confidence +in his troops, was undoubtedly on the eve of launching an attack. But +in the light of the succeeding events, it is clear now that such an +attack would have been premature and ill-timed. In the event of its +non-success--and we had a very small force to carry it out with--the +general operations would have been completely ruined, for we being +the Southern force, there would have been nothing to prevent De Wet +going south. In the event of success it would merely have meant that +the Boers would have slipped away north two or three days sooner than +they did, when, seeing that our arrangements to intercept them were +not even then complete, an earlier start would have enabled them to +carry out their retreat with even greater ease. + +Major King, of General Hunter's staff, now arrived in camp with a Boer +prisoner, one of Prinsloo's staff. The latter was being sent through +with a message to De Wet, informing him of the full magnitude of the +Boer surrender at Golden Gate, and advocating his own relinquishment +of further operations. They went through to the Boers' position, and +were courteously received, but General De Wet declared it was +impossible for him to think of giving up now, as he had President +Steyn with him. Nobody believed in the excuse, and its purport is +somewhat difficult to understand, but it ended the conference, and +Major King and his prisoner returned to camp. + +Major English, whose eye had proved troublesome and kept him behind, +now rejoined the battalion, to everybody's gratification, for the +publication of Lord Roberts's army order, which took place at this +time, had made us all very proud of him and his men. + +On the 5th an order was given to send out a small force, consisting of +two companies of the regiment, a pompom, and a troop of Marshall's +Horse, to a point five miles N.N.E. of the camp, in order to fill up a +somewhat big gap between General Hart and the 3rd Cavalry Brigade. 'B' +and 'G' companies, under an officer of the regiment, with Captain +Nelson, R.M.L.I., and Lieutenants Smith and Molony as subalterns, and +Lieutenant Nek of Marshall's Horse, were selected, and started as soon +as the men's dinners were finished. General Hart rode out later on, +and, catching this force up, selected a site, and gave orders to the +officer commanding it to dig himself in, promising that the pompom, +which had not turned up, should be sent on. + +In the meantime the remainder of General Hart's force also started +digging, a very different state of affairs to his premeditated attack +a couple of days earlier. + +The detachment sent out patrols on the morning of the 6th to see if +they could draw the enemy's fire, with strict injunctions to content +themselves with doing so and then withdraw. This they soon succeeded +in doing. On their return they passed a farmhouse, and received +information that an important Boer General was in the habit of +sleeping there sometimes. Visions of a capture of De Wet inflamed the +minds of some of the younger officers, and on the night of the 6th-7th +Captain Nelson and Lieutenant Smith, with a few picked men, made a +raid on the house. However, they found nobody but womenfolk, and +returned empty-handed. + +Next day commenced our memorable pursuit. De Wet and his merry men had +slipped away over the ford bearing his own name as neatly as a +cherry-stone from between finger and thumb, and, with their heads +turned north, were to give us, and many another converging column like +us, the hunt of our lives. The regiment started at 11.30 and only +halted at dusk, some three miles from a range of hills on which rumour +said the Boers were going to stand and fight it out to the bitter end, +even if the whole British Army came against them. 'B' and 'G' +companies did not get in until 9 p.m., as, in addition to having an +extra five miles to march, they had some trouble with their waggons. + +We marched all day on the 8th in an easterly direction along the left +or southern bank of the Vaal River--a long, tiring, uneventful trek. +Expecting momentarily to see our prey delivered over to us, our +spirits sank lower and lower as the day dragged on with no sign of any +Boers. There was the usual aggravating little drift to be negotiated +at 6 p.m. only half a mile short of our camping-ground for the night, +but eventually we got all the waggons over, and men and officers +obtained something to eat. This proved one of the coldest nights of +the winter, and there was ice instead of water in most of the +water-bottles next morning when reveille went at 3.30 a.m. + +Starting at 5 a.m. we again went steadily on till 6 p.m., making well +over thirteen hours without food. We skirted round the south of Parys, +a name which appealed strongly to a good many of us, and suddenly +heard the welcome sound of heavy firing not very far ahead. The column +halted, and word soon came that this time our pains were really to be +rewarded; the Boers were only six miles ahead, and Lord Methuen was +engaged with their rearguard. All signs of hunger and fatigue at once +disappeared, the regiment started trekking off once more, +instinctively 'stepping out' as they went. The guns still thundered +invitingly just ahead, and as we topped each fresh horizon or rounded +the slope of the next kopje we all expected to see our prey close in +front. But it was not to be. As the afternoon wore on the sound of the +guns died away, until at last we came to a halt at dusk in a sort of +amphitheatre among the low hills. Too tired to want much food, the men +sank down with the delightful nightcap that reveille might again be +expected at 3.30 a.m. + +The 10th proved more or less a repetition of the preceding days. +Starting at 5 a.m., we did not halt till well after dark, the waggons, +kits, food, &c., not getting up to us till 10 p.m. Seeing that there +was no chance of any other food, some bullocks were commandeered, and +the men cooked them in little chunks in their mess-tins over the grass +fires. Tired out as they were it was too cold to get any sleep without +blankets, and long lines of melancholy soldiers could be seen standing +along the edges of the grass fires, against which their figures were +outlined in bold silhouette, and from whose scanty flames they +endeavoured to get what little warmth they could. Everybody was wet +through to the knee, a good many to the waist, while some were soused +all over, for in the course of our march we had turned due north, and +crossed the Vaal at Lindeque Drift. The river is very broad here, and +split up into numerous small streams, in the wading of which many +humorous incidents took place, owing to the slippery nature of the +rolling stones in the bottom of the river. A rolling stone may not +gather much moss, but it is undoubtedly capable of gathering a +considerable quantity of slimy weeds, and when concealed by two or +three feet of running water it offers about as precarious a footing as +it is possible to imagine. + +[Illustration: The Vaal River, Lindeque Drift.] + +Winding our way through the low hills on the Transvaal side of the +river, we at length emerged on to an enormous plain. The far horizon +was bounded by the Gatsrand hills, with which, as with another +detached clump of rounded kopjes on our left, known as the Losberg, we +were destined ere long to become closely acquainted. As we finally +turned in about 11 p.m. we heard reveille was not to sound till 4.30 +a.m., but when some subaltern attempted a feeble joke about a 'Europe +morning,' his effort met with nothing but silent contempt. + +There is little doubt that any one who shared in that next day's march +will never forget it. As we proceeded across the illimitable plain a +strong head-wind began to blow, increasing in strength as the day wore +on. De Wet had fired all the grass ahead of us, with the result that +the air was laden with millions and millions of particles of minute +ashes and sharp cinders. These soon filled eyes, ears, nostrils, +throats, and lungs, until breathing became well-nigh impossible, and +the agony caused by their penetration into our eyes almost +intolerable. But woe to him who endeavoured to alleviate his distress +by wiping his eyes with grimy hands. Such action merely had the effect +of 'rubbing it in,' and so accentuating the misery and discomfort. The +men very soon began to fall out in ever-increasing numbers. On one +occasion Captain Nelson, R.M.L.I., was seen straggling off right away +from the column. Lieutenant Bradford went after him and found that he +was temporarily quite blind. At last, after hours of torment, we +reached a pass in the Gatsrand, on the far side of which we halted, as +night fell. A big grass fire almost immediately broke out, and as the +grass was long and thick, and a strong wind still blew to fan it, +things looked very ugly. The flames swept right through the camp, but +luckily the tents were not up. But what would happen when they reached +the guns and ammunition? What, indeed, might have happened, but for +the gallantry of the gunners and naval detachment, it is hard to say. +As it was the ammunition-waggons caught fire and were sufficiently +charred to demonstrate the closeness of the danger. But, as ever, 'the +handy-man' was to the fore, and with promptitude and courage, that +could not have been excelled, managed to extinguish the flames. + +And now for a wash--what, no water! No water, which, hungry and +exhausted as they were, every one wanted even more than food. But, +alas! it was too true, and after contenting ourselves with some liquid +mud, flavoured with charcoal, called coffee, and some few mouthfuls +of tough old trek-ox, liberally peppered with burnt grass, we only +waited to hear that reveille was to be at 1.30 a.m. before sinking +down to snatch what rest was possible. This delightful spot rejoiced +in the refreshing name of Orange Grove. + +The 12th of August. Shade of St. Grouse! At 3 a.m. we were on the move +in bright moonlight and sharp frost, with a wind blowing which cut +like a knife. After doing some sixteen or seventeen miles we arrived +about 10 a.m. at Wolverdiend station--a large force of cavalry and +infantry assembled there, moving out as we moved in. Camp was pitched, +and a good meal cooked--our first respectable one for three days--and +then--then came the order to start off again in the afternoon. Wearily +we resumed that march, but even as we started the prospect was +brightened by the sound of heavy guns ahead, on our right front. We +finally bivouacked for the night on the most stony kopje in all South +Africa. It was impossible to find a spot anywhere that did not consist +of sharp, jagged rocks, rendering sleep, to any troops less tired than +we were, an utter impossibility. A rumour credited Lord Methuen with +again having brought De Wet to bay, and we were almost positively +assured that next day would end our laborious march. + +No less than ten mules were lost during the day, from utter +exhaustion. Many a heart, weary in itself, ached yet more deeply for +the sufferings entailed on the dumb animals. + +Reveille at 2, off at 3, was our time-table for the next day. After +proceeding some five or six miles, the force came to the pretty little +Mooi River. The Colonel found an excellent place for us to cross it, +compared to the spot where the Somersets were obliged to plunge in. A +halt was called on the far side, and a scratch meal taken. While thus +employed, some of our troops who had been De Wet's prisoners, amongst +them a couple of our own men, came in. They had been with De Wet's +rearguard, and told us that when Lord Methuen had shelled it the day +before, they had managed to escape; also that the fire of Lord +Methuen's guns had knocked over a Boer gun and exploded one of their +ammunition waggons. They added that De Wet was in command of a very +considerable force, and some distance ahead. + +[Illustration: The R.D.F. bathing in Mooi River, Potchefstroom.] + +We presently resumed the pursuit, finally camping in some very +desolate country, where the water was scarce and bad. Signs of +over-fatigue and want of sleep were now becoming very apparent, a +large number of men falling out and riding on the waggons. Poor +fellows! they stuck it out as long as ever they could, but their socks +gave out from the constant wettings, and they pitched them away, +marching on in their boots until the pain of the raw chafes became too +much to bear. There was never a grumble or complaint: a man simply +asked to see his Captain, and respectfully said his feet had given +way, and he must regretfully fall out. The officers knew it was true, +and felt for their comrades whose emaciated kits precluded the +possibility of a change. To such a state was the column now reduced +that the General, who had ordered reveille for 2 a.m. the following +morning, actually put it back till 6 o'clock. + +The regiment acted as rearguard on the 14th, and did not start till 9 +a.m., halting for a short time at mid-day near a blown-up Boer +ammunition waggon. Every conceivable sort and kind of small-arm +ammunition lay scattered around on the veld, and those who were keen +on curios of this description made quite a collection of full and +empty cases. + +The battalion lost eleven more mules, the poor brutes simply falling +to the ground from utter exhaustion, being perforce left where they +lay. We arrived in camp at 5.30 p.m., and then for the first time, in +at all events some of our lives, heard two reveilles in one day, the +hated call blaring in our ears at 10.30 p.m. Starting at 12, we pushed +on, belts tightened, teeth clenched, and simply determined _not_ to +give in. We were told that the cavalry brigades had De Wet at last at +the foot of the Magaliesberg, only sixteen miles ahead. So on we went +into the sheer and bitter night, more like ghostly shadows than +anything else, as the spectral column wound its way through sleeping +villages and over mile after mile of dark and silent veld. At last our +eyes were gladdened by the sight of twinkling watch-fires on the +slopes of some hills just ahead, and as the first signs of dawn began +to become manifest, we sank wearily down to enjoy a few minutes' +repose. But it was broad daylight when we woke, and alas! for all the +hopes of the past eight days, the hills ahead were only occupied by +our cavalry. Theirs had been the watch-fires of the dark hours of the +night. The game was up, and we were told the first great De Wet hunt +was over. Some one had failed to stop the earth; the fox had foiled +his pursuers, and the various Generals reluctantly whipped off their +hounds. + +It was a bitter disappointment. We had been so buoyed up by the +promises held out to us. Every one had so thoroughly entered into the +job, and plodded stolidly along; and all for nothing. Work which, if +successful, would have lived in history, but which, being +unsuccessful, was fated to be forgotten and ignored; and unsuccessful +through no fault of any of the troops engaged in it. There was no +General or Staff to blame: no regiment or department which could be +hauled over the coals. No; some one had blundered, that was all. The +point has never been exactly cleared up, and probably never will be, +and there the matter ended. + + 'Lay not your blame on me: if you have lost him, + Why, I have lost him too.'--_Othello._ + +So we turned over and fell asleep again, and woke up at 9 a.m. and had +some breakfast, and were about to fall asleep again when the word came +to fall in and march on to some other bivouac. The one we were in was +good enough for us, but of course there was nothing for it but to +obey, and we marched to a small village called Rietfontein. Here we +heard that Colonel Hore's column was surrounded, and in a bad way, +some eighty miles off, and that we were to form part of a small force, +and make a forced march to his relief. + +Accordingly the column marched at 8 a.m. next morning. After going +about two miles, an order arrived saying we were to go back; and back +we went--a somewhat profitless proceeding, but doubtless unavoidable. +The remainder of the day was spent resting, but it was known that +reveille was to sound at midnight, and that we were to make a big +effort next day. + +Starting at 1 a.m., and steadily tramping on till 9.30 a.m., we put +twenty miles behind us. A halt was then made for a meal in rather a +pretty spot, which actually boasted of some trees sufficiently large +to afford shade, and under the foot of some well-wooded kloofs on our +right. Resuming our march, we did some two or three miles more when +word came that Colonel Hore was all right, having made a most gallant +resistance and suffered many casualties, and that we were to go back +the way we had come and march to Pretoria. + +By the time we got back to our bivouac it was still early in the day, +and we had already marched twenty-five miles. Five more mules had +fallen dead, making a total of thirty-eight since we started on the +7th. + +On the 18th we resumed our return journey, if return journey it could +be called, since wherever we were going it was a hundred to one +against its being the place we had come from. After a short trek we +out-spanned for breakfasts, and an order was then given that we were +to stay where we were and bivouac there for the night. + +We moved to Vlakfontein next day, a distance of about sixteen miles, +and the march quite uneventful. Rumour, however, pointed to +Krugersdorp as our destination, and this must have been the exception +that proves the rule, for on this occasion rumour proved right. + +Another long and equally uninteresting march of eighteen or nineteen +miles, only relieved by the arrival in hot haste of an indignant +Marquis. It appeared he had been at a farm some two miles off on our +left front, and had been offered some tea, which he had refused, and +on leaving the house had been shot at by about a dozen Boers. What it +was all about, or what he had been doing alone at this farm, and why +the Boers should not shoot at him when he withdrew, none of us could +quite make out. However, there were some Boers there, so the Colonel +fired a few long-range volleys in the direction indicated, but +declined to make a deviation with a view to reprisals. + +Another eighteen miles on the 31st brought us to within about eight of +Krugersdorp. About time too, for the men's boots were giving way +badly, and scarcely one in ten had any socks. + +The eight miles proved to be very long ones, however--longer than even +Irish miles--and although we had made an early start, it was noon +before we at last reached Krugersdorp for the second time. On this +occasion we halted on a hillside just outside the north of the town, +and beside a sort of small suburb on the further side of the creek. + +Since leaving Heidelberg we had marched 289 miles. But of this +distance 123 had been covered in the week during which we pursued De +Wet, and 228 in the fortnight commencing August 7th. The longest +distance covered in any one day had been the 25 miles on the day we +turned. This marching was not done on roads it must be remembered, but +across country, over hills, and through rivers, with frequent troubles +with the unfortunate transport to overcome, and with very little food, +and that of an inferior quality. + +So ended our attempt on foot to catch De Wet on a thoroughbred. It was +hopeless from the first, and yet went within measurable distance of +succeeding, though even if we had rounded up some of his force at +Olifant's Nek, it is very doubtful if De Wet himself would have been +caught. + + + + +CHAPTER IV. + +SEPTEMBER IN THE GATSRAND. + + 'Why gaddest thou about so much?' + + _Jer._ ii. 36. + + +From August 23rd to 28th we obtained a very welcome week's rest, which +would have been more enjoyable had the weather not broken badly, +resulting in a succession of cold, high winds and heavy thunderstorms. +These latter were of the most abominable description and a severe +trial to those of us whose nervous systems were so constituted as to +be affected by them. Some declared that they liked them; others +frankly admitted that they detested them. They seemed to have a way of +coming along about 4 p.m., and as soon as they got into position, +immediately above our heads, opened fire. Needless to say, in the +course of the long campaign there were a good many very narrow shaves, +and one of our men was actually killed by lightning. The storms were +almost invariably accompanied by torrential rain, which, though adding +greatly to our discomfort, mitigated the danger, the local cognoscenti +assuring us that even they looked upon a dry thunderstorm as no joke. + +The regiment was a good deal split up at this time owing to the men we +had dropped behind us on our late trek; they had fallen out from a +variety of causes, but ninety per cent. of them on account of sore +feet or lack of boots. There were no less than 160 at Wolverdiend, 50 +at Rhenoster, 40 at Wolverhoek, and so on. The Colonel made many +attempts to gather up his chickens once more, but when we started on +our next trek we were still deficient of a good many. Major Bird left +us at this time to go to Natal, where he was to arrange about our +property, and organize orderly-room papers, etc. Major English was +unfortunately down with a severe attack of dysentery, and had it not +been for Major Rutherford's arrival on the morning of the 29th the +battalion would have been Majorless. Our padre, Father Mathews, +presented us with a very fine pair of koodoo horns which he picked up +at a store while we were here. He had originally been attached to the +Royal Irish Fusiliers, but had come to us after Nicholson's Nek. He +remained with us till the end of the war, and proved himself a brave +soldier and a welcome member of the mess. + +[Illustration: Father Mathews.] + +Orders were eventually issued for a start at 6 a.m. on the morning of +the 29th, but a night of heavy rain and succession of thunderstorms +put an early start out of the question, and we did not get off till 3 +p.m. The force was known as the Pochefstroom Column,[11] and our +mission, as far as we knew, was to lay waste the country between +Krugersdorp and that place, to fight the enemy whenever we met him, +to bring in women and children, to destroy anything in the way of +forage, &c., which might be useful to our enemies, if we could not +bring it along for our own use; to collect waggons, cape-carts, +animals, harness, &c.; and generally to carry fire and sword +throughout the land. + + [Footnote 11: South Wales Borderers, Royal Dublin Fusiliers, + half-battalion Somersetshire Light Infantry, 4.7 Naval Gun, + 28th Battery Royal Field Artillery, Marshall's Horse, and + Yeomanry.] + +Moving off in a southerly direction through the town, we came to what +should have been a harmless little drift, about two or three miles +out. The recent rains had, however, transformed it into a formidable +obstacle, and waggon after waggon stuck hopelessly in its miry +embrace. The General, therefore, determined to halt on a rising slope +on the far side, and as many waggons as possible were man-handled over +the bog. Tents were pitched, but scarcely were they up when a furious +storm burst overhead. In a minute everything and everybody was soused +through and through, the scene being vividly lit up by the almost +continuous flashes of vivid lightning, while the crashing, bellowing +boom of the thunder in our ears made voices inaudible and orders +perfectly useless. What sort of teas the regimental cooks prepared we +did not know, but the invaluable and ubiquitous Corporal Tierney +managed to bring each of us a cup of hot tea and a rasher or a steak +in our tents. The storm lasted till dawn, when the heavy clouds, as if +despoiled of their victims by the rising sun, reluctantly drew off +northwards. A glorious morning was the consequence, but, of course, +there was no chance of trekking for some hours to come. + +At 2 p.m. a start was again made, but as the tents and everything else +were soaked through, and weighed fifty per cent. more than they would +under ordinary circumstances, there was little hope that our transport +animals would be able to drag them through any bad drifts. We only +managed to do some seven miles before darkness came on, when we camped +for the night at the Madeline Gold-mine. It was jumpy work here, as +the whole place was honeycombed with prospecting-holes and ditches, +varying in depth from three feet to about three hundred. How on earth +no one fell in must ever remain a mystery, as, to add to the +delightful freshness of the situation, a large herd of bullocks took +command, and meandered through the camp, one of which moved the mess +president on some considerable distance, fortunately for him with a +horn on each side of him, instead of one through him, as was doubtless +intended. + +We marched from the Madeline at 7 a.m. on August 31st, and after +trekking some miles arrived at a large coal-mine, which seemed to be +in very good order. This country had been the scene of a goodish bit +of fighting. Not far off the ill-fated Jameson raid had come to its +inglorious conclusion; a little further on the Gordons had suffered +severely during the advance on Johannesburg; and here the Pochefstroom +column was to be 'blooded.' + +We did not know that anything interesting was on the tapis until we +saw the white cotton-wool puffs of our shrapnel bursting against a +range of kopjes in our front. Then the Colonel told us that there were +supposed to be a good many Boers on ahead, and that the General had +gone off with a portion of the column to attack them, while we were to +advance and seize and hold a nek, with a view to cutting off the +retreating Boers, or threatening their left flank, or reinforcing our +right, or some obscure purpose. It was the same in so many of our days +of scrapping and trekking. Talk about the fog of war: we who were +actually in the battle knew nothing about it. Doubtless the Commanding +Officer was in the know, but the Company Officer, the commander of +what is now recognised as the real fighting unit, he knew nothing. It +was a funny fight. We trekked along, unconcernedly watching the pretty +effect of our friends the gunners' practice; able with glasses to see +the stones and dust driven ahead when the shells burst low; but unable +to see any Boers. On reaching our destined spot we lay down and had +a smoke, and thought of all sorts of things other than fighting, until +at last news came from the General, and we heard we had fifteen +casualties. So it had been quite a battle after all, as fights were +going in those days, when any scrap that resulted in a casualty was +known as a hardly-contested engagement. + +On the 1st we moved to a rather pretty camp, close under the far side +of the hills, called Jakfontein. The General and the troops he had +with him on the 31st arrived at about 5.15 p.m., and camped alongside. +The General told the Colonel they had had quite a victory yesterday, +driving the Boers from their position, and occupying it at nightfall. +They also thought they had done a good deal of damage to them with our +guns, as they withdrew. + +The column did not march on the 2nd, but two companies ('E' and 'F') +under Captain Shewan proceeded to Bank Station as escort to the +wounded, while two more ('A' and 'B'), under Major Rutherford, were +sent off to commence the burning and looting, which, as far as we +could understand, was the _raison d'etre_ of the column. However that +might be, there was a tremendous fuss on their return, and all sorts +of accusations made _re_ looting. There is no disguising the fact that +we were altogether too squeamish, and that the orders on these and +subsequent occasions were capable of more than one interpretation. +Here were we in an enemy's country, badly off for a cart, let us say, +for the officers' mess; the very thing is found in an unoccupied farm; +to bring it along and use it was to loot: to burn it was to obey +orders. At this length of time it is easy to write dispassionately, +and there can be no harm in saying that it was vexing to be found +fault with when under the impression that one was doing one's best for +the general good, and not in any way profiting oneself. A few days +later an officer searching a farm for concealed weapons, &c., came +across a heavy ebony stick--just the thing he wanted. The old Boer +lady made a great fuss about his taking it, saying it was all she had +to beat the Kaffirs with. That finally determined him, more especially +as he was not exactly standing on ceremony at the time, seeing the +next company was being sniped at, and his turn liable to come at any +moment. + +Captain G. S. Higginson was appointed Remount officer, and from this +moment we began to lose sight of him, to everybody's great regret. + +After spending another day in bringing in forage and supplies, the +column started at 9 p.m. on the 3rd on a night march. For the first +four or five miles all went well, and the advance-guard, under the +careful leading of Captain Romer, maintained the right direction. +Then, however, the road made a sharp turn, and although Captain +Romer's party followed the turn right enough, part of his +advance-guard, under a subaltern, went wandering off into the black +night. It took some time to retrieve them, and as the column +immediately afterwards came to a deep drift, it was considerably +delayed. 'G' company was sent up a high hill on the left to guard that +flank until the whole of the transport and rearguard was past, and the +cold on the top was a thing to remember. The main column got into +bivouac shortly after 1 a.m., but this unfortunate company was out +till 5, which, seeing the march was resumed at 6, was rather hard +luck. However, there was plenty of that going for everybody in those +days, and after the usual short 'grouse,' the sleepless night was +forgotten. + +After moving into the hills about eight miles further, and passing +through some beautiful farms, with every peachtree a mass of glorious +bloom, the column halted. The Imperial Yeomanry, who had been scouting +far ahead, now found themselves perilously involved with a small body +of the enemy. General Hart, with a portion of the column, including +the artillery and naval gun, moved out to extricate them, and very +soon we heard heavy fighting going on. He succeeded in his object, +however, at the expense of four of the Yeomanry wounded and one man +killed. In the meantime, Colonel Hicks had thrown out outposts on the +hills, 'G' company coming in for another sleepless night, probably +through some mistake in the roster. Captain Nelson, R.M.L.I. +(attached), had a somewhat peculiar experience. Having been detained +for some purpose when his company was going out, he gave Lieutenant +Marsh, his subaltern, orders where to go, and later on followed +himself. But then he couldn't find them. Nor could the other companies +on other hills see anything of them, though signals were flashed in +the direction they had taken. It was not until next morning that they +were discovered, quite close to the place they had been ordered to go +to. It was characteristic of the nature of the country in which we +were operating, and the excellent manner in which they hid themselves, +that Captain Nelson should have missed them, for at one time he must +have passed quite close to the piquet. + +Next morning Boers were reported in the vicinity. It is impossible to +say they were in our front, as our front coincided with the report of +the first visible Boer, and we simply went for anything we saw. Rumour +put this force at 700 strong, but most people considered that an +exaggerated estimate. We moved off in three columns: the South Wales +Borderers took the right, moving along the difficult, serrated tops of +the hills; the cavalry and yeomanry took the lower, more undulating, +easier hills to the left, while the rest of us with the guns moved +along in the centre; the General, conspicuous by a large red flag +which a trooper carried behind him, moving wherever any opposition +presented itself. It must be the unanimous opinion of all troops who +knew our General, that a braver man never fought in action, but at the +same time the man who carried that red flag deserved some honourable +distinction. Perhaps he got it; probably he did not. + +After moving some two or three miles, our further way was blocked by +mauser-fire from a very ominous, black-looking kopje which stretched +down into the valley from the high ground on our left. The guns came +into action against this hill at a range of about two thousand yards, +and it seemed as if a golden-crested wren could not have escaped if it +had been unlucky enough to be there. The shrapnel kept up an almost +incessant hail, covering the wooded sides of the kopje with jets of +round white balls of smoke, while every now and then the deeper note +of the 4.7 was followed by a huge cloud of dust and yellowish vapour +thrown up, and off, by the explosion of the lyddite in the huge +projectile. How many Boers held that hill will probably never be +known; only four were found. But a strange spectacle ensued. Emerging +from the cover on the far side, rode, _ventre-a-terre_, a solitary +horseman. Immediately two companies extended in our front opened fire +on him. How he escaped was a marvel, for in front, behind, on every +side of him could be seen 'the bullets kicking dust-spots on the +green.' But escape he did, and many a 'Good luck to you' went after +him, for he was a bold man to have stayed as long as he had, and fully +deserved to escape. Our bombardment had effected one useful purpose. +Amongst the killed was a Commandant called Theron, a brave, +enterprising young fellow of about twenty-five years of age, whose +exploits had already stamped him as a born leader of men. Our own +casualties amounted to four yeomen wounded. + +We camped a little further on, and buried our enemy, and one of our +own men who had died from his wounds, side by side, with all due +honour, ceremony, and respect. + +[Illustration: Funeral of Commandant Theron and a British Soldier. +September 6th, 1900.] + +September 6th was an unpleasant day. In the first place we made a very +early start, which, after the two previous nights' work, was rather +hard on the troops. Several had been without sleep for two nights, and +engaged with the enemy all day. As far as fighting went this +long-range scrapping was not of course worthy of the name, but as far +as discomfort and fatigue were concerned, the operations were entitled +to the most dignified and resonant title in the vocabulary. The 6th +was an example. In the first place there was no fighting; in the +second place, there was very little marching; in the third place, +there was no rest; in the fourth place, there was no food. In the +absence of definite orders the commanding officers delayed for a long +time ere venturing to outspan and cook: when they did do so orders +immediately arrived, scattering companies right, left, and centre, on +the burning and capturing expeditions. Finally, when orders were +published, they were for another night march, the object and +destination of which were concealed even from officers commanding +regiments. However, there was nothing for it but to make the best of +an unpleasant state of affairs, to snatch a few mouthfuls of food +whenever possible and a few minutes' sleep at any opportunity and once +more the long column wound its way through the night. It arrived on +the morning of the 7th at Wolverdiend station, where there was now a +considerable garrison, among them 140 of our own men, who had been +there since the De Wet trek. The day was passed in shifting camp and +fatigue work in the station, where there was much to do in the way of +loading and unloading trains. + +Captain Romer got three days' leave here to meet his father, the +famous judge, who had come out as President of the Royal Commission. + +At 9 p.m. the column started on another night march, the battalion +supplying the rearguard. It was weary work waiting on those occasions. +Tents were struck, and coats, blankets, &c., packed on the waggons an +hour before the advance-guard was due to march off, after which there +was nothing to do but lie down on the ground in the bitter cold, and +wait till all the transport had got away. Nor did the advance-guard +have very much the best of it, as they of course arrived hours before +the waggons, and had their shivering turn in the early morning, at the +other end of the march. + +By 10 a.m. the column arrived at Klerkskraal, a small and very widely +scattered village on the banks of the beautiful Mooi River, a stream +of the clearest and most delicious water. Companies were sent to clear +out the neighbouring farms as usual, and a good deal of information +was gathered about a considerable quantity of the enemy, who had been +trekking through for some time past in small groups. + +A dozen fine Indian tents, the gift of Rai Bahadur Boota Singh, of +Rawal Pindi, were handed over to us here for the use of the officers. +Very welcome they proved, as our old ones were nearly worn out. + +Sunday, September 9th, 1900, was a day that will live long in the +annals of the battalion. It was given out that in view of the hard +work done by the troops, the day would be treated as a day of rest, +almost immediately following which order came another, detailing two +companies of each corps to go out on the unpleasant foraging duties. +The roster declared that 'G' and 'H' companies were next in +succession, and these two companies started immediately, officers and +men snatching a hasty and very scratch breakfast before starting. They +were out all day, from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m., during which time they were +gathering in supplies of straw, fodder, &c., together with all carts, +waggons, and harness in a serviceable condition, burning such as they +could not carry away with them. At about 5 p.m. a heliograph message +recalled them to camp, in reaching which they had to cross a small +stream with a snipe-marsh on either side: the waggons of course stuck, +but the men set to with a will, impelled doubtless by a keen desire to +get back to their dinners in camp, and dragged them out one by one +with ropes. A dismal surprise was in store for them. For even as they +came in sight of the camp, it was struck, and in place of the dinners +they had so fondly anticipated, some tea alone awaited them. The +officers were even worse off, for as the mess president had been +employed with the two companies out foraging, no one else had thought +of keeping even a cup of tea for them, and, exhausted as they were by +ten hours' work without food, under a burning sun, they received the +pleasing intelligence that the column was starting at once to march to +Pochefstroom, a distance variously estimated at from thirty-five to +thirty-eight miles. + +[Illustration: Buffelsdoorn Camp, Gatsrand Hills.] + +The force marched in three parts. First, mounted men, guns, and 'A' +and 'E' companies Royal Dublin Fusiliers in waggons. Then the main +body of infantry, and lastly the transport with 'G' and 'H' companies +Royal Dublin Fusiliers as rearguard. There was a moon for most of the +way, but it only served to make the surroundings more weird. Parallel +to our right ran a low range of hills, whilst on the left was the Mooi +River, with a farm looming up out of the night every mile or so along +the way. There was one halt of half an hour towards midnight, but the +remainder of the halts were merely of the usual five minutes' +duration. And hard it was to resume the weary way at the end of even +those brief spells of rest. Every one was so fit that the actual +marching was nothing like so trying as the difficulty of keeping awake +through the long, dreary hours, and one would time after time drop +asleep as one walked mechanically along, only to wake in the very act +of falling. Frederickstadt was reached in the small hours of the +morning, and the stream crossed to its left bank. There was then a +halt of about an hour to close up the transport, and very welcome it +was, for we were still an ordinary day's march from our destination. +Turning to our right, we brought the Gatsrands on our left, and the +word went forth that the Boers were in them, a report which seemed to +be confirmed a moment later as a blaze of light suddenly appeared +above their summits. 'There they are!' 'That's their signal lamp!' +were the comments that greeted the glory of the morning star, whether +Jupiter or Venus, on that as on many a previous and subsequent +occasion. On straggled the column, many of the men completely worn +out, having been reluctantly compelled to avail themselves of the +permission to ride on the waggons; the remainder, with grim +determination to march till they dropped, trudging patiently and +silently on. At last came the welcome flush of dawn; no 'envious +streaks' these, but the first message from the longed-for day which +ended that abominable night. When Pochefstroom finally came in sight +it was still a good five miles off, and those last five miles were as +bad as any part of the march. For though in some mysterious way the +coming of day had dispelled to a great extent the deadly sleepiness +from which most of us suffered, our aching limbs now began to make +themselves manifest, and those far-off trees never seemed to get any +nearer. However, by ten o'clock the last man was in, but very nearly +done. It had been a remarkable march--very remarkable seeing the +conditions under which some of the troops performed it.[12] For to do +from thirty-five to thirty-eight miles, most of it by night, on an +empty stomach, after a hard ten hours' work under a hot sun, in +sixteen hours, is a performance of which any troops may be justly +proud. + + [Footnote 12: That minor operations such as these should + receive but scant recognition at the hands of historians is + not to be wondered at, but neither the official nor the + _Times_ histories in their accounts of this surprise of + Pochefstroom found space to mention the length of this march, + an omission which is very greatly to be wondered at.] + +Nor was it altogether without result, for our mounted and +waggon-carried troops had arrived much earlier, and, fairly taking the +place by surprise, had surrounded it, killed seven, and captured some +seventy or eighty prisoners, and put a good many more to ignominious +and hasty flight. + +We also obtained some draught beer. Beer! None of us had tasted it for +months. How it went down! Yet our memory of it is sad, for the +unfortunate manager of the brewery was afterwards shot by the Boers +for selling it to us. The column remained at Pochefstroom till the +12th, our stay being darkened by the melancholy death of the +signalling officer, Lieutenant Maddox, of the Somersetshire Light +Infantry, who was shot through the heart while going round his +stations. + +[Illustration: A Group of Boer Prisoners taken at the Surprise of +Pochefstroom.] + +On the 12th Colonel Hicks took command of a small force[13] which +moved out to occupy some kopjes overlooking two drifts over the Mooi +River. Starting at about 3 p.m., we did not reach our destination +(some five miles south of Frederickstadt) till dark. Somewhat to our +surprise, the hills were unoccupied, as Boers were known to be in the +vicinity, while there had been a certain amount of distant sniping +throughout the march. Putting piquets at the drifts, the infantry and +guns occupied one hill, and the mounted troops another hard by. We had +just turned in for the night when a sharp rifle-fire broke out all +along the front, to which our sentries were not slow to respond. We +immediately occupied the posts to which we had been assigned, but the +firing soon died away. No one was hit by the enemy, but an unfortunate +trooper in Marshall's Horse was shot by a comrade, and later on +succumbed to the wound. + + [Footnote 13: Royal Dublin Fusiliers, 100 cavalry, two + guns.] + +[Illustration: Colour-Sergeant Cossy issuing Beer.] + +At daybreak on the 13th, we located a Boer laager some five miles out +on the plain. One of our officers had a deer-stalking telescope, with +which it was possible to follow the movements of the Boers as they +woke up, a most interesting spectacle. They were of course far out of +range of our fifteen-pounders, but just as we were regretting our +inability to get at them, General Hart's force from Pochefstroom could +be seen trekking slowly in their direction from our left front. We, +from our elevated position, could see what the Boers could not, and to +watch our comrades creeping slowly nearer, while the Boers were +loitering about and stretching themselves, was a sight the opportunity +to view which was seldom afforded in the course of the war. But long +before the General got close enough to do any harm, the alarm went. +Any one who has ever seen a pebble cast into an ants' nest can realise +the proceedings of the next two minutes. Darting about in every +direction, the Boers caught their horses and inspanned their transport +with a celerity which fairly took our breath away, and in what seemed +an incredibly short space of time they were trekking away across our +right front, their movements still more hastened by a few rounds from +the naval guns. Moreover, they came within very long range of our +fifteen-pounders, so we were enabled to return them a 'quid' for their +'quo' of the previous night, with probably about the same result to +their skins, though one riderless horse could be seen careering about. + +A helio message from the General instructed us to march off and join +him at Frederickstadt, where we arrived that afternoon, spending the +morning in the usual domiciliary visits, getting a really handsome +waggon for the mess, and carefully searching a farmhouse belonging to +the Bezuidenhouts. + +On the 14th there was a considerable amount of firing in the +neighbourhood, but nobody seemed to take much interest in it. As, +however, it resulted in the loss of twelve mules and some waggons, and +one gunner wounded, it is hoped that we did some damage in return. + +On the 15th Colonel Hicks again took out a small force of all +arms,[14] for the purpose of getting in more stores, of burning +Bezuidenhout's farm (it being now clear he had murdered two +telegraphists), and to hold the kopjes we were on the 13th, while the +Somersetshire Light Infantry marched to join us from Pochefstroom. The +country was now thoroughly infested with Boers, who made some slight +effort to oppose Colonel Hicks. He very soon brushed them aside, +however, and, marching his force along two parallel ranges of low +hills, arrived at the place where we had bivouacked on the night of +the 12th-13th. Dinners were cooked on arrival before the companies +went out marauding. Whilst they were being prepared a cartridge went +off in one of the fires, and severely wounded one of the cooks, the +bullet penetrating his chest. This poor fellow was later on sent into +hospital at Krugersdorp, and, as the wound never improved, was +eventually invalided home. But the line was blown up just in front of +his train, and he was brought back to hospital. He soon began to +recover, and one day went wandering about without his hat, got +sunstroke, and died, one piece of bad luck on the top of another, and +a melancholy example of how 'when sorrows come, they come not single +spies, but in battalions.' + + [Footnote 14: Royal Dublin Fusiliers, two guns, twenty-five + Yeomanry.] + +A convoy under Captain H. W. Higginson, arrived at Frederickstadt at +this time, after having been considerably pestered by some Boers who +had shelled him with a nine-pounder Krupp, and severely wounded one of +our men. Luckily, the General had sent out a small force with two guns +to meet this convoy, or it might have had a very much worse time. + +Next day Bezuidenhout's farm was duly burnt, and at 3 p.m. the force +started to march back to Frederickstadt, the Somersetshire Light +Infantry (wing) under Major Williams, with eighty prisoners, a large +number of refugees and waggons, starting an hour earlier, having of +course further to go. The march was not interfered with, and the force +reached its old quarters once more before dark. + +The dreary monotony of these days and nights of trekking and foraging +suffered a variation on the 17th. In the morning 'A' company, under +Major Rutherford, took over the eighty odd prisoners from +Pochefstroom, and marched off with them to Wolverdiend. In the +afternoon a shell suddenly burst in the middle of the camp. The cheek +of these foes of ours. The first arrival was shortly followed by +several more in quick succession, some of which landed in camp, and +some of which went over our heads. We turned out, lowered the tents, +and then lay down in extended order, trying to locate the position of +the hostile gun. At last some one saw the flash, after which our naval +gun and fifteen-pounders picked up the range with admirable celerity, +immediately silencing the opposition. At a range of 3600 yards, the +second shot from the naval gun had burst within four feet of the +marks of the Krupp nine-pounder which had been shelling us. + +At the time the enemy opened fire a regimental court-martial for the +trial of twenty-one prisoners had just assembled, under the presidency +of Captain Shewan. On the arrival of the shells, the court, escort, +witnesses and prisoners dissolved themselves with one accord, and were +not afterwards reassembled. + + 'In such a time as this it is not meet + That every nice offence should bear his comment.' + + _Julius Caesar._ + +The sun was in the enemy's eyes, and the village of Frederickstadt +almost immediately behind our camp, which may account in some measure +for the indifference of their fire, as we must have offered a +magnificent target to them. As it was, our only losses were four +horses, not a man being hit. But we were fairly caught napping. + +The General ordered the regiment to take possession of the hill, which +was done without any further fighting, two companies being left on +outpost duty on its summit. + +On the 18th some of the usual desultory sniping commenced on the other +side of the camp, but a demonstration by the inlying piquet ('G' +company, 2nd Royal Dublin Fusiliers) was sufficient to put a stop to +it. + +Major Bird arrived back from Maritzburg. Next day the trek commenced +once more. A small force[15] was left behind under command of Major +Bird to hold the hills from which we had been shelled, and to take +care of most of the transport. The remainder of the column marched at +11 p.m. on Ventersdorp, where some Boers were reported. After marching +all night and covering some twelve miles, the enemy opened fire in +front and on both flanks. Our guns came into action, and a sort of +running fight was maintained. Eventually the enemy took up a more +definite position, when General Hart ordered Colonel Hicks, with two +companies of the regiment, two guns and a pompom, to advance to a +small ridge on one flank, while he with the remainder of the force +marched round the enemy's rear. This resulted in the evacuation of +their position, when Colonel Hicks's small party got an opportunity to +deliver an effective fire on them. + + [Footnote 15: Half-battalion Royal Dublin Fusiliers, one + company Somerset Light Infantry, two guns 28th Battery Royal + Field Artillery, and twenty Marshall's Horse.] + +Next day sniping at the bivouac began at dawn, but the troops were +allowed a meal before resuming their march. Colonel Hicks was again +detailed to take a kopje from which a considerable but ineffectual +fire was coming. Moving steadily on, with his 200 men in +widely-extended order, he brought a maxim into action, which had the +effect of clearing the hill, but the long-range fighting went on +without a break till the evening. + +Having more or less broken up the Boers in this direction, orders were +issued for the return march to Frederickstadt. An early start was +made, and at 10 a.m. a halt and outspan ordered. At mid-day the +officers commanding units were sent for, when the General informed +them that a large force of Boers, under Steyn and De Wet, with women +and children, 3000 strong, was reported in the neighbourhood of +Klerksdorp. Rumour further said that they were so bewildered by our +apparently aimless midnight movements that they neither knew where to +go nor what to do. The General added that it was his intention to +march again in the afternoon in their direction, to have another +outspan at dusk, and then to march all night and surprise them next +morning. The commanding officers looked at one another in blank +amazement, for they knew better than the General could the effect +these constant nights without sleep and days of fighting without food +were having on their men, but there was nothing for it, and the +General called upon his troops for one more supreme effort. At the +same time he heliographed to Major Bird to march from Frederickstadt +and join him _en route_, which was done. + +Major Bird's force had not been left altogether unmolested during this +time. The company of Somersetshire Light Infantry were holding a small +knoll in prolongation of his left, and some 2000 yards off. Against +them the Boers brought up their Krupp gun which they had used against +us two or three days before. The range was considerable, but they +managed to reach their target; yet, though they fired twenty-three +shells into the camp of this company, the only damage they did was to +knock the top off a box of eggs _without breaking a single egg_. They +also managed to pitch a shell or two amongst the transport. Our +fifteen-pounders endeavoured to reply, but, in spite of digging deep +holes for the trails, were unable to reach the ridge from which the +Boers were firing. + +Major Bird's force having joined hands with the main column shortly +after dark, the long march was resumed at 10 p.m. It was a pitch-dark +night, and the difficulty of keeping in touch, and the still greater +difficulty of keeping the transport in touch, wore out tempers as well +as sinews. On one occasion the regiment as nearly as possible got +left. We were following the first-line transport of the corps +immediately in front of us, and keeping close up to it, but the +Colonel got anxious, and, after several times asking the adjutant if +he was certain we were in touch, told him to ride on and see. He came +back in a few minutes to say that there was nothing to be seen ahead. +The carts in front had lost touch, and they were all we had to guide +us. The adjutant at once cantered on, and had the good fortune to +shortly pick up the tail of the column, when everything was soon all +right again. The march continued the whole night, dawn being heralded +by the corncrake-like note of the pompom, which led us to hope we had +effected our object. But once again it was not to be, for the Boer +laager had moved off, and from the top of a small hill could be seen +trekking away about 7000 yards distant. Men and horses had been at it +since 6 a.m. the day before, and any further pursuit was out of the +question. Indeed, an extra two or three miles that had to be done to +reach a better camping-ground almost proved the last straw. The right +half-battalion had marched thirty-three miles in the twenty-four +hours, and only slept on one night out of the last three, while the +left half-battalion had done twenty-six miles in eighteen hours. + +Our enemy had slipped away once more at the critical moment, but our +spirits were raised all the same by the arrival of a dispatch, which +we understood called us back to Krugersdorp and hinted that the war +was over. + +After a day's rest at this rather pleasant camp, the force moved into +Pochefstroom (eighteen miles), and marched past the General in the +Market Square on the 25th, remaining there until the 27th. It had been +on the move for nearly a month with very little rest, during which +time men and horses had undoubtedly got very wiry and fit. But beyond +collecting a certain amount of stores, cattle, and forage, it is +doubtful whether all the forced marches and strenuous exertions had +been of much benefit, or whether they served to bring hostilities much +nearer to a conclusion. Although the enemy, in more or less force, had +been viewed practically every day, it had always been impossible to +bring him to close quarters, and the policy of wearing out +infantrymen's hearts, tempers, constitutions, and boots in abortive +pursuits of mounted enemies was, and in the light of all that we now +know still is, open to question, for a reference to the _Times_ +history of the war shows that all our wanderings and meanderings are +summed up in very few sentences, the most pregnant of which is to the +effect that word had gone out to the Boer Commandoes not to interfere +with us. + +On the 27th the column started on its march back to Krugersdorp, and +did the distance (sixty-two miles) in four easy stages. It marched by +the road south of the Gatsrand Hills, with the Losberg on its right, +and with the exception of one day (29th) without molestation from the +enemy. On that occasion they made a somewhat determined attack on the +rearguard, attempting to cut off some waggons, and the last few miles +of the march took the shape of a running fight. The General had ridden +on ahead with the cavalry to our next camp, so Colonel Hicks sent back +a couple of guns to the rearguard, who shook off the terrier-like +attentions of the enemy without very much trouble; but they had +delayed the march a good deal, and it was not till late in the evening +that every one got in, and heard that the war really was over at last. +An officer in the regiment who was considerably exhausted sank on to +his valise, too tired to care for anything. His servant said to him, +'We'll be in Krugersdorp to-morrow, sorr, and I'll be able to get yiz +some claning matherials,' to which his weary master replied, 'I don't +care a damn whether I'm clean or whether I'm dirty.' In answer his man +made the following cryptic remark: ''Tis no use talking like that, +sorr. Lord Roberts says the war is over, and we'll begin soldiering +now.' + +The following summary of the work done was published for +information:-- + + +'SUMMARY OF WORK OF POCHEFSTROOM COLUMN. + +'The Pochefstroom column started from Krugersdorp on the 29th August, +and returned on 30th September. The task of the column is to assist in +stamping out the resistance of the remaining scattered forces of the +enemy by hunting them, and depriving them of their supplies of food +and transport, with a view to bringing the war to an end. In the first +cruise of 33 days the column has marched 310 miles--the length of +England from Portsmouth to Scotland--and was in action with the enemy +on 29 days, putting them to flight on each occasion. The column's +casualties were only 3 killed, 24 wounded, and 3 missing. The Boers +lost considerably according to accounts of Kaffirs present; we found +some of their dead, including General Theron. In prisoners of war +and important arrests, the column took 96 of the enemy. Loyal +inhabitants, numbering 316 men, women, and children, were rescued from +Pochefstroom, and safely conveyed to Wolverdiend. General Liebenburg +ordered General Douthwaite to attack this convoy, but Douthwaite +thought it dangerous, and was arrested by Liebenburg for suggesting +that he, Liebenburg, "had better do it himself." The convoy was not +attacked. The column took from the enemy the following cattle: 2720 +sheep and 3281 goats; 1066 sacks of mealies, 104 sacks of meal, 2 +waggon-loads of mealie cobs, 12 sacks of wheat, 847 loaves of bread, +162 sacks of potatoes, 68 sacks of oats, 33 sacks of bran, 36,000 +bundles of oat-hay, 299 bales of chaff, 400 bundles of manna-hay, 90 +horses, 28 ponies, 11 mules, 36 waggons, 31 carts, and destroyed 45 +waggons and carts that could not be taken away. + + '(Signed) A. HART (Captain), + '_C.S.O. Pochefstroom Column._ + + '_Krugersdorp, 2nd October, 1900._' + +[Illustration: 'Come to the Cook-House Door, Boys!'] + + 'We looked for peace, but no good came.'--_Jer._ viii. 15. + + + + +CHAPTER V. + +FREDERICKSTADT--KLIP RIVER--THE LOSBERG. + + 'Have I not heard great ordnance in the field, + And Heaven's artillery thunder in the skies?' + + _Taming of the Shrew._ + + +Our camp, on this our third visit to Krugersdorp, was on the +south-west side of the town. The 6th Brigade (General Barton's) was +also in Krugersdorp, and had been for some time, so it was with +somewhat mixed feelings that we heard we were to set out on the trek +once more almost immediately. However, in the end the other brigade +went out, with what result will presently appear. Krugersdorp was now +surrounded by a large circle of forts and fortified houses. The +perimeter of these defences was very large, not far short of twelve +miles, but the positions themselves were well selected from a tactical +point of view. As they were continually being strengthened, improved, +and added to, in a few months' time it would have been very difficult +for the Boers to have taken the place, provided a sufficient garrison +remained in it. But this strength, or sometimes weakness, was a +constantly varying one--about the middle of December sinking as low as +300--which of course was risking a good deal. Moreover, it was not +until some time later, when the Officer Commanding Town Guards devised +an inner series of defences, that the town could be said to be in any +way safe from a midnight raid; and it was this, more than even the +capture of the place, which seemed so likely to occur, when the banks +and stores could have been cleared out in a few minutes, and the +raiding party gone before any force could have been assembled to +interfere with it. The town was, of course, full of spies and +friendly enemies, ever on the look-out for any chance of getting a bit +of their own back--and who could blame them?--but on the whole +remained very quiet and well-behaved throughout the occupation. + +The regiment's headquarters were destined to remain here for the rest +of the campaign, with the exception of the three treks which form the +subject of this chapter, and Krugersdorp will ever be identified with +our name in South Africa in consequence. As we got to know its +inhabitants better, and as they got to appreciate our men better, a +kindlier feeling was generated on both sides, with which improved +state of affairs the cricket and football we played with them had not +a little to do. + +General Barton moved off on October 5th, with much the same commission +that General Hart had carried, and immediately came into contact with +the enemy, the noise of the fight sounding loud in our ears, while +from Captain Nelson's piquet the bursting shells and even some of the +Boers could be plainly seen. The day before a flag of truce had come +in with a letter, saying that one of our men was lying wounded in a +farmhouse a little way outside the outposts; a waggon was sent out and +brought him in, when he proved to be one of our mounted infantry, who +had been wounded in Colonel Rochfort's dashing attack on a Boer laager +near Pretoria.[16] The Boers had looked after him as well as they +could, and dressed his wounds according to their homely lights, and +altogether played the game so far as he was concerned. + + [Footnote 16: The writer was recently dining with + Colonel--now Major-General--Rochfort, when that officer + particularly asked him to mention how splendidly the party of + Dublin Fusiliers under his command had behaved on this + occasion, and his admiration of their soldierly conduct at + all times while serving under him.] + +Next day still brought the sound of General Barton's artillery, and +the right half-battalion under Major Bird went out as escort to two +waggon-loads of ammunition for him. The General sent half-way to meet +him, and our men got back all right about 6 p.m. + +With the advent of summer the thunderstorms increased in frequency and +severity, and it was no joke to have to suddenly jump up and hang on +to the pole of one's tent to prevent it being blown away, with the +uncomfortable knowledge that lightning has a partiality for running +down tent-poles. We had one really bad experience in this way, to be +narrated later, but nothing to touch the blizzard that struck the camp +of the 5th Battalion Royal Dublin Fusiliers near Mafeking, when sheets +of corrugated iron flew about like packs of gigantic cards, and +Colonel Gernon and Captain Baker, the Quartermaster, together with +many others, sustained very serious injuries. Still, our share was bad +enough, and quite spoiled the summer for a good many of us. The +mornings would break clear, cloudless, and invigorating; but about 3 +p.m. on about three days of the week, a bunch of cotton-wool clouds +would appear from the south. As these rose higher and higher, they +swelled into enormous piles of grand, rolling cloud-masses, like +stupendous snow-clad mountains, whose bases grew black and ever +blacker, until they would suddenly be riven by blinding flashes of +flickering ribbons of lightning, and the air torn and rent by +reverberating booms of awe-inspiring thunder. + +Second Lieutenant Tredennick joined at this time. Second Lieutenant R. +F. B. Knox should have arrived with him, but had to remain behind in +Johannesburg, as he was seedy. The train they were in had been +attacked by Boers near Heidelberg. + +Rumour now began to be busy with General Barton's force, and on the +22nd an order came for General Hart to join him. We had just packed +up, when an order came countermanding the move. + +Next day, however, another order came to the same effect, but +detailing Colonel Hicks to command the column. Though small in point +of numbers,[17] it would have been hard to have picked a better one in +point of quality. A finer body of horsemen, or one more adapted to the +work in hand, than Strathcona's Horse it would be impossible to +conceive. Without making any invidious comparisons, it is only just to +say that these Canadian troops appeared to us to have no superiors, +while the truly magnificent way in which they literally brushed away +the opposition, on the morning we joined hands with General Barton, +was a sight to be remembered. + + [Footnote 17: 600 Strathcona's Horse, 160 Brabant's Horse, 2 + Elswick guns, 1 pompom, Essex Regiment, 1/2-battalion Royal + Dublin Fusiliers.] + +The regiment was entrained, but did not get off till about 5 p.m., our +departure being marked by a peal of thunder which made even those who +declared themselves fond of such phenomena nearly jump through the +roof of the guard's van. We only got as far as Bank Station, as the +line was reported infested with the enemy, and it was important that +we should not be blown up. Indeed, we had scarcely arrived there, when +a loud explosion--fortunately behind us--proved the activity of our +watchful foes. After making teas we bivouacked in the train. + +The regiment reached Wolverdiend next day, in the course of which the +remainder of the force assembled, preparations being made for an early +start next morning. + +Fearing that information would get through, the Colonel gave orders +that the column would start at 6 a.m., but at the same time issued +confidential orders to officers commanding units that he really +intended to start at 3.30 a.m. Unfortunately, however, it rained so +hard all night that it was impossible to start until 5 a.m. Colonel +Hicks sent Strathcona's Horse out to the front and left flank, while +Brabant's Horse took the right flank and front. The Essex Regiment +supplied the advance-guard, while one company of the Dublin Fusiliers +acted as rearguard and escort to the waggons. In this order the force +approached a low line of bush-covered hills, which separated them from +General Barton. These hills were occupied by two or three hundred +Boers, who had been detailed to check our advance. On arrival within +rifle-range of the hills, Strathcona's Horse made a dash right at +them, the effect of which was so imposing that the enemy immediately +resigned all idea of resistance, and bolted as hard as they could go. +With this range of kopjes in our possession, the rest was plain +sailing, and we marched on to the hill on which the larger part of +General Barton's force was posted. The column had barely arrived when +a fierce rifle-fire broke out in front. It was impossible to see what +was going on, as the hillside was covered with thick mimosa bush, but +that a fierce fight was raging in our close proximity was very evident +from the prolonged and heavy fire, in which the pompoms soon began to +take part, while the naval gun and smaller field-pieces joined in. +Colonel Hicks, accompanied by an officer of the Dublin Fusiliers, then +climbed some little way up the hill in the direction of the 4.7, and +there a sight met their eyes which was seldom seen in this war. The +plain at their feet, stretching from the railway west to the village +of Frederickstadt, was covered with flying Boers--Boers flying on +their feet, a most unusual occurrence with them. As they fled across +the open veld in full view, they were pursued by every variety of +missile. In one spot, seven Boers were running side by side. The +officer with Colonel Hicks had just drawn his attention to them, when +a shell from the naval gun burst in the air behind them, and a second +later tore up the ground all round. Five fell at once; the other two +staggered on a few paces and then fell also, all seven being +afterwards found stone-dead. It was all over in a very short time, and +then the stretcher-bearers began to come in with their patient, +gruesome burdens, and the prisoners arrived under escort, to be +handed over to the Royal Dublin Fusiliers for safe custody. + +[Illustration: Plan of Battle of Frederickstadt.] + +Then we heard the story of the fight. General Barton's position, which +he had occupied for some days, extended along a line of low hills, the +two main features of which were divided by a valley running back at +right angles to the railway into the Gatsrand, the general line of the +position being parallel with the railway. The station was held and +used as a hospital, while the hill on which General Barton's camp was +situated extended down to the railway, and was the nearest point to +the river. For some days the Boers, under De Wet, had been gathering +round this position, and the force had been subjected to a constant +shell-fire and the intermittent attentions of a particularly +aggressive and unlocatable pompom. Under the railway, about midway +between General Barton's two main positions, ran a small, dry donga. +Into this underfeature De Wet had ordered about 200 men on the night +of the 24th-25th. The first indication of their presence was a +somewhat foolish attempt made by them to capture some mules. Unaware +of their numbers--and truly the situation was such that any one could +be pardoned for not grasping it at once--a company or part of a +company was sent forward to dislodge them and clear up matters. The +Boers allowed them to approach quite close, and then annihilated them. +It was now very evident that the donga was held in force, and, as the +General was aware by this time of the arrival of Colonel Hicks' +column, he launched a vigorous attack. This was the heavy firing we +heard on our arrival. After offering a slight resistance, some of the +enemy surrendered, the remainder flying on foot as already stated to +their horses, which they had left amongst the trees near the river. It +is not often the Boer leaves his horse thus, and it offered strong +presumptive evidence of their confidence in their ability to rush the +position, in accordance with De Wet's intention. + +The battalion bivouacked on the hill, and threw out outposts. To them +was also assigned next morning the intensely unpleasant duty of +shooting three prisoners who had been tried and found guilty of +showing the white flag and afterwards resuming their fire. 'G' +company, being the nearest piquet to the place selected for the +execution, was detailed to carry it out. The casualties on our side +had been about forty-one killed and wounded, while twenty-four Boers +were killed, sixteen wounded, and twenty-six taken prisoner. + +[Illustration: Sergeant French and the Officers' Mess, Nachtmaal.] + +After remaining at Frederickstadt on the 26th, orders came for our +return to Krugersdorp on the 27th. We had an uneventful march to +Wolverdiend, and there entrained, reaching our destination late in the +evening. The officers, as usual, rode in the guard's van, and, as +these trains used to bump and jolt in the most unpleasant manner, we +made ourselves as comfortable as we could in a sort of 'zariba' +composed of our valises and a number of large packages sewn up in +sackcloth. Our feelings when we later on discovered that these +packages were corpses may be left to the imagination. + +We returned to our last camp, and set to work to make it more +comfortable, running up wood and corrugated-iron shelters for stores, +officers' mess, &c. We were also kept perpetually busy in building +more forts and improving those already in existence. Captain Romer +gave his name to a work which he erected and on which he expended much +time, pains, and ingenuity. Posts and piquets also had to be held on +all the principal roads into the town. Captain Nelson, R.M.L.I., in +command of one of these, one afternoon shouted to two men who were +driving through his posts to stop. Unfortunately for them, they paid +no attention and drove on, so he seized a rifle and fired, killing one +of the occupants stone-dead, an exemplary lesson to the inhabitants to +make them understand that outposts were not posted for amusement. + +General Clements' column was now stationed at Krugersdorp, and we saw +something of Captain MacBean, Royal Dublin Fusiliers, his +Brigade-Major. Alas! poor MacBean; he was killed a few days later, +standing close beside his General, at the battle of Nooitgedacht. A +universal favourite, and one of the most popular officers in the +regiment, he was also probably the ablest. Passing brilliantly into +and through the Staff College, he went on to the Egyptian Army, taking +part in all the principal actions up to and including the battle of +Omdurman, receiving a D.S.O. in recognition of his services. In the +present campaign he had commenced the war as a Brigade-Major, later on +serving on General Hunter's staff, and now transferred to General +Clements', who had the highest opinion of his capabilities. Amongst +many other accomplishments he was one of the best bridge-players in +the service. There is little doubt that if he had been spared he would +have risen to the highest rank. He was gazetted to a Brevet-Majority +after his death. + +On November 15th Lord Roberts inspected the regiment, and +congratulated them on the work they had done, afterwards speaking to +Major English and telling him how highly he had thought of the +Zuikerbosch affair. It is these little acts of kindness and +remembrance that make all the difference, and their effect is much +more far-reaching than those who confer them often imagine. One only +does one's duty, of course, but yet one is only human, and it is very +pleasant to feel that that duty has been appreciated. + +Captain Lowndes, the adjutant, who had been home after his severe +wound at Talana, now rejoined the regiment, and took over the +adjutancy from Captain Fetherstonhaugh. That officer had filled the +post with marked zeal and ability for over twelve months, and was the +only officer who was present with the Headquarters of the battalion +from the start of the war without being wounded. + +On November 16th the regiment formed part of a column,[18] ordered to +march off and scour the veld, though our destination was, as usual, +shrouded in mystery. The night of the 15th-16th however, precluded any +possibility of carrying out the intended early start, as the rain +descended in torrents, deluging kits and country. At about 2 p.m., +however, a start was effected, and all went well till a small drift +was reached, when the 'cow-gun,' which had taken the place of our old +and tried friend, the Naval gun, stuck hopelessly. Colonel Hicks fell +out 120 men and put them on to the drag-ropes. Their first pull was +too much for the rope, which broke, with the inevitable result that +the whole 120 were deposited on the veld, on the broad of their backs. +Another and a stouter rope was produced, which proved itself equal to +the strain, and with a long pull, a strong pull, and a pull all +together, the heavy weapon was dragged on to _terra firma_, and the +march resumed, a halt being made for the night about eight or nine +miles out, and almost on the historic site of Doornkop. + + [Footnote 18: South Wales Borderers, Royal Dublin Fusiliers, + 28th Battery, R.F.A., 4.7 inch gun, mounted details.] + +The trek was resumed next morning under more favourable auspices, but +these soon proved a delusion and a snare. The column was making for a +pass in the Gatsrand, not far from the waterworks, known to be in the +enemy's occupation, when at about 11 o'clock a violent thunderstorm +broke directly overhead. Marching along, soaked to the skin, with a +lightning-conductor in the shape of a rifle over one's shoulder, was +not conducive to steady nerves, but so dense was the rain that it had, +at all events, one beneficial effect, for the Boers holding the pass +left their positions and took shelter in some farmhouses, with the +result that they were very nearly captured by our cavalry, who, +indeed, succeeded in taking possession of the pass without opposition, +the enemy, taken completely by surprise, having only just time to jump +on their horses and gallop off. Getting the 'cow-gun' over the pass, +however, was no easy matter, but it was eventually accomplished, and +after a march of about sixteen miles, the force halted for the night +in rather a pretty camp, on a farm known as Hartebeestfontein. + +[Illustration: 4.7 Crossing a Drift, assisted by the Dublin +Fusiliers.] + +The column marched to Klip River, about seventeen miles, next day, +arriving there about 5 p.m. The rearguard was sniped at the whole way +by our friends of the day before, but without effecting much damage. +A cavalry brigade under Brigadier-General Gordon was here on our +arrival, and an exchange of troops took place, we receiving some Greys +and Carabineers in exchange for half a battalion of South Wales +Borderers. + +A halt was now made for a day, most of us taking the opportunity to +get a bathe in the river. + +Leaving Klip River on the morning of the 20th, we marched back in the +direction whence we had come two days before, and were soon engaged +with the enemy's snipers, of whom we captured one; but they had the +best of the argument, as they killed two of our column. One of these +poor fellows had very bad luck: he had received a letter at Klip River +only the day before, telling him he had come into a sum of money, +sufficient to enable him to retire and spend the remainder of his days +in peace and quiet. + +Nor was the day to prove uneventful for the rest of us. About 1 p.m. +it began to cloud over, and presently to rain; this soon turned into +hail, of the variety which one is accustomed to at home. This was at +first refreshing, and one would pick up the cool hailstones--they were +about as big as peas--and eat them, and the rattle they made on the +helmets was quite musical. When they grew to the size of gooseberries, +and began to sting, they provided less amusement, shoulders being +shrugged up and necks arched to obtain as much protection as possible. +The unfortunate dogs, of which a variety invariably turned up with +every column, howled with pain, and the cattle and horses grew very +restive. But soon the stones, driven by a gale of wind, increased to +the size of cherries and strawberries, with occasional jagged lumps of +ice an inch in diameter. As there seemed no particular reason why they +should not run through the whole gamut of the orchard, and rival +plums, peaches, and melons, and as there was no earthly chance of +obtaining a vestige of shelter of any kind, men began to wonder what +was going to happen next, with an occasional sharper-than-usual belt +between the shoulders or on the boot to quicken their fancy. It was +only with the greatest difficulty that the horses were controlled, but +the stones providentially grew no larger, though the storm continued. +The entire country-side was a rolling mass of ice nearly over the tops +of boots. Runnels and rivulets became roaring torrents, roads became +rivers. When the storm eventually subsided the transport of course +could not go another yard, and camp was pitched where we were. The +carpet of hailstones in the tents slowly melted into mud, and we made +ourselves as comfortable as possible under the circumstances. Several +kids and lambs we had with us were killed by the stones. Not one of us +had ever been out in such a storm before, but, as those who had not +been on 'the Natal side' confidently predicted, those who had been +declared that this was mere child's play to the hailstones they had +seen there. + +What became of the Boers we never knew: up to the commencement of the +storm we had been merrily sniping away at each other at extreme +ranges, but during and after it they entirely disappeared, so entirely +that even next day we never got a sign of them, and concluded they had +all been drowned. + +There was, however, nothing to complain of on this score the day +after, as sniping was carried on all the time. Though this form of +fighting resulted in few casualties, it was destructive to peace and +comfort and enjoyment of the scenery. It was interesting to notice +what officers recognised when we arrived at places we had visited on +previous treks, and instructive to note that it was almost always +those who were addicted to sport and field-pursuits who were the first +to pick up their bearings and the lie of the land. The force +eventually encamped at the foot of the hill on which 'G' company had +spent such a cold and miserable night when waiting for the transport +to pass, two months before. + +On the 23rd, the march took us up again through Orange Grove and on +past Leeuwport Nek, moving along the south side of the main ridge of +the Gatsrand, with three companies making the best of their way along +their jagged peaks. Two of Roberts' Horse were hit on this march, one +being killed. + +The column reached Buffelsdoorn Pass on the 24th, after a spirited +rearguard action, the brunt of which fell on the South Wales +Borderers, who had several men and one officer hit. We remained in +this pass for some days, sending out small expeditions among the +adjacent hills, and erecting fortifications to cover the defile. It +was in its way an important place, being within a few miles of +Wolverdiend Station, and providing an excellent door through the +rocky, serrated peaks of the Gatsrand into the broad plain which lay +between them and the Vaal. Our camp was situated just on the north +side of the pass, in a picturesque place, with easy access to the +railway, and from a tactical point of view an excellent position. + +Next day a convoy with nearly ten thousand cattle, sheep, &c., was +dispatched to Wolverdiend, without seeing any signs of the enemy. + +The night of the 25th-26th could scarcely have been worse; heavy rain, +howling wind, and vivid and frequent lightning with its sonorous +accompaniment, put sleep out of the question; indeed, at one period it +became necessary to get up and hold on to the tents to prevent them +being blown away. With the advent of dawn the forces of nature gave us +a rest, our friends the enemy immediately filling their place. They +opened fire from some kopjes to the east of the camp, and endeavoured +to round up some of our cattle. The South Wales Borderers undertook to +dislodge them, and speedily did so, the 'Cow-gun' joining in at long +range as soon as the Boers evacuated their positions. Having disposed +of man for the time being, Nature again rolled up in dense masses of +magnificent clouds to the attack. The storm which followed was also +one to be remembered; the lightning could be seen striking the ground +in the close vicinity of the camp, and though no one was hit, we heard +that two men of the regiment at Kaalfontein were not so fortunate, one +poor fellow being killed and the other severely wounded. 'C' company, +2nd Royal Dublin Fusiliers, was on piquet through both these night and +day storms, and had, as may be imagined, an unenviable experience. + +On the 27th, General Hart rode down to Wolverdiend to see Sir John +French. While he was away, word arrived that a party of Roberts' Horse +who were out scouting had been held up. Colonel Wilson--the senior +officer in camp--detailed 100 Carabineers to go to their assistance, +but they found the opposition still too great, so two companies of the +regiment were sent out to reinforce them, while the guns opened fire +from the summits of the hills. In the middle of the operations a +thunderstorm joined in to swell the general din, under cover of which +the Boers crept in round three sides of the force. There was never any +question of their succeeding in cutting it off, but the boldness of +their tactics was characteristic of the phase the war had now begun to +assume. There was a good deal of rifle-fire on both sides, and the +28th Battery R.F.A., under its new commander, who had replaced our +esteemed friend, Major Stokes, D.S.O., promoted to R.H.A., fired +nearly one hundred rounds. What casualties the enemy suffered was not +ascertained, but on our side there was only one, a man in Roberts' +Horse being badly hit. Those of us who were not engaged sat among the +rocks on the tops of the hills, whence a fine panoramic view of the +skirmish was obtainable by the aid of telescopes and binoculars. + +The 28th and 29th passed uneventfully, Captain Romer occupying the +time in again demonstrating his architectural capabilities in the +erection of a fort near the pass. + +[Illustration: Boy Fitzpatrick waiting at Lunch.] + +On the 30th a reconnaissance in force was made along the Gatsrand in a +westerly direction, the left half-battalion of the Royal Dublin +Fusiliers acting as the infantry of the force. Moving along the +summits of the hills in four lines of widely extended companies, they +marched to within sight of Frederickstadt before they returned. +Imagine exaggerated Pyramids of Cheops; imagine each block of stone +carved by stress of weather into a thousand needle-points and +ankle-twisting crevices; plant a dense growth of mimosa and other +thorny scrub in every cranny and interstice. Take a dozen such +pyramids, and do your morning constitutional over them, after the +scrappiest of breakfasts at 5 a.m., and you will find twelve or +fourteen miles quite as much as you care about. But the march was not +devoid of interest, though we met with no Boers. Small buck, hares, +and partridges were there in sufficient number to afford a good day's +sport under other circumstances, while a profusion of various kinds of +flowers afforded satisfaction to the eye, in strong contrast to the +bare and barkless trunks of trees riven by the frequent storms that +devastate these hills. In one place a most gruesome sight was met +with. Under a small tree beside a tiny stream stood a three-legged +cooking-pot, and round it lay three skeletons, with a scattering of +shrapnel bullets to silently tell the story of the tragedy. Beside one +body lay a Rifleman's haversack, an eloquent if speechless travesty on +the fortunes of war, for undoubtedly they were the remains of Boers, +over whose head a chance shrapnel must have burst months before. + +A similar reconnaissance, but in the opposite direction, was made next +day, resulting in one man being wounded. Convoys were also passing to +and fro, and on the 2nd, Captain Fetherstonhaugh took over the duties +of provost-marshal, temporarily, from Captain Thompson, of the +Somersetshire Light Infantry, who had hurt his knee. Rumours of an +early move also began to circulate, with the Losberg, the grim and +solitary hill rising out of the plain to the south of the Gatsrand, as +our probable destination. For some time past the Boers had used it as +a sort of headquarters and rallying-place for their frequent raiding +parties. Columns were now converging on it from all points of the +compass, but as they could be plainly seen from its summit, the high +hopes entertained in some quarters of rounding up a large number of +the enemy were not shared by everybody. + +Yet the start at 9 p.m. on the 3rd was sufficiently impressive. The +officers were assembled, and had their several duties clearly pointed +out to them, one peak of the hill being assigned to the South Wales +Borderers and the other to the Dublin Fusiliers. To 'A' company of the +latter regiment, under Major English, was given the honour of leading +the attack, which was to be made at dawn next morning. Silently and +with all due precautions the column slowly wound its way down the +pass, like some gigantic boa-constrictor, and out on to the plain +below. Whenever a farm was reached it was entered, and steps taken to +prevent lights being shown or signals flashed: three Boers, booted and +spurred, being taken in one. It was a perfect night for marching, all +Nature hushed in deep repose save the loud-mouthed bull-frog; the moon +set an hour before dawn, reminding one of Whyte-Melville's line: + + 'The darkest hour of all the night is that which brings the day.' + +But dark as it was our objective could be seen ominously looming up--a +lamp-black mass against the velvet softness of starlit sky. The +movement had been admirably timed, and as day broke the two regiments +advanced to the attack, the South Wales Borderers on the right, the +Dublins on the left, while the artillery opened fire against the +hillside between the two summits. But that was all. Not a shot was +fired in return. Not a Boer was even seen. Nothing. Except, indeed, +large quantities of most delicious and most acceptable oranges, after +eating which the tired troops lay in the rain, which commenced to pour +down, and slept peacefully till the transport came up. + +Before we started next morning, a huge herd of blesbok suddenly +appeared on the scene, wildly galloping about in every direction, +being continually brought up by the barbed wire fences of the farms. A +good many were shot, but it was cruel to kill them, or try to, with +hard bullets, and many and many a beast must have got away badly +wounded, whilst the indiscriminate manner in which the sportsmen fired +in all directions was a source of danger, not only to themselves and +the buck, but to the camp as well. One fine old fellow, with a good +head, charged right through the camp, altogether eluding one regiment, +in spite of every variety of missile, from cooking-pots to helmets, to +finally fall a victim in another regiment's lines to a tent-pole. +After which interlude the force marched to Modderfontein. + +Next day a helio from Bank directed the column to make its way to that +station, a party of the South Wales Borderers being left behind to +watch the pass at Modderfontein, where they were to have a rough +experience later on. The remainder of the force moved to Bank on the +7th, and marched again the same night for Krugersdorp, making a total +distance of thirty-three miles in the twenty-four hours, a good +wind-up to the three weeks' trek. An enormous number of cattle and +sheep were brought in, but it was the end of the Pochefstroom column, +which was now finally broken up into a number of small posts. + +[Illustration: 'The Latest Shave.' Captain G. S. Higginson (mounted) +and Major Bird.] + +The regiment camped once more on the same site it had last occupied. + + + + +CHAPTER VI. + +BURIED TREASURE--THE EASTERN TRANSVAAL--THE KRUGERSDORP DEFENCES. + + 'They are wet with the showers of the mountains, and embrace the + rock for want of a shelter.'--_Job_, xxiv. 8. + + +By this time we had begun to regard Krugersdorp as our base, and to +look upon our returns to it as more or less getting home. But on this +occasion there was to be no rest of any length. From the plum-bloom +blue of the far Magaliesberg, General Clements' heliograph was +twinkling and blinking for the remainder of his force and more mounted +men. In addition to this Colonel Hicks took out a column. These and +other deductions left Krugersdorp with a garrison of 300 men to man a +perimeter of some ten or twelve miles, or, roughly speaking, just over +fifty yards for each rifle. 'C' company, under Captain Pomeroy, W.I.R. +(attached), and Lieutenant Molony, occupied Fort Craig; 'D' company, +under Captain Clarke, R.M.L.I. (attached), and Lieutenant Marsh, held +Fort Kilmarnock; and 'G' company, under its Captain and Lieutenant +Smith, took over Fort Harlech. Major Rutherford took over this fort +next day, as the captain of 'G' company had been appointed commander +of the town guards and piquets and interior defences. Colonel Hicks +had been ordered to Johannesburg to see General French, who informed +him that he was to take command of a mixed force[19] and march to the +Losberg, there to dig up a large sum of gold, reputed to amount to +nearly 100,000_l._; after which he was to proceed south to the Vaal, +and hold the drifts between Vereeniging and Rensburg. + + [Footnote 19: 400 Royal Dublin Fusiliers, 200 cavalry, two + guns.] + +Starting at midnight on the 10th-11th, the column marched till 6 a.m., +covering fifteen or sixteen miles. The men then had breakfasts; and, +after resting till mid-day, when they had dinners, started again for +Orange Grove, the pass in the Gatsrand with which we were by this time +so familiar. It was occupied by Boers, estimated at about one hundred +in number, who offered considerable resistance, but who were finally +shelled out of it, without loss on our side, though charged by a +squadron of Carabineers with great dash. Having done about twenty-six +miles, the camp was pitched at 6 p.m., outposts being, of course, +thrown out on the adjacent hills. + +Reveille sounded at 4.30 a.m., and by 5.30 the small column was on the +way again. Their destination was plain enough this time, and very grim +and formidable it looked in the broad light of day, considering the +very small force which was about to attack it. Moreover, on this +occasion it held something besides oranges. Advancing from the north +in the direction of the spot from which we had advanced to the attack +a few days before, Colonel Hicks made a demonstration as though about +to attack the eastern peak, then, suddenly opening a heavy shell fire +on the nek between the two, he launched his real attack against the +other summit. Although the hill was held by a considerable number of +the enemy, estimated at 500, these tactics proved eminently +successful, for when they discovered the direction of the main attack +shrapnel was bursting all over the nek along which they would have had +to gallop to meet it, and they gave up the idea and evacuated the +position, which fell into Colonel Hicks' hand with a loss of one man, +who had the misfortune to be hit in no less than five places. A guide +had been sent with the column who knew where the gold was, and a party +was told off to dig it up and bring it in. The guide may or may not +have known where the gold _was_, but he certainly did not know where +it was _then_, and the search proved entirely abortive. He was a +murderer under sentence of death, and was to save his life by showing +the gold and ten buried guns. + +The force started at 5 a.m. next morning for Lindeque Drift. There was +a certain amount of sniping all the way, principally at the cavalry, +who were riding wide on either flank, collecting cattle and burning +straw and hay, in addition to guarding the flanks. Lindeque was +reached at 5.30 p.m., a camp of our people being in view on the far +bank of the river, with whom communication was opened by signal. The +drift was very deep, but an orderly managed to get across with a +letter. Orders also arrived from General French giving Colonel Hicks +thirty miles of river to watch, which seemed a good deal, considering +the paucity of the numbers at his disposal. + +At 6.30 a.m. a helio message was received calling the column at once +back to Krugersdorp, and a start was made for the return journey at 8 +a.m. The Boers endeavoured all day to cut off the rearguard, but met +with no success, the gunners shelling them whenever they got close +enough to be unpleasant. + +[Illustration: KILMARNOCK. From a sketch by Col. H. Tempest Hicks, C.B.] + +The 15th proved to be almost a repetition of the day before, the enemy +hanging persistently on the flanks and rear of the little column, but +showing no signs of any desire to make their closer acquaintance. +Indeed, that morning Colonel Hicks had prepared a small surprise for +them which fully realised his anticipations. Whenever columns were +moving about it was the invariable custom of the enemy to at once +occupy the vacated camping-ground in search of any odds-and-ends that +might have been left about, but more especially ammunition, which used +to drop out of our men's pouches in surprising quantities, in spite of +the most stringent orders on the subject. On this occasion the Colonel +left a small party in ambush when he moved off, with the result that +when half-a-dozen Boers began rummaging about in the camp they were +suddenly invited to hold their hands up, a request which they had +of necessity to comply with, one of them being a Field-Cornet and a +man of some local importance. A halt was made in sight of Randfontein, +on the slopes of which a column, under Colonel the Hon. Ulick Roche, +could be seen proceeding in the direction of Krugersdorp. Next day was +Dingaan's Day, and rumour stated that the Boers under De la Rey, +flushed with their victory over Clements, were going to attack +Krugersdorp. + +The column marched the remaining fifteen miles by 2.30 p.m. next day +without seeing any sign of the enemy. During the six days they had +been away they had marched 102 miles, skirmished with the enemy nearly +every day, taken a strong position by a fine example of tactics, +captured a good many prisoners, and brought in a large quantity of +cattle, sheep, &c.: a very fine six days' work. + +Since May 30th the headquarters of the battalion had marched well over +1200 miles. On three occasions it had exceeded thirty miles in +twenty-four hours--the record, of course, being the thirty-eight miles +in sixteen hours from Klerkskraal to Pochefstroom in September. But +the most wonderful part of its work was the strange immunity it +experienced from any of the determined attacks which were so +constantly being made on other columns. Whether it was good or bad +luck, good or bad scouting, whatever it was, the fact remained that +with the exception of the almost daily scrapping and sniping, which +constant use had made to appear as part of the day's work, no action +of any importance came our way in spite of the countless marches and +counter-marches we made to bring one on. With the solitary exception +of the afternoon at Frederickstadt, when the Boers dropped a few +shells into our camp, and the two following days, when General +Liebenburg paid a similar attention to the detachment left behind on +the hill, we had not been under shell-fire. + +In the meantime, the disaster to General Clements at Nooitgedacht had +drawn all eyes to the state of Krugersdorp, which with its small +garrison seemed to offer a tempting bait to De la Rey, and column +after column arrived to assist in repelling the assault which was +threatened for Dingaan's Day. Before the reinforcements arrived the +General had taken every sort of precaution; amongst others, arresting +most of the principal inhabitants of the town, and holding them as +hostages. The festival, however, passed without incident, and the tide +of men and horses, guns and waggons, which had reached a record height +in the history of the town, soon began to ebb once more, and then +everything settled down to the quiet, peaceful state of affairs which +almost always characterised Krugersdorp. The band played in the market +square, and concerts were arranged in the town hall, while the General +set a fine example to his troops for their guidance in his treatment +of those of our late enemies who had observed their oaths of +neutrality, as a large number of them most religiously did. Ever +foremost in aggressive tactics in the field until the enemy was +overcome, the General adopted a policy of conciliation at other times +which undoubtedly had far-reaching effects as regarded the conduct of +the inhabitants of Krugersdorp. + +On December 19th, 400 men of the regiment, under Major Bird, started +off to join the force under General French which was going to sweep +the Eastern Transvaal, very much on the same lines that the various +columns had been sweeping the Western Transvaal. Their special duty +was to act as a baggage-guard to the various mounted corps, a duty +which they shared with a battalion of Guards. Their lives for the next +two or three months were very much the same as they had been for the +previous two or three months, though they covered an even greater +number of miles, and, owing to the rains and thunderstorms of the +South African summer, experienced an even harder time. It is the +custom to speak in terms of high praise of the climate of South +Africa, but if the British Army had been consulted on the subject +after some of these treks, it is doubtful if their vocabulary would +have been large enough to enable them to thoroughly ventilate their +opinions. The fact is that the spring, summer, and autumn are ruined +by the desperate storms which are of such common occurrence at those +times of year. There are, it is true, four winter months of glorious +weather: fine, frosty, starlit nights, and clear days of brilliant +sunshine when the heat is never unpleasant. But of these four months, +two are completely ruined by the high winds which sweep the broad +veld, and which, in the vicinity of the mines, fill the air with +minute particles of gritty dust from the waste-heaps, penetrating eyes +and nostrils, throats and lungs. + +The first portion of the trek was, however, spent in the country that +General Hart had been operating in. The following account of some of +their hardships and privations is given by Lieutenant and +Quartermaster Burke:-- + +_With General Knox's Brigade in the sweeping movement by General +French on the eastern side of the Transvaal. Detail of a few orders as +showing the hardships the troops suffered through bad weather and +scarcity of food._ + +Brigade Orders. 'Witcomb, 8.2.01. Owing to the late arrival of the +convoy, the force will go on 2/3 biscuits.' + +This all the time we were marching daily and fighting. + +16.2.01. Our force reached Piet Retief. + +Brigade Orders. '20.2.01. The following will be the scale of rations +until further orders:--2 ozs. rice, 4 ozs. jam, 1/2 lb. mealie meal, +1-1/2 lb. meat. No coffee, tea, biscuits, vegetables, or salt.' + +Orders received from General French:--'Convoy under General +Burn-Murdoch is terribly delayed by swollen rivers and bad roads. The +Pongola is fifty yards and the Intombi 300 yards wide. You must use +your utmost resources to economise food, and so meet this unfortunate +state of affairs, which will assuredly last till the weather +improves. No forage for horses and mules. Send parties for food to +search out as far as ten miles. Kaffirs to receive 1_l._ in gold for a +bag of mealies, or a heifer for five bags.' + +21, 22, 23.2.01. 1 oz. jam, 1/2 lb. mealie meal, 1-1/2 lb. meat, +nothing else. + +24, 25. Same. + +26. No jam, 1/2 lb. mealie meal, 1-1/2 lb. meat, nothing else. I paid +a shopkeeper at Piet Retief 2_s._ 6_d._ for a quarter-handful of salt. + +Brigade Orders. 27.2.01. By General French: 'O.C. units will take +steps to let the troops know how highly their spirits and bearing +under the privations they are suffering from bad weather and short +rations are appreciated by the Lieutenant-General Commanding.' + +27.2.01. Burnt mealie cobs issued for coffee. + +Telegram from Lord Kitchener to General French, Piet Retief, +28.2.01:--'Explain to the troops under your command my admiration of +the excellent work they have performed, and the difficulties they have +overcome.' + +8.3.01. Full rations, first issue since 14.2.01. + +To show that the troops, besides suffering from frightful bad weather +(constant rain for a month), had to work hard, the following results +are shown. + +General Orders. The following results of our operations since 27.1.01, +is published for officers and men:-- + +_Boers_, killed, wounded, and captured, 393; surrendered, 353. Total +accounted for, 746. + +_Cannon_ taken, excluding a maxim, 4. + +_Rifles_, 606. _Ammunition_, 161,630. + +_Horses and mules_, 6504. _Trek oxen_, 362. + +_Other cattle_, 20,986. _Sheep_, 158,130. + +_Waggons and carts_, 1604. + +_Mealies and oat hay_, over 4,000,000 lbs. + + H. BURKE, LT. + +Colonel Hicks now set every one to work improving the various posts +round Krugersdorp, setting a fine example to all by the interest he +took in the work, and showing his thoroughness by the attention he +devoted to even the most trivial details. He also took infinite pains +to make Christmas as pleasant as he could for every one. The regiment +was, of course, very much split up in the various forts and fortified +houses, but headquarters still remained till the end of the year in +our old camping-ground. + +On the very last day of the year an escort of forty men returning to +Krugersdorp had a near shave of being cut off; they lost four men +captured, and would assuredly have lost more but for the prompt action +of Major English, who went out from Kilmarnock with twenty men to help +them in. + +So ended 1900. It had been a hard year for every one, but one and all +had done their best, and no sign of failing spirits was visible +anywhere. It was difficult to see anything like an end to the +campaign, however, for the process of attrition, which now seemed the +sole solution, was necessarily a slow one, and considerably interfered +with by the various 'regrettable incidents' that occurred from time to +time in the huge theatre of the war. These not only assisted our +indomitable foes with extra supplies of clothing, arms, ammunition, +&c., but also had the effect of keeping up their _morale_. + +On January 4th, 1901, the 400 men under Major Bird passed through on +their way to Elandsfontein, but nobody knew about the move in time to +go up to the station and see them. + +Large bodies of the enemy were now known to be in the neighbourhood, +and a spy came in saying that it was an open secret among the Boers +that Krugersdorp was De la Rey's objective as soon as a favourable +opportunity should present itself. In spite of this it was difficult +to make the danger of going beyond the outposts appreciated, and this +resulted in the death of one of our men, Private Hyland, servant to +one of the clergymen. It was supposed that the poor fellow had gone +out in a cape-cart with the object of getting some flowers for the +church; his body was found on the 8th simply riddled with bullets, as +was also that of the Cape-boy who had driven him. + +On the 10th, Major Pilson, Royal Dublin Fusiliers, one of the first +officers selected to proceed to South Africa on special service before +the war, arrived--not, unfortunately, to join the regiment, but the +South African Constabulary. + +On the 11th the enemy blew up the railway just beyond Roodeport, the +first station out of Krugersdorp on the way to Pochefstroom. +Lieutenant Marsh and twenty men of the regiment were sent out as +escort to guard the Engineers who repaired it. + +The storms continued to be very severe. Kilmarnock House was struck by +lightning, and the sentry on guard at the Court House in the town sent +spinning, fortunately only receiving a severe shaking. + +On the 23rd the sad news of the death of Her Majesty Queen Victoria +was made known to the troops, by whom it was received in deep and +impressive silence. + +A salute was fired by the Artillery on the 24th with plugged shell, to +celebrate the Accession of King Edward VII. + +At the end of the month General Hart left us. The regiment had been +continuously under his command since the formation of the Irish +Brigade; officers and men alike had learned to entertain a deep +respect and admiration for their General, than whom no braver man ever +went into action. He on his part loved the regiment, and fully +appreciated the _esprit de corps_ which permeated it, from the Colonel +to the last-joined recruit. His farewell letter to Colonel Hicks, +another on the subject of our camping arrangements, and his farewell +order to his brigade, may all be found in the Appendix, and afford +proof of his regard for his troops and the spirit which he breathed +into them. + +Colonel Groves took over command of Krugersdorp and its defences, and +gave Colonel Hicks a free hand: he also rode round the inner defences +with the commander of the town-guards and piquets, and arranged for +their being made stronger also. + +In spite of the presence of a good many of our columns, the enemy was +very active all over the Magaliesberg and the Gatsrand at this time. +It will be remembered that on the return from the Klip River trek, a +party of the South Wales Borderers had been left to watch the +Modderfontein Pass. + +This small force was now surrounded and being fiercely attacked, and +offering as determined a resistance. A force was hastily organized to +proceed to their relief, under command of Colonel the Hon. U. Roche, +of the South Wales Borderers. With half or more of the battalion away +under Major Bird, we could only supply 180 men, under command of +Captain Shewan, for this column. + +They marched that night, and the following morning found all the hills +for ten miles held by the enemy, Colonel Roche wiring in that the +Boers were in too great force for his column to proceed. Indeed, the +column had to fight hard enough to maintain its position and to save +itself from being surrounded. General Conyngham, hastily gathering +together another 500 men and a battery, marched off to reinforce +Colonel Roche, but before they could get to the unfortunate post at +Modderfontein, it had fallen to superior numbers. The Boers, who were +under the command of General Smuts, sent in a flag of truce, giving +notice of the capture of the post, stating that there were many +British wounded, and suggesting that an ambulance and doctors should +be sent out to them. This incident was very hard lines on a most +gallant regiment, and in no way reflects adversely on them for one +instant. They defended their position splendidly as long as defence +was possible, and suffered greatly from want of water as well as from +the enemy's fire. Colonel Roche reported that Captain Shewan and his +men had done very well, and had held a hill on the left of his +position, until he recalled them. + +Colonel Hicks never for a moment remitted his exertions in the +fortifying of the various posts and houses in the section of the +command for which he was responsible, with the result that he very +soon had them in a most efficient state. Ammunition, food, and water, +in sufficient quantities to withstand a regular siege, were stored in +each post, while the wire entanglements would have effectually +precluded any attempt on the part of the enemy to rush them. Indeed, +no precautions were omitted, and one began to enjoy one's sleep +considerably more than had been the case for some months past. + +On the 7th, the headquarters of the regiment at last moved into +Kilmarnock, a house which had belonged to a Mr. Burger, a brother of +Mr. Schalk Burger, the acting President. Here they remained until the +regiment left for Aden in January 1902. + +[Illustration: The Hairdresser's Shop.] + + + + +CHAPTER VII. + +THE LAST TWELVE MONTHS. + + 'In the morning thou shalt say, Would God it were even! and at + even thou shalt say, Would God it were morning!'--_Deut._ xxviii. + 67. + + +[Illustration: Kilmarnock, Krugersdorp.] + +With the occupation of Kilmarnock by the headquarters of the regiment +arrived the third and last phase of the war. It had begun with four +months' hard fighting, continued with twelve months' hard marching, +and was to end with twelve months of weary escorts to convoys, +occupation of blockhouses, and garrison work generally. It was, +perhaps, in its way, the most trying period of the three, for in +addition to unceasing vigilance there was added the dead monotony of +week after week in the same place, surrounded by the same faces, and +feeding on the same indifferent food. One was buoyed up by the reports +published from time to time of the hauls of prisoners made by the +various columns, but there was always some pessimist handy to discount +one's hopes, and even though the result proved their dismal croakings +more or less correct, they might have had the grace, even if they had +not the common sense, to keep their miserable opinions to themselves. +Thank goodness there were not many of these gentlemen in the regiment. +Throughout the war I only heard one man grumble sulkily, and only +heard of one man who paid too great a regard to the use of cover. The +high tone with which the war had been entered upon was maintained to +the very end, and if the regimental officer came out of it with +credit, the N.C.O. and private soldier did every bit as well. +Hardship, fatigue, stress of weather--everything was accepted as part +of the general day's work, and as such cheerfully met and thoroughly +done. + +Lieutenants B. Maclear and J. P. B. Robinson joined about this time, +the former a brother of Percy Maclear, Adjutant of the 1st Battalion. + +In spite of all the work, however, time was yet found for a certain +amount of play, the exercise of which was very beneficial. Cricket +matches were played against the town, the S.A.C., and amongst ourselves, +and later on football matches against the town and other regiments. We +proved more successful at the latter game than the former: not to be +wondered at, seeing that two of our officers--Lieutenants Maclear and +Newton--were later on to become International three-quarter backs, the +former playing for Ireland and the latter for England. + +Lieutenant Knox joined on March 23rd, having been detained nine months +through illness on the way up. + +In March, Major-General Mildmay Willson, a Guardsman, took over from +Colonel Groves the command, which now became 'the District West of +Johannesburg.' + +On April 17th, Major English proceeded to Bank in command of a small +mixed force (one hundred Royal Dublin Fusiliers) to try and catch a +Boer force who had been for some time hovering round that station. He +returned on the 19th, having seen no Boers. + +On the 21st, Captain Watson, formerly in the regiment, came to see us. +He was then Adjutant of the Scottish Horse, and was shortly afterwards +killed at Moedwil. He had distinguished himself on many occasions, and +had received special promotion into the Lancashire Fusiliers. + +On the 30th, Major Bird and his half-battalion at last got back. They +had done a lot of marching and good work in the Eastern Transvaal with +General French's columns, but had not had much fighting. They all +seemed glad to be back; it is always satisfactory to have the regiment +together, as we have a feeling of dependence on one another that one +cannot have when working with other troops, however good they may be. + +On May 3rd Captain Kinsman, Royal Dublin Fusiliers, came to see the +battalion. He was then in the S.A.C. He had been badly wounded some +time ago, having been with the force under General Plumer since the +beginning of the war, and present at the relief of Mafeking, and had +seen a deal of fighting. + +On May 7th Lieutenant Seymour joined the regiment, in which his father +had also served. + +On May 25th a force[20] went out to escort the S.A.C. to a fort they +were to build. The column was under command of Colonel Hicks, and +almost immediately met with opposition, the Scottish Horse, on the +left, coming in for a good deal of sniping. Sending out his mounted +men well ahead, and occupying a ridge in front with the Worcesters, +the Colonel then rode on with Colonel Edwardes, S.A.C., to select a +spot for the erection of the work. The only casualties were two men +wounded and five horses killed, and the force then bivouacked on the +positions they held. Next day building was commenced on a small fort +and three blockhouses, the building parties being sniped for some time +until a detachment of the regiment under Captain Fetherstonhaugh and +Lieutenant Maclear went out and drove the Boers away. By the 27th the +fort and posts were nearly completed, the enemy still hovering round +the neighbourhood, and next day the column returned to Krugersdorp, +meeting and dispersing a few Boers on the way back. + + [Footnote 20: 400 Royal Dublin Fusiliers, 100 Worcestershire + Regiment, 200 S.A.C., 220 Scottish Horse, two guns.] + +[Illustration: A Blockhouse.] + +On June 3rd Colonel Hicks took over command of the Krugersdorp +sub-district, as Colonel Groves was down with measles, as was also +Lieutenant Bradford--an extraordinary disease for a man of the +Colonel's time of life. + +On the 15th of June Colonel Groves handed over the Krugersdorp +sub-district to Brigadier-General Barker, R.E. Before leaving he said +some very nice things about the regiment, and we on our part were +sorry to lose him, as he had always had a good opinion of the +battalion, and had assisted the Colonel in his endeavours to put +Krugersdorp in a thorough state of defence. + +On the 27th Lieutenant Frankland, 2nd Royal Dublin Fusiliers, came to +see us. It will be remembered that he was taken prisoner at the very +beginning of the war in the armoured-train disaster. Since the capture +of Pretoria he had been occupied on the line of communications. He +told us that Lieutenant Le Mesurier had probably never got over the +exposure to which he was subjected during his escape from Pretoria and +on his long march to Delagoa Bay, as he no sooner got over one attack +of fever than he was down with another. He also gave us an account of +the escape, which was a most gallant affair, and in the light of what +has since happened to the only other officers who escaped--Captain +Haldane and Mr. Winston Churchill--it seems hard luck that Le Mesurier +should have received nothing. He added that Lieutenant Grimshaw had +been attached to the Mounted Infantry since the relief, and that +Captain Lonsdale had got into the Staff College. + +On July 1st two convoys went out, one under Major English and the +other under Captain Fetherstonhaugh, not returning until the 6th. The +remainder of the month brought forth nothing novel, however, and was +spent in strengthening posts and escorting convoys. + +August also passed uneventfully, but on September 16th Colonel Hicks +was given command of a mixed force some 1000 strong, 170 of whom +belonged to the regiment, with orders to move along through the same +old Gatsrand country, visit posts, burn farms, collect cattle, &c., +&c. He marched accordingly, but met with little opposition until well +inside the hilly country, where some sniping took place. After a +fortnight's trek he arrived in Pochefstroom, where he found General +Willson, who informed him that he was to succeed General Barker in +command of the Krugersdorp sub-district. He returned to that place on +the 30th, only to find a wire ordering him to go back for the present +to his column and to move to a place on the Vaal south of Pochefstroom +and turn out a Boer force which was occasioning considerable trouble. +Colonel Hicks by a rapid march anticipated the Boers at a pass leading +into this valley, their commander, George Hall, afterwards declaring +that this step saved us a hundred men, as he had determined to hold +the pass till the last. + +On October 5th he encountered a force of Boers who were prepared to +dispute the ownership of some cattle with him, but he had little +difficulty in convincing them that under the circumstances might was +undoubtedly right. On the 6th the seven-pounder gun lost by the S.A.C. +was recovered, and George Hall, a prominent Boer leader, captured. The +Colonel induced him to send a letter out to his commando advising them +to give in, which resulted in twenty-two of them surrendering at +Pochefstroom a few days later. In addition to this the column captured +about fifteen prisoners and brought or sent in very large quantities +of stock, mealies, cattle, &c. The Colonel got back to Krugersdorp on +the 12th, having returned by train to take over his command. + +Lieutenants Frankland and Weldon of ours were present at the fight at +Bakenlaagte, when Colonel Benson was killed, and had a hot time of it. +Our mounted infantry lost two killed and six wounded. The following +description is supplied by Lieutenant Weldon:-- + + +THE ROYAL DUBLIN FUSILIERS MOUNTED INFANTRY AT BAKENLAAGTE. + +On the afternoon preceding the move from Zwakfontein, where Colonel +Benson's column was camped, I was ordered to escort Lieutenant Biggs, +R.E., to a drift some miles away on the road to Bakenlaagte: this we +accomplished, bringing back one prisoner, whom we took near the drift. +At daybreak on the following morning our outposts were attacked before +the column had moved out of camp, and the rearguard action commenced. +Our mounted infantry formed the right and left flank guards to the +light transport, the right under Lieutenant Grimshaw, and the left +under Lieutenants Frankland and Weldon. The enemy did not pay much +attention to us at first, but after going a little way I galloped with +my section to take possession of a small kopje which commanded the +route. The Boers made a simultaneous dash for it, resulting in a +spirited race, in which we proved victors, having been expedited on +the way by two 'belts' from our own pompom. On gaining the hill we at +once poured a heavy fire into our opponents, who withdrew. In the +meantime considerable difficulty was experienced in getting the +transport over the drift, which gave the Boers time to get round us. +Eventually, however, most of it was got across and the march resumed. +On nearing camp our mounted infantry closed in a bit, when we were +suddenly fired on from a farmhouse flying the Red Cross flag, and +sustained five or six casualties. We were detailed to a section of the +defence of Bakenlaagte, which was practically surrounded. We lay down +on the slopes with our heads downhill, and kept the enemy well away, +taking the opportunity to improvise some sort of head-cover whenever +their fire slackened. Although we fully expected an attack in the +night, or at dawn, none was made, there being no sign of the enemy +next day. + + KENNETH WELDON. + +On December 6th Captain Romer took over the appointment of C.S.O., +Krugersdorp Sub-District, from our old friend, Captain Hart, who was +appointed to General Knox's staff. We were very sorry to lose him, as +from first to last he had done his best to oblige all, and during his +term of office made friends with everybody. + +On the 9th Lieutenant Britton and fifty men of the regiment proceeded +to Middelvlei to relieve a party of the Border regiment. + +On the 17th Lieutenant Robinson had to perform the +unpleasant duty of carrying out the sentence of death on a Boer +prisoner, who had been tried and condemned for shooting three of our +men after having surrendered. + +General Cooper arrived on the 19th, to say good-bye to the regiment, +as he was on his way home. He brought the very welcome intelligence +that we were shortly to be relieved, but of course this was only made +known to the Colonel at the time. + +Lieutenant Renny, who had been A.D.C. to General Cooper, rejoined on +the 27th, and brought further rumours to the effect that the regiment +was shortly to leave the country, and as orders had come to get in all +our employed men, and men from forts, blockhouses, and stations all +over the country, it began to look as if there was some truth in the +rumours. + +On the very last day of 1901 a severe thunderstorm passed right over +headquarters, two of our men being struck by lightning. + + +1902. + +On the first day of the New Year the order for the battalion to leave +South Africa arrived at the brigade office, its destination being +Gibraltar, the best of the Mediterranean stations; but next day a wire +arrived cancelling the move. + +On the 5th, however, Lord Kitchener passed through Krugersdorp, when +the Colonel saw him and ascertained that the regiment was to go to +Aden. + +At 8.30 p.m. on the 11th, part of the 1st Battalion Royal Dublin +Fusiliers, under Majors Shadforth and Gordon, Captains Swift and +Maclear, and Lieutenant Le Mesurier, with some other officers, arrived +to take over the defences from the 2nd Battalion. + +On the 14th, 300 of the 1st Battalion, under Major Gordon, proceeded +down the Pochefstroom line to take over the posts at present held by +us. + +[Illustration: KRUGERSDORP from Kilmarnock House. Shewing the Gold +mines Monument, Camps &c. From a sketch by Col. H. Tempest Hicks, +C.B.] + +On the 20th, Captains Kinsman and Rowlands (now serving in the S.A.C.) +arrived to say good-bye, and on the 23rd, Colonel Mills and Major +Bromilow, 1st Battalion, arrived. + +[Illustration: The 'Blue Caps' relieving the 'Old Toughs.'] + +On January 26th the regiment fell in for the last time at Kilmarnock, +and marched through Krugersdorp to the station. They had made many +friends during their stay, and the entire town, Boers as well as +Britons, turned out and enthusiastically cheered the corps as it +marched out of the town it had first marched into on June 19th, 1900. +The night was spent at the railway station, and a start made at 4 a.m. +on the 27th. A good view of Talana, from a distance of about five +miles, was obtained on the morning of the 28th, and it may easily be +imagined with what mixed feelings our thoughts flew back to that grey +morning of October 20th, 1899, and our well-loved comrades who had +given their lives to gain that gallant victory. Ladysmith was reached +about 1 p.m., and Maritzburg in the small hours of the 29th, which was +unfortunate, as the regiment had so many friends there. In spite of +the hour, however, a large number of the inhabitants were on the +platform with various small presents of cigarettes, &c., for the men. +Durban was reached a few hours later, when an illuminated address was +presented to the regiment, as well as refreshments to officers and +men, after which the battalion embarked on board the S.S. _Sicilian_ +for conveyance to Aden. + + + + +PART III. + + + + +CHAPTER I. + +THE ADEN HINTERLAND + + 'For this relief much thanks.' + + _Hamlet._ + + +The voyage from Durban to Aden was a welcome change, but quite +uneventful, with the exception of one sad event, the death of Sergeant +Pearson, who had embarked in a state of collapse, with little or no +prospect of recovery. He was a most promising N.C.O., and his father +had served in the regiment before him. Aden was reached on February +11th, 1902, and the battalion disembarked that afternoon. + +The year passed without any incident calling for remark, and on +October 1st the following notice appeared in battalion orders:--'It is +notified for general information that the battalion will leave Aden +for home in H.M.T. _Syria_, on or about the 11th of February, arriving +home on 24th February, 1903.' 'There is many a slip 'twixt the cup and +the lip,' however, and the old adage was once more to be exemplified. + +For some time past rumours of approaching trouble with regard to the +delimitation of the Turkish frontier in the Hinterland had been rife. +A force of Turkish troops was encamped near Dthala, about one hundred +and ten miles from Aden, and the Sultan of Dthala finally appealed to +the British for support. The result was that instead of going home, a +column was organized under the command of Brevet-Lieutenant-Colonel F. +P. English, 2nd Royal Dublin Fusiliers, to watch the frontier. + +The following is an extract from the Aden District Orders:-- + + +DISTRICT ORDERS BY LIEUTENANT-COLONEL H. T. HICKS, C.B., 2ND ROYAL +DUBLIN FUSILIERS, COMMANDING ADEN DISTRICT. + + No. 450. _Aden, Friday, December 12th, 1902._ + +In supersession of previous instructions, a column composed as under +will be held in readiness to proceed, on field-service scale, from +Aden into the interior of Arabia:-- + +In Command: Lieutenant-Colonel F. P. English, 2nd Royal Dublin +Fusiliers. + + Staff Officer: Major S. M. Edwards, D.S.O., 2nd Bombay Grenadiers. + + Supply and Transport Officer: Captain W. C. W. Harrison, Supply and + Transport Corps. + + Staff Medical Officer: Captain I. A. O. MacCarthy, Royal Army Medical + Corps. + + 2nd Royal Dublin Fusiliers (including section of maxim gun and twelve + signallers) 225 N.C.O.'s and men. + + No. 45 company, Royal Garrison Artillery + (with two seven-pounder + mountain guns and four nine-pounders) 80 " + + {25 horsemen. + Aden Troop {12 camelmen. + + 2nd Bombay Grenadiers A double company. + + Section A. No. 16 British Field Hospital. + " " 68 Native " " + +If the column is required to move out, they will be joined _en route_ +(if necessary) by a detachment of No. 3 company Bombay Sappers and +Miners. + + (By Order) C. H. U. PRICE, _Major_, + _D.A.A.G. Aden District_. + +The following officers of the regiment accompanied the +column:--Lieutenant Haskard, Lieutenant Wheeler, Lieutenant Smith, +Second Lieutenant Tredennick, Second Lieutenant W. F. Higginson. + +The following standing orders are quoted in full, as they give a good +idea of the scope of the operations, the difficulties likely to be met +with, and the precautions taken to overcome those difficulties:-- + + +COLUMN STANDING ORDERS BY LIEUTENANT-COLONEL F. P. ENGLISH, COMMANDING +ADEN COLUMN. + + _December 24th, 1902._ + +1. _Water._--It is anticipated that in all probability it will be +difficult to obtain good drinking water in sufficient quantities on +some of the marches into the interior. All ranks are therefore +cautioned to husband their drinking water as much as possible. Troops +and followers should be forbidden to draw water from the camel tanks +without permission from the officer in charge, and be cautioned +against drinking water from any but authorised sources, as some of the +water on the route is brackish and liable to bring on diarrhoea. + +Each unit will detail an officer or selected N.C. officer to be in +charge of the water camels, who will see that their supply is only +drawn on by order of the officer commanding, and that great care is +taken to prevent wastage. Whenever possible, water tanks and bottles +should be replenished; halts will be made for this purpose. +Water-bottles will be filled overnight. On arrival in camp, the +sources of water supply will be pointed out by the staff officer, and +sentries posted to see that the right people draw from the right +source. + +2. _Country and Inhabitants._--It should be remembered that the +country through which the column will march to Dthala is in the +British Protectorate, and that the inhabitants and their property must +not be interfered with. All supplies must be paid for, and foraging is +strictly forbidden. + +3. _Camps._--On arrival at the camping-places, the staff officer will +point out the sites for the camps of the different units to N.C.O.'s +detailed for that purpose. Officers commanding units will see that +their respective camping-grounds are cleared up before departure. + +4. _Transport._--On arrival in camp the transport in charge of each +unit will be picketed near its camp. + +5. _Order of March and Baggage._--Each unit will be complete in +itself, being followed by first line transport, viz:-- + +1. Signalling equipment. 2. First reserve ammunition. 3. Entrenching +tools. 4. Water camels. 5. Stretchers. 6. Great-coat camels. + +All followers not required with the above are to accompany the baggage +of their corps. The transport officer will act as baggage-master, and +all baggage-followers and baggage-guards will be under his orders. He +will see that the baggage moves off the ground in the following order, +viz:--Field hospital with its baggage in rear of fighting portion of +column; ammunition second reserve and ordnance park; staff baggage, +including supplies; regimental baggage with supplies in regimental +charge in order of march of unit; supply go-down; spare animals in +transport charge; rearguard. + + (By order) S. M. EDWARDS, _Major_, + _S.O. Aden Column_. + +_January 2nd, 1903, Sheikh Othman._--On January 2nd, 1903, the column +assembled at its rendezvous, Sheikh Othman, some ten miles from Aden. + +_January 3rd, Bir Sayed Ali Wells_ (2-1/2 _miles north of +Firush_.)--An early start was made, though as it was the first day's +march as a column it was not intended to go very far. The going, +moreover, was bad. It takes time to accustom oneself to marching +through deep sand, just as it takes time to acquire the 'heather-step' +in August. However, every one did well, the water was good and fairly +plentiful, though somewhat scattered, and the spirits of the little +force rose high at the possibilities of the prospect before them. + +_January 4th, Bir Salim._--The water at this camp was good, but +insufficient in quantity, necessitating the watering of the animals +some mile away. + +_January 5th, Shaika._--Another good march, the only incident of which +was the breaking down of the treasure-camel, an important item of the +force. + +_January 6th._--Owing to the necessity of making very early starts, +long before daybreak, Lieut.-Colonel English gave orders for bonfires +to be built overnight. These proved a great success, and enabled the +packing-up in the morning to be accomplished with facility and +dispatch. + +_January 7th, Alhaja._--This place was reached after a long and trying +march, but the water proved bad in quality and small in quantity. +Captain Harrison, however, luckily joined the force here with a good +supply from Aden, so all was well. + +_January 8th, Hadaba._--Another tiring march, but a spring in the +river-bed provided a plentiful supply of good water. As there were +1300 human beings and animals to provide for, it can easily be +understood that the problem of the water-supply was a never-ceasing +care to the staff. Its solution would have been still more difficult +had not the O.C. column arranged that the Bombay Grenadiers and native +hospital should march a day behind the rest of the force. + +_January 9th, Arrado._--A short march, and more water than was +expected. + +_January 10th, Dthala._--There was a difficult pass to ascend before +the column reached its objective; three camels were in consequence +lost _en route_, one falling over a precipice and two dying from +exhaustion. By 1 p.m., however, all difficulties had been overcome, +and the camping-ground was reached without opposition. + +_January 11th._--The remainder of the column arrived safely. + +[Illustration: Dthala Camp.] + +The rest of the month was occupied in putting the camp in a state of +defence, and the usual camp life. A force of 400 Turkish troops, with +four guns and twenty-five mounted men, was encamped only two miles off +at Jelala, and, as the condition of affairs, according to the +political officer, Colonel Wahab, was very acute, it was necessary to +observe the strictest precautions at all times. On January 30th the +detachment of the Royal Dublin Fusiliers was relieved by one from the +Hampshire Regiment, and marched off on their way back to Aden, under +command of Lieutenant Haskard. Colonel English did not return, having +received orders from Lord Kitchener to remain in command of the field +force, whose total strength now consisted of 818 officers and men, and +735 animals. + +[Illustration: Dthala Village from Camp.] + +_February 1st._--The situation now, however, became more serious. +Colonel English received a wire at 2.30 p.m. directing him to stop +Haskard's return march at Nobat-Dakim, and another at 6 p.m. informing +him that the whole of the Dublin Fusiliers were coming up, and also +half the 23rd Bombay Rifles. On February 10th instructions were +received to recall Haskard, who marched on the 12th, arriving at +Dthala on the 14th. On the 18th, headquarters and the remainder of the +Dublin Fusiliers left Aden, reaching Dthala on the 26th, when Colonel +Hicks took over command of the column, Lieut.-Colonel English assuming +command of the battalion. + +On March 22nd the Turks, however, evacuated Jelala, retiring behind +Kataba. Jelala was at once occupied by two companies of the Bombay +Rifles. Captain Rooth, Brevet-Major Carington Smith, Captains +Garvice, Grimshaw, and Taylor arrived on the same day. + +On April 27th a detachment, consisting of 100 Royal Dublin Fusiliers, +two guns 6th Mountain Battery, and 100 Bombay Rifles, with supply and +transport, the whole under the command of Lieutenant-Colonel English, +occupied Sanah, where they remained until July 11th, when they +returned to Dthala. + +On May 18th a detachment of 100 men of the Royal Dublin Fusiliers, +under Brevet-Major Smith, joined a column under command of Colonel +Scallon, C.I.E., D.S.O., 23rd Bombay Rifles, which proceeded on a +punitive expedition to Hardaba. They met with some slight opposition, +in which No. 7274 Private Martin, Royal Dublin Fusiliers, was slightly +wounded. The column returned to Dthala on May 25th, after suffering +considerably from heat. + +On August 31st a small flying column, under Major Delamain, left for +the Bunna River. Lieutenant Wheeler, Royal Dublin Fusiliers, acted as +Staff Officer to this force. On September 4th, Lieutenant Haskard, +Royal Dublin Fusiliers, with thirty-five men, went out to Delamain +with a convoy, returning on September 6th. + +Considerable trouble had for some time been caused by the depredations +of the Arab tribes, who had been killing camelmen, and generally +making themselves obnoxious on the line of communications. Information +was now received that these Arabs were beginning to get very excited, +and that they contemplated an attack on a post under Captain Shewell, +at Awabil. A force was immediately got together, and placed under the +command of Colonel English. He marched on September 13th, only to +find, however, on arrival that Shewell had beaten off the attack by +himself, with a loss of one man killed and five wounded. Colonel +English then returned to Dthala, which place he reached on September +19th. + +On October 5th the same officer took command of another column, to +punish the Dthanbari tribe and destroy their chief town, Naklain. The +column consisted of Royal Dublin Fusiliers, 4 companies; 6th Mountain +Battery, Royal Artillery, 1 section; Camel Battery, 2 guns; Aden +Troop, 17 sowars; Bombay Grenadiers, 1 double company; 23rd Bombay +Rifles, 23 men. + +[Illustration: A Frontier Tower. Abdali Country.] + +Colonel English arrived before Naklain at 8.25 a.m. on October 7th, +after pushing back the enemy, who disputed the passage of a difficult +gorge for some time. He then proceeded to destroy the place, and at +11.15 a.m. started on his return march. The enemy clung to his flanks, +and kept up a long-range fire until 2.30 p.m., when he repassed the +gorge mentioned above. His casualties consisted of one killed (No. +5710 Private Andrew Keegan), and six wounded, while there were in +addition six cases of sunstroke. The column did not return to Dthala, +but marched straight to Aden, where it arrived on October 14th. + +The remainder of the battalion left Dthala on October 10th, reaching +Aden on the 16th, where, on October 24th, it embarked on the transport +_Soudan_ for home. + +For his services in the Aden Hinterland, Lieutenant-Colonel English +was awarded the D.S.O. It was never better earned. But no medal was +issued to the regiment, in spite of the fact that for ten months they +had been living under active service conditions, which necessitated +unceasing vigilance by day and night. It is true they had not suffered +many casualties, or seen much fighting, but as this was undoubtedly +due to the excellent manner in which the operations were conducted, +and to the precautions taken, it seemed a little hard that the coveted +distinction of a medal should be withheld, although the little +campaign is ranked in war services as active service. + +However, the experience and the knowledge of the country gained will +doubtless prove beneficial to all concerned, who still look back upon +Dthala with affection, and speak of it with regret. On the night after +Colonel English had dealt with the Dthanbari tribe, Major Carington +Smith, who was in command of a small detachment, after posting his +outposts was just thinking of retiring when he heard the sentries +challenge; this was immediately followed by a rush of horsemen, headed +by a most gorgeously dressed officer. Reining up almost at Smith's +feet he informed him that his master, a neighbouring potentate, +friendly to the English, had sent him and his men to assist in the +repulse of the bloodthirsty Dthanbari tribe, who might be expected to +attempt to rush the camp that night. Although not anticipating +anything of the kind, Major Smith was far too polite to say so, and +after thanking his allies, suggested that they should take up a line +of cossack posts in front of his outpost line. To this they +consented, but before leaving declared their earnest conviction that +an assault would be delivered. Shortly after midnight Smith was +awakened by a fiendish din. Grasping his sword with one hand and his +pistol with the other, he rushed out to meet the crisis. From every +direction his allies came galloping in as fast as their horses could +lay legs to the ground, while the detachment sprang to arms in a +second, fully expecting to be attacked by every Arab in the +Hinterland. Reining up his horse as before, the leader of the cavalry +once more saluted Smith, and made the following report: 'Sah, I have +honour to salute you, and inform your Honour that Dthanbari tribe have +not yet arrived.' + +The following description of the action at Naklain appeared in the +home press:-- + + +'AN ARAB DRIVE.' + +'HOT FIGHTING IN THE ADEN HINTERLAND. + +'The expedition, under Brevet-Lieutenant-Colonel English, was sent out +to destroy the chief village and crops of the tribe Naklain, as +punishment for the shooting of Government camels and the looting of +his Majesty's mails. The tribe is very warlike, and their country had +never hitherto been penetrated. + +'After leaving As Suk camp, the British column began to wind among the +mountains, which rise very abruptly from the plain, and, as they met +with no opposition for a considerable time, they began to think there +would be no resistance. Suddenly, without warning of any sort, a +ragged volley was opened on the advance-guard, apparently from some +very broken ground, fifty to a hundred yards in front. + +'This seemed to be a prearranged signal, for from the hills on both +flanks the firing was taken up, the enemy constantly changing their +positions after firing. The guns were brought into action almost at +once, and the infantry, extending at the double, soon covered a wide +front and swept along the hills parallel to the advance. + + +'MOVING FORWARD. + +'After the surrounding hills had been shelled, the whole column moved +forward, the infantry pushing the enemy back step by step until the +village of Naklain was reached. While parties of men were told off to +keep down the enemy's fire from points of vantage, others proceeded to +blow up the houses with gun-cotton, and the more inaccessible houses +were shelled. + +'The crops were then destroyed by the men with their bayonets and +swords. There was a fierce fire while this was proceeding, the enemy +evidently not having expected such a reprisal. The work having been +completed, the arduous retirement commenced, the enemy following the +force up step by step the whole way back, at one time coming to +comparatively close quarters and necessitating a most careful +management of the rearguard. + +'As Suk was reached after a trying march of twenty miles, the troops +being under fire most of the time, with scarcely any water and exposed +to a burning sun. The British casualties were seven men of the Dublin +Fusiliers wounded (one since dead) and one native and one gunner +slightly wounded.' + +[Illustration: 2nd Lieut. H. St. G. S. Scott; 2nd Lieut. B. Maclear; +2nd Lieut. E. St. G. Smith; 2nd Lieut. J. P. Tredennick. + +Bt.-Major E. Fetherstonhaugh; Lieut. A. H. D. Britton; Lieut. and +Qr.-mr. Burke; Major S. G. Bird, D.S.O.; Lieut. Haskard; Lieut. +Wheeler; 2nd Lieut. R. F. B. Knox; 2nd Lieut. J. P. B. Robinson; 2nd +Lieut. A. W. Newton. + +Lieut. C. Garvice, D.S.O.; Capt. G. N. Cory, D.S.O.; Capt. M. Lowndes; +Lieut.-Col. H. T. Hicks, C.B.; Lieut. L. F. Renny; Capt. H. W. +Higginson; 2nd Lieut. E. F. E. Seymour; Lieut. A. de B. W. W. Bradford +(absent). + +Officers of the 2nd Battalion Royal Dublin Fusiliers who embarked for +Aden.] + + + + +CHAPTER II. + +THE RETURN HOME AND RECEPTION. + + 'I must to England. + I pray you give me leave.' + + _Hamlet._ + + +Early in October, 1903, the 2nd Battalion at length heard the good +news that the date of their departure from Aden had been definitely +fixed, and on the 23rd of the month it sailed in the s.s. _Soudan_, +arriving at Queenstown late in the evening of November 9th. The tour +of foreign service had lasted for twenty years all but two months, and +only one man in the whole battalion had seen it through from start to +finish without coming home, the present quartermaster, Lieutenant J. +Burke. + +The 2nd Battalion Royal Dublin Fusiliers left England for Gibraltar on +January 9th, 1884, and in February, 1885, proceeded to Egypt, where it +was quartered first at Ramleh, and later on at Cairo. Early in 1886 +the battalion went to India, headquarters being stationed successively +at Poona, Nasirabad, Karachi, Quetta, and Bombay. + +In May, 1897, it was suddenly ordered to South Africa, and quartered +at Maritzburg, as already stated in the opening chapter. + +The details were at Buttevant, County Cork, and thither the battalion +proceeded on their arrival in Ireland. + +Just two days prior to the arrival home of the 2nd Battalion the +regiment had been honoured by having appointed as its Colonel-in-Chief +Field-Marshal H.R.H. A. W. S. A. Duke of Connaught and Strathearn, +K.G., K.P., K.T., G.C.B., G.C.M.G., G.C.I.E., G.C.V.O. + +On November 13th, 1903, the battalion proceeded to Dublin to attend a +public reception and also to receive their medals at the hands of +H.R.H. the Duke of Connaught. The following is the account of the +proceedings as published in the _Irish Times_ of November 14th, 1903, +to whom the thanks of the regiment are due for their kindness in +permitting its reproduction:-- + + +(_Extract from 'Irish Times,' Saturday, November 14th, 1903._) + +HOME-COMING OF THE ROYAL DUBLIN FUSILIERS. + +The officers, non-commissioned officers, and men of the 2nd Battalion +of the Royal Dublin Fusiliers may well feel proud of the reception +accorded them on their return to their native land and city after a +long and arduous service under the British flag in foreign lands. +There was quite a contest for places on the gallery in the great +Central Hall of the Royal Dublin Society's buildings at Ballsbridge to +see the heroes of a regiment which had gained undying laurels in +Burmah, India, and South Africa. Exceptional arrangements had been +made for the entertainment of the battalion at Ballsbridge, and the +reception committee, which had for its chairman the Earl of Meath, +must be congratulated on the manner in which they carried out the +entertainment and provided for the enjoyment of such a large number of +guests. The arrangement of the hall was admirable in every respect. At +the further end a slightly-raised dais was placed and profusely +decorated with palms and evergreens, and immediately behind the chair +subsequently occupied by H.R.H. the Duke of Connaught was the +regimental emblem introducing the figures of an elephant and a tiger; +the former bringing to mind the doughty deeds of the Dublin Fusiliers +in Burmah and the latter their equally splendid record on the historic +field of Plassey. At the back was the regimental motto, _Spectamur +Agendo_, and the roof and gallery railings were handsomely draped with +red, green, and blue muslin, while the names of the various +engagements in which the men took part were prominently displayed. On +the right-hand side of the hall four long rows of tables were placed, +handsomely prepared for the dinner, while the centre of the building +facing the dais was kept clear for the men to be drawn up in proper +formation to receive H.R.H. the Duke of Connaught. The spacious +galleries reserved for ticket-holders were crowded long before the +hour fixed for the ceremony, 12.30 o'clock. Shortly before 10 o'clock +a large number of reservists of the battalion, about 250, and some +reservists from other battalions of the regiment assembled at the +Marshalsea Barracks, and under the command of Captain Perreau, Royal +Dublin Fusiliers, Adjutant 5th Battalion, and Major Baker, D.S.O., +marched via Thomas Street, Cork Hill, Dame Street, Nassau Street, +Merrion Square North, Lower Mount Street, and Northumberland Road to +Ballsbridge. The men were dressed in civilian clothes, but wore their +medals and other decorations, and many showed by their appearance that +they, too, had played no insignificant part in the recent campaign. +They were accompanied by the massed bands of the 3rd, 4th, and 5th +Battalions Royal Dublin Fusiliers. The 2nd Battalion of the regiment +arrived from Buttevant by train at the Ballsbridge siding at 11.30 +a.m., and marched across the roadway into the Royal Dublin Society's +premises. A great crowd of people watched the men detraining, and +several hearty rounds of cheering greeted their appearance. The men +looked in splendid form as they defiled into the main hall and took up +the positions allotted to them. It was at first stated that the +strength comprised 25 officers, 2 warrant officers, 8 staff sergeants, +54 sergeants, and 528 rank and file; but the figures given yesterday +were 18 officers and 523 rank and file. Be the numbers as they may, +the appearance of the men thoroughly maintained the regimental +nickname of 'The Old Toughs.' Hardy, wiry warriors they +looked--thoroughly capable of accomplishing the daring and courageous +deeds which have covered the Dublin Fusiliers with special glory. It +is worthy of note that the majority of the non-commissioned officers +served through the South African campaign from the Battle of Dundee, +and that Lieutenant and Quartermaster Burke is the only remaining one +who left England with the battalion nineteen years ago. The officers +and men of the battalion were dressed in general service (khaki) +uniform, and carried their rifles and bayonets. They also wore Indian +helmets with puggarees, while the mounted company were attired in the +clothing suited to this, particular branch of the Service. They were +under the command of Colonel Tempest Hicks, C.B., Colonel English, and +Major Fetherstonhaugh, and when they marched into the hall and took up +position on either side, in line of half-battalions, they were greeted +with loud cheering, and when the order 'stand at ease' was made a +number of reservists and other friends rushed forward to exchange +greetings with former acquaintances. There was nearly a half-hour's +wait for the arrival of the Duke of Connaught, and in the interval the +bands of the Fusiliers and Warwickshire Regiment played some +selections. At a quarter-past twelve precisely, H.R.H. the Commander +of the Forces in Ireland arrived in an open carriage, accompanied by +H.R.H. the Duchess of Connaught and Princesses Margaret and Patricia +of Connaught, and attended by the following staff: Major-General Sir +William Knox, Major-General Sir John Maxwell, Colonel Hammersley, +Colonel Davidson, Colonel Dickinson, Colonel Congreve, V.C., and Major +Murray, A.D.C. + +[Illustration: Homeward bound at last after twenty Years' Foreign +Service.] + +The Duke, who wore the uniform of a Field-Marshal, was received by the +following members of the reception committee: Major Domville, D.L. +(vice-chairman), Mr. Justice Ross, Sir Wm. Thompson, Sir Charles +Cameron, C.B., Major Davidson Houston, Colonel Finlay, Colonel +Davidson, Major-General Sir Gerald Morton, K.C.B., Colonel Paterson, +Colonel G. T. Plunkett, C.B., Captain Lewis Riall, D.L., Colonel +Vernon, D.L., and Alderman Harris. + +Major-General Vetch, commanding the Dublin District, was accompanied +by Major Lowndes, A.D.C., Major Gilles (Brigade-Major), and Captain +Fox Strangways (Garrison Adjutant). A guard of honour of the Royal +Irish Rifles was drawn up outside the Show Buildings, and the band of +the regiment played the National Anthem when the Duke and Duchess of +Connaught drove up. + +Their Royal Highnesses having taken seats on the dais, the Duke of +Connaught, who spoke in a tone which was easily heard in all parts of +the building, said, 'Colonel Hicks, officers and non-commissioned +officers, and men of the 2nd Battalion Royal Dublin Fusiliers, allow me +to welcome you most warmly home again to old Ireland after your very +arduous four years' service. I am sure I am only the mouthpiece, not +only of the General Officer Commanding this Army Corps, but also of +every loyal Irishman, when I assure you how warm and how hearty is the +greeting that is given you on your return to your native country, and +especially in this capital of Ireland. You are an old and distinguished +regiment; raised originally for service in India as the Royal Madras and +Royal Bombay Fusiliers. During the time that you bore this name and the +numbers 102 and 103, you took a very honourable part in all those great +battles that assured us the conquest of India. Now, since the year 1881, +you have become closely associated not only with Ireland, but with its +capital. Your first service since you became the Royal Dublin Fusiliers +was in South Africa, and through the arduous services in that country +you, men, whom I have now the honour of addressing, nobly maintained the +traditions of those fine soldiers who went before you. When you were +sent from India amongst the first reinforcements of the troops in South +Africa in 1897--soon afterwards the war broke out--you took a leading +part in the Battle of Talana. You then went back to Ladysmith, and after +falling back across the Tugela, you were attached to the army of Sir +Redvers Buller, in the Irish Brigade under General Hart. During all +those weary months on the Tugela, you took a leading part in every +action that took place, and you distinguished yourselves so much at +Pieter's Hill that when the relief force of Ladysmith marched in, the +general officer commanding gave you the post of honour, and you led the +troops that marched into Ladysmith. (Cheers.) Men of the Royal Dublin +Fusiliers, this occasion is one of especial pleasure and satisfaction to +myself, as His Majesty has done me the great honour of appointing me +your Colonel-in-Chief--(cheers)--and I hope that in this you will +recognise not only His Majesty's high appreciation of the distinguished +services you have rendered to his throne and his empire, but also that +you will see in it his wish that you will have some special mark of +distinction when he has made me, his only brother, Colonel-in-Chief of +the regiment. I hope I shall long have the honour to be your +Colonel-in-Chief, and to have a connection with a regiment of which +every Irishman feels so proud.' (Cheers.) + +Colonel G. T. Plunkett, C.B., read the following letter, received from +the Earl of Meath, H.M.L. for the County and City of Dublin:-- + + + '_Ottershaw, Chertsey._ + +'MY DEAR PLUNKETT,--Owing to absence from Ireland, I shall be unable +to be present in person with you on the 13th, when you and the +Reception Committee entertain the 2nd Battalion Royal Dublin Fusiliers +on their return home from foreign service, but I shall be with you in +spirit, and I hope you will let the officers and men know how sorry I +am that I cannot personally welcome them on their return to Ireland, +and to Dublin, after so many years spent abroad in the service of +their Sovereign. + +'The fame which the regiment has acquired by daring deeds of valour +performed during the late war has travelled far beyond the shores of +Ireland. Military men the world over, and all who have studied the +South African War, have heard of the famous deeds of the Dublin +Fusiliers. The citizens of the Metropolitan county and City are proud +of the men who, mindful of their origin, have known how to make the +name of Dublin to be honoured in all lands. Both officers and men have +done their duty to King and country, and we, their Irish brothers, +accord them a hearty welcome on their return to the dear land of their +birth. + +'Believe me, yours sincerely, + + 'MEATH, + + '_H.M.L. for County and City of Dublin_.' + +The Duke of Connaught then said: 'I have been particularly requested +by His Excellency the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland to assure you of his +warm welcome. He is away in England at present, but he has sent his +military secretary and senior A.D.C. to represent him, and to give you +his warmest wishes.' (Applause.) + +His Royal Highness then distributed the medals and other distinctions +to the officers and rank-and-file of the battalion who were entitled +to them. The following officers were decorated, the Duke cordially +shaking hands with each recipient:--Colonel Hicks, C.B., Colonel +English, Major Fetherstonhaugh, Major Carington Smith, Captain H. W. +Higginson, Captain Cory, D.S.O., Captain Garvice, D.S.O., Lieutenants +Grimshaw, D.S.O., Haskard, Britton, Wheeler, St. George Smith, Knox, +Tredennick, Seymour, Robinson, and Maclear, and Lieutenant and +Quartermaster J. Burke and Sergeant-Major Sheridan. His Royal Highness +pinned distinguished-conduct medals on the breasts of Lieutenant and +Quartermaster J. Burke, Corporal Connell, and Privates C. N. Wallace, +M. Farrelly, and M. Kavanagh, each recipient being loudly cheered. + +The following officers who had served with the battalion during the +war, but who had previously come home through wounds or sickness, +availed themselves of the opportunity to have their medals presented +to them by the Duke:--Captain Downing, Captain Dibley, Lieutenants +Renny, Supple, Newton, Weldon, Molony, Armstrong, and Cooper. The +distribution of the medals occupied over half an hour. + +When this important portion of the programme had been completed, the +order to 'stack arms' was given, and the men filed into their seats at +the four long rows of tables which had been admirably prepared for the +dinner by the caterers, Messrs. Mills & Co., of Merrion Row. Messrs. +Mills & Co. had a picked staff of forty-two persons to carve the +various dishes and wait at table. Dinner consisted of several courses, +with selected fruit; while in addition to liberal supplies of ale, +stout, and mineral waters, 300 bottles of champagne were placed +before the honoured guests. This last-mentioned luxury was the +generous gift of Messrs. Perrier-Jouet & Co., of Epernay, the famous +wine shippers, who kindly and thoughtfully presented this supply of +their extra-quality wine through their Irish representatives, Messrs. +James McCullagh, Son & Co., 34 Lower Abbey Street. When the guests +were seated, H.R.H. the Duke of Connaught, the Duchess of Connaught, +and the Princesses Margaret and Patricia of Connaught, with the +Reception Committee, a number of ladies, and a resplendent military +_entourage_, walked slowly down between the rows of tables, stopping +to speak a few gracious words to the non-commissioned officers and men +who had made themselves conspicuous even amongst their comrades for +valorous deeds and unflinching devotion to duty. Many of the +reservists who sat beside former 'chums' at table, and on whose less +warlike garb, the ordinary civilian clothes, medals and clasps shone +out in high relief, also received kindly congratulations from the +Commander-in-Chief in Ireland. Meanwhile the string band of the 21st +Lancers, who occupied a good position on the gallery, played a +beautiful selection of airs, principally Irish, not the least being +'The Wearin' of the Green.' The Royal party on walking down the centre +of the hall was enthusiastically cheered, and the Duchess and her +daughters left the building at about half-past one. + +The Duke remained for lunch with his staff and the officers of the +battalion. The health of His Majesty the King was drunk amidst much +enthusiasm. After dinner, cigars and cigarettes and tobacco were +liberally distributed, officers of the regiment performing most of +this agreeable duty, and each man was presented with a nice briar pipe +before leaving, the gift of Messrs. Lalor & Co., of Nassau Street. + +In the interval between dinner and leaving the premises at +Ballsbridge, many friends and relatives of the members of the +battalion were afforded an opportunity for a pleasant chat, and most +of these accompanied the men in their subsequent march through the +city. One figure attracted much attention during the afternoon--a +sturdy soldier who formerly belonged to the Royal Dublins, and who +appeared in the quaint, and, in this country, unusual uniform of a +West African regiment. It would be certainly less than unwarranted to +refer to the general appearance and behaviour of the men. Clean, +smart, soldierly fellows, they all appeared to be impressed with the +one idea--that they belonged to a crack corps with unrivalled +traditions to maintain. + +The departure from Ballsbridge occasioned unbounded enthusiasm on the +part of thousands of eager spectators, who, unaware of the exact time +at which the entertainment would finish, had patiently waited for a +couple of hours to catch a glimpse of the 'Old Toughs.' The main +thoroughfare from the Show-grounds to Pembroke Road was lined by +detachments of the Warwickshire, East Lancashire (with band), and +Middlesex Regiments, while a guard of honour of the Royal Irish Rifles +(with their band) was stationed opposite the main entrance. About 3.15 +o'clock H.R.H. the Duke of Connaught, preceded by two mounted +policemen and an escort of the 21st Lancers, drove out, and passed +over the route to be traversed immediately afterwards by the +Fusiliers. The Field-Marshal was loudly cheered as he proceeded to the +Royal Hospital, and repeatedly returned the cordial salutations of the +large crowds who were assembled at different points. The appearance of +the feted warriors was the signal for an astonishing ovation at +Ballsbridge. + +The scene was a striking one. A splendid body of the 21st Lancers, +numbering fifty, occupied first place in the procession, and these +were followed by four or five bands and the heroes of the day. +Another detachment of fifty Lancers brought up the rear, and a number +of men of the same dashing cavalry regiment marched on either side of +the advancing column. Many relatives and friends of the Fusiliers had +now an opportunity to exchange greetings, and strict army discipline +was at an end. There was nothing reprehensible, however, and the +progress to Kingsbridge was of the most orderly and praiseworthy +description. + +The route followed was the main road from Ballsbridge--Pembroke Road, +Upper Baggot Street, Lower Baggot Street, Merrion Row, Stephen's +Green, North Grafton Street, College Green, Dame Street, Parliament +Street, and the south lines of quays to Kingsbridge. At different +points, like Baggot Street Bridge, Stephen's Green, and Grafton +Street, the reception was of a most cordial nature, while an immense +crowd in College Green raised deafening cheers as the sturdy warriors +marched past. Enthusiasm reached its height when the tattered colours +of the battalion, borne by two stalwart young ensigns, came into view. +The officers and men appeared delighted with the cordial reception +extended to them on all sides. At Grattan Bridge the band of the +Seaforth Highlanders, which had already delighted a large concourse of +people with some choice selections, struck up a lively air as Dublin's +guests moved past, while a splendid send-off characterised the +entrainment of the battalion at Kingsbridge for Buttevant, co. Cork. + +The Railway Company made excellent arrangements for the men, who, +considering their long day and its happy experiences, went through the +ordeal in first-class style. After all, one could scarcely expect less +from soldiers who carry six or seven, or even nine clasps, on their +medal ribbons. + +It is right to mention that a number of members of the Army Veterans +Association, decorated with their medals and other distinctions, +visited Ballsbridge, and cordially congratulated the Fusiliers on +their return from foreign service. + +On reaching Buttevant, the men will be supplied with new clothing and +granted a general furlough. + + * * * * * + +Shortly after the reception the battalion was once again supplied with +their home service full-dress head-gear--the busby, and it was with +much gratification that the men wore their new busby hackle for the +first time. This distinction was granted in 1902, when by Army Order +57 it was directed that the Royal Dublin Fusiliers should wear a blue +and green hackle in their busbies: that for the officers to be blue +and green, eight inches long, and that for the non-commissioned +officers and men a similar but shorter one, in recognition of their +services during the war in South Africa. In explanation of the colours +of the hackle it may be stated that blue is the distinguishing colour +of the 1st Battalion ('Blue Caps'), and green that of the 2nd +Battalion ('Old Toughs'). + +On November 27th, 1903, the regiment was honoured by having appointed +as its Colonel Major-General W. F. Vetch, C.V.O., commanding Dublin +Garrison, _vice_ Lieut.-General Sir John Blick Spurgin, K.C.B., +G.C.S.I., deceased. + +General Vetch joined the 102nd Foot on March 8th, 1864, was promoted +Lieutenant, July 1st, 1869; Captain, May 22nd, 1875; Major, June 18th, +1881; Lieut.-Colonel, June 7th, 1884; Colonel, June 7th, 1888; and +Major-General, April 1st, 1900. + +After a quiet and uneventful stay at Buttevant for nearly three years +the battalion proceeded to Fermoy on September 14th, 1906, and took up +quarters in the New Barracks at that station. + + + + +CHAPTER III. + +THE MEMORIAL ARCH. + + 'Even so great men great losses should endure.' + + _Julius Caesar._ + + +On August 19th, 1907, the memorial arch to the officers and men who +fell in South Africa was opened by H.R.H. the Duke of Connaught, +Colonel-in-Chief the Royal Dublin Fusiliers. The 2nd Battalion was +marching from Kilworth Camp to Ballyvonaire Camp on that day, but the +authorities very kindly did everything in their power to make the +ceremony a success, and Colonel English, Major Bromilow, and every one +of any importance who had taken part in the war proceeded to Dublin by +special train on the morning of the 19th, while the Depot and Militia +officers also assembled in good force. + +The officers and men of the regiment were very sensible of the honour +shown to them by H.R.H. the Duke of Connaught in personally opening +the arch, and so identifying himself with it and them, while every +Dublin Fusilier present felt an added pride in himself and his uniform +as he saw it worn by His Royal Highness the brother of His Majesty the +King. + +The following account of the ceremony is taken from the Dublin _Daily +Express_, to whose proprietors our thanks are due for permission to +reproduce it:-- + + + 'ROYAL DUBLIN FUSILIERS' MEMORIAL IN STEPHEN'S GREEN + INAUGURATED BY THE DUKE OF CONNAUGHT. + LUNCHEON AT SHELBOURNE HOTEL. + +'To-day the Royal Dublin Fusiliers' Memorial to the officers and men +of the regiment who fell in South Africa was formally inaugurated by +the Duke of Connaught, Inspector-General of the British Army. His +Royal Highness arrived at Amiens Street terminus by the early morning +train from Belfast, and was received by the Viceroy's Military +Secretary. The Duke of Connaught at once drove to the Shelbourne +Hotel, where he was received by the following members of the Memorial +Committee:--The Earl of Meath, President; the Earl of Drogheda, Mr. +Justice Ross, Colonel Vernon, Sir Frederick Shaw, Bart., D.S.O., Sir +Maurice Dockrell, Mr. Richard Dowse, Colonel Gore-Lindsay, Colonel +Finlay, Sir Thomas Drew, R.H.A., Sir Charles Cameron, C.B., &c. + +'Lunch was served immediately afterwards, and was presided over by the +Earl of Meath, K.P., who was supported on his right by H.R.H. the Duke +of Connaught, K.P., the Earl of Drogheda, Major-General Vetch, C.V.O., +and Mr. Justice Ross, P.C.; and on his left by Lord Grenfell, G.C.B., +Commander-in-Chief of the Forces in Ireland; Viscount Iveagh, K.P.; +Major-General Sir Herbert Plumer, K.C.B.; Lieut.-Colonel Sir F. Shaw, +D.S.O., 5th Royal Dublin Fusiliers. There were also present:-- + +'Sir G. Holmes, K.C.V.O.; Col. Vernon, D.L.; Brig.-Gen. Hammersley, +Col. Lindsay, D.L.; Brig.-Gen. Monro, C.B.; Col. R. St. L. Moore, +C.B.; Lieut.-Col. Hackett, 4th R.D.F.; Sir Daniel Hegarty, Captain +Seymour, A.D.C.; Sir T. Myles, Major D. C. Courtney, Alderman Cotton, +D.L.; Mr. Gerald M'Guinness, Col. Doyly Battley, Capt. Cameron, Dr. +Wheeler, Mr. G. S. Dockrell, Capt. Halahan, Col. Chapman, 1st R.D.F.; +Sir Horace Plunkett, P.C.; Col. Finlay, Sir John Arnott, Brig.-Gen. +Cooper, C.B.; Mr. G. A. Stevenson, M.O.; Col. Hutcheson Poe, D.L.; Mr. +P. Hanson, Sir John Moore, Major Carington Smith, Major Domville, +D.L.; Col. Lyster Smythe, D.L., A.D.C.; Major Skeet, Capt. Garvice, +Capt. Thompson, Mr. H. M. Dockrell, Mr. Wm. Graham, Mr. John Laverty, +Col. F. P. English, D.S.O., 2nd R.D.F.; Mr. R. Dowse, B.L.; Major-Gen. +Sir John Maxwell, K.C.B.; T. A. O'Farrell, J.P.; Surg.-Gen. Edge, +C.B.; Col. the Hon. E. Lawless, Col. O'Neill, 3rd R.D.F.; Sir W. +Watson, D.L.; Col. Colville Frankland, Major Lowndes, Mr. James F. +Darcy, D.L.; Mr. J. H. Pentland, R.H.A.; Mr. Key, A.D.C.; Mr. J. A. +Pigott, Mr. Robert Mitchell, Mr. R. H. A. M'Comas, Mr. Major Gorman, +Mr. George Healy, Mr. R. Tyson, Mr. R. A. Falconer, Major-Gen. +Bunbury, C.B.; Sir Maurice Dockrell, Brig.-Gen. Mills, C.B.; Sir John +Ross of Bladensburg, K.C.B.; Sir T. Drew, R.H.A.; Sir G. Moyers, D.L.; +the Hon. M. Ponsonby, A.D.C.; Sir William Thomson, Sir C. Cameron, +C.B.; Sir L. Ormsby, Col. D. Browne, Mr. R. H. Jephson, Major Knight, +Mr. A. E. Kennedy, Mr. W. A. Shea, Mr. Milward Jones, Mr. F. J. Usher, +Mr. J. H. Reid, Mr. Henry L. Barnardo, Mr. R. P. Jephson. + +'After lunch, which was admirably served, + +'The Earl of Meath arose, amidst applause, and said:--"The toast list +to-day is short, and contains but one toast, that of The King +(applause). His Majesty King Edward occupies a position amongst rulers +which is absolutely unique. He not only rules over twelve million +square miles, one-sixth of the earth's surface, and governs four +hundred millions of subjects of all races, colours, creeds, and +conditions of civilisation, from the most advanced to the most +backward, but he is a Monarch whose personal qualities are of so +distinguished an order that he has come to be regarded as a statesman +of the first rank (applause). The world watches His Majesty's +movements with breathless interest. Under his masterful touch +international difficulties which seem insuperable are solved, +political sores are healed. His presence seems to breathe the spirit +of peace and of goodwill, so that when he undertakes a journey it +needs no strong imagination to picture to oneself the Angel of Peace +hovering over his footsteps with healing in her wings (applause). King +Edward is no stranger to Ireland; certainly not to Dublin (renewed +applause). We knew him and loved him as Prince of Wales, and our +affection for him has only increased since he became King, and since +we recognised that Ireland and the Irish are as dear to him as he is +to us (applause). We are an open-hearted race, and on each occasion +that he has visited these shores, his kindly, sympathetic, and genial +nature has captivated our hearts. He is just such a monarch as we love +(applause). May he be long spared to reign over us and may he often +grace this island with his genial and captivating presence." (Loud +applause.) + +'The toast was duly honoured, and the festive proceedings terminated. + + + 'INAUGURATION CEREMONY BY THE DUKE OF CONNAUGHT. + BRILLIANT FUNCTION. + +'Brilliant and strikingly picturesque was the ceremony of unveiling +the Royal Dublin Fusiliers' war memorial in St. Stephen's Green, which +took place at four o'clock this afternoon. The weather was, +fortunately, bright, although inclined to be showery, and no heavy +rain fell at any stage to mar the success of the interesting +proceedings, which were attended by a very large and distinguished +gathering. Long before the ceremony commenced, a great crowd had +assembled in the Green and its vicinity. + +[Illustration: The Memorial Arch, Dublin. + +Erected to the Memory of the Officers, N.C.O.'s. and Men of The Royal +Dublin Fusiliers. + +Opened by H.R.H. The Duke of Connaught, K.G., etc., Colonel-in-Chief + +The Royal Dublin Fusiliers, August 19th, 1907.] + +'The military arrangements were of a most elaborate nature, and +thoroughly in keeping with the occasion. The troops of the Dublin +Garrison and representative detachments of the Line and Militia +battalions of the Royal Dublin Fusiliers were drawn up in the vicinity +of the Memorial Arch, and presented a very imposing appearance. There +was also a representative gathering of ex-soldiers who had served in +the Royal Dublin Fusiliers during the South African war and of members +of the Veterans' Club, who were accommodated in special places +reserved for them on the outside of the arch. After the troops had +been drawn up, the massed bands of the 13th Infantry Brigade played +a number of pleasing selections whilst awaiting the arrival of H.R.H. +the Duke of Connaught. + +'The magnificent monument, which takes the form of a triumphal arch +spanning the north-west corner of St. Stephen's Green, was greatly +admired by the crowd. The noble archway is undoubtedly a most +beautiful and artistic ornament to the city. Twelve feet in width, it +springs from rusticated piers, each intersected by a pedestal and a +pair of pilasters supporting a Doric entablature. The frieze bears on +its four elevations the names in gold of the principal actions in the +South African War in which the regiment took part. The entablature is +surmounted by an Attic storey broken over the pilasters, and bearing +two inscription panels. The front keystone supports a bronze +cartouche, flanked by branches of bay bearing the arms of the +regiment. Within the arch appear the names of the gallant 212 who +perished in the war. + +'Loud cheers were raised when, at a quarter to four o'clock, +Field-Marshal H.R.H. the Duke of Connaught arrived on the scene and +was received with a Royal salute. He was accompanied by the Right Hon. +the Earl of Meath, President of the Memorial Committee; General the +Lord Grenfell, K.C.B.; Sir George Holmes, K.C.V.O.; the members of the +committee, and others who had attended the luncheon at the Shelbourne +Hotel. More cheers rose from the expectant gathering when, a few +minutes later, their Excellencies the Lord Lieutenant and the Countess +of Aberdeen arrived, and were received with a Royal salute. The flag +on the Memorial Arch was then half-masted, and the order was given for +the troops to "reverse arms" and "rest on their arms reversed." The +massed bands of the 13th Infantry Brigade played the "Dead March in +Saul," after which "Oft in the Stilly Night" was played by the band of +the 2nd Battalion Royal Dublin Fusiliers. The massed bugles of the +13th Infantry Brigade then sounded "The Last Post," and the flag on +the Memorial Arch was mast-headed. + +'His Excellency the Lord Lieutenant extended a hearty welcome to the +Duke of Connaught, and congratulated the Memorial Committee, and every +one connected with the undertaking, upon the successful manner in +which it had been carried out. + +'The Earl of Meath, in requesting his Royal Highness the Duke of +Connaught to open the gates of the archway, said:--"Your Royal +Highness, we meet to-day for the purpose of honouring the memory of +the gallant men belonging to the Royal Dublin Fusiliers who sacrificed +their lives for King and country in the late South African war. By the +aid of subscriptions raised throughout the city and county of Dublin +and its neighbourhood, a large sum of money has been collected, and I +trust that your Royal Highness will agree with the general opinion +that a very handsome and satisfactory memorial has been raised, worthy +of the heroes whose fame it is destined to perpetuate. As the only +surviving brother of the gracious and mighty Sovereign whose uniform +these heroes wore when they died in the defence of their country's +interests, and as Colonel of the regiment in which they so faithfully +served, it is fit and proper that you, Sir, should have been invited +to perform the ceremony of opening the gates of the arch erected to +their memory. We who have been actively concerned with the erection of +the memorial most sincerely and gratefully thank your Royal Highness +for the honour you have done the regiment by thus personally +identifying yourself with the effort to keep fresh in the minds of +their fellow-countrymen the gallant deeds performed by those heroes +whom to-day we delight to honour. Irish gallantry and Irish fidelity +to King and country are well known. Wherever British arms have +penetrated, there the record of Irish valour need not be sought in +brass or stone, but in the soil itself, which has been made +sacred to Erin's sons by the knowledge that it holds the mortal +remains of hearts which have been faithful to duty and to high ideals +of Irish valour even to the gates of death. But, sir, it may safely be +said that not in the Peninsula, nor in India--where this regiment +under its old title, in a hundred fights never knew the meaning of the +word defeat--did Irish soldiers ever cover themselves with greater +glory than did the Dublin Fusiliers in the battles of South +Africa--Talana, Colenso, Tugela Heights, Hart's Hill, Ladysmith, and +Laing's Nek. These glorious contests are commemorated on the memorial +arch which your Royal Highness will shortly declare open. Situated in +the centre of the Irish capital this memorial, recording the gallant +deeds of brave men, will be an ever-present reminder to coming +generations of the citizens of Dublin of the obligations of loyalty, +of faithfulness to duty and to honour which Ireland demands of all her +sons. I have the honour, sir, on behalf of the Dublin Fusilier +Memorial Committee, to ask your Royal Highness to declare the gates of +the archway to be open." + +'As his Royal Highness formally opened the gate, the massed bands +played the National Anthem. + +'Headed by H.R.H. the Duke of Connaught, the troops then marched +through the arch with bayonets fixed, the Royal Dublin Fusiliers +leading, and the other battalions following in regimental seniority, +headed by their bands. Loud cheers were raised as the soldiers passed +out into Grafton Street, and proceeded down that thoroughfare, which +was thickly lined on either side with spectators. At College Green the +troops separated, and marched off to their respective quarters. + + * * * * * + +'The memorial which was inaugurated to-day forms a handsome addition +to the ornamental architecture of the city. It stands in one of the +most prominent and most beautiful parts of the city, and is a striking +adornment to the main entrance to Stephen's Green Park. The luxuriant +trees and foliage of the park form a capital background to the fine +imposing arch, the design for which was suggested by Sir Thomas Drew, +composed entirely of Irish granite; the height of the memorial is +thirty-two feet six inches, and the breadth twenty-seven feet three +inches. The ornamental iron gates leading into the principal +carriage-drive of the park are cast out of metal taken from guns +captured by the British Army from enemies in the past, and suspended +over the keystone there will be an interesting trophy consisting of +the Crest and Arms of the regiment. In front a large millstone will +bear the inscription:-- + + FORTISSIMIS SUIS MILITIBUS + HOC MONUMENTUM + EBLANA DEDICAVIT. MCMVI.[21] + + [Footnote 21: 'To her brave soldiers Dublin has dedicated + this Monument. 1906.'] + +'In big letters in the frieze appear the names of the important +battles in which the battalions of the regiment took part, and on the +back of the arch the inscription:--"In memory of the officers, +non-commissioned officers, and men of the Royal Dublin Fusiliers who +died in the service of the country during the South African War, +1899-1902." + +'The Earl of Meath, H.M.L., President of the Memorial Committee, and +his colleagues, including the Earl of Drogheda, Sir Maurice Dockrell, +Sir Thomas Drew, Colonel Gore Lindsay, and Colonel Vernon, are to be +congratulated upon the successful result of their indefatigable +efforts. When the project was first mooted, it met with enthusiastic +support, and the necessary sum of 1800_l._ was quickly raised to cover +the cost of erection. + +'The plans were designed by Mr. Howard Pentland, of the Board of +Works, in consultation with Sir Thomas Drew, and Messrs. Laverty & +Son, Belfast, carried out the contract. + +'The losses of the 1st and 2nd Battalions of this famous regiment in +the Boer war totalled 31 officers and 655 non-commissioned officers +and men. The glorious and inspiring deeds performed by these two +battalions during the terrible engagements which led to the relief of +Ladysmith are still fresh in the memory of their proud countrymen. +Throughout the whole of the arduous campaign, indeed, the regiment +nobly upheld the finest tradition of the Irish soldier, and gained the +admiration and respect of friend and foe alike. The 5th Battalion +lost, in several minor engagements, two officers and ten men killed, +and eight wounded.' + + + + +EPILOGUE. + + +With the opening of the Memorial the curtain drops on the last scene +of the drama of the South African war, and the regiment's share in it. +To the large majority of those present the ceremony was probably +merely a spectacular entertainment, but its real significance was +borne fully home to us, even without the sight of more than one poor +woman, silently weeping from the re-opening of the never-healed wound +in her heart. For there is nothing truer than that a victory is only +less terrible than a defeat, and as the sad strains of the wailing +music fell on our ears, our thoughts flew back through the many happy +years of good-comradeship we had spent with the gallant friends whom +we have never ceased to mourn, and whose names will be treasured +memories as long as the regiment endures. + +But with the opening of the gates by our Colonel-in-Chief a fresh +chapter in the history of the regiment commenced, and all that remains +for us who share in the triumph of the present is to emulate in the +future the noble deeds of those who gave their lives in willing, +cheerful sacrifice for their sovereign, their country, and their +regiment. + + + + +THE END. + +[Illustration: The South African Memorial, Natal.] + + + + +APPENDIX + + +I. + +ROLL OF DEATH CASUALTIES. + +KILLED IN ACTION. + + No. Rank and Name. Place of Cause. Date. Remarks. + Death. + ----+-----------------+---------------+------------+--------+-------- + Capt. Weldon Talana Hill Killed in + action 20/10/99 + 5103 Pte. Cahill " " " + 5794 " Merrill " " " + 5933 " Crotty " " " + 5918 " Callaghan " " " + 5795 " Balfe Chieveley " 15/11/99 Armoured + Train + 5031 " Birney " " " " + 5546 " O'Shea Colenso " 1/11/99 While on + patrol, M.I. + Lieut. Henry " " 15/12/99 + 3441 Sgt. Hayes " " " + 4488 Pte. Smith " " " + 5930 " Sinnott " " " + 5123 " Broderick " " " + 5319 L.-Cpl. Coyne " " " + 5833 Pte. Dillon " " " + 4795 " Murphy " " " + 4380 " Doolan " " " + 4299 " McAlpine " " " + 5044 " Moore " " " + 4560 " Clifford " " " + 4838 " Flood " " " + 6287 L.-Cpl. Gibson " " " + 6134 Pte. Pearse " " " + 6044 L.-Cpl. Cathcart " " " + 4462 Pte. Murphy " " " + 6165 " Bennett " " " + 6297 " Campion " " " + 4679 " Bowen Potgieter's Drift " 8/2/00 + Capt. Hensley Venter's Spruit " 20/1/00 + 5668 L.-Sgt. Taylor " " " + Lt.-Col. Sitwell Hart's Hill " 24/2/00 + Capt. Maitland " " " + 4261 Cpl. Seymour " " " + 4871 Pte. White " " " + 5359 " Galbraith " " " + 6296 " Allen Pieter's Hill " 27/2/00 + 3303 " Timmins Hart's Hill " 24/2/00 Militia + 4th R.D.F. + 4012 " Armstrong " " " Militia + 5th R.D.F. + 2037 " Whelan " " " " + 2872 " Wade " " " " + 5073 " Kinsella Pieter's Hill " 27/2/00 + 5618 " Purcell " " " + 1769 Sgt. Brennan " " " Section 'D' + 1717 Pte. Shirwin " " " Militia + 5th R.D.F. + 2327 " Grimes " " " " + 5573 " Tyrrell Near Talana " 20/10/99 + 5987 Pte. Mahoney Near Talana " 20/10/99 + 4864 " Byrne " " " + 5861 " McGuire Chieveley " 15/11/99 Armoured train + 2112 " Kelly Hart's Hill " 23/2/00 Section 'D' + 6171 " Kavanagh Colenso " 15/12/99 + 6011 Cpl. Sinnot Steelkoolspruit " 25/10/01 + 4621 Pte. Hyland Nr. Krugersdorp Murdered by + Boers 6/1/01 Found riddled + with bullets + + +II. + +DIED OF WOUNDS. + + No. Rank and Name. Place of Cause. Date. Remarks. + Death. + ----+-----------------+--------------+---------+--------+-------- + 2nd-Lt. Genge Talana Hill Of wounds 21/10/99 + 1166 C.-Sgt. Anderson " " " + 5263 Pte. Johnston Maritzburg " 27/11/99 Arm. train + disaster + 3467 Clr.-Sgt. Gage " " 20/12/99 Battle of Colenso + 6293 Pte. Crosbie Spearman's Cmp " 26/1/00 " Venter's Spruit + 1823 " Finnegan Hart's Hill " 25/2/00 Section 'D' + 219 " Oldham Chieveley " 3/3/00 Battle of Hart's + Hill + 3648 " Norton Maritzburg " 2/3/00 Battle of Hart's + Hill + 5745 " Brady Colenso " " Battle of Pieter's + Hill + 6299 " Kelly Maritzburg " 8/3/00 Battle of Pieter's + Hill + 5349 " Bracken " " 16/3/00 Battle of Hart's + Hill + 3094 Sgt. Broughton Dundee " 22/10/99 Battle of Talana + 2753 Pte. Frahill " " 28/11/99 " " + 4029 " Quirke Colenso " 1/3/00 " Colenso + 5706 " McEvoy Johannesburg " 11/11/01 + 6347 " Nugent Bakenlaagte " 31/10/01 + 5710 " Keegan Dthala " 8/10/03 + + +III. + +DEATHS BY DISEASE. + + No. Rank and Name. Place of Cause. Date. Remarks. + Death. + ----+-----------------+---------------+------------+--------+-------- + + 5102 Pte. Phelan Frere Enteric 24/12/99 + 642 Q.M.S. Hynes Maritzburg Pneumonia 7/1/00 + 2865 Sgt. Linehan Pretoria Dysentery 16/12/99 + 5519 Pte. Brennan Maritzburg Abscess liver 7/1/00 + 3498 " Dunphy " Dysentery 19/1/00 + 6129 " Homan Mooi River Enteric 22/2/00 + 4593 " Keating " " 15/2/00 + 5368 " Walsh Cape Town Tumour brain 26/11/99 + 2775 " Ward Ladysmith Enteric 7/2/00 + 5317 " Maher Estcourt " 8/3/00 + 6510 " Tobin Ladysmith Dysentery 22/3/00 + 5909 " Dixon " " 25/3/00 + 5801 " Martin Chieveley " 24/4/00 + 5790 Pte. Greene Mooi River Enteric 15/4/00 + 2nd Lt. Dennis Aliwal North " 2/5/00 + 1600 Pte. O'Brien " " " 3rd R.D. Fus. + 4791 " O'Connor Mooi River " 3/5/00 + 5200 " Hart " Fractured thigh + 1/5/00 + 3380 " Cummings Aliwal North Enteric pneumonia + 5/5/00 3rd R.D. Fus. + 3760 " Keogh Chieveley Enteric " + 4012 " Mack Aliwal North " 12/5/00 + 5847 " O'Carroll " Enteric phthisis + 15/5/00 + 4566 " Gray Kimberley Enteric 17/5/00 + 5622 " Corr Maritzburg Ague 28/2/00 + 4131 Cpl. Looney Woolwich Dysentery 24/3/00 + Lieut. Ely At sea Enteric 15/4/00 + 6049 Pte. Neill Kimberley " 23/5/00 + 6309 L.-Cpl. McGinley " " 8/6/00 + 6608 Pte. Behan " " 19/6/00 + 4686 " Ears Wynberg " 25/6/00 + 7049 " Roach Heidelberg Pneumonia 14/7/00 + 5881 " Pooley " Enteric 18/7/00 + 4499 O.R.S. Hanrahan Maritzburg g.s. skull 2/7/00 Suicide + 5873 Pte. Hunt At sea Enteric 26/4/00 + 3998 " Kenny Krugersdorp Pneumonia 12/9/00 + 1741 " Burke Johannesburg " 11/9/00 Section 'D' + 4737 Cpl. Wilson Maritzburg " 27/10/00 + 5741 Pte. Dwyer Germiston Enteric 31/10/00 + 5697 " Davis Pretoria 29/11/00 Died in + hospital, + prisoner + of war + 5181 " Clark Kaalfontein Lightning 24/11/00 + 6800 " Connor Johannesburg Enteric 25/11/00 + 5967 " Sutton Krugersdorp Jaundice 18/1/00 + 2961 " Ambrose Johannesburg Enteric 3/2/01 + 6770 " Cassidy Bloemfontein " 22/3/01 + 1346 " Hanlon Maritzburg " 5/4/00 + 6109 " Buckley Cork Insane + 3910 L.-Cpl. Stewart Gaskraal " 28/8/01 + 6491 Pte. O'Connor " " " + 5532 " Peel Krugersdorp Enteric 14/8/01 + 4657 " Mooney " " 22/12/01 + 5397 " Melia Kroonstad " 27/12/01 + 5540 " Quinn Krugersdorp Drowned 14/1/02 + 6028 Sgt. Pearson At sea Enteric 7/2/02 + 5303 Pte. Furlong Aden Heat apoplexy 29/5/02 + 4938 " Moore " Heart disease 9/8/02 + 4921 Sgt. Smith " Syncope 13/9/02 + 4565 Pte. Dunne " Multiple neuritis + 10/10/02 + 5686 " Gray Diseased liver + 11/10/02 + 3661 " Mooney Krugersdorp Enteric 6/7/01 4th R.D. Fus. + 6332 " Merrigan Aden " 8/11/02 + 7547 Boy Roberts Dthala Pneumonia 8/3/03 + 7182 Pte. Dempsey " Enteric 13/10/03 + 5944 " Wynne Aden Consumption 2/3/04 + + +IV. + +LIST OF WOUNDED. + + Reg. + No. Rank and Name. Date. Place. Nature of Wound. Remarks. + ----+-----------------+---------+------------+----------------+--------- + Capt. M. Lowndes 20/10/99 Talana g.s. leg + " Dibley " " g.s. head + Lieut. Perreau " " g.s. shoulder + 5686 Pte. Gray " " + 2753 " Frahill " " + 5310 " Black " " + 4815 " Doyle " " + 4700 " Leonard " " + 4894 Sgt. Grace " " + 5430 Pte. Babester " " + 5317 " Maher " " + 4790 " O'Brien " " + 5047 " Greer " " + 4359 " Smith " " + 4699 " Callaghan " " + 4931 " Righton " " + 5947 " Dwyer " " + 43 Sgt.-Maj. Burke " " + 3770 Col.-Sgt McNeice " " + 5426 Sgt. Walton " " + 3139 " McKenna " " + 6264 Pte. Carroll " " + 6125 " Dempsey " " + 5038 " Richardson " " + 5523 " Ryan " " + 4620 " Summerville " " + 5635 " Tracey " " + 6084 " Brady " " + 4910 Dmr. Brudnell " " + 5078 Pte. Gorman " " + 5643 " Cullen " " + 5011 " Brennan " " + 4382 " Jordan " " + 4766 " Murphy " " + 4592 " Cullen " " + 6096 " Gilhooley " " + 3704 " Kearns " " + 4857 " Butler " " + 4767 " Byrne " " + 6022 " Cassin " " + 5156 " Fitzpatrick " " + 5118 " Magee " " + 5142 " Murray " " + 5063 " Kelly " " + 5595 " Reynolds " " + 4948 " Wilby " " + 2156 Cpl. Hogan " " + 5634 L.-Cpl. Keenan " " + 4593 Pte. Flood " " + 5137 " McGrath " " + 4785 " Hopkins " " + 5531 " Hatt " " + 4444 " Creegan " " + 4347 " Lahey " " + 5914 " Coyle 15/11/99 Armr. Train shell, arm + Capt. Shewan 15/12/99 Colenso g.s. thigh + 4341 Sgt. Doherty " " g.s. shoulders + 4986 L.-Sgt. Gibbons " " g.s. arm + 5668 " Taylor " " g.s. shoulder + 3150 Sgt. Towey " " g.s. hand and foot + 501 " Hamilton " " g.s. foot + 5108 " Bodkin " " g.s. leg + 5628 L.-Sgt. Church " " g.s. leg + 5374 Cpl. Loughran " " g.s. thigh + 6684 Pte. O'Brien " " g.s. hand + 5117 " Lillis " " g.s. foot + 4589 " Whelan " " g.s. hand + 5637 " Taylor " " g.s. thigh + 4898 " Walker " " g.s. head + 5687 " Enright " " g.s. hand + 5869 " Mackey " " g.s. knee + 5584 " Carr " " g.s. hip + 6145 " Byrne " " g.s. elbow + 6103 " Cooney " " g.s. foot + 4997 " Ludlow " " g.s. arm + 4201 Dmr. Webb " " g.s. thigh + 5970 L.-Cpl. Cooper " " g.s. leg + 6094 " Hanley " " g.s. leg + 5760 Pte. Brown " " g.s. leg + 5765 " Welsh " " g.s. foot + 4545 " Flood " " g.s. thigh + 4959 " Smith " " g.s. hand + 5672 " Sanders " " g.s. leg + 5661 " Murphy " " g.s. foot + 4582 " McCarthy " " g.s. head + 4395 " Ellis " " g.s. arm + 4290 Sgt. Hunt " " g.s. wrist and thigh + 4987 Pte. Reilly " " + 4552 " Kelly " " g.s. thigh + 3362 Dmr. Murphy " " + 4411 Pte. Murray " " + 5716 " Lahey " " + 6038 " Kelly " " + 3013 Sgt. Healey " " + 4726 Pte. O'Brien " " + 5848 " Townsend " " + 5834 Pte. McBride " " g.s. hip + 5520 " Hackett " " + 4441 L.-Sgt. Merry " " g.s. thigh + 5023 L.-Cpl. Hayes " " g.s. feet + 4543 Pte. Keating " " g.s. foot + 6123 " Kelly " " + 4800 " Walsh " " + 4226 " Reilly " " g.s. hand + 6137 " O'Brien " " g.s. thigh + 2442 " Leary " " + 5151 " Clark " " + Maj. English 20/1/00 Vent. Spruit g.s. leg + 6105 L.-Cpl. Kidd " " g.s. neck + 6796 Pte. Burke " " g.s. foot + 6285 " Healey " " g.s. back + 3141 " Rooney " " g.s. arm + 4644 " Burke " " g.s. hip, thigh + 5997 " Davis " " g.s. thigh, leg + 5458 " Burke " " g.s. neck + 5873 " Hunt " " g.s. head + 5659 " Walsh " " g.s. leg + 5069 " Lee " " g.s. hand + 6121 " Brien " " g.s. thigh + 2892 L.-Sgt. Ryan 21/1/00 " g.s. foot + 3548 Sgt. Cragg " " g.s. hand + 6047 Pte. Cole " " g.s. arm + 6391 " Richardson " " g.s. foot + 4898 L.-Cpl. Walker " " + 6366 Pte. Molloy " " g.s. right leg + 6310 " Gibney " " g.s. leg + 5883 " Marshall " " g.s. hand + 5283 " Shaughnessey " " g.s. left leg + 5904 " Edwards " " g.s. right hand + 4636 Cpl. Reynolds " " g.s. chin + 4368 Pte. Githens " " g.s. arm + 5056 " Lordan 22/1/00 " g.s. thigh + 4794 " Murray 23/1/00 " g.s. right forearm + 4689 L.-Sgt. O'Higgins " " g.s. chest + 4384 Pte. Ring " " g.s. head, shoulder + 5888 " Kenny " " g.s. head, shoulder + 6484 " Duffy " " g.s. hip + 5882 Sgt.-Dmr. Smith 25/1/00 " + 5900 Pte. Mason " " g.s. hand + 6569 " Conroy " " g.s. foot + 2nd Lieut. Lane 23/2/00 Hart's Hill g.s. head + " Dennis " " g.s. left leg + 2872 Pte. Wade " " 5th R.D. Fus. + 4012 " Armstrong " " + 3303 " Timmins " " + 5167 Pte. McDonnell " " + 5928 " Pender " " g.s. right hand + 4791 " Connor " " g.s. chest + 4817 " Iliffe " " + 4559 " McCabe " " + 2426 " O'Beirne " " + 6522 " Ryan " " g.s. right hip 1st Battalion + 5461 L.-Cpl. Dennehy " " + 5387 Pte. Brannagan " " g.s. chest + 4771 " Johnston " " g.s. left thigh + 5765 " Ward " " g.s. arm and knee + 4557 " McCarthy " " g.s. back + 5811 " Ryan " " g.s. arm + 2921 " Thompson " " + 6355 " Fagan " " + 148 " Metcalf " " g.s. right arm 5th R.D. Fus. + 2096 " Farrell " " + 1557 " Kinsella " " + 4530 " Brown " " g.s. groin + 5684 " Hetherston " " g.s. chest + 6333 " Newsome " " g.s. left arm + 3631 " McDonald " " g.s. left shoulder + 1997 " Brady " " 5th R.D. Fus. + 6110 " Kelly " " + 2387 " Strain " " g.s. buttock + 3068 " Adams " " + 5069 " Lee " " + 4424 " Mulvaney " " + 4621 " Hyland " " g.s. left thigh + 5836 " Cullen " " g.s. right wrist + 3313 " Concannon " " g.s. right shoulder + 6498 " Flannagan " " g.s. chest + 1741 " Burke " " g.s. left arm + 2422 " Morgan " " + 2787 " Brien " " g.s. left knee + 4325 " Curran " " g.s. left leg + 6108 " Bernes " " + 5908 " McDonald " " + 1881 " Reynolds " " 4th R.D. Fus. + 4015 " Lynch " " + 2348 " Maddox " " g.s. left shoulder + 4029 " Quirk " " + 6217 " Valentine " " + 3881 " Talbot " " + 6314 " Early " " + 5224 " McNeill " " + 4277 " Mack " " + 4994 " Knoctor " " g.s. right leg + 3441 " O'Grady " " g.s. left hand 4th R.D. Fus. + 5982 " Tighe " " g.s. head + 347 " Doyle " " g.s. left hand + 6130 " Mason " " 3rd R.D. Fus. + 5141 " Kirwan " " g.s. right foot + 4569 " Gorman 27/2/00 Pieter's Hill + g.s. shoulder + 5399 " Connor " " + 5828 " Kegney " " + 847 " Mangan " " 3rd R.D. Fus. + 1716 " Quinn " " " + 5716 " Leahy " " + 5981 " Broad " " + 5698 " Toomey " " + 350 " Murphy " " 3rd R.D. Fus. + 1846 " Kealey " " " + 4741 " Moore " " + 4903 Cpl. Marshall " " + 5379 Pte. Pryor " " + 2368 " Byrne " " + 4878 " Clark " " + 6524 " Quaid " " + 1554 " Brennan " " 5th R.D. Fus. + 5757 " Kelly " " + 5284 " Farrell " " 5th R.D. Fus. + 3361 " Brady " " " + 1765 " Fagan " " + 6429 " Fox " " + 4777 " Mullane " " + 3253 " Mellington " " 5th R.D. Fus. + 5280 " Daly " " + 639 " Whelan " " 5th R.D. Fus. + 6139 " Dignam " " + 2917 " Ferris " " 5th R.D. Fus. + 3242 " McHale " " " + 3266 " Evans " " + 1377 " Farrell " " + 4474 " McLoughlin " " + 6113 " McCormack " " + 1651 " Kinsella " " 5th R.D. Fus. + 3639 " Brien " " " + 3282 " O'Brien " " g.s. hand + 1846 " Gradwell " " 5th R.D. Fus. + 174 " Lawless " " g.s. foot, right hand " + 1284 " Molloy " " " + 1508 " Donnelly " " + 5704 " Kennedy " " + 2236 " Tuite " " g.s. right heel 5th R.D. Fus. + 4317 " Carpenter " " + 3231 " Mallon 21/7/00 Zuikerbosch g.s. right thigh 4th R.D. Fus. + 2853 " O'Brien " " g.s. left thigh " + 1143 Pte. Stanton " " 4th R.D. Fus. + 2961 Col.-Sgt. Cossey " " + Maj. English " " slight shell splinter, eye + 6786 Pte. Reilly 15/9/00 Nr. Frdkstdt. On convoy duty + 2392 Sgt. James 21/9/00 " very slight g.s. leg + 6070 Pte. Angleton 2/10/00 Near Irene g.s. foot With M.I. + Lieut. Haskard 27/2/00 Pieter's Hill + right elbow + 2nd Lieut. Bradford " " shoulder + 2692 Pte. Doyle 31/12/00 Nr. Krugersdorp + g.s. buttock + 5767 " Lang " Nooitgedacht + 2052 " Armstrong 2/2/01 Gatsrand g.s. left arm, very slight + 6265 " Roach " " g.s. right leg, slight + 4981 " Sheehan " Nr. Carolina g.s. neck + 5718 " Kavanagh " " g.s. left knee + 4365 " Moran " " g.s. left shoulder + 4680 " Fitzgerald " " g.s. left arm + 6057 " Goff " " g.s. chest + 5433 " Holmes 28/8/01 Gaskraal + 4840 " Nolan " " + 4858 " Butler 27/7/01 Nr. Wonderfontein + 4680 " Fitzgerald 25/10/01 Swartzfontein + g.s. hand, severe + 5706 " McEvoy " " g.s. buttock, groin + 3761 Sgt. Carroll 30/10/01 Bakenlaagte g.s. leg, very slight + 4473 Pte. Hand " " g.s. knee, severe + 4448 " Murphy " " g.s. foot, slight + 4513 " Connor " " g.s. hip, severe + 5706 " Moran " " g.s. hand, severe + 6347 " Nugent " " g.s. abdomen + 4686 Cpl. Curtis 15/12/99 Colenso g.s. hand + 5548 Pte. Metcalf " " g.s. left leg + 4453 " White " " g.s. both legs + 6330 L.-Cpl. Matthews 21/1/00 Vent. Spruit g.s. leg + 5330 Pte. Holohan 27/2/00 Pieter's Hill + 5973 Cpl. Gaffney 7/10/03 Aden Hntlnd. g.s. severe, foot + 6367 Pte. Daly " " g.s. very slight + 5584 " Carr " " g.s. severe, chest + + +V. + +BATTLE OF TALANA. + +REPORTED MISSING SINCE OCTOBER 21ST, 1899. + + Reg. No. Rank and Name. + ---------+----------------- + 2615 Clr.-Sgt. Gage + 2078 Sgt. Martin + 4388 " Guilfoyle + 3761 " Carroll + 5328 L.-Sgt. Payne + 5178 " Crean + 5094 Cpl. Corrigan + 5544 " Richards + 6028 " Pearson + 5004 " Kiernan + 5601 L.-Cpl. Lee + 5143 " Flynn + 5304 " Whelan + 4812 " Lyons + 4868 " Green + 5033 " Byrne + 4947 " Harper + 4638 Pte. Mahon + 4966 " Murphy + 4359 " Hall + 4655 " Cullen + 5175 " Reddy + 5143 " Flynn + 5759 " Dowling + 5070 " Angleton + 5402 " Rourke + 5209 " Dunne + 5793 " Murphy + 4513 " Connor + 5055 " Reidy + 5609 " Connor + 5162 " Macken + 5929 " Carroll + 5956 " Rourke + 4498 " Watts + 4884 " Kenny + 5876 " Molloy + 5647 " Harrison + 6087 " Tyrrell + 4788 " Toomey + 4366 " Doyle + 5931 " Bracken + 3752 " Travers + 5733 " Kavanagh + 6055 " Gough + 5266 " Bigley + 5479 " Brien + 5489 " Geoghegan + 6019 " Curran + 5918 " Callaghan + 4411 " Cooney + 5706 " McEvoy + 5600 " Gleeson + 5000 " Nulty + 4974 " Costello + 5889 " Keogh + 5501 " Mannix + 5127 " Battersby + 5352 " White + 4864 " Byrne + 5390 " Doyle + 5126 " Farrell + 5714 " Finnigan + 5055 " Reidy + 5345 " Dunne + 5789 " Flood + 4964 " Gibney + 5987 " Mahoney + 5030 " Callaghan + 5126 " Delaney + 4692 " McGuinness + 6018 " McDonagh + 5693 " Keating + 4532 " Kirwan + 6866 " Molloy + 5427 " Carr + 4142 " Lyons + 6120 " Cullen + 4927 " Kane + 5545 " Reilly + 5702 " Byrne + 5724 " Dempsey + 5218 " Reilly + 5880 " Carroll + 5144 " Williams + 5027 " Doody + 4473 " Hand + 4566 " Glynn + 5184 " Dowler + 5551 " Finn + 5912 " Kavanagh + 5182 " Cavanagh + 5350 " Farrell + 4692 " McGann + + +VI. + +REPORTED MISSING SINCE OCTOBER 22ND, 1899. + + Reg. No. Rank and Name. + --------+----------------- + 5022 Pte. Rourke + 4998 " Hawthorn + 5246 " McGuinness + 4327 " Neill + 5321 " Moran + + +VII. + +REPORTED MISSING SINCE OCTOBER 30TH, 1899. + + Reg. No. Rank and Name. + --------+---------------- + 5524 Pte. Wall + 5503 Pte. Hennessey + + +VIII. + +REPORTED MISSING SINCE NOVEMBER 15TH, 1899 + +(ARMOURED TRAIN DISASTER). + + Reg. No. Rank and Name. + --------+------------------ + 3672 Sgt. Hassett + 5114 Cpl. Hallahan + 5800 Pte. Buckley + 6293 " Kempster + 5499 " Byrne + 4497 " Barry + 5755 " Collins + 6140 " Dunphy + 5741 " Dwyer + 5256 " Kavanagh + 5691 " O'Rourke + 5626 " Buckley + 5968 " Glynn + 5057 " Kirwan + 5017 " Pakenham + 5239 " Herbert + 6283 " Cragg + 5790 " Murray + 5210 " Rice + 5329 " Stanton + 4680 " Fitzgerald + 5548 " Metcalf + 3715 Sgt. Osborne + 5795 Pte. Balfe + 5316 " Daly + 5516 " Scully + 4443 " Hoey + 5031 " Bierney + 5697 " Davis + 5297 " Drew + 5841 " Hoy + 5287 " Lynch + 5908 " Murphy + 6308 " Connell + 6116 " Harty + 6228 " Meehan + 5297 " Doogan + 6319 " Burke + 4676 " Driscoll + 4865 " Reynolds + 6354 " Sheridan + 5861 " McGuire + 4542 " Flannagan + + +IX. + +LIST OF OFFICERS IN NATAL CAMPAIGN. + + Rank and Name. Remarks. + ---------------------------------------------------------------------- + Col. Cooper Commanding 2nd Royal Dublin Fusiliers. + Maj. Bird 2nd in command. + " English, A Company Wounded at Venter's Spruit and Zuikerbosch. + Capt. Hensley, G Company Killed at Venter's Spruit. + " Weldon, E Company Killed at Talana. + " Fetherstonhaugh, D Coy. Acted as Adjutant after Capt. Lowndes + was wounded. + " Dibley, B Company Wounded at Talana, and sent into Intombi + Hospital. + " Lonsdale, M.I. Company Captured at Talana. + Lieut. Shewan, H Company Wounded at Colenso. + " Perreau Wounded at Talana, and sent into Intombi + Hospital. + " Le Mesurier Captured at Talana. Escaped from Pretoria. + " Grimshaw Captured at Talana. + " Cory Was sent with M.I. Section to Dundonald's + Brigade. + " Renny Transport Officer. Left in Ladysmith. + 2nd Lieut. Haskard Wounded at Pieter's Hill. + " Henry Killed at Colenso. + " Frankland Captured in Armoured Train. + " Genge Killed at Talana. + Capt. Lowndes (Adjutant) Wounded at Talana, and sent into Intombi + Hospital. + Lieut. and Qtmr. Rowland Went to S. A. C. + Lieut. Garvice Joined battalion at Dundee; captured + at Talana. + 2nd Lieut. Ely Joined battalion at Dundee, and died + of enteric, 1900. + Lieut. H. W. Higginson Joined on posting, and shared in siege + of Ladysmith. + Capt. Romer Joined from Staff College on Oct. 30th. + Capt. Haldane and Lieut. The former was captured in the Armoured + Maitland (of Gordon Train, and escaped from + Highlanders) Pretoria with Lieut. Le Mesurier; + the latter killed at Hart's Hill. + 2nd Lieut. Britton Joined on November 5th. After Colenso + he acted as Transport Officer. + Brevet-Lieut.-Col. Sitwell Joined on November 8th, and commanded + C Company. He was killed + at Hart's Hill. + 2nd Lieut. Lane Joined on December 6th. He was + wounded at Hart's Hill. + + +X. + +_The following Officers of the 1st Battalion and other corps joined on +December 7th and subsequent dates:--_ + + Rank and Name. Remarks. + ---------------------------------------------------------------------- + Maj. Hicks Returned to 1st Battalion after Colenso. + Succeeded Col. Cooper in command + of 2nd Battalion, March 1900. + " Gordon Wounded at Colenso. + Capt. Bacon Killed at Colenso. + 2nd Lieut. De Salis Promoted into another regiment. + " Brodhurst Hill Wounded at Hart's Hill. + " Halahan + " Macleod Wounded at Colenso. + " Winnington (Worcestershire Regiment). Attached. + " Wheeler Joined December 23rd. + " Dennis Joined December 27th, and died of enteric + at Aliwal North. + Capt. Venour Joined on January 30th. + Lieut. Hill Joined on January 30th. Wounded at + Hart's Hill. + 2nd Lieut. Bradford Joined on January 30th. Wounded at + Pieter's Hill. + Capt. Sir Frederick Frankland, (3rd Bedford Regiment). Joined on + Bart. March 2nd. + Lieut. G. S. Higginson Joined on March 11th. + Lieut. Nelson, R.M.L.I. Joined on March 29th. + Capt. Clark, " Joined on April 1st. + +Col. C. D. Cooper took over a brigade, with Lieut. Renny as his +A.D.C., early in 1900. It will thus be seen that Capt. Fetherstonhaugh +was the only officer who was with the regiment from start to finish +who was not hit. + + +XI. + +TOTAL CASUALTIES OF OFFICERS OF THE 1st AND 2nd BATTALION ROYAL +DUBLIN FUSILIERS. + + Name. Nature of Place. + Casualty. + ----------------------------+-----------------+-------------------- + Capt. Weldon Killed Talana. + Lieut. Genge " " + Capt. Bacon " Colenso. + Lieut. Henry " " + Capt. Hensley " Venter's Spruit. + Lt.-Col. Sitwell " Hart's Hill. + Capt. Maitland (Gordon " " + Highlanders, attached) + Capt. Macbean " Nooitgedacht. + " Watson " Western Transvaal. + Lieut. Ely Died of disease + " Dennis " " + Capt. Dibley Wounded Talana. + " Lowndes " " + Lieut. Perreau " " + Maj. Gordon " Colenso. + Capt. Shewan " " + Lieut. Macleod " " + Maj. English " Venter's Spruit + and Zuikerbosch. + Capt. Hill " Pieter's Hill. + Lieut. Brodhurst Hill " " + " Lane " Hart's Hill. + " Dennis " " + " Bradford. " Pieter's Hill. + " Haskard " " + Capt. Carington Smith " Sanna's Post and + Heidelberg. + Lt.-Col. Mills " Alleman's Nek. + Lieut. Seppings " " + " Taylor " Parys. + Capt. Kinsman " Near Mafeking. + " Chapman " Itala. + Lieut. Lefroy " " + + +XII. + +HONOURS AND REWARDS OF OFFICERS OF THE 2ND ROYAL DUBLIN FUSILIERS. + + C.B. + + Colonel C. D. Cooper. + " G. A. Mills. + " H. T. Hicks. + + + D.S.O. + + Major S. G. Bird. + " W. H. O. Neill. + Brevet-Major A. F. Pilson. + " W. J. Venour. + Captain H. M. Shewan. + " G. N. Cory. + Lieutenant E. A. A. De Salis. + " C. Garvice. + " Lefroy. + " W. F. Stirling. + " C. T. W. Grimshaw. + " A. Moore. + Captain-Quartermaster R. Baker. + + + BREVETS. + + Major F. P. English. + Brevet-Major Godley. + Captain McBean. + Major A. W. Gordon. + Captain E. Fetherstonhaugh. + " C. F. Romer. + " P. Maclear. + " H. Carington Smith. + Major A. J. Chapman. + Captain M. Lowndes. + + + SPECIAL PROMOTIONS. + + Lieutenant Watson. + " E. A. A. De Salis. + " Lefroy. + + +XIII. + +N.C.O.'S AND MEN OF 2ND ROYAL DUBLIN FUSILIERS AWARDED DISTINGUISHED +CONDUCT MEDAL. + + Reg. Rank and Name. + No. + ------+-------------------------------- + 3423 Sgt. M. Connor } + 4290 " Hunt } + 1664 " Sheridan } A.O. + L.-Cpl. J. Kelly } 163 of + Pte. W. Holmes } 1901 + " P. Kelly } + " E. Reid } + + Sgt.-Mj. F. A. Whalen } + 5th R.D. Fus. } + Qmr.-Sgt. B. T. Bruen } + 5th R.D. Fus. } + Col.-Sgt. F. Gage } + Arm.-Sgt. T. H. Ford, } + attached R.D. Fus. } + Sgt. W. Brown } + 2892 " J. Ryan } A.O. + Cpl. G. F. Frost, 1st } 15 of + Batt. R.D. Fus. } 1902 + L.-Cpl. Melia } + Pte. W. Connell } + " W. Cullen } + " A. Dowling } + " M. Farrelly } + " M. Kavanagh } + " J. McCormack } + 6642 " C. N. Wallace } + + 43 Sgt.-Maj. J. Burke } + 4637 Col.-Sgt. J. Ambrose } A.O. + 5178 " T. Crean } 10 of + " M. Dunne } 1903 + Cpl. P. Flannery } + Pte. P. Furlong } + + Col.-Sgt. J. H. } A.O. + Robinson, 1st Batt. } 172 of + R.D. Fus. } 1903 + + +XIV. + +AN ADDRESS PRESENTED BY THE NATAL UNITED IRISH ASSOCIATION. + +_The Officers, Non-commissioned Officers, and Men of the 2nd Battalion +Royal Dublin Fusiliers._ + +The recent war, from which we welcome you back, marks another epoch of +glory in the annals of your distinguished battalion. It was our +privilege on several occasions to be favoured at social functions with +the presence of officers and men of the DUBLIN FUSILIERS, and we felt +assured that the goodness of character and disposition which shed +their radiance at those gatherings, would shine with added lustre when +in the face of danger and death. The popularity of your regiment in +Natal has only been exceeded by your distinguished gallantry in the +field, and as we followed your fortunes with feelings of deepest +interest throughout the campaign, our hearts thrilled with pride as we +read of your gallant and heroic deeds. As you held the position of +honour at the march to Lucknow, so were you by the unanimous consent +of the army awarded a similar position in the entry to Ladysmith. The +marvellous bravery displayed by your regiment in the terrible fighting +between Talana Hill and Tugela, forms a fitting sequel to your +magnificent record in the Indian Peninsula; and we as Irishmen can +take a legitimate pride in the fact that your muster-roll of glory is +replete with familiar names which abound throughout the hills and +valleys of our far-off motherland. The name and fame of your regiment +are world-wide; and whether on frozen shores or in tropical climes, a +light-heartedness, an uncomplaining endurance of hardship and fatigue, +and a ready adaptability to circumstances, afford abundant proof that +the best traditions of our race have been maintained by the DUBLIN +FUSILIERS. In the vast territories of Hindustan as in South Africa, +you have shown the world the material of which an Irish soldier is +made. In the many engagements in which you have taken part, you have +seen your enemies fall thick around you, and seen, too, the crimson +tide ebb from the heart of many a brave comrade, whose last good-bye +will remain for ever hallowed in your memory. You have returned +triumphant from this WAR, and though, alas! your numbers are fewer, +your hearts are as stout and your spirits as intrepid as ever. The +land which claims you as her sons has in proportion to her +capabilities given more hostages to glory than any land beneath the +sun, and well and nobly have you upheld that national renown. You have +won a name and _eclat_ that will go down through the ages, and with +the hope that countless honours are yet in store to further illumine +the aureole of your prestige, + +We are yours faithfully, + + CHAS. DONNELLY, _President_. + JAMES P. DONNELLY, _Hon. Treasurer_. + E. G. O'FLAHERTY, _Hon. Secretary_. + + _Vice-Presidents_: + + CRAWFORD LINDSAY. THOS. KELLY. + A. TRIMBLE. J. F. E. BARNES. + + _Committee_: + + W. P. BOWEN. C. W. KAY EVANS. + W. J. LYONS. R. S. W. BARNES. + P. O'NEILL. J. J. O'NEILL. + E. BUTLER. D. LANE. + N. F. BLACK. + + +XV. + +ADDRESS FROM THE EUROPEAN INHABITANTS OF ADEN TO THE MEMBERS OF THE +SERGEANTS' MESS, 2ND ROYAL DUBLIN FUSILIERS. + +_To the Members of the Sergeants' Mess, 2nd Battalion Royal Dublin +Fusiliers._ + +We, the undersigned, take advantage of this occasion, the eve of your +departure from among us, to place on record our very high esteem of +the many sociable qualities displayed by you since your battalion +arrived in this station from South Africa in February, 1902. + +Coming to Aden at a time when, after the brilliant services you had +rendered to your Sovereign and country in that uncertain field of the +reputation of battalions as well as individuals--South Africa, you +had every reason to expect a far better station, a union with those +near and dear to you, and therefore every reason to be despondent. +Instead, you threw yourselves into the social life of this place in +such a way that, before you were here many weeks, it was felt that +you, who had displayed the brilliant qualities so characteristic of +your race on many a hard-fought field in South Africa, were not +lacking in those social qualities which tend to enhance the popularity +of His Majesty's forces, and make life a little less irksome in what +all must admit is not a pleasant spot. + +Words fail to express what we all feel at being compelled to say +good-bye to you, who have been more than friends to so many of us, and +in leaving Aden for return to your homeland, we assure you that you +carry with you the sincerest good wishes of all. + +We shall always have a kindly feeling for you, and watch your future +with great interest, and, above all, we trust that you will find those +from whom you have so long been separated in the best of health, and +that a long life and prosperity is before you. + + W. SMITH. F. WISEMAN. + C. ELLIOTT. G. C. KENNEDY. + W. WILLOWS. R. THORLIN. + E. B. BATCHELOR. H. M. HANLEY. + T. GRAVES. E. B. OWEN. + R. GRIFFITHS. J. A. RUPERT JONES. + A. HANDY. J. R. DEANE. + C. A. HOLLAND. T. W. TWADDLE. + C. J. HOCKING. C. O. CRAVEN. + J. M. GILTINAN. J. MALLIA. + F. C. BREWIN. J. INGLOTT. + F. WELLS. G. NOEL. + E. HALL. J. F. FIELD. + F. J. CLAY. E. HESSLETON. + G. R. CHAMARETT. F. PENHA. + P. C. KELLY. + + +XVI. + +EXTRACT FROM BATTALION ORDERS ISSUED AT LADYSMITH, 27/10/99. + +Para. 2. Strength.--The following officers and men, killed in action +on the 20th inst. at the Battle of Talana, are struck off the +strength:-- + + Capt. G. A. Weldon. + + No. 5103 Pte. P. Cahill, A Coy. + " 5794 " A. Merrill, E Coy. + No. 5931 Pte. P. Crotty, E Coy. + " 5918 " P. Callaghan, H Coy. + +Died of wounds received in action on 21st:-- + + 2nd Lieut. C. J. Genge. + No. 1166 Col.-Sgt. F. Anderson, F Coy. + +The Commanding Officer, while expressing his deep regret at these +casualties, can fully testify to the gallant manner in which each and +all met their death, fighting for their Queen and upholding the +regimental honour. + + +XVII. + +EXTRACT FROM BATTALION ORDERS, DATED FRERE, 18/12/99. + +Para. 3. Strength.--The following officers, N.C.O.'s, and men, having +been killed in action at Colenso on the 15th inst., are struck off the +strength of the battalion from that date:-- + +2ND BATTALION. + + Lieut. Robert Clive Bolton Henry. + + Reg. No. Rank and Name. + 3441 Sgt. Hayes. + 6287 L.-Cpl. Gibson. + 6044 " Cathcart. + 5123 Pte. Broderick. + 4488 " Smith. + 5930 " Sinnott. + 5833 Pte. Dillon. + 4795 " Murphy. + 4380 " Doolan. + 4299 " McAlpine. + 5044 " Moore. + 4462 " Murphy. + 6134 Pte. Pearse. + 4560 " Clifford. + 4838 " Flood. + 5319 L.-Cpl. Coyne. + 6165 Pte. Bennett. + +1ST BATTALION. + + Capt. Arthur Henry Bacon. + + Reg. No. Rank and Name. + 3993 Col.-Sgt. Magee. + 3514 Sgt. Flynn. + 4869 " Callan. + 5505 Pte. Cole. + 4301 " Carroway. + 2943 " O'Keefe. + ? " O'Keefe. + 6472 Pte. Hayes. + 4192 " Neill. + 3906 " Walsh. + 4273 " Nolan. + 3273 " Costello. + 2504 " Bissett. + 4193 " Deevey. + 4095 Pte. Usher. + 3108 " Connell. + 6002 " Wisdom. + 4387 " Toole. + 4242 " Joyce. + 4672 " Maddox. + +The Commanding Officer, whilst deeply regretting, in common with all +ranks, the severe loss the regiment has sustained in the deaths of +Captain Bacon and Lieutenant Henry and the N.C.O.'s and men killed in +action at Colenso on Friday last, desires to place on record his high +appreciation of the admirable spirit displayed by all ranks in +unflinching pressing forward under a very heavy fire to the attack of +a practically impregnable position. + +The names of the officers, N.C.O.'s, and men who fell will, he feels +sure, be honoured in the annals of the regiment, as having set a noble +example of fearless courage and devotion to duty. + + +XVIII. + + _Colenso, 18/12/99_ (5). + +TELEGRAM RE DECEASE SERGEANT LINEHAN. + + '_From Censor to G.O.C. L. of Comn._ + +'No. 5514 Cable from Lorenzo Marquez says that Sergeant Linehan, +Fusiliers, died Racecourse, Pretoria, of Dysentery, Friday last. +Buried Catholic Cemetery.' + + +XIX. + + _Frere, 25/12/99_ (3). + +THE QUEEN'S MESSAGE, CHRISTMAS, 1899. + +'I wish you and all my brave soldiers a happy Christmas. God protect +and bless you all.--V.R.I.' + + +XX. + + _Spearman's Camp, 29/1/00_ (6). + +CAPTAIN C. A. HENSLEY DIED OF WOUNDS 21/1/00; STRUCK OFF STRENGTH; +ORDER REGRETTING HIS LOSS. + +The following Officer and N.C.O. having been killed in action and died +of wounds on the dates opposite their names, are struck off the +strength of battalion accordingly:-- + + Captain C. A. Hensley, died of wounds 21/1/00. + No. 5668 Lance-Sergeant Taylor, D company, killed in action 20/1/00. + +Whilst in common with all ranks deeply deploring the severe loss the +battalion has sustained by the death of Captain Hensley, the +Commanding Officer desires to place on record his great appreciation +of the services rendered on all occasions by the late Captain Hensley, +whose zeal, devotion to duty, and gallantry in action was ever +conspicuous since the present war began. He feels sure he is but +expressing the sentiments of all ranks in saying that his name will +always be handed down in honour to future generations of the regiment +as one of those who have nobly striven to shed additional lustre on +the regiment's reputation. + + +XXI. + + _Spearman's Camp, 31/1/00_ (3) + +PRESENT OF TOBACCO FROM PAST OFFICERS, AND LETTER, &C. + +The following letter, accompanying a present of 400 pounds of tobacco +sent to the N.C.O.'s and men of the battalion by some former officers +of the battalion, has been received to-day:-- + +'From the old Officers of the 2nd Battalion Royal Dublin Fusiliers to +the N.C.O.'s, rank and file of the 2nd Royal Dublin Fusiliers, in +token of their high appreciation of the conspicuous gallantry +displayed by the battalion during the campaign, now in progress in +South Africa, in which they have so brilliantly maintained the ancient +traditions of the "Old Toughs."' + +The following names are appended to the above:--Colonel R. Taylor, +Colonel Colville Frankland, Colonel C. E. Glasse, Colonel W. Holmes, +Colonel F. Taylor, Colonel W. C. Riddell, Lieut.-Colonel Reeves, +Lieut.-Colonel F. W. Graham, Lieut.-Colonel A. A. Godwin, +Lieut.-Colonel R. H. Mansel, Lieut.-Colonel M. J. Hickley, +Lieut.-Colonel J. R. Povah, Major the Hon. H. M. Hobart Hampden, Major +R. L. Shaw, Major S. J. Wynne, Major E. Pearse, Captain A. M. +Horrocks, Captain R. D. Vincent, Captain H. J. Guyon, Lieutenant W. S. +Burmester. + +REPLY. + +'Colonel Cooper, the Officers, N.C.O.'s and men of the 2nd Battalion +the Royal Dublin Fusiliers desire to return their very heartfelt +thanks to Colonel Frankland and the old Officers of the battalion for +their kind thoughtfulness in providing the men with tobacco. + +'They beg to assure the old Officers that their gift is most +thoroughly appreciated, as also the expression of goodwill and +admiration of the battalion's services in the present campaign which +accompanies it. + +'To know that the old Officers still continue to follow with interest +and admiration the fortunes and doings of the "Old Toughs" will ever +be an incentive to all ranks to do all that lies in their power to +maintain the reputation which the old Officers helped to win for the +corps in days gone by.' + + +XXII. + + _Spearman's Camp, 1/2/00_ (5). + +LANCE-SERGEANT MERRY PROMOTED FOR GALLANTRY. + +The Commanding Officer has been pleased to specially promote the +undermentioned N.C.O. to the rank of Sergeant from January 12th for +meritorious service in the field:-- + + No. 4441 Lance-Sergeant J. Merry, H company. + + +XXIII. + + _Ladysmith, 5/3/00_ (2). + +LOSSES IN ACTION, INCLUDING COLONEL SITWELL AND CAPTAIN MAITLAND, +NOTED AND DEPLORED. + +The following Officers, N.C.O.'s and men having been killed in action +on the dates opposite their names, are struck off the strength of the +battalion, or cease to be attached to it as the case may be, from +those dates accordingly:-- + + Major and Brevet-Lieut.-Colonel C. H. G. Sitwell, D.S.O., 24/2/00. + Captain S. C. Maitland, 2nd Gordon Highlanders (attached), 24/2/00. + + No. 4871 Pte. J. White. + " 4262 Cpl. J. Seymour. + " 5359 Pte. Galbraith. + " 2872 " Wade. + " 4012 " J. Armstrong. + " 2037 " Whelan. + " 3303 " Timmins. + No. 4743 Pte. T. Reid (attached). 24.2.00 + " 5073 " Kinsella. + " 6296 " Allen. + " 5618 " T. Purcell. + " 1717 " Sherwin. + " 2327 " Grimes. + " 1749 Sgt. T. Brennan. + +Died of wounds 2/3/00:-- + + No. 5745 Pte. Brady. + +Whilst in common with the rest of the battalion deeply deploring the +loss of so many brave Officers, N.C.O.'s and men, and sympathising +with those who have been wounded, the Commanding Officer wishes to +place on record his high appreciation of the services rendered to the +battalion on all occasions by the late Major and Brevet-Lieut.-Colonel +Sitwell, whose distinguished career hitherto tended to the honour and +reputation of the regiment. All ranks of the battalion join with him, +he is sure, in lamenting the loss of such a distinguished soldier and +comrade, and a brilliant career thus suddenly though gloriously cut +short. + +To the late Captain Maitland's sterling qualities as an officer and +comrade he would also wish to bear testimony. His services to the +battalion during a very trying and critical time were most valuable. +On behalf of the battalion he offers the late Captain Maitland's +relatives and brother-officers his deepest sympathy. + + +XXIV. + + 5/3/00 (4). + +THE QUEEN'S MESSAGE RE RELIEF OF LADYSMITH. + +The following telegram, received by the Commander-in-Chief on the +relief of Ladysmith from Her Most Gracious Majesty the Queen, is +published for information of all ranks:-- + +'Thank God for news you have telegraphed to me. Congratulate you with +all my heart.--V.R.I.' + + +XXV. + + _Ladysmith, 5/3/00_ (3). + +THE QUEEN'S MESSAGE--'MY BRAVE IRISH.' + +The Commanding Officer has much pleasure in publishing for the +information of all ranks, the following message from Her Majesty the +Queen, to the 5th Brigade, which was recently received by the G.O.C. +in Chief in Natal. + +_'To General Buller, Natal._ + +'I have heard with the deepest concern of the heavy losses sustained +by my brave Irish soldiers. I desire to express my admiration of the +splendid fighting qualities which they have exhibited throughout these +trying operations.--V.R.I.' + +THE FOLLOWING REPLY WAS SENT BY SIR REDVERS BULLER:-- + +'Sir Redvers Buller has, on the part of the Irish Brigade, to thank +the Queen for her gracious telegram of sympathy and encouragement.' + + +XXVI. + + 5/3/00 (5). + +LETTER TO GORDON HIGHLANDERS, RE CAPTAIN MAITLAND. + +The Commanding Officer has, on behalf of the battalion, forwarded the +following letter to the Officer Commanding the 2nd Gordon Highlanders. + + '_Ladysmith, 5/3/00._ + +'DEAR MAJOR SCOTT,-- + +'On behalf of myself and the officers of the battalion, I write to +offer you all our very deepest sympathy in the severe loss your +battalion has sustained by the death of Captain Maitland. + +'I find it hard to adequately express to you how very deeply the whole +of my battalion laments his loss, and I know I am only expressing the +sentiments of all ranks when I assure you that his memory will ever be +cherished in the battalion. + +'A better or more conscientious officer I have never had under my +command. We would all esteem it a very great favour if you could send +us a photograph of our late dear comrade, and might I also so far +trespass on your kindness, as to ask for one for his company (G) as +well, which I need hardly say will be highly prized by them. + + 'Yours, &c. + (Signed) C. D. COOPER.' + + +XXVII. + + _Ladysmith, 14/3/00_ (3). + +NATAL ARMY ORDERS. THE WEARING OF SHAMROCK ON ST. PATRICK'S DAY. + +The following extracts from Natal Army Orders are published for +information:-- + +'(1) The General Commanding has to communicate to the troops the +following telegram he has received from the C. in C. viz. + +'Her Majesty the Queen is pleased to order that in future on St. +Patrick's Day all ranks in Her Majesty's Irish regiments shall wear as +a distinction a sprig of shamrock in their head-dress to commemorate +the gallantry of Her Irish soldiers during the recent battles in South +Africa. + + 'WOLSELEY.' + + +XXVIII. + + _Ladysmith, 18/3/00._ + +WINSTON CHURCHILL'S TELEGRAM TO REGIMENT. + +The following telegrams received yesterday, and replies thereto, are +published for information:-- + + '_To Colonel, Dublin Fusiliers, Ladysmith._ + +'My earnest congratulations on the honour the Dublin Fusiliers more +than any other regiment have won for the land of their birth. We are +all wearing the shamrock here. + + '(Signed) + WINSTON CHURCHILL.' + +REPLY. + +'_To Winston Churchill, Lord Dundonald's Brigade._ + +'Many thanks for your kind message received yesterday, all ranks +appreciate your kind expressions. + + '(Signed) + COLONEL, DUBLIN FUSILIERS.' + + +XXIX. + + 18/3/00 (1). + +COLENSO RAILWAYMEN'S TELEGRAM TO REGIMENT. + +'_To Brigadier-General Cooper, Commanding Irish Brigade, Ladysmith._ + +'On St. Patrick's Day the railway men of Colenso respectfully wish to +convey to the officers and men of Her Majesty's Dublin Fusiliers their +best wishes for a speedy termination of the present war, in which the +Dublins have borne so glorious a part. The whole of South Africa rings +with praise of the gallant Irish Brigade. We mourn with you the loss +of so many gallant men of your command. They have fallen in their +defence of a united South Africa, over which, please God, Her Most +Gracious Majesty's flag will fly from Cape Town to the Zambesi. + + '(Signed) + INSPECTOR CAMPBELL.' + +REPLY. + + 18/3/00 (1). + +_'To Inspector Campbell, Colenso._ + +'On behalf of the officers and men under my command, please accept our +heartfelt thanks for your kind message and expressions of sympathy. + + (Signed) + COLONEL COOPER.' + + +XXX. + + _5th Brigade Orders, 18/3/00_ (1). + +CAPE TOWN IRISHMEN SEND TELEGRAM. + +The following telegram has been received by General Sir Redvers +Buller:-- + +'Cape Town Irishmen wish the gallant Irish officers and men under your +command many returns of St. Patrick's Day, and would express their +heartfelt admiration for the way in which they have maintained +unsullied the splendid military traditions of Ireland and the Empire +under your gallant leadership.' + + +XXXI. + + _Ladysmith, 20/3/00_ (2). + +THE QUEEN SENDS TELEGRAM OF THANKS. + +The following reply to telegram sent by Colonel Cooper on behalf of +the battalion to Her Majesty the Queen on Shamrock Day was received +yesterday:-- + +'The Queen thanks her Dublin Fusiliers for loyal message. Windsor +Castle, 18th.' + + +XXXII. + + _Elandslaagte, 3/4/00_ (7). + +COLONEL SAUNDERSON'S LETTER. + +The following letter was received to-day by the Commanding Officer +from Colonel Saunderson, M.P.:-- + + _'Castle Saunderson, Belturbet, 1/3/00._ + +'DEAR SIR, + +'I cannot help writing to you to express on my part, and on the part +of every loyal Irishman, the pride and sympathy we take in the heroic +deeds of the Dublin Fusiliers in South Africa. Your gallant regiment +has shed a lustre on the army to which they belong and on the country +from which they come. + +'No words of mine can express the admiration we feel for their +loyalty, their courage, and their indomitable determination. I hope +they realise how our hearts are with them.' + +A reply thanking Colonel Saunderson has been sent by the Commanding +Officer. + + +XXXIII. + + _Fourteen Streams, 12/5_ (3). + +DEATH OF SECOND LIEUTENANT J. T. DENNIS AT ALIWAL NORTH, MAY 2ND. +ENTERIC. + +The Commanding Officer deeply regrets to announce the death of Second +Lieutenant J. T. Dennis, which occurred at Aliwal North on May 2nd of +enteric. + + +XXXIV. + + 17/5/00 (4). + +GENERAL HART CONGRATULATES 1ST BORDERS AND 2ND ROYAL DUBLIN FUSILIERS +ON THEIR MARCHING. + +Major-General Hart congratulates the 1st Border Regiment and 2nd Royal +Dublin Fusiliers upon the recent instance of their marching powers. +For military reasons it was needful after the march forward yesterday +to march back at once to Fourteen Streams. As far as he can arrive at +a tolerably accurate estimate of the ground gone over, these two +battalions in the course of yesterday and last night marched +twenty-six miles in the space of nineteen hours. And the strong point +is that they arrived at the end of it in compact formation, still +going a good pace, and without any straggling or falling out. The +Major-General accordingly puts this event on record. + + +XXXV. + + _Heidelberg, 2/7/00_ (5). + +COLONEL COOPER'S FAREWELL ORDER. + +The following farewell order by Major-General C. D. Cooper is +published for information. The Commanding Officer regrets that its +publication has been unavoidably postponed till now:-- + +'In bidding farewell to the battalion in which I have served for so +many years, I wish to thank all ranks from the bottom of my heart for +the kind and efficient support accorded to me during the period of my +command--close on five years. It was always my ambition to command the +battalion, and on active service, and I feel very thankful that my +wish was granted. We have fought together and worked hard for our +noble Queen and country, and all ranks have shown that good spirit and +bravery that has made the battalion what it is. You may rest assured +that I will always take the greatest interest in the doings of the +battalion, and I shall never forget the happy days spent amongst you. +I much regret that I was unable to wish you Godspeed in person, but I +sincerely hope I shall soon see you all again. My very sincere +sympathy and regret at our very heavy losses. May God bless you all. + + '(Signed) + C. D. COOPER, _Major-General + Commanding 4th Brigade_.' + + +XXXVI. + + _Heidelberg, 24/7/00_ (6). + +GENERAL BULLER'S TELEGRAM RE ZUIKERBOSCH. + +The following telegram received by the G.O.C. is published for +information:-- + +'_from Sir Redvers Buller._ + +'So glad to hear of your fight. Good old Dublins, and tell them so +from me, and well done you.' + + +XXXVII. + + _Krugersdorp, 4/10/00_ (8). + +A PATROL UNDER LIEUTENANT GARVICE, &c. + +A patrol under Lieutenant Garvice, Commanding Virginia Railway +Station, came in contact with some Boers on the 1st. We had one man +wounded, Boers three, whom they had to leave on the ground. The +casualties in the 2nd Coldstream Guards near Pan were caused by the +enemy's fire, the majority of the wounds were caused by explosive +bullets: the men behaved very well, and everybody kept their heads, +otherwise the loss would have been greater, as the Boers opened fire +at sixty yards range. + + +XXXVIII. + + _Krugersdorp, 4/10/00_ (8). + +COLONEL ROCHFORD'S ATTACK. + +Colonel Rochford attacked a small Boer laager between Pretoria and +Johannesburg before dawn yesterday, with Royal Dublin Fusiliers and +M.I. Fusiliers. He rushed the position with the bayonet. Nine +prisoners were captured, most of them men of importance, who have been +troubling the district for some time. A small party of Boers made +their way to Dewetsdorp and Wepener. General Kelly Kenny has sent +troops to occupy both these places. + + +XXXIX. + + _Krugersdorp, 16/12/00_ (8). + +COMMANDING OFFICER'S REMARKS ON TREK. + +The Commanding Officer is very well pleased with the way the men +marched in this trip, doing 102 miles in six days, an average of +seventeen miles a day; also with their excellent conduct and the +cheerful way in which all difficulties were met. The results of the +trip were over 1000 head of sheep and cattle and seven waggons +captured, thirty barns of forage burnt, and innumerable stocks of oat +hay, some of which concealed ammunition. + + +XL. + +LETTER FROM GENERAL HART. + +_Lieut.-Colonel Hicks, Commanding 2nd Battalion Royal Dublin +Fusiliers._ + +The manner in which the encampment of your battalion is arranged +deserves my special commendation. On very bad camping-ground, beset +with rocks and bush, and afflicted with dust between, I find your +companies excellently established by ingenious and industrious +adaptation to circumstances. The regularity and tidiness are +conspicuous, and have been noted by me with great satisfaction. I need +not say how much neatness of arrangements must conduce to quickness +and good quality of soldier work. + + (Signed) + A. FITZROY HART, + _Major-General Commanding Irish Brigade_. + +_Fourteen Streams, May 20th 1900._ + + +XLI. + + _Krugersdorp, 25/1/01_ (4). + +GENERAL HART'S FAREWELL. + +The following Farewell Order by Major-General A. Fitzroy Hart, C.B., +is published for information:-- + +'In leaving to take another command, I wish you, my brother soldiers +of my force, farewell. + +'It is an article of my faith, that you would go anywhere and do +anything required in battle. + +'I leave you with deep regret, and of course I must feel this +particularly for the last of my old Irish brigade with which I began +the war. + +'In departing, I give you this scrap of advice: Be individually, +whenever opportunity offers personally, not only kind but generous to +the inhabitants of this country which we have taken from them, and +among whom so many of our countrymen and countrywomen will have to +dwell. It will not diminish your soldierly strength, and it will +hasten a welcome for the pleasant government of peace.' + + +XLII. + + _Fort Kilmarnock, 25/9/01_ (6). + +LETTER FROM CAPTAIN ANLEY. + +The following extracts from a letter received from Brevet-Major Anley, +Commanding 3rd M.I., are published for information:-- + +'The behaviour of your M.I. company continues to be very good. +Lieutenant Garvice and thirty men of the company did excellent service +the other day, when acting as rearguard to a convoy which was leaving +Carolina. It was reported that it was due to the steadiness of the men +of the Royal Dublin Fusiliers, and the able manner they were handled +by Lieutenant Garvice, that the convoy got in without loss. + +'The Inspector-General M.I. wrote and asked me to congratulate +Lieutenant Garvice on the behaviour of his men. No. 4701, Private +Kelly, R.D.F., was recommended for gallantry on this occasion. + + '(Signed) + F. GORE ANLEY, + +_Brevet-Major Commanding 3rd Battalion M.I._' + + +XLIII. + +CONSPICUOUS GALLANTRY AT GASKRAAL ON AUGUST 28TH, &C. + +The following extract from Army Order No. 418, dated Pretoria, +September 28th, 1901, is published for information:-- + +'No. 1. The following have been brought to notice of the General +Officer Commanding-in-Chief, for gallantry and good service: + + 2nd Royal Dublin Fusiliers: No. 6491, Lce.-Cpl. T. O'Connor + (killed). + +For great and conspicuous gallantry when very closely engaged with +enemy at Gaskraal on 28th Aug. 1901.' + + +XLIV. + +LORD KITCHENER'S WIRE. + +'I know I am speaking for the whole army in South Africa, when I wish +the Dublin Fusiliers Godspeed, and congratulate them on the fine +record they have established during their services in the country.' + +ANSWER. + +'I beg to thank your Lordship in the name of the regiment for your +very kind and congratulatory telegram, which is much appreciated by +all ranks.' + + +XLV. + +ROLL OF OFFICERS, 2ND ROYAL DUBLIN FUSILIERS, WHO EMBARKED AT DURBAN +ON S.S. 'SICILIA,' ON THE 29/1/02, EN ROUTE FOR ADEN. + + Rank and Name. + + Col. H. T. Hicks, C.B. + Maj. S. G. Bird, D.S.O. + Capt. and Bt.-Maj. E. Fetherstonhaugh. + Capt. and Bt.-Maj. M. Lowndes. + Capt. H. W. Higginson. + " G. N. Cory, D.S.O. + Lieut. C. Garvice, D.S.O. + " L. F. Renny. + " J. McD. Haskard. + " A. H. D. Britton. + Lieut. A. de B. W. W. Bradford. + " S. G. De C. Wheeler. + 2nd Lieut. A. W. Newton. + " E. St. G. Smith + " R. F. B. Knox. + " J. P. Tredennick. + " B. Maclear. + " J. P. B. Robinson. + " E. F. E. Seymour. + " H. St. G. M. S. Scott. + Lieut. J. Burke (Quartermaster). + + +_Printed by Strangeways & Sons, Tower Street, + +Cambridge Circus, London, W.C._ + + + +***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE SECOND BATTALION ROYAL DUBLIN +FUSILIERS IN THE SOUTH AFRICAN WAR*** + + +******* This file should be named 25618.txt or 25618.zip ******* + + +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: +https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/2/5/6/1/25618 + + + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules, +set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to +copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to +protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project +Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you +charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you +do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the +rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose +such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and +research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do +practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is +subject to the trademark license, especially commercial +redistribution. + + + +*** START: FULL LICENSE *** + +THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE +PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK + +To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free +distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work +(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project +Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project +Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at +https://www.gutenberg.org/license). + + +Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm +electronic works + +1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm +electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to +and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property +(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all +the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy +all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession. +If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project +Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the +terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or +entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8. + +1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be +used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who +agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few +things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works +even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See +paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project +Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement +and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic +works. See paragraph 1.E below. + +1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation" +or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project +Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the +collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an +individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are +located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from +copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative +works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg +are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project +Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by +freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of +this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with +the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by +keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project +Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others. + +1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern +what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in +a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check +the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement +before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or +creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project +Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning +the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United +States. + +1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg: + +1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate +access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently +whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the +phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project +Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed, +copied or distributed: + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + +1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived +from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is +posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied +and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees +or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work +with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the +work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 +through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the +Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or +1.E.9. + +1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted +with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution +must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional +terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked +to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the +permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work. + +1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm +License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this +work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm. + +1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this +electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without +prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with +active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project +Gutenberg-tm License. + +1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary, +compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any +word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or +distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than +"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version +posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org), +you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a +copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon +request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other +form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm +License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1. + +1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying, +performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works +unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9. + +1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing +access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided +that + +- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from + the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method + you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is + owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he + has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the + Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments + must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you + prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax + returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and + sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the + address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to + the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation." + +- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies + you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he + does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm + License. You must require such a user to return or + destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium + and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of + Project Gutenberg-tm works. + +- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any + money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the + electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days + of receipt of the work. + +- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free + distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works. + +1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm +electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set +forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from +both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael +Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the +Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below. + +1.F. + +1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable +effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread +public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm +collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic +works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain +"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or +corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual +property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a +computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by +your equipment. + +1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right +of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project +Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project +Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project +Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all +liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal +fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT +LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE +PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH F3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE +TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE +LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR +INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH +DAMAGE. + +1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a +defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can +receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a +written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you +received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with +your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with +the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a +refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity +providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to +receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy +is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further +opportunities to fix the problem. + +1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth +in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO OTHER +WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO +WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE. + +1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied +warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages. +If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the +law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be +interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by +the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any +provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions. + +1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the +trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone +providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance +with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production, +promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works, +harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees, +that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do +or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm +work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any +Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause. + + +Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm + +Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of +electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers +including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists +because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from +people in all walks of life. + +Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the +assistance they need, is critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's +goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will +remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project +Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure +and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations. +To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation +and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4 +and the Foundation web page at https://www.gutenberg.org/fundraising/pglaf. + + +Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive +Foundation + +The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit +501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the +state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal +Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification +number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg +Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent +permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws. + +The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S. +Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered +throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at +809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email +business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact +information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official +page at https://www.gutenberg.org/about/contact + +For additional contact information: + Dr. Gregory B. Newby + Chief Executive and Director + gbnewby@pglaf.org + +Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg +Literary Archive Foundation + +Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide +spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of +increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be +freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest +array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations +($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt +status with the IRS. + +The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating +charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United +States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a +considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up +with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations +where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To +SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any +particular state visit https://www.gutenberg.org/fundraising/donate + +While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we +have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition +against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who +approach us with offers to donate. + +International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make +any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from +outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff. + +Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation +methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other +ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations. +To donate, please visit: +https://www.gutenberg.org/fundraising/donate + + +Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic +works. + +Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm +concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared +with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project +Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support. + +Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed +editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S. +unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily +keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition. + +Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility: + + https://www.gutenberg.org + +This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm, +including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary +Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to +subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks. + diff --git a/25618.zip b/25618.zip Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..35e0acc --- /dev/null +++ b/25618.zip diff --git a/LICENSE.txt b/LICENSE.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..6312041 --- /dev/null +++ b/LICENSE.txt @@ -0,0 +1,11 @@ +This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements, +metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be +in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES. + +Procedures for determining public domain status are described in +the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org. + +No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in +jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize +this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright +status under the laws that apply to them. diff --git a/README.md b/README.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..deaad7f --- /dev/null +++ b/README.md @@ -0,0 +1,2 @@ +Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for +eBook #25618 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/25618) |
