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-Project Gutenberg's A Handbook of the Boer War, by Gale and Polden, Limited
-
-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: A Handbook of the Boer War
-
-Author: Gale and Polden, Limited
-
-Release Date: April 24, 2005 [EBook #15699]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ASCII
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A HANDBOOK OF THE BOER WAR ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Jonathan Ingram, David King, and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team
-
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-</pre>
-
-<h1>A HANDBOOK OF THE BOER WAR</h1>
-<h2>With General Map of South Africa and 18 Sketch Maps and
-Plans</h2>
-<h3>GALE AND POLDEN LIMITED</h3>
-<h3>LONDON AND ALDERSHOT</h3>
-<h3>1910</h3>
-<h3>BUTLER &amp; TANNER</h3>
-<h3>THE SELWOOD PRINTING WORKS</h3>
-<h3>FROME AND LONDON</h3>
-<h2>CONTENTS</h2>
-<div class="poem">
-<div class="stanza">
-<p><a href="#chap1">I PROLEGOMENA</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<p class="i2"><a href="#chap1-1">I The Roundheads of South
-Africa</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<p class="i2"><a href="#chap1-2">II Patriotism, Duty and
-Discipline</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<p class="i2"><a href="#chap1-3">III War considered as a Branch of
-Sport</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<p><a href="#chap2">II THE NATAL WEDGE</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<p><a href="#chap3">III DEUS EX MACHINA NO. I</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<p><a href="#chap4">IV KIMBERLEY AND THE SIEGE OF RHODES</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<p><a href="#chap5">V A TRAGEDY OF ERRORS</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<p><a href="#chap6">VI MORE TUGELA TROUBLES</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<p><a href="#chap7">VII LADYSMITH AT BAY</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<p><a href="#chap8">VIII DEUS EX MACHINA NO. 2</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<p><a href="#chap9">IX ALARMS AND EXCURSIONS</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<p><a href="#chap10">X BADEN-POWELL AND THE SIEGE OF
-MAFEKING</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<p><a href="#chap11">XI BLOEMFONTEIN TO PRETORIA</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<p><a href="#chap12">XII THE NEW COLONY</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<p><a href="#chap13">XIII NEC CELER NEC AUDAX</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<p><a href="#chap14">XIV THE TAMING OF THE TRANSVAAL</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<p><a href="#chap15">XV THE RECURRENCES OF DE WET</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<p><a href="#chap16">XVI LORD KITCHENER AT WORK</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<p><a href="#chap17">XVII THE MECHANICAL PHASE</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<p class="i2"><a href="#chap17-1">I Orange River Colony</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<p class="i2"><a href="#chap17-2">II Eastern Transvaal</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<p class="i2"><a href="#chap17-3">III Western Transvaal</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<p class="i2"><a href="#chap17-4">IV Cape Colony</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<p><a href="#chap18">XVIII THE END</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<p><a href="#commanders">COMMANDERS OF DIVISIONS AND
-BRIGADES</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<p><a href="#index">INDEX OF PERSONS AND PLACES</a></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<h2>SKETCH MAPS AND PLANS<a id="footnotetag1" name=
-"footnotetag1"></a><a href="#footnote1"><sup>1</sup></a></h2>
-<div class="poem">
-<div class="stanza">
-<p><a href="#fig-natal">Northern Natal</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<p><a href="#fig-modder">Modder River and Magersfontein</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<p><a href="#fig-stormberg">Stormberg</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<p><a href="#fig-colenso">Colenso</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<p><a href="#fig-vaalkrantz">Spion Kop and Vaalkrantz</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<p><a href="#fig-spion">Spion Kop</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<p><a href="#fig-ladysmith-advance">Final Advance on
-Ladysmith</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<p><a href="#fig-ladysmith-siege">Siege of Ladysmith</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<p><a href="#fig-riet">Riet and Modder Drifts</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<p><a href="#fig-paardeberg">Paardeberg</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<p><a href="#fig-poplar">Poplar Grove and Driefontein</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<p><a href="#fig-sannahs">Sannah's Post</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<p><a href="#fig-magaliesberg">Magaliesberg District</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<p><a href="#fig-diamond">Diamond Hill</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<p><a href="#fig-brandwater">Brandwater Basin</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<p><a href="#fig-orange">Orange Free State</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<p><a href="#fig-so-transvaal">Southern Transvaal</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<p><a href="#fig-noitgadecht">Noitgedacht Nek</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<p><a href="#fig-general">General Map of South Africa&mdash;at the
-beginning.</a></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote1" name=
-"footnote1"></a><b>Footnote 1:</b><a href=
-"#footnotetag1">(return)</a>
-<p>The thanks of the Author are due to the Army Council for
-permission to copy the maps and plans in the Official History of
-the War, and to L.S. Amery, Esq., for permission to copy the plans
-in the fifth volume of the <i>Times</i> History of the War.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<h2>PREFATORY NOTE</h2>
-<p>The author has endeavoured in this Handbook to compile, for the
-use of students and others, a general account of the various phases
-of the Boer War of 1899-1902, in which he served for twenty-six
-months.</p>
-<p>With some exceptions, every statement of fact relating to the
-military operations may be verified in one or more of the following
-publications&mdash;</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>The "Times" History of the War;</p>
-<p>The War Office Official History of the War;</p>
-<p>The Minutes of Evidence taken before the Royal Commission of
-Inquiry into the War.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>To the two Histories, which have been but recently completed,
-the Author is much indebted. Other authorities have, however, been
-consulted.</p>
-<p>The Sketch Maps and Plans of certain areas and battlefields are
-only intended to give, by means of a few hachures, contours, and
-form-lines, a general impression of topographical features.</p>
-<p>The Author has from time to time in the course of the narrative
-indicated what he believes to have been the chief causes of the
-prolongation of the War:&mdash;</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>The inefficacy of modern Tactics as a means of dealing with
-partisan warfare;</p>
-<p>The moral reinforcement derived from a confident belief in the
-justice of a cause, by which the enemy was continually encouraged
-to persevere;</p>
-<p>The reluctance of the British leaders to fight costly
-battles;</p>
-<p>The constitutional inability of the British Officer to take War
-seriously;</p>
-<p>The waste of British horses due to inexpert Horsemastership.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>May, 1910.</p>
-<a name="fig-general" id="fig-general"></a>
-<div class="figcenter" style="width:50%;"><a href=
-"images/image01.png"><img width="100%" src="images/image01.png"
-alt="General Map of South Africa" /></a></div>
-<div class="figcenter" style="width:50%;"><a href=
-"images/image02.png"><img width="100%" src="images/image02.png"
-alt="General Map of South Africa" /></a></div>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page1" id="page1"></a>{1}</span>
-<h2><a name="chap1" id="chap1">CHAPTER I</a></h2>
-<h3>Prolegomena</h3>
-<h3><a name="chap1-1" id="chap1-1">I. THE ROUNDHEADS OF SOUTH
-AFRICA</a></h3>
-<p>History often reproduces without reference to nationality some
-particular human type or class which becomes active and predominant
-for a time, and fades away when its task is finished. It is,
-however, not utterly lost, for the germ of it lies dormant yet
-ready to re-appear when the exigencies of the moment recall it. The
-reserve forces of human nature are inexhaustible and
-inextinguishable.</p>
-<p>It is probable that few of the Boers had ever heard of Oliver
-Cromwell, or that his life and times had ever been studied in the
-South African Republics, and had influenced the Boer action; yet
-the affinity of the South African burghers of the XIXth century
-with the Puritans and the Roundheads of the XVIIth is striking. It
-was not so much a parallelism of aims and hopes, for the struggle
-in England was political and not national as in South Africa, as of
-temperament, character, and method. There was hardly an individuity
-in the Boers of the War which might not have been found in the
-followers of Cromwell. Like these they were fanatically but
-sincerely religious, and their unabashed and fearless adherence to
-their beliefs and their open observance of the outward forms of
-religion exposed them to the same cruel and baseless charge of
-hypocrisy. Just as the aristocratic followers of Charles I had
-jeered at <span class="pagenum"><a name="page2" id=
-"page2"></a>{2}</span> the Roundheads, so did every thoughtless
-officer and newspaper correspondent jeer at the psalm-singing and
-the prayer meetings in the laagers. The Boers had the courage of
-their religious opinions, and were not ashamed to proclaim them in
-the face of man. The Bible was the only book they knew, and they
-guided themselves according to their lights by its precepts. In
-opposing the English they believed that they were resisting the
-enemies of the Almighty. Like the Puritans they honestly thought
-that certain passages in the Holy Scriptures applied to them as the
-Chosen People, and that they were assured of Divine Protection; and
-if they erred in their exegesis their delusion at least deserves
-respect. Yet all the while the Old Testament was the volume they
-chiefly studied, and if they quoted the New Testament they
-sometimes modified the context to their own advantage.</p>
-<p>Each Puritan movement has derived its strength not so much from
-its abstract merit as from the intense personal conviction felt by
-each unit engaged in it, that the righteousness of the cause was
-unassailable. The Puritan never wavered in philosophic doubt. No
-misgivings disturbed his soul, and he pursued his object with all
-the strength of his body.</p>
-<p>The Puritan stir in the reign of Charles I was a revival, almost
-a continuation, of the half political, half religious activity
-which in the previous century had effected the Reformation. The
-Boer movement in South Africa, which sprang up after a germination
-lasting three generations, was brought about by a recrudescence of
-the spirit which made the Boers of the Netherlands rise against
-Alva and the Spanish domination in the XVIth century.</p>
-<p>In the XVIIth century the Boers of the Netherlands, made a
-voluntary settlement in South Africa, and there under the Southern
-Cross they were joined by French Puritans, who had fought under
-Cond&eacute; and who left their country after the revocation of the
-Edict of Nantes, <span class="pagenum"><a name="page3" id=
-"page3"></a>{3}</span> and also by some persecuted sectaries from
-Piedmont. The two stocks, although one was of Teutonic and the
-other of Celtic origin, easily came together, and under the
-pressure of common interests and common dangers were consolidated
-and vulcanized: and if in the previous generation the English
-Pilgrim Fathers of the <i>Mayflower</i> had directed their course
-to the south instead of to the west, and had cast anchor off the
-shore of that distant region of Good Hope, it is probable that a
-mighty nation would have been founded in South Africa.</p>
-<p>Cromwell as the military leader of the Commonwealth Boers is, at
-least in England where the military art has not been scientifically
-studied, one of the suppressed characters of history. His political
-achievements, as is perhaps natural in a community which courts the
-voter and despises the soldier, have put out of sight the means by
-which he mainly won them; namely his genius as a cavalry and
-partisan commander. An ungainly, narrow-minded, bigoted, bucolic
-squireen of Huntingdon, lacking in every quality which we are
-accustomed to associate with a cavalry officer, inaugurated an era
-in the history of Mounted Troops. His methods are studied on the
-Continent, and the German Staff has recently discovered that he was
-the first leader to use cavalry as a screen to hide the movements
-of the main body. Yet there is no evidence that he ever studied the
-military art, and he did not become a soldier until he had reached
-his fourth decade. In the Royalist Army opposed to him were
-soldiers by profession and experience; officers and men who had
-been under Gustavus Adolphus in the Thirty Years' War; for in the
-XVIIth century the services of aliens were in request on the
-Continent, and at one time no less than eighty-seven senior
-officers of British nationality were serving in the Swedish Army,
-then the most renowned in Europe. Yet Cromwell with his "Eastern
-Association," his Ironsides, his yeomen and raw levies, beat the
-Royalist Army, officered from the same class which is still
-believed <span class="pagenum"><a name="page4" id=
-"page4"></a>{4}</span> to possess the monopoly of the aptitude for
-leading men in war, by exercising the homely qualities of energy,
-self-control, endurance, and practical common sense applied
-instantly to the occasion of the moment.</p>
-<p>The lessons to be learnt from Cromwell's campaigns have been
-thus epitomized by General Baden-Powell:&mdash;"There is one thing
-that ought not to escape the attention of students, namely the
-success that attended Cromwell's method of rallying his troops
-whenever they got dispersed. When things looked bad, as they did on
-one or two occasions, when some of his cavalry were defeated and
-the rest scattered, he never lost heart and his men never lost
-heart; they knew they had to rally again and attack somewhere else.
-Very often the enemy were deceived by that, thinking that the
-Roundheads were scattered and broken up, and took no further notice
-of him until they suddenly found him attacking from quite a new
-direction. That was the secret of his success on many occasions,
-and one that has its lesson to-day, just as it had in those
-days&mdash;that when all seems pretty bad and you are scattered and
-broken, keep up a good heart and get together again and have
-another go." With scarcely the change of a word these remarks will
-account for the prolongation of the war for two years after the
-occupation of the Boer capitals.</p>
-<p>The Boer leaders, like their great prototype Cromwell, owed much
-of their success to their novel and skilful use of mounted troops.
-The European conception of the functions of mounted troops had been
-stereotyped for some time; Cavalry screens an advancing army,
-prevents the enemy observing its dispositions, acts as its eyes and
-ears; and so forth. It is true that Great Britain had already for
-at least a generation employed Mounted Infantry in colonial wars;
-but the innovation had never been approved of on the Continent,
-where it was regarded as a cheap and inefficient British substitute
-for Cavalry.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page5" id="page5"></a>{5}</span>
-<p>Yet the famous postscript "unmounted men preferred,"<a id=
-"footnotetag2" name="footnotetag2"></a><a href=
-"#footnote2"><sup>2</sup></a> which was affixed to the acceptance
-of the help proffered by the Australian Colonies, shows that at
-first the power of mounted troops acting not as the eyes and ears
-of an army, but as a mobile and supple "mailed fist," was not
-understood. In ten weeks, however, the tune changed, and it was
-"preference given to mounted contingents."</p>
-<p>When the grand operations were over, the enemy's chief towns
-occupied, and the lines of communication fairly secure, the
-necessity for mounted troops became still more apparent. The Boers
-saw that it was useless for them to campaign at large. They took to
-<i>guerilla</i>, and restricted themselves generally to independent
-horse raids against which foot troops were powerless. Gradually the
-proportion of horses to men in the British columns rose, until
-practically all the combatants were mounted, and at last the
-Cromwellian principle that the best military weapon is a man on a
-horse was fully accepted.</p>
-<p>The military qualities of the Boers, like those of Cromwell's
-men, were useful but not showy. They came by instinct and not by
-acquisition, and they cannot be sufficiently accounted for as the
-outcome of experience in the pursuit of game on the veld. They were
-neutralized partially by characteristics the reverse of military.
-The Boers were not remarkable for personal courage. If there had
-been in the Boer Army a decoration corresponding to the Victoria
-Cross it would have been rarely won or at least rarely earned.
-There is scarcely an instance of an individual feat of arms or act
-of devotion performed by a Burgher. On the few occasions when the
-Boers were charged by cavalry they became paralysed with terror.
-They were incapable of submitting themselves <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page6" id="page6"></a>{6}</span> to discipline,
-and difficult to command in large numbers. They could not be made
-to understand that prompt action, which possibly might not be the
-best under the circumstances, was preferable to wasting time in
-discussing a better with the field cornets. They were subject to
-panics and, for the time, easily disheartened: and their sense of
-duty was not conspicuous. The principles of strategy were unknown
-to them, their tactics were crude, and with the exception of a very
-few who had fought in 1881, they were without experience of the
-realities of war.<a id="footnotetag3" name=
-"footnotetag3"></a><a href="#footnote3"><sup>3</sup></a></p>
-<p>If in the month of September, 1899, an impartial military critic
-in a foreign Ministry of War had been directed to draw up an
-appreciation of the situation and to forecast the course of the
-impending struggle, he would probably have expressed himself
-somewhat as follows:&mdash;</p>
-<p>"An Army of 100,000 men is the utmost that Great Britain will be
-able to place in the field in South Africa, for the Indian and
-Colonial drafts must be provided for, and the Militia and other
-Auxiliary Forces, which are not of much account, are tethered to
-the country; but it will be sufficient for the purpose. Although
-the military system of Great Britain is hopelessly behind the
-times, she has always done wonders with her boomerangs, bows and
-arrows, and flint instruments. That Army will be fairly well
-furnished with modern weapons and equipment, and the excellent
-personality of the soldier will compensate to a great extent for
-incapacity in the Staff and superior officers. With this Army she
-will have to meet a brave but undisciplined opponent whose numbers
-cannot be estimated. Even if the Free Staters are included it is
-improbable <span class="pagenum"><a name="page7" id=
-"page7"></a>{7}</span> that more than 100,000 men can be put into
-the field. These have had no military training, their leaders will
-be unprofessional officers who will be unable to make good use of
-the munitions of War which the two Republics have been strangely
-allowed to import through British ports and to accumulate in large
-quantities. If the burghers of the Orange Free State throw in their
-lot with the Transvaalers, which is improbable as they have no
-quarrel with Great Britain, the numbers opposed to her will
-certainly be augmented, but the task before her will be greatly
-simplified. Instead of having to send one portion of her Army by
-way of Natal to effect a junction in the Transvaal, with the other
-portion working northwards through Kimberley and Mafeking, a
-campaign which would involve two long and vulnerable lines of
-communication, she will be able to strike at once through the heart
-of the Free State and will advance without much difficulty to
-Johannesburg and Pretoria. The hardest part of her task will be the
-passage of the Vaal, where a great battle will be fought, and the
-capture of Pretoria, which is reported to be well fortified. With
-Bloemfontein, Johannesburg, Pretoria and the railways in the
-possession of Great Britain, the opposition will collapse in a very
-few weeks, for no nation has ever been able to carry on a struggle
-when its chief towns and means of communication are in the enemy's
-possession."</p>
-<p>This hypothetical appreciation probably represents the general
-opinion current both at home and abroad during the period
-immediately preceding the outbreak of the War; but it proved to be
-mistaken from the first. The Free Staters joined the Transvaalers
-and the allied forces assumed the offensive over a wide area
-without delay. Kimberley and Mafeking were threatened on the west,
-and on the east the Boers poured into Natal, upon which they had
-for sixty years looked with the aggrieved and greedy eyes of a dog
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page8" id="page8"></a>{8}</span>
-from whom a bone, to which he believes he is entitled, has been
-recovered.</p>
-<p>To Natal, in 1824, had come a handful of British pioneers. From
-Chaka, the King of the Zulus, they obtained a grant of land upon
-the coast, and after eleven years they endeavoured without success
-to induce the British Government to recognize the settlement, which
-in course of time became the City of Durban, as a Colony to which,
-in honour of the Princess heiress presumptive to the Throne of
-Great Britain, they proposed to give the name Victoria; and they
-were thus the first to associate her with the Empire, which, in
-spite of reluctant politicians who did their best to restrict it,
-was destined to expand marvellously during her reign.</p>
-<p>The Natal settlement was frowned on by the Imperial Government,
-who even confiscated a little ship which the pioneers had toilfully
-fitted out and which was bringing envoys from the King of the Zulus
-to the King of England, on the plea that it was unregistered and
-that it came from a foreign port. In 1828 Chaka, who was not
-unfavourably disposed towards the Durban pioneers, was murdered by
-his brother Dingaan, who succeeded him as King of the Zulus. It is
-said that his last words to Dingaan were, "You think that you will
-rule the land when I am gone, but I see the white men coming, and
-they will be your masters."</p>
-<p>His words were prophetically true, but there were two races of
-white men hovering over Natal; and the Great King of the Zulus, a
-tribe held in little account before his time, but which had under
-his leadership absorbed or exterminated almost every other tribe
-from Pondoland to Delagoa Bay, was no longer with them to choose
-between the rivals to his own ends and advantage; and Dingaan
-inherited the cruelty without the ability or the statecraft of his
-brother, the Napoleon of South Africa.</p>
-<p>Of all the races of Europe the Low Germans of Holland
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page9" id="page9"></a>{9}</span>
-seemed the least likely to contract the migratory habit. The
-Hollander of the present day, popularly but incorrectly called a
-Dutchman, is home-staying and home-loving. The compact,
-well-cared-for, well-ordered homestead, village, and town
-communities of the Netherlands are inconsistent with a roving
-disposition, and yet the Hollanders of South Africa furnished the
-most conspicuous example of Nomadism in modern times.</p>
-<p>It may have been that the ordeal of Alva and the subsequent
-disturbance of the Thirty Years' War had constitutionally unsettled
-the Hollanders to such a degree that their descendants, emancipated
-from European ideas, became prone to restlessness, for in a
-generation or two they began to trek; or perhaps the magic of the
-spacious veld, with its clear sky and the mountains and flat-topped
-kopjes sharply defined on the horizon, irresistibly lured them on.
-In the land they had quitted the air was dense with moisture;
-scarcely a hill was to be seen; they were hemmed in by sluggish
-rivers and by the sea, which leaned heavily against the dykes and
-threw its spray angrily down on to the reclaimed pastures which had
-been stolen from it.</p>
-<p>The original Dutch settlement at the Cape was made by a Company
-of Amsterdam merchants for the refreshment and refitting of their
-ships engaged in trade with the East. The Company was a harsh and
-extortionate master, who paid little attention to the needs and the
-welfare of the settlement, which was regarded merely as a place of
-call. The discontented colonists began to leave the seacoast and
-trekked inwards, where the heavy hands of the cordially detested
-representatives of the Company could not reach them. Its rule came
-to an end in 1795, when, at the request of Holland, Great Britain
-took over the Colony in order to prevent it falling into the hands
-of France. It was restored at the Peace of Amiens, but in a few
-years again came into the possession of Great Britain.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page10" id="page10"></a>{10}</span>
-<p>The Colonies of the Empire were at that time administered by a
-Branch of the War Office which regarded the Cape settlement much in
-the same light as it had been regarded by the Dutch Company, as a
-necessary but troublesome dep&ocirc;t on the way to the East; and
-had the Overland Route and the Suez Canal been available a
-generation earlier it would probably have been abandoned.</p>
-<p>The Boers hoped that their new masters, who at least were not an
-association of Amsterdam merchants absorbed in their ledgers, would
-treat them with more sympathy and consideration. But the only
-serious colonial problem with which British politicians had up to
-that time been called upon to deal was in North America, and they
-had disastrously failed in their attempt to solve it. They were
-without experience in the management of white plantations, they
-shirked the future and looked only to the "ignorant present," and
-their policy in South Africa was based upon two principles: that on
-no account must the boundaries of the Empire be enlarged and new
-responsibilities incurred, and that in all quarrels between white
-man and black man the presumption was that the white man was in the
-wrong.</p>
-<p>The Great Trek of 1836-7 was brought about by the emancipation
-of the slaves and by the refusal or inability of the Government to
-protect the farmers against the raids of the "Kaffir"<a id=
-"footnotetag4" name="footnotetag4"></a><a href=
-"#footnote4"><sup>4</sup></a> tribes on the border. There is no
-doubt that enslaved Hottentots, Bushmen, and even Malays who had
-been with the knowledge of the authorities imported from Madagascar
-and Malacca, were often ill-treated by individual slave-owners; but
-the Boers resented the charge of wholesale cruelty which was made
-against them, and the favour and patronage <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page11" id="page11"></a>{11}</span> bestowed
-upon native tribes. Moreover, although the slave-owners were
-entitled to compensation for the loss of their helots, the fund was
-administered in London, with the result that a considerable
-proportion of the already inadequate sum was retained in the hands
-of agents.</p>
-<p>The object of the Great Trek was deliverance from the harsh and
-hostile jurisdiction of the British Government, and the setting up
-of a new and independent Boer community in Natal, which was
-reported to be a promised land flowing with milk and honey. The
-Boers proposed to shake themselves free from the Egyptian and to
-occupy Canaan.</p>
-<p>The <i>voortrekkers</i>, among whom was the boy Paul Kruger,
-slowly passed away towards the north and crossed the Orange River.
-Moshesh, the chief of the Basutos, watched curiously from his
-mountains the trains of wagons strung out on the veld, but
-refrained from molesting the emigrants. Not so Moselekatse,<a id=
-"footnotetag5" name="footnotetag5"></a><a href=
-"#footnote5"><sup>5</sup></a> a chief who had formerly broken away
-from Chaka and had set himself up beyond the Vaal, and who
-subsequently founded the Matabele Kingdom in which he was succeeded
-by his son Lobengula. He swooped down upon the advanced parties,
-who defended themselves with success and afterwards chastised him
-in his own country, in which, hidden from his eyes, lay the
-gold-bearing reefs of Johannesburg.</p>
-<p>Meanwhile the British Government had forged a useless and clumsy
-weapon for the coercion of its "erring and misguided" subjects. It
-was held by the lawyers that the trekkers could not at will and by
-the simple process of migration throw off their allegiance to the
-Crown of England, and a declaratory Act was passed under which all
-British subjects south of Latitude 25, whether within or without
-the colony, could be arrested and punished.</p>
-<p>The Boer scouts discovered passes over the Drakensberg
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page12" id="page12"></a>{12}</span>
-which gave them a readier access than they had expected into Natal.
-It had not recovered from the devastations of Chaka and was thinly
-inhabited. Settlements were made near the banks of the Tugela,
-while Piet Retief, after a brief visit to Durban, went on to
-negotiate with Dingaan at the royal kraal of Umgungundhlovu in
-Zululand. He was received with some cordiality, but accused of
-participating in a recent cattle raid. Retief, to show his good
-faith, offered to catch the robber, a chief named Sikunyela, whose
-kraal was a hundred miles away. He found Sikunyela, who greatly
-admired the glistening rings of a pair of handcuffs shown him by
-the slim Dutchman, and who was even persuaded that they would be a
-becoming ornament to a native chief. He tried them on, but a more
-intimate acquaintance with the use of handcuffs induced him to
-surrender the cattle he had stolen from Dingaan, the King of the
-Zulus.</p>
-<p>Again Retief with a hundred followers waited upon Dingaan at
-Umgungundhlovu, and after military displays on each side received
-from him a grant of the same land which Chaka had already given to
-the British pioneers of Durban. Next day the Boers were received in
-farewell audience by Dingaan, by whose orders they were
-treacherously surrounded and led out to the place of execution, a
-hill of mimosas outside the royal kraal, where they were put to
-death.</p>
-<p>There remained the defenceless plantations on the Tugela. Before
-the news of the massacre could reach them, and while they were
-hourly expecting the return of Retief, Dingaan's impis swooped down
-upon them from Zululand. At the cost of the lives of 600 men,
-women, and children, the tribes were driven back, and the little
-town of Weenen, the "place of weeping," remains to mark the
-spot.</p>
-<p>Soon other parties of emigrants came in from beyond the
-Drakensberg, and in 1838 an expedition under Potgieter failed to
-punish Dingaan for his treachery. Nor <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page13" id="page13"></a>{13}</span> did an
-attempt to help the emigrants made by the British settlers at
-Durban meet with success. A small force of Natal natives under an
-Englishman named Biggar was greatly out-numbered at the mouth of
-the Tugela and perished almost to a man. Dingaan retaliated by
-sending an impi to Durban, which he held for a few days; the
-settlers taking refuge on board a ship in the Bay.</p>
-<p>The Boers were disheartened and many of them trekked back to the
-veld beyond the Drakensberg passes, which is now the Orange River
-Colony. Their position in face of Dingaan seemed hopeless; but in
-November, 1838, there came out of the Cape Colony one Pretorius. He
-had heard of their distress, and he organized a force of 500 men,
-with whom, on December 16, he successfully encountered Dingaan's
-army and slew 3,000 of his warriors at the Blood River, an affluent
-of the Buffalo. Dingaan fled and the column marched on to
-Umgungundhlovu, where Retief's mouldering body was found on the
-hill of mimosas, and on it the deed of grant of land at Durban.
-Pretorius was ambushed by Zulus disguised as cattle, crawling on
-all fours and wearing ox hides; but he escaped with slight loss,
-and returned to the Tugela. "Dingaan's Day," December 16, is kept
-by the Boers as a festival of thanksgiving and rejoicing.</p>
-<p>Soon a new complication beset the harassed emigrants. In
-December, 1838, the British Government, anxious to stop the wars
-between the Boers and the natives and to exclude the former from
-the sea, sent one hundred soldiers to Durban and issued a
-proclamation in which the Boers were declared to be British
-subjects who had unlawfully occupied Natal, and who were morally
-responsible for all the blood that had been shed. They protested
-against the imputation and against the military occupation of
-Durban, but took no active steps to resent the affront.</p>
-<p>When twelve months had passed without hostilities <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page14" id="page14"></a>{14}</span> between Boer
-and native, the British Government withdrew its hundred warriors
-from Durban and tacitly handed over Natal to the emigrant Boers.
-Hardly had the little transport <i>Vectis</i> catted her anchor
-when the Republic of Natalia was proclaimed and its flag run up on
-the staff of the forsaken British Camp on Durban Bay.</p>
-<p>But the dog-in-the-manger policy of neither incorporating Natal
-in the British Empire nor frankly allowing the Boers to occupy it
-could not be indefinitely maintained. Each present difficulty
-wriggled out of made the future more embarrassing. Soon, as might
-have been anticipated, the Boers were again in trouble with the
-natives. Panda, the father of Cetchwayo, whose impis forty years
-after washed their spears in the blood of 800 British soldiers at
-Isandhlwana, broke away from his brother Dingaan, taking with him
-into Natal many thousand Zulus who were awaiting an opportunity of
-shaking themselves free from the tyranny and cruelty of Dingaan.
-Panda made overtures to the Boers and was gladly received as an
-ally, and with his help Dingaan was finally crushed and driven into
-Swaziland, where, in the hands of a hostile tribe, he perished
-miserably by torture.</p>
-<p>The emigrants were now favourably situated in Natal. They had
-established an equitable if not a legal claim to it; Dingaan was
-out of the way; and the British Government seemed indisposed to
-inter-meddle. But the fatal and grotesque alliance with Panda,
-which culminated in his installation as King of the Zulus by
-Pretorius in 1840, and which was entirely inconsistent with the
-attitude hitherto assumed towards the natives, was the undoing of
-the trekkers of 1836.</p>
-<p>Panda's men as native auxiliaries eager to avenge themselves on
-the common enemy Dingaan were all very well in their way. Most of
-them, however, belonged to Natal and joined him in the hope of
-recovering the <span class="pagenum"><a name="page15" id=
-"page15"></a>{15}</span> tribal lands from which they had been
-evicted by Chaka and to which they had a better right than the
-trekkers.</p>
-<p>The Boers now began to reap the harvest of the Panda alliance.
-They regarded the new arrivals as intruders, refused to acknowledge
-their claims, and finally in August, 1841, decreed their expulsion
-from Natal. The location chosen for their settlement was a district
-in Pondoland in the possession of a chief under British protection,
-who already had had occasion to lodge at Capetown a complaint
-against the Boers.</p>
-<p>The British Government now found it necessary to intervene again
-in Natal. A military occupation was announced by proclamation in
-December, 1841, and 240 men, under the command of an infantry
-captain named Smith, were sent up to Durban to give effect to
-it.</p>
-<p>When Smith, after a difficult march along the coast, reached his
-destination on May 4, 1842, he pitched his camp on the flat which
-forms the base of one of the promontories enclosing the Bay. He at
-once lowered the Republican flag flying over the block-house at the
-Point, and soon found that 1,500 Boers were occupying Congella on
-the shore of the Bay. An attempt to surprise them by night failed
-disastrously; Smith's force was reduced to half its strength, and
-the block-house was captured by Pretorius.</p>
-<p>Smith was now besieged in his camp, and the nearest help that
-could come to him was at Grahamstown, five hundred miles away.
-Thither a gallant civilian named King, who was one of the pioneers,
-rode in ten days; and on June 25, when the little garrison was in
-extremity, it was relieved by sea. Pretorius withdrew into the
-interior, and the Volksraad at Pietermaritzburg, the capital of the
-Republic of Natalia, voted the submission of the Boers. Pending a
-final settlement it was allowed to remain in authority over the
-settlers, but the district around Durban Bay was at once taken over
-as British territory. In May, 1843, a year after the landing of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page16" id="page16"></a>{16}</span>
-Smith, the Republic of Natalia passed away and Natal was proclaimed
-a British Colony.</p>
-<p>The final settlement did not come for some time. The Volksraad
-was abolished, but the claims of the Boers to the lands upon which
-they had squatted were liberally considered. They were, however,
-dissatisfied because the rights of Panda's men were also regarded,
-and many trekked away across the Drakensberg. Those who remained
-protested that their lives and property were insecure in the
-presence of the natives, and Pretorius was deputed to go and lay
-their grievances before the British Governor at the Cape.</p>
-<p>The ill success of his mission provoked him to reprisals, and he
-proceeded to stir up trouble in the Orange River Sovereignty, which
-had recently been formally proclaimed British Territory. If not
-actively loyal it was peaceably disposed until the arrival of
-Pretorius, who soon drove out the British Resident and the little
-garrison of Bloemfontein and set them on the run as far as
-Colesberg in the Cape Colony. He was defeated at Boomplatz in
-August, 1848, by Sir Harry Smith, a veteran of the Peninsular War,
-and British authority was for a time reestablished over the
-Sovereignty. The Colonial Office soon however tired of the new
-possession and gladly scuttled out in 1854 in order to avoid the
-task of reaping the harvest of a clumsy and grotesque policy, which
-it had formulated a few years before, of hemming in the
-<i>voortrekkers</i>, who had settled north of the Orange River,
-with a barrier of native states set up for the purpose on the east
-and west; and which now threatened to involve it in a quarrel which
-naturally arose between Moshesh, the Basuto chief, and the
-emigrants whom he had been appointed to restrain.</p>
-<p>Pretorius retired across the Vaal where he joined Potgieter,
-who, after the failure of his attack on Dingaan in 1838, had gone
-into Moselekatse's country and had driven him beyond the Limpopo. A
-Republic was set up beyond the Vaal which the British Government
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page17" id="page17"></a>{17}</span>
-recognized as independent in the Zand River Convention of 1852.</p>
-<p>Such is in brief the story of the Boers' claim to Natal. They
-considered it to be their lawful heritage out of which they had
-been jockeyed, and in October, 1899, they seemed to have a chance
-of recovering it. They boasted that they would not only win back
-Pietermaritzburg, which was named after two leaders of the Great
-Trek, Pieter Retief and Gert Maritz, but that they would establish
-themselves on the shores of the Indian Ocean. It was not the
-vainglorious gasconade of a swashbuckler. Four months after October
-11, 1899, when the Boer ultimatum expired, the British Army was
-still engaged in endeavouring to drive out the Boers from British
-territory, and hardly a rifle had been discharged in the enemy's
-country.</p>
-<p>Napoleon was in the habit of impressing upon his officers the
-necessity of studying past campaigns, both modern and ancient; but
-those who anticipated confidently that the Boer War would soon be
-brought to a successful close by the British Army were led into
-their error by the history of past campaigns. There was, however,
-one campaign, the War of Independence in North America, which the
-discerning might have recognized as an analogous struggle; but it
-was overlooked, and the history of the great European conflicts was
-established as the leading authority. The occupation of the
-populous places and the control of the means of access to them,
-which seemed to present few difficulties, meant the end of the war
-and the subsequent negotiations as to the amount of the indemnity
-or other penalty to be paid by the defeated.</p>
-<p>But not only were the necessary preliminary successes deferred
-far beyond the expected time of their
-accomplishment&mdash;Bloemfontein was not occupied until five
-months, nor Pretoria until eight months had rolled by since that
-October dawn when the Boers crossed the frontier into
-Natal&mdash;but the prospect of the end of <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page18" id="page18"></a>{18}</span> the War soon
-began to recede into the perspective of infinity: and even now,
-after an interval of some years since the peace of Vereeniging,
-when, like the proportions of some huge edifice which can be truly
-comprehended only by the observer who views it from a distance, the
-various incidents and phases of the War begin to assume their
-relative importance, the difficulty of discovering some guiding
-principle which shall reconcile the Great Boer War with other wars
-is as great as ever.</p>
-<p>Sometimes a cause can be found <i>a posteriori</i> by groping in
-the dim and deceptive light cast by an effect: or a process of
-exhaustion and elimination may be set up in which the qualities
-common to each side are cancelled and the result attributed to the
-credit balance which will appear under one of the accounts. We saw
-for some months a gallant and well equipped if somewhat amorphous
-British Army impotently endeavouring, though in superior numbers,
-to make headway against an aggregation of Boer commandos, and
-checked at various points on an arc drawn wholly in British
-territory and extending in a circuit of over 500 miles from
-Ladysmith in Northern Natal through Stormberg and Colesberg to
-Kimberley and Mafeking; and at each extremity of the arc was a
-besieged city. Was the military art as taught in Europe founded
-upon error, or had the British Army been negligently instructed in
-it?</p>
-<p>Yet no European troops had had so much recent experience of
-active service. We had lately fought in the Soudan, in East and
-West Africa, in Burmah and on the North-West frontier of India;
-there was in fact hardly a year in the preceding decade in which
-the portals of the temple of a British Janus would have been
-closed. Moreover, our fighting had not been against trained
-soldiers, but against enemies who like the Boers were
-undisciplined, collectively if not individually brave men
-patriotically defending their own country. We therefore entered the
-arena with experience which no other European Army possessed.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page19" id="page19"></a>{19}</span>
-<h3><a name="chap1-2" id="chap1-2">II. PATRIOTISM, DUTY, AND
-DISCIPLINE.</a></h3>
-<p>Many hard things have been said of Patriotism.<a id=
-"footnotetag6" name="footnotetag6"></a><a href=
-"#footnote6"><sup>6</sup></a> Dr. Johnson's definition is well
-known, and more recently it has been styled the sublimest form of
-Selfishness. These, however, are not definitions but rather
-criticisms of certain phases of Patriotism, which is closely allied
-to Family Affection and, like that sentiment, originates in the
-helplessness and the egotism of the Individual.</p>
-<p>The weak infant clings to his mother for sustenance, comfort and
-protection, and the tender care which is bestowed upon him while
-his body and his mind are developing fosters the notion of the
-subjective importance of the human unit. Human nature is so
-constituted that the Individual is disposed to over-estimate his
-own consequence and to regard his own surroundings as superior to
-the surroundings of all other persons, and therefore more worthy of
-recognition, encouragement, and admiration. As the Child grows in
-years this sentiment is gradually and unconsciously modified, but
-it is never wholly eradicated. The inward emotion aroused in his
-heart by parental solicitude becomes partially altruistic and
-outward and is transmuted into Gratitude and Love.</p>
-<p>The Child emerges into Youth and thence into Manhood, and the
-area of his immediate environment is enlarged. He needs further
-succour and assistance, and the Family Community to which he
-belongs and which nurtured and watched over his early years can no
-longer supply his requirements. He is in want of new fellowships
-and must strengthen himself by joining various bodies and
-associations. With these he incorporates himself more or less and
-his friendly attitude towards them for his own good is a
-development of the primitive Family Affection. In the case of a
-class, a social, or professional community the sentiment is termed
-<i>Esprit de Corps</i>;<a id="footnotetag7" name=
-"footnotetag7"></a><a href="#footnote7"><sup>7</sup></a>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page20" id="page20"></a>{20}</span>
-in view of recognized civil institutions by which he perceives that
-he benefits, it is Loyalty; while with respect to the Fatherland it
-is Patriotism, which denotes the adherence of the helpless
-individual Ego to the Supreme Community. Patriotism, like Family
-Affection, is a growth and culture of the idea of Self. It is the
-expression of the Individual's thanks for the support, countenance,
-protection, and other moral and material advantages claimed by him
-from the Supreme Community, to which in return he readily attorns
-with respect and admiration. He is, however, patriotic because with
-unconscious egotism he regards his Country as part of himself
-rather than himself as part of his Country. Even the act of a man
-who sacrifices his life for the good of his country may not be
-wholly unselfish, for some natures are so constituted that they can
-discount the future and be gratified by the prospective award of
-posthumous honour. There can, however, be no doubt that Patriotism,
-though possibly of not very noble origin, is a sentiment beneficial
-both to the community and the individual, and is therefore worthy
-of encouragement. Happily, those cold heights of philosophy on
-which every man is loved as a brother and every nationality held in
-equal honour and esteem are unattainable by human nature; for
-without the stimulus of Patriotism National Life would be
-impracticable.<a id="footnotetag8" name="footnotetag8"></a><a href=
-"#footnote8"><sup>8</sup></a> <span class="pagenum"><a name=
-"page21" id="page21"></a>{21}</span> It's chief defect is that like
-most of the emotions it is sometimes hasty and unreasoning.</p>
-<p>Such, it is believed, is briefly the history of Patriotism, and
-the theory is supported by the fact that the British soldier is not
-patriotic by nature. It is not his fault. The class from which he
-is usually drawn has unhappily less reason for respecting and
-admiring the Supreme Community than any other class, for it
-participates fully in the distresses and meagerly in the successes
-and good fortune of the Nation, from which, though not actually
-unpatriotic, it stands sullenly aloof. It can hardly be denied that
-the power and prosperity of Great Britain have favourably affected
-the position of the upper and middle classes to a greater degree
-than they have ameliorated the condition of the lower classes, and
-it is therefore not surprising that the latter seem to take little
-or no pride in their nationality, and sometimes even act perversely
-in opposition to its interests.</p>
-<p>The private soldier has never been taught to think about his
-country. The education which he may have received at the Board
-School is not calculated to arouse in him a feeling of national
-pride which is non-existent in his home life. The display of the
-National Flag, which flutters over so many distant lands, is
-discouraged in the primary schools of Great Britain as tending to
-"flag-worship." In the United States, on the other hand, the Stars
-and Stripes are hoisted in every school yard. No systematic effort
-is made to interest the children of the operative classes in
-Greater Britain. India and the Colonies are facts in geography
-troublesome to learn and easy to forget. The history of the British
-Empire is sterilized before it is imparted to them. They are not
-taught to realize that the happiness and prosperity of a large
-proportion of the inhabitants of the world are dependent upon the
-moods of the population of a small group of islands in the Atlantic
-Ocean, and that in the ballot-boxes of Great Britain are cast the
-fortunes of many millions of their fellow-creatures.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page22" id="page22"></a>{22}</span>
-<p>Foreigners have remarked that the minstrelsy of Great Britain is
-singularly devoid of patriotic songs. The British soldier has no
-"Star-Spangled Banner" or "Wacht am Rhein" to sing on the line of
-march or in the bivouac, but only the last comic or sentimental
-ditty which he may have heard at the Garrison Music Hall before
-embarking on active service. The National Anthem is not a patriotic
-song but a prayer for Divine Protection for the Sovereign, to which
-have been appended some inappropriate stanzas now rarely heard;
-while "Rule, Britannia!" might have been composed for the
-gasconading swashbuckler of an extravaganza.</p>
-<p>It would therefore be surprising if the recruit joined the Army
-with a highly pitched conception of the work he has undertaken.
-Destitution; or trouble about a woman, or with his own people, or
-with the police; or the mysterious magnetism of an adventurous life
-rather than the desire to serve his country, has induced him to
-enlist. An existing or prospective War always keeps the recruiting
-sergeant busy, but the object of a War is a matter of indifference
-to the recruit. Most of our wars have been waged for political
-reasons which he cannot understand. Apart from the difficulties of
-language and of unaccustomed environments, he would as readily
-serve in any other Army in which the pay was as liberal and the
-restraint of discipline not more irksome. How is it, then, that
-lacking the stimulus of Patriotism through no fault of his own and
-being, in fact, a mercenary, he becomes an excellent soldier;
-perhaps, next to the Turk, the best in Europe?</p>
-<p>The answer seems to be that he soon acquires a high sense of
-Duty. Duty may be defined as the necessity to do something for
-one's own or for the general good which is not naturally
-pleasurable or agreeable or instinctively desired. In the trite
-proverb it is contrasted with and takes precedence of Pleasure. As
-a motive for action it stands on a higher plane than
-Patriotism.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page23" id="page23"></a>{23}</span>
-<p>The alchemic process by which the indifferent, unemotional, and
-sometimes unintelligent recruit is transmuted into the precious
-metal of the soldier who wins battles seems to be somewhat as
-follows: Of his own volition he has taken on a certain job and his
-dogged pride or obstinacy will not allow him to be beaten by it,
-however little enthusiasm it may arouse in him and however
-distasteful it may be to him at first. He offers no "ca' canny"
-service, but plods on and does his best in his own way. The lack of
-the enthusiastic temperament does not seriously retard the progress
-of his military education, and without much ado he becomes a stolid
-dependable unit of the Army. He is not carried away by success nor
-unduly depressed by failure. His instincts tell him that they are
-the accidents of Duty.</p>
-<p>It has been noticed that the word Glory and its
-derivatives<a id="footnotetag9" name="footnotetag9"></a><a href=
-"#footnote9"><sup>9</sup></a> rarely appear in the accounts of the
-action of the British Army on service, except in a War
-Correspondent's letter or telegram. No reference is made in
-reports, orders or despatches to the so-called "glorious" incidents
-of a soldier's life in time of war. He is commended for his
-endurance, his tenacity and his matter-of-fact acceptance of the
-vicissitudes of war as "part of the day's work." The truest Glory
-is the conscientious performance of Duty.</p>
-<p>If through the incompetence or neglect of his leaders he is
-called upon to sacrifice himself, he sacrifices himself without a
-murmur. If he is compelled to keep himself alive on scanty rations
-of horseflesh and to wet his parched lips with the trickle of a
-dwindled and tainted spruit, he believes that his officers have
-done their best for him. He is ordered to fall in upon the deck of
-a burning troopship and to stand at attention while Death inspects
-the ranks. He is besieged in a hill fort on the Indian frontier by
-a horde of fanatics eager to kill or to mutilate him. He lies
-wounded on the field of battle from which, after an indecisive
-engagement, each combatant <span class="pagenum"><a name="page24"
-id="page24"></a>{24}</span> has retired; and there, scorched by the
-mid-day sun and starved by the cold of the night, and perhaps also
-in danger of being burnt alive by a veld fire, he waits without
-water for the armistice which shall bring up the ambulances. He
-returns to his own land where he soon finds that he is not of much
-account. After a great war there may be a period of evanescent
-patronage; or a deed of Dargai, Rorke's Drift, or Balaklava may
-have temporarily thrilled the audience into Music Hall enthusiasm;
-but he is not greatly impressed, and stoically reflects that like
-the battle, the starvation, and the Field Hospital it is "all in
-the day's work" and will soon pass away.</p>
-<p>There has probably never been a struggle in which the private
-soldier more fully earned the gratitude of his country than in the
-South African War. The most unfriendly critics in the foreign staff
-offices have paid tribute to the excellence of the British soldier:
-sometimes, however, sneering at him as a mercenary, whom, by a
-curious perversion of the probabilities, they profess to think
-unlikely to be as efficient as their own conscripts who are forced
-into military service; but they never hold him responsible for the
-ill-success of the war. Throughout their criticisms there lurks a
-feeling of pained astonishment that the British "mercenary" proves
-himself to be as good or even a better soldier than the continental
-conscript, coupled with a comfortable conviction that Discipline is
-not well maintained in the British Army.</p>
-<p>The final cause of Discipline is the efficient use of arms on
-the field of battle. Discipline is the result of an irksome
-educational process by which a man is taught to submit his wishes,
-his instincts, and, to a great extent, his personal liberty to the
-control of one who may be his inferior morally, mentally, and
-physically. It has also been cynically defined as the art of making
-a man more afraid of his own officers than of the enemy. Its
-function seems to be the formation of certain military qualities
-which Patriotism and the Sense of Duty are by themselves
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page25" id="page25"></a>{25}</span>
-believed incapable of creating. It has always been considered an
-essential part of a soldier's training; but this view, though
-probably correct, is not confirmed by the South African War, in
-which an undisciplined force held its own for some years against
-greatly superior numbers of disciplined men.</p>
-<p>The ideal Army, patriotic, full of the sense of Duty, and
-perfect in discipline, would be invincible; but such an Army has
-never yet been seen. A deficiency of one or two of these qualities
-may be made up for by a fuller measure of the others. The history
-of each war will seem to indicate for a time the proportions in
-which the qualities should be blended, which is the essential, and
-whether any one of them can be omitted; but the inferences thus
-drawn from one war will probably be found misleading in the next
-war.</p>
-<p>The inference to be drawn from the South African War seems to be
-that the value of those military qualities which are created by
-Discipline and training has been over-rated, and that a passionate
-bigoted belief in the justice of a cause is a more potent factor in
-the making of a soldier. Even if every allowance be made for the
-strategical advantages possessed by the Boers, of fighting in their
-own land on interior lines in a sparsely populated country
-peculiarly adopted for <i>guerilla</i>, it is difficult to account
-for their success if the tests by which the efficiency of a
-European army is measured are applied to them. It may be that war
-has hitherto been regarded too exclusively as a statical and
-dynamical problem and that the moral element has been overlooked.
-It certainly was overlooked in South Africa; for the war which Lord
-Roberts in October, 1900, believed was practically at an end had in
-fact then run little more than one-third of its course.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page26" id="page26"></a>{26}</span>
-<h3><a name="chap1-3" id="chap1-3">III. WAR CONSIDERED AS A BRANCH
-OF SPORT</a></h3>
-<p>The astonishment, distress, chagrin and bewilderment caused by
-want of success, "regrettable incidents," and disasters, sometimes
-found consolation during the South African War in the foolish
-remark&mdash;The Germans would have done no better. What the German
-Army, which had not been actively employed for twenty-eight years,
-might have accomplished under the same conditions is a matter for
-sterile speculation which has little bearing on the case. But the
-German Army certainly had not been accustomed to look upon War as a
-branch of Sport or Athletics.</p>
-<p>Owing in all probability to the happy fact in History that
-England has not been invaded and over-run by a foreign army since
-the time of William the Conqueror&mdash;an episode which had in the
-end an excellent influence on the national life&mdash;she has never
-taken the military art seriously. She alone, thanks to the
-protection of Providence, has never been compelled to fight on her
-own fields for her existence as a nation; she alone knows nothing
-even by tradition handed down from distant generations of the
-appearance of an alien soldier on her shores.<a id="footnotetag10"
-name="footnotetag10"></a><a href="#footnote10"><sup>10</sup></a>
-Some of her wars, as for example the successful struggle by which
-the Napoleonic domination was broken up, have been fought for the
-purpose of safe-guarding her independence, but they were not
-popular with the people at large, whose short sight did not permit
-them to see that a defensive war may have to be fought beyond the
-seas; and they had little or no effect in evoking a patriotic
-military spirit. Napoleon's gibe that the English were a nation of
-shopkeepers was not unasked for, and is still seasonable.</p>
-<p>On the other hand there are hundreds of thousands of persons on
-the Continent of Europe who have seen, or who are the near
-descendants of those who have <span class="pagenum"><a name=
-"page27" id="page27"></a>{27}</span> seen, their fatherland
-ravaged; their homes destroyed; their relations, friends, and
-neighbours slaughtered in the defence; the tree of the national
-life maimed; and the full cup of the horrors of war drained to its
-dregs.</p>
-<p>To them the prospect of an invasion is not a remote contingency
-to be considered and provided for at leisure after academical
-discussion, but a real and instant danger from which only universal
-service, to which fortunately for themselves they submit without
-much demur, as it could not be enforced upon a reluctant community,
-can preserve them.</p>
-<p>The possibility of invasion is the dominant anxiety of the
-land-frontier nations.<a id="footnotetag11" name=
-"footnotetag11"></a><a href="#footnote11"><sup>11</sup></a> Across
-the frontier they can see the conscripts drilling who almost at a
-moment's notice may be marching in to attack them. Their armies are
-not sent on interesting little expeditions to restrain a
-too-militant tribe of hill-men or to patrol the distant marches of
-a magnificent Empire, but must stand at attention generation after
-generation, year after year, maintaining the featureless routine of
-military life. None of the Romance of War that falls to the lot of
-the British soldier&mdash;the service among strange Easterns in
-Asia, the building up of a new imperial province in South Africa,
-the constant change of scene along the posts which form a girdle
-round the world from Hongkong to Jamaica&mdash;falls also to the
-lot of the continental conscript, for whom there is only the dull
-waiting for the critical moment.</p>
-<p>The land-frontier nations alone are aware of the reality of the
-Terror of War; it is a Thing overshadowing and, apart from every
-other thing in their world, which must not, cannot be expelled from
-their thoughts. The objects that meet the eye on all sides speak of
-War; the railway vehicles marked with the number of men and horses
-conveyable, the noble war memorials, the <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page28" id="page28"></a>{28}</span> officers
-constantly in uniform, the crowds of soldiers in the streets, the
-military bearing and precision of even the civilian servants of the
-State; while upon the ears falls the sound, which is in most cases
-a lingering echo of the roar of war, of alien tongues spoken within
-the frontier, or of the tongue of the Fatherland spoken in exile
-without it.</p>
-<p>On the other hand, Peace is believed to be permanently settled
-upon the shore of the silver streak which encloses the British
-Isles. The war monuments are scanty and not a few of them are
-grotesque; the soldier and his work are thrust into the background,
-and his uniform is so often a hindrance to him that on certain
-occasions he is permitted to appear in plain clothes, that is to
-disguise himself as a civilian; and this concession is officially
-termed a "privilege." The red tunic of the soldier, like the red
-rays of the spectrum which cannot be brought into focus with the
-other colours, fails to make a sharp impression upon the British
-retina, but projects an ill-defined image seen through a medium of
-doubt and indifference.</p>
-<p>The nation looks upon the Army much as the individual looks upon
-the Policeman, as a necessary institution, but one rather to be
-avoided and kept in its place when its services are not actually in
-requisition. Little interest is taken in its difficulties, its
-merits, and its opportunities. It is regarded not as an
-indispensable protection, but rather as an expensive result of
-possessions in all parts of the world, and when the peace of these
-is in danger of being broken, the cry too often belated goes up:
-Send for the Soldiers. Probably nothing less than an actual landing
-of foreign troops or the scare of it so tremendous as to drive the
-nation into the opposite and equally dangerous extreme of
-consternation and panic will be necessary to shake its belief, that
-the white cliffs of Albion are immune to an invasion in force.</p>
-<p>The nightmare of Militarism by which so many worthy persons are
-fanatically obsessed obscures the dangers <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page29" id="page29"></a>{29}</span> against
-which Militarism is an insurance. Now Militarism is not in itself a
-desirable thing, and the developments and accidents of it upon the
-Continent of Europe are often not only irksome and absurd but also
-irreconcilable with the existence of a healthy feeling of
-self-respect in the non-military sections of the community, who are
-taught to regard themselves as an inferior caste; but with all its
-shortcomings it promotes the moral as well as the physical strength
-of a nation. It calls up some of the nobler qualities of human
-nature; self-control, self-reliance, endurance, and altruism or the
-devotion of Self to the good of the community; and not the least of
-its merits is that it corrects and restrains the dreary materialism
-of the Labour and Socialist movements.</p>
-<p>The shy and distant bearing of the British nation and its
-persistent refusal to regard the Army as part of itself, in
-conjunction with the growing national passion for Sport and
-Athletics, fostered the idea that War itself must be a branch of
-them. From time immemorial the military had been eyed with
-suspicion by the country, which professed to believe that its
-liberties were in greater danger from its own soldiers than from
-the soldiers of a foreign power, and which for a long time withheld
-from its rulers the right of having a standing army. Gradually and
-with great reluctance it was convinced of the necessity of a
-permanent force, not so much for home defence as for the
-performance of the police duties of an Empire. As the Empire grew
-year by year, these duties became more onerous and responsible, but
-the Army itself was not taken seriously. It was confessedly too
-weak to engage in a European campaign, and the Navy was considered
-to be sufficient to protect the country against invasion.</p>
-<p>The duties of the Army abroad were generally interesting and
-exciting but they did not call for the exercise of the military art
-with great precision, as the opponents which it was called upon to
-face were rarely experts, <span class="pagenum"><a name="page30"
-id="page30"></a>{30}</span> and there was a comfortable belief that
-the bravery and endurance of the British soldier would outweigh
-deficiencies in other military qualities.<a id="footnotetag12"
-name="footnotetag12"></a><a href=
-"#footnote12"><sup>12</sup></a></p>
-<p>The War-as-a-Sport idea was also encouraged by the opinion still
-stoutly held by many persons that a good sportsman is necessarily a
-good soldier, and that the qualities which ensure success in
-Athletics or Sport make also for success in War: but this is true
-of certain of them only. In so far as Athletics and Sport tend to
-manliness, self-reliance, good comradeship, endurance of bodily
-hardship, and contempt of danger, they are no doubt an excellent
-preparatory school for War. But there is one quality without the
-possession of which no man is held to be a good sportsman, and that
-is the acceptance of defeat or non-success with equanimity and
-good-humour as "part of the game." Without this quality Athletics
-and Sport would, in fact, become impossible.</p>
-<p>In the soldier, however, this temperament is a dangerous gift.
-It led to reverses, captures, loss of convoys and other
-"regrettable incidents" being regarded with stoical composure as
-"part of the game"; and the victims were condoled with on their
-"shocking bad luck." It would have been difficult to discern from
-the bearing and demeanour of the typical officer whether he was at
-the moment a prisoner of war in the Model School at Pretoria, or
-had just taken part in the magnificent cavalry charge by which
-Kimberley was relieved. The former plight did not greatly depress
-him, nor did the latter phase of military life greatly elate him.
-It is probable that the War would have been brought to a successful
-close at a much earlier date if throughout the British Army and
-especially among the officers <span class="pagenum"><a name=
-"page31" id="page31"></a>{31}</span> hearty disgust and indignation
-at the failures of the first few months had taken the place of a
-light-hearted accommodation to circumstances. The companions of
-Ulysses may</p>
-<div class="poem">
-<div class="stanza">
-<p>With a frolic welcome take</p>
-<p>The thunder and the sunshine,</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<p>but it is not War.</p>
-<p>The British officer played at war in South Africa much in the
-same way that he hunted or played cricket or polo at home. He
-enjoyed the sport and the game, did his best for his own side, and
-rejoiced if he was successful, but was not greatly disturbed when
-he lost. A dictum attributed to the Duke of Wellington says that
-the Battle of Waterloo was won upon the Playing Fields at Eton. It
-would not be so very far from the truth to say that the guns at
-Sannah's Post were captured on the polo-ground at Hurlingham; that
-Magersfontein was lost at Lord's; that Spionkop was evacuated at
-Sandown; and that the war lingered on for thirty-two months in the
-Quorn and Pytchley coverts.</p>
-<p>The sporting view of War was recognized and confirmed in Army
-Orders and official reports, in which the words "bag," "drive,"
-"stop," and some other sporting terms not infrequently appeared. No
-one would reasonably object to the judicious and illuminating use
-of metaphor, but there are metaphors which impair the dignity of a
-cause and degrade it in the eyes of those whose duty is to maintain
-that cause. When the advance of a British Division at a critical
-period in the operations is frivolously termed a "drive," and when
-the men extended at ten paces' interval over a wide front are
-called "beaters," it is natural that the leaders should look upon
-their work as analogous to the duties of a gamekeeper; and when an
-artillery officer is instructed to "pitch his shells well up," he
-is encouraged to regard failure as no worse than the loss of a
-cricket-match.</p>
-<p>It was at least to be expected that in the use, care,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page32" id="page32"></a>{32}</span>
-and management of horses upon which the success of a campaign, in
-which mounted men formed an unusually large proportion of the
-troops engaged, so much depended, the sporting instincts of the
-British officer would have made him particularly efficient; yet the
-evidence given by General officers before the Royal Commission
-showed that it was otherwise. They are practically unanimous in the
-opinion that all branches of the mounted troops were inefficient,
-except the artillery, whose work so far as horses are concerned is
-akin to that of the skilful but unsporting farm teamster or
-wagoner.</p>
-<p>A nation greatly addicted to Sport, Games, and Athletics is a
-nation lacking in that earnestness of moral purpose which should be
-its chief strength for War. Amusements are regarded not as
-"recreation" or means of refreshing and re-invigorating the mind
-and body for the duties of life by a temporary change of
-occupation, but as the main objective of existence.</p>
-<p>A retrospect into history will show that the most efficient
-armies were those in which the sporting instinct was non-existent.
-The armies which in modern times have most satisfactorily performed
-the duties for which armies are raised were those of Gustavus
-Adolphus, Napoleon, Moltke, and Oyama. Each of these was the most
-perfect military instrument of its day, and their exploits have
-never been surpassed. Yet neither the Swedes, the French, the
-Germans, nor the Japanese were addicted to Athletics or Sport.
-Their manly instincts were exercised, to the great advantage of
-their countries, in skill at arms and in the Military Art.<a id=
-"footnotetag13" name="footnotetag13"></a><a href=
-"#footnote13"><sup>13</sup></a></p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page33" id="page33"></a>{33}</span>
-<p>The cult of Sport and Athletics sets up false ideals and lowers
-the intellectual standard. Thousands of loafers, idlers, and work
-skirkers live upon the anticipations or recollections of out-door
-sports when not actually present at them, and are ready to spend
-their last shilling at the turnstile of the ground on which a
-handful of football gladiators are at play: and are more
-exasperated by the defeat of the team which they patronise in a Cup
-Tie match than they would be by the loss of a battle by the British
-Army. There is this to be said for the working classes, that in
-youth, if not longer, they in general endure a hard and strenuous
-life, and at least in their school years they cannot indulge a
-passion for amusement; whereas the class from which the officers of
-the British Army are drawn is encouraged on the other hand to
-indulge it from childhood. Owing to the prominence given in the
-Public Schools and Universities to games and athletics and to the
-esteem in which proficiency in these is held, youths of the upper
-middle and upper classes are dumped upon the world not humbly but
-arrogantly ignorant of almost everything necessary to qualify them
-to take their proper place in the community. They have subsisted in
-a rarefied intellectual atmosphere, and to fit themselves for any
-profession for which they may have an inclination they have to be
-forced or "crammed" in a saturated atmosphere by which they are
-congested. The result is that "young officers now join the service
-with a very fair idea of cricket and football, bridge, and even
-motor-driving; but with no education in patriotism; no real
-acquaintance with the history or geography of their own or other
-countries; unable to write English concisely, or even
-grammatically;<a id="footnotetag14" name=
-"footnotetag14"></a><a href="#footnote14"><sup>14</sup></a>
-unaccustomed <span class="pagenum"><a name="page34" id=
-"page34"></a>{34}</span> to read general information for themselves
-other than under the headings of the <i>Daily Mail</i>; unable to
-talk a foreign language; and with no knowledge of the sciences
-which are of military use."<a id="footnotetag15" name=
-"footnotetag15"></a><a href="#footnote15"><sup>15</sup></a> To this
-may be added the fact that these young dullards, the supply of whom
-is dwindling, are, on joining the service, encouraged and accepted
-rather with reference to their sporting and social qualities than
-to their military capacity.</p>
-<p>England, as a sporting, athletic, and game-loving nation, has of
-late years suffered many rebuffs. By the United States she has been
-taught the scientific method of riding racehorses, and also of
-sailing yachts; she has been defeated in polo by a Transatlantic
-team; her selected representative horsemen are unsuccessful in the
-International Military Tournaments; she cannot defeat Australia on
-the cricket field; a Belgian crew holds its own at Henley. If these
-rebuffs tend to abate the mania for watching the performances of a
-handsome but not particularly intelligent quadruped, and for
-studying the various methods of imparting motion to a Ball and to
-show the vanity of the passion for sports and games when indulged
-to excess, they will have served their purpose. The nation,
-disgusted at its want of success in its favourite pursuits, may
-perhaps turn its manhood to the noblest pursuit of all, the defence
-of the Fatherland; and then it will not be the betting and football
-news that has to be blacked out <span class="pagenum"><a name=
-"page35" id="page35"></a>{35}</span> of the daily papers in the
-free libraries, but the bi-weekly military gazettes, the reports
-from the military stations and the Special Correspondents' letters
-from Salisbury Plain during the manoeuvres.</p>
-<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote2" name=
-"footnote2"></a><b>Footnote 2:</b><a href=
-"#footnotetag2">(return)</a>
-<p>In justice to the War Office it should be stated that this was
-inserted at the instance of Sir Redvers Buller, who believed that
-he would be able to raise in South Africa a sufficient force of
-mounted troops.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote3" name=
-"footnote3"></a><b>Footnote 3:</b><a href=
-"#footnotetag3">(return)</a>
-<p>B. Viljoen in his "Reminiscences of the Anglo-Boer War"
-frequently complains of the insubordination, the malingering, and
-the cowardice of his followers, and of the incompetence of his
-superior officers.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote4" name=
-"footnote4"></a><b>Footnote 4:</b><a href=
-"#footnotetag4">(return)</a>
-<p>"Kaffir" is an Arabic word meaning one who does not believe in
-the religion of Mahomet. It was introduced into South Africa by the
-Portuguese and subsequently applied to the tribes living on the
-N.E. of the Cape Colony.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote5" name=
-"footnote5"></a><b>Footnote 5:</b><a href=
-"#footnotetag5">(return)</a>
-<p>Zilikat's Nek in the Magaliesberg is named after him.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote6" name=
-"footnote6"></a><b>Footnote 6:</b><a href=
-"#footnotetag6">(return)</a>
-<p>In its crudest and least admirable form Patriotism may be
-expressed in the terms of an equation&mdash;</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>One Englishman=Two Aliens.</p>
-</blockquote>
-</blockquote>
-<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote7" name=
-"footnote7"></a><b>Footnote 7:</b><a href=
-"#footnotetag7">(return)</a>
-<p><i>Esprit de Corps</i> in the British Army is the predilection
-of the individual for the unit in which he is serving. It creates a
-healthy rivalry which, on the whole, makes for efficiency; but its
-effects are sometimes unfortunate. A distinguished regiment was
-accused of misbehaviour in one of the battles of the advance on
-Bloemfontein. The charge was unfounded, but some of its hasty
-partisans, with the idea of removing the reproach as far as
-possible from Self and forgetful that the honour of the British
-Army is not contained in water-tight compartments, endeavoured to
-transfer the imputation to another regiment in the same
-brigade.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote8" name=
-"footnote8"></a><b>Footnote 8:</b><a href=
-"#footnotetag8">(return)</a>
-<p>The citizens of a Republic are usually more patriotic than the
-subjects of a Monarchy. This may be accounted for by the fact that
-a Republic is usually a new nation or a nation that has made a
-fresh start and has not had time to get tired of itself.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote9" name=
-"footnote9"></a><b>Footnote 9:</b><a href=
-"#footnotetag9">(return)</a>
-<p>Lord Roberts once used the word "glorious."</p>
-</blockquote>
-<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote10" name=
-"footnote10"></a><b>Footnote 10:</b><a href=
-"#footnotetag10">(return)</a>
-<p>Except the French raid at Fishguard in 1797.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote11" name=
-"footnote11"></a><b>Footnote 11:</b><a href=
-"#footnotetag11">(return)</a>
-<p>The Franco-German War cost France &pound;600,000,000 exclusive
-of the loss from suspension of business and commerce.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote12" name=
-"footnote12"></a><b>Footnote 12:</b><a href=
-"#footnotetag12">(return)</a>
-<p>The attach&eacute; of a Great Power noticed in the South African
-War an aversion to the tedious duties of outposts and
-reconnaissance, and he remarks that "it is often openly stated by
-British officers that it is better to get now and then into a
-really tight place by the neglect of these duties than to have to
-endure the constant irksomeness which they entail."</p>
-</blockquote>
-<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote13" name=
-"footnote13"></a><b>Footnote 13:</b><a href=
-"#footnotetag13">(return)</a>
-<p>Apart from the question of the relative importance of the two
-services, it can hardly be denied that the British Naval Officer is
-an asset more valuable to his country than his brother in the Army.
-The social side of his character may be more rugged and less
-acceptable, but as a rule he has had neither the time nor the
-inclination to fritter away his manhood in sporting pursuits which
-do not make for proficiency in his profession, and he therefore
-excels in it; in spite of trying conditions which do not exist in
-any other calling, for with some rhetorical exaggeration it may be
-said that in the lower ranks he is an abject slave, in the higher
-an irresponsible despot.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote14" name=
-"footnote14"></a><b>Footnote 14:</b><a href=
-"#footnotetag14">(return)</a>
-<p>To the various courses, ranging from Balloons to Economics,
-which are open to British Officers, might be added a course in
-English Grammar and Composition, for the instruction of staff
-officers and others who may have to formulate battle orders and
-despatch important telegrams on active service. The art of
-composing a clear, terse, and unambiguous order or telegraphic
-message is not studied in the Army. Not a few telegrams of vital
-importance in the South African War were composed by impressionist
-staff officers who lightly assumed that what was present in their
-own minds must necessarily also be present in the mind of the
-recipient. The author particularly remembers a certain telegram
-from a staff officer of a column, in which it was impossible to
-discover from the context whether the word "they" in the concluding
-paragraph referred to British Columns or to Boer Commandos
-previously mentioned.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote15" name=
-"footnote15"></a><b>Footnote 15:</b><a href=
-"#footnotetag15">(return)</a>
-<p>Major-General Baden-Powell, in <i>Cavalry Journal</i>,
-April.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page36" id="page36"></a>{36}</span>
-<h2><a name="chap2" id="chap2">CHAPTER II</a></h2>
-<h3>The Natal Wedge</h3>
-<p><a href="#fig-natal">Map p. 50</a></p>
-<p>The northern section of Natal before the war<a id=
-"footnotetag16" name="footnotetag16"></a><a href=
-"#footnote16"><sup>16</sup></a> roughly assumed the shape of a
-wedge driven in between the Transvaal and the Orange Free State.
-The Drakensberg Range on the one side and the Buffalo River on the
-other formed the cleaving surfaces, Majuba and Laing's Nek were the
-cutting edge, and the base was the Tugela River.</p>
-<p>In mechanics a wedge is an instrument which can be usefully
-employed only under favourable circumstances. It has many
-disadvantages. It is easily jammed. The driving power at the base
-must be considerable; much of the force is absorbed by the friction
-on the surfaces; the progress made is very slow; and if the
-surfaces encounter a more tenacious material they will be
-perforated. A wedge is intended chiefly for cleavage and disruption
-when less clumsy methods are not at hand.</p>
-<p>The defects of a wedge as a mechanical power at once became
-apparent to the British force which occupied Natal when war became
-inevitable. The cutting edge was inaccessible and liable to injury
-which could not be easily repaired; much trouble was anticipated
-from the presence of Boer commandos in contact with the surfaces;
-the base did not appear to be sufficiently well designed to receive
-the impact of the propelling force; and there were grave doubts as
-to the soundness <span class="pagenum"><a name="page37" id=
-"page37"></a>{37}</span> of the material of which an important
-section of the wedge, namely Ladysmith, was constructed.</p>
-<p>It was therefore proposed by the military authorities that the
-Natal wedge should not be used as an instrument in the war. To this
-the civil government at Pietermaritzburg strongly objected on
-account of the evil moral effect which the abandonment of a
-considerable proportion of the Colony to the enemy would exercise
-upon the general situation in South Africa, and of the loss of
-prestige which the evacuation would entail in the minds of the
-natives, who numbered three-quarters of a million. Under pressure
-from the Colonial Office, and against its own judgment, the Army of
-Natal set itself to work upon the Wedge.</p>
-<p>The mistake soon became manifest, although the artisans did
-their best. The Wedge was not an effective instrument; its cutting
-edge was never in operation; and in a very few weeks it was hewn
-into a mangled, cumbrous and irregular mass, which could neither be
-advanced nor withdrawn and which for nearly five months led a
-precarious and unhappy existence. Its distress necessitated the
-recasting of the plan of the South African campaign and a
-pernicious "moral effect" was not avoided. One British Army
-besieged in an open town surrounded by heights, while another was
-lying impotent upon the banks of the Tugela, eighteen miles
-distant, was the result of a few weeks' work with the Natal Wedge,
-which had been forced by the civilian strategists into the
-reluctant hands of the troops.<a id="footnotetag17" name=
-"footnotetag17"></a><a href="#footnote17"><sup>17</sup></a></p>
-<p>When Sir George White arrived in Natal on October 7 he found Sir
-W. Tenn Symons carrying out the wedge policy of the Colonial
-Government. Part of the latter's force was at Ladysmith and part
-was protecting the collieries in the Dundee district. It was his
-intention to advance northwards to Newcastle as soon as he was
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page38" id="page38"></a>{38}</span>
-reinforced by the contingent on its way from India, the full
-strength of which had not arrived at Durban. The position at Dundee
-was strategically defective, as it was exposed to a raid from the
-Transvaal border only twelve miles distant, and it was actually
-further from the Orange Free State than Ladysmith. Its defects as a
-tactical position were still more obvious as it was commanded by
-hills.</p>
-<p>Such, in a few words, was the situation with which White was
-called upon to deal. He had two courses before turn; he could
-accommodate himself to it or he could endeavour to modify it. He
-attempted the latter, and failing he recurred to the former. He saw
-at once the insecurity of Symons' detached force, but being unable
-to convince the Natal Government of the necessity of withdrawing it
-he reluctantly allowed it to remain.</p>
-<p>Soon the Boer plan of campaign, which aimed at the isolation of
-the British Troops in the wedge, began to unroll itself. Fourteen
-thousand Transvaalers under Joubert, who had first tested the
-cutting edge by sending a coal truck through the tunnel at Laing's
-Nek and who suspected an ambush when he found it clear, were moving
-south on Newcastle, while six thousand Free Staters under Martin
-Prinsloo were pouring through the Drakensberg passes west of
-Ladysmith. The Natal Government now began to feel uneasy about the
-safety of the colonial capital and even of Durban; and informed
-White that undue importance had been attached to the occupation of
-Dundee and that its retention was no longer desirable. Thus in
-little more than a week White's original objection was reconsidered
-and upheld. But again he allowed his better judgment to be
-over-borne. Symons, whom he instructed to withdraw southwards
-unless he felt his position to be absolutely secure, was at his own
-urgent request allowed to remain. Next day, October 19,
-Elandslaagte, on the railway between Ladysmith and Dundee, was
-occupied by a Boer commando, and it was reported that 4,000
-burghers <span class="pagenum"><a name="page39" id=
-"page39"></a>{39}</span> were ready to cross the Buffalo River at
-Jager's Drift during the night.</p>
-<p>Symons' camp was pitched about a mile west of Dundee which lay
-between it and Talana and Lennox Hills, which commanded the town
-from the east. Some hours before sunrise on October 20 a British
-picket on Talana was attacked. The incident was reported to Head
-Quarters, where it was not deemed to be of much importance and the
-routine duties of the morning were not interrupted. The artillery
-horses had been taken down as usual to water, and some companies
-had even fallen in for skirmishing drill, when the curtain of the
-morning mist upon the higher ground was raised to the first scene
-in the Natal drama. The eastward hills, looming up darkly into the
-brightening sky, were seen to be occupied in force by the enemy
-under L. Meyer, and soon his shells were falling among the
-tents.</p>
-<p>The troops in camp, though taken by surprise, pulled themselves
-together with admirable promptitude. The Boer guns were soon
-silenced, the figures of men silhouetted along the sky line
-vanished, and the infantry was ordered out to clear the hill. It
-was a formidable and dangerous task, but it was facilitated by some
-of the features of the ground. There was a dry river bed in which
-the troops could be formed up for attack, and, half a mile beyond,
-a farmhouse and a plantation afforded some cover; while a donga on
-the left at right angles to the river bed apparently offered a
-covered way up the hill to the crest. In the plantation occurred
-the first calamity of the war. Symons, who had come up impatiently
-from the lower ground to hurry up the assault, which he thought was
-being unnecessarily delayed, was mortally wounded. Three days later
-he paid with his life for his adherence to a forward policy in
-tactics as well as in strategy; and the command devolved upon
-Yule.</p>
-<p>The donga on the left was found to be useless, as it led
-nowhere; and the advance was made directly from <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page40" id="page40"></a>{40}</span> the
-plantation towards a wall running along the foot of the hill. Here
-a long halt was made in order to reorganize the attack, and when
-the word was given the men pressed forward and threw-themselves
-upon the rough front of the acclivity after a rush across an open
-slope. The crest was attained and carried without much difficulty;
-for all but a few stalwarts had quitted it when they saw the
-British bayonets pricking upwards towards their hold.</p>
-<p>It seemed now that the victory was won, but an unfortunate
-mistake postponed it. The two field batteries on the plain, which
-had ceased fire before the final infantry rush, changed position
-and came under a heavy fire from the Boers who were still in
-possession of a section of the Talana ridge. The light was bad and
-the guns re-opened upon the crest line in the belief that the whole
-of it was still occupied by the enemy. The practice was excellent,
-and in a brief space both sides were driven off the hill by the
-shrapnel. A subsequent attempt to take it was successful. The
-result of the battle, which lasted from sunrise until 2 p.m., might
-have been reversed but for the inaction of the main Boer force
-posted on Lennox Hill under L. Meyer, and of another force on
-Impati under Erasmus, who, though he could hear the noise of battle
-pealing through the mist which lay upon the hill, abstained from
-intervening.</p>
-<p>The whole Boer force was now in full retreat along the line by
-which it had advanced so silently the night before, and Yule
-ordered the two field batteries up to the nek between Talana and
-Lennox to pound the retreating burghers as they slowly trekked
-towards the Buffalo River; but again an unfortunate misapprehension
-intervened. The officer in command, being under the impression that
-an armistice asked for by Meyer two hours before had been granted,
-refrained from opening fire and the Boers escaped untouched. A
-serious misadventure marred the success of the day. <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page41" id="page41"></a>{41}</span> The 18th
-Hussars, who at the commencement of the action received orders to
-hold themselves in readiness to advance when occasion offers, soon
-appeared to the restless general to be losing their opportunity,
-and were hustled into activity. They charged in various directions
-and even made some prisoners; but one squadron lost its way and was
-captured in an attempt to ride round Impati by a detachment of
-Erasmus' force at a farm where it had taken refuge.</p>
-<p>The fight for Talana Hill encouraged each belligerent. In
-England it was received as an indication of the early and
-successful termination of the struggle. The Boers regarded it as a
-reconnaissance in force from which they had returned with slight
-loss, and they could boast that they had reaped the first fruits of
-the harvest of war; a squadron of British cavalry which, with the
-commanding officer of the regiment, was at once dispatched into
-captivity at Pretoria, where its arrival was accepted as a proof of
-a great Boer victory in Natal.</p>
-<p>Talana Hill regarded as an isolated event in the Natal campaign
-was a distinctly successful encounter, the credit of which is due
-entirely to the infantry engaged in it. Twice the artillery
-blundered, and the cavalry was inoperative. The extent of the loss
-suffered by the Natal Field Force in the death of Symons must
-always be a matter for speculation. But it is at least probable
-that if he had survived to take part in the subsequent operations,
-his ardent, impetuous, Prince Rupert like temperament would have
-beneficially impregnated with greater audacity the stolid and
-ponderous tactics and strategy of the Natal campaign.</p>
-<p>The unreality of the Talana Hill victory soon became apparent.
-The threat of Erasmus sitting on Impati still impended, and Yule
-moved his camp next day to a site which he believed to be out of
-range. But in the meantime Erasmus awoke from his trance and, on
-the afternoon of October 21, opened fire with a six-inch
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page42" id="page42"></a>{42}</span>
-gun,<a id="footnotetag18" name="footnotetag18"></a><a href=
-"#footnote18"><sup>18</sup></a> and again Yule was compelled to
-shift his camp. He had already asked for reinforcements, but White
-was unable to spare them, and recommended him to fall back upon
-Ladysmith. Next day Yule was encouraged by the news of a British
-success at Elandslaagte; and with the object of intercepting the
-Boers who were reported to be retreating on Newcastle, he
-endeavoured to seize Glencoe, but Erasmus on Impati forbade the
-movement.</p>
-<p>Shortly before midnight on October 19, Kock, a Free Stater who
-commanded a force chiefly composed of foreign auxiliaries and who
-was working southwards from Newcastle, sent on an advanced party to
-swoop down upon the railway between Ladysmith and Glencoe, and
-Elandslaagte station was seized. Early next morning Kock came in
-with his main body. White at first made no serious attempt to clear
-the line beyond sending out a reconnoitring force which he soon
-recalled, as he was reluctant to employ troops away from the
-immediate neighbourhood of Ladysmith, which had been already
-threatened on the N.W. by Free State commandos.</p>
-<p>The news however of Yule's success at Talana changed the
-situation and seemed to justify a more forward policy; and early in
-the morning of October 21 French was sent out to re-occupy
-Elandslaagte and repair the line. Although he succeeded in driving
-the enemy out of the railway station and in holding it for a very
-brief period, he found himself outclassed in artillery and too weak
-to stand up to the Boers, and withdrew a few miles southward; at
-the same time asking White to reinforce him. It was reported that
-Kock expected shortly to be reinforced.</p>
-<p>The main Boer position was on the northern limb of a horseshoe
-arrangement of kopjes which develops close to the railway station
-and swings round southwards and westwards, at an elevation
-generally about 300 <span class="pagenum"><a name="page43" id=
-"page43"></a>{43}</span> feet above the normal level of the ground.
-Two posts were also held north of the railway. The southern limb of
-the horseshoe was lightly held, and against it French, without
-waiting for the arrival of all his reinforcements, moved with his
-mounted troops, and easily cleared it. Here he was joined by the
-Manchester Regiment, one of the battalions of the brigade of
-infantry sent out by White under the command of Ian Hamilton, and
-established himself on the left flank of the Boer position on the
-two kopjes on the northern limb of the horseshoe.</p>
-<p>The other two battalions, the Devonshire Regiment and the Gordon
-Highlanders, simultaneously came into position, the former for a
-frontal attack, and the latter as a reserve acting in the interval
-between the Manchesters and the Devons; while the artillery
-advanced between the two limbs and shelled the enemy's position on
-the kopjes. The artillery preparation enjoined by the regulations
-had, however, to be curtailed owing to the approach of night, but
-not before the two Boer guns on the southern kopje were silenced;
-and then the main attack was delivered.</p>
-<p>The Boers on the kopjes were reinforced by a body of German
-auxiliaries under Schiel, who had been driven out of a position
-north of the railway by the cavalry acting on the left and who
-circled round to the main position, but the reinforcement did not
-avail them. Hardly pressed on their left, they were unable to
-withstand the frontal charge of the Devons led by Hamilton in
-person. The guns were captured and the position occupied at sunset.
-By this time most of the Boers were in retreat and their tracks
-were made devious by the cavalry, which so long as light remained
-harried them hither and thither.</p>
-<p>Suddenly a white flag was seen fluttering near the laager
-between the kopjes. There is no reason to believe that it was
-treacherously raised, but it compelled Hamilton to order the Cease
-Fire. Yet at once half a hundred Boers started up and rushed as a
-forlorn hope upon <span class="pagenum"><a name="page44" id=
-"page44"></a>{44}</span> the crest: a remnant of stalwarts, who
-even succeeded in firing a round or two from the guns which had
-just been taken from them. There was a moment or two of doubt and
-bewilderment, but Hamilton with the help of a few junior officers
-rallied the waverers, and earned the Victoria Cross, which on
-account of his high military rank was withheld from him; the guns
-were recovered, the laager rushed, and the tactical victory was
-complete.</p>
-<p>Elandslaagte was as unreal a victory as Talana. The troops had
-not rested many hours in their bivouacs on the ridge before they
-received orders to return without delay to Ladysmith, which was
-still threatened from the west by the Free State commandos; and by
-noon on October 22 not only had Elandslaagte been hurriedly
-evacuated, but stores, ammunition and even some prisoners had been
-left behind in the scuttle. Next day it passed without effort into
-the possession of a small body of Free Staters, who were astonished
-to find it abandoned.</p>
-<p>Meanwhile Yule after the failure of his movement on Glencoe
-found his position insecure and reluctantly resolved to retire on
-Ladysmith, although it entailed leaving not only his supplies and
-ammunition but also his wounded behind him. The victory of Talana
-had indeed been won but the victors were exhausted by it and unfit
-to stand up to Erasmus on Impati. It became necessary for Yule to
-disappear immediately and stealthily.</p>
-<p>On October 23 soon after midnight the maimed and harassed force
-slipped quietly away and trudged wearily to the south. When the
-mist rolling aside next morning disclosed the evacuation the
-Transvaalers on Impati occupied the town almost simultaneously with
-the reoccupation of Elandslaagte by their allies the Free Staters;
-and thus the battlefields of two British victories were redeemed by
-the defeated. It is no reproach to Yule that military necessity
-compelled him to leave behind <span class="pagenum"><a name=
-"page45" id="page45"></a>{45}</span> the wounded of Talana Hill.
-The death of Symons on October 23 was a pathetic episode of the
-Natal Campaign. He passed away of his mortal wound while the Boers
-were looting the camp in which he was lying and wondering, in the
-rare intervals of conscious thought, why the troops whom he had led
-so gallantly had been taken from him; and for half a year his grave
-lay lonely in the enemy's country before another British soldier
-could stand beside it.</p>
-<p>The retreat of Yule's force was effected without more trouble
-than that which was caused by the nature of the country and the
-alternations of the climate. Van Tonder's Pass&mdash;a difficult
-defile which would have been impassable under opposition&mdash;was
-crossed, and a sudden spate on the Waschbank river only temporarily
-checked the retirement. A column was sent out from Ladysmith by
-White to check the Free Staters who had re-occupied Elandslaagte
-and to prevent them falling on Yule, and on October 24 they were
-engaged with success at Rietfontein. The sound of the artillery in
-this action was audible to Yule on the Waschbank, but he was unable
-to account for it.</p>
-<p>On the afternoon of October 25 Yule was within one day's march
-of Ladysmith. He proposed to halt for the night; but suddenly a
-patrol from a column sent out by White to help him in appeared, and
-he received orders to press forward to Ladysmith.</p>
-<p>The exhausted men resumed their march, and the misery of that
-night's journey was probably never exceeded during any subsequent
-movement in the war. Sodden, hungry, weary, disheartened; men and
-transport animals inextricably intermingled; the column plodded
-onwards in the rain and the night. A halt at daylight next morning
-brought in some of the stragglers and gave a little rest to those
-who were still in the ranks; and by mid-day the men of Talana Hill
-had trudged into Ladysmith.</p>
-<p>The urgency of the immediate resumption of the <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page46" id="page46"></a>{46}</span> march had
-arisen from White's anxiety for the safety of Yule's force.
-Rietfontein had indeed, like Talana and Elandslaagte, been a
-tactically successful engagement and had similarly been followed by
-a retreat; but Yule was exposed to an attack by Erasmus, to whom he
-had given the slip at Dundee during the night of October 22 and who
-was known to be endeavouring to overtake him. Erasmus was believed
-to be acting from the direction of Elandslaagte; but fortunately
-for Yule his movements were not judiciously directed and his
-information was imperfect.</p>
-<p><a href="#fig-ladysmith-siege">Map, p. 139.</a></p>
-<p>All the detached members of the Natal Wedge had now been driven
-in and the reconnaissances sent out by White on October 27 and the
-following days showed that the Boers had lost no time in pressing
-on to Ladysmith. The Transvaalers were apparently in force N.E. of
-the town on a section of the arc in which Lombard's Kop, Long Hill,
-and Pepworth Hill were the chief physical features; the Free
-Staters were approaching from the N.W. and a small force of them
-under A.P. Cronje was already in touch with the Transvaalers; their
-main body, however, seemed to be making for the Tugela in order to
-isolate Ladysmith from the south. On October 29 White assumed the
-offensive with the greater part of his command, and endeavoured to
-cut through the still unconsolidated investing line and to thwart
-the co-operation of the allies.</p>
-<p>The general idea was that an infantry brigade, supported on its
-right flank by cavalry acting towards Lombard's Kop, should attack
-the enemy, who was presumed to be in force on Long Hill and
-Pepworth Hill. On the left flank of the attack a column would
-endeavour to pass through the Boer line, and having seized
-Nicholson's Nek due north of Ladysmith would either close it
-against the retreating enemy or hold it as a post through which a
-mounted force could debouch in pursuit on to the more practicable
-ground beyond.</p>
-<p>Some difficulty in drawing and loading up ammunition
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page47" id="page47"></a>{47}</span>
-delayed the start of the column, which under the command of
-Carleton was to secure the left flank of the operations; and
-fearing that daylight on October 30 would find his vulnerable force
-still on the march he determined soon after midnight to halt short
-of Nicholson's Nek, from which he was then two miles distant. He
-had succeeded in passing through the enemy's picket line, and was
-perhaps not justified in discontinuing his advance, although his
-instructions were to take Nicholson's Nek only "if possible." But
-an error of judgment made by a commanding officer on a dark night
-in a strange country acting under instructions which left him a
-free hand must not be judged severely, and had it not been for a
-disaster which could not be foreseen, he would probably have been
-commended for his prudence.</p>
-<p>Kainguba Hill, which rises on the left of the road to
-Nicholson's Nek, seemed to offer a suitable stage on the journey
-and towards it the column was diverted. While the men were climbing
-the steep and stony hillside a panic suddenly seized the transport
-mules. It may have been a spontaneous emotion, or it may have
-originated in an alarm raised by the Boers who were holding the
-crest. The animals stampeded down the slope, and carrying with them
-not only the reserve ammunition but also the signalling equipment,
-the water carts, and the component parts of the mountain artillery,
-charged through the rear of the column. The timely exertions of the
-officers checked the general scare that was imminent; and with the
-exception of a few score of infantry men and gunners the column
-reached the summit before daybreak, having lost almost everything
-needed for a successful occupation of it.</p>
-<p>Misfortune continued relentlessly to pursue the column. A
-position was taken up on the hill on the supposition that it could
-only be attacked from the south, but at daylight C. de Wet, who
-here came upon the stage which afterwards he often filled so
-effectively, <span class="pagenum"><a name="page48" id=
-"page48"></a>{48}</span> threatened it from the north with a Free
-State commando. A gesture made by an officer in order to attract
-attention was interpreted as a signal to retire; another officer
-thinking that his company was left alone on the summit, though it
-was in fact within seventy yards of an occupied sangar, raised the
-white flag; and almost at the same moment a bugle sounded the Cease
-Fire. Neither the white flag nor the bugle call was authorized by
-Carleton; but a glance at the situation showed him that they could
-not be repudiated and after a gallant struggle to maintain an
-indefensible position he surrendered. Nearly a thousand men were
-led away into captivity.</p>
-<p>The main infantry attack was made by a force of five battalions
-with six field batteries under the command of Grimwood. He marched
-out of Ladysmith soon after midnight, but had not covered half the
-distance to the point of attack when an unfortunate incident
-deprived him of all his artillery and of two of his battalions. The
-guns marching in the centre of the column and acting under orders
-which were not communicated to Grimwood, diverged to the right and
-were followed by the two battalions in rear; and the absence of
-nearly half the force was not discovered by him until daybreak, and
-after he had taken up the position assigned south of Long Hill.
-Daybreak also revealed the fact that Long Hill which was assumed to
-be the Boer left was not occupied, and that Long Tom from Impati
-had been emplaced on Pepworth Hill. The cavalry brigade under
-French upon whom Grimwood relied to protect his right flank was two
-miles away in his rear; and finding himself attacked on that flank
-instead of from the front he was compelled to swing round and
-almost reverse his front. Thus far the general scheme of attack had
-signally failed. Carleton on the left had not reached Nicholson's
-Nek and was in trouble; Grimwood with nearly half of his command
-gone astray, and having discovered that the enemy's left was not on
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page49" id="page49"></a>{49}</span>
-Long Hill but on Lombard's Kop, had to improvise a scheme of his
-own; while French instead of conforming to Grimwood was compelling
-Grimwood to conform to him. At 8 a.m. Grimwood was suffering
-severely from artillery fire, and French whose cavalry now
-prolonged Grimwood's line southwards was with difficulty holding
-his own. The enemy, whom the general idea destined to be outflanked
-and rolled up towards the north and pursued by mounted troops
-issuing from Nicholson's Nek, was instead attacking vigorously from
-Lombard's Kop on the east and seemed likely to outflank White; the
-infantry reserves under Ian Hamilton were almost expended; and the
-British artillery was unable to silence the Boer guns.</p>
-<p>All through the forenoon Ladysmith and the little garrison left
-behind for its defence was the target of Long Tom on Pepworth Hill.
-The fugitives from Kainguba brought in disheartening reports and
-the Boers seemed to be threatening from the north. W. Knox, a Horse
-Artillery officer who had been left in command, anticipated an
-attack which he had little chance of meeting successfully with the
-scanty force at his disposal and sent an urgent message to White,
-who at noon ordered the battle to be broken off and the troops to
-retire to Ladysmith.</p>
-<p>The retreat was effected in confusion. Grimwood's force was the
-first to be withdrawn and was saved from disaster by the gallant
-stand made by two field batteries as it crossed the level ground.
-The cavalry scampered home in Grimwood's track. A dramatic episode
-brought the battle of Lombard's Kop to a close. Just as the baffled
-troops were entering Ladysmith a battery of naval guns, which had
-arrived from Durban that morning and had gone immediately into
-action, succeeded in silencing Long Tom and some other guns on
-Pepworth Hill, nearly four miles distant. In the evening Joubert
-sent in a flag of truce to White to announce Carleton's
-surrender.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page50" id="page50"></a>{50}</span>
-<p>The Natal Wedge disappeared in the smoke of the battle of
-Lombard's Kop and was never again heard of as an instrument in the
-Natal campaign. The Boers filled the gaps in the investing line
-without difficulty, and on November 2 the Siege of Ladysmith began.
-The last man to leave the town was French, who went forth to win
-honour on distant fields.</p>
-<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote16" name=
-"footnote16"></a><b>Footnote 16:</b><a href=
-"#footnotetag16">(return)</a>
-<p>In 1902 the Vryheid and Utrecht districts of the Transvaal were
-annexed to Natal and the wedge disappeared.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote17" name=
-"footnote17"></a><b>Footnote 17:</b><a href=
-"#footnotetag17">(return)</a>
-<p>They were indeed authorized as early as October 18 to throw it
-aside but by that time they were committed to its use.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote18" name=
-"footnote18"></a><b>Footnote 18:</b><a href=
-"#footnotetag18">(return)</a>
-<p>"Long Tom," which was afterwards sent to Ladysmith and
-subsequently to bombard Rhodes in Kimberley.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<a name="fig-natal" id="fig-natal"></a>
-<div class="figcenter" style="width:50%;"><a href=
-"images/image03.png"><img width="100%" src="images/image03.png"
-alt="Sketch map of Northern Natal" /></a></div>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page51" id="page51"></a>{51}</span>
-<h2><a name="chap3" id="chap3">CHAPTER III</a></h2>
-<h3>Deus Ex Machina No. I</h3>
-<p>The arrival of Sir Redvers Buller at Cape Town on October 31,
-1899, the morrow of the battle of Lombard's Kop, encouraged the
-despondent at home and in Cape Colony.<a id="footnotetag19" name=
-"footnotetag19"></a><a href="#footnote19"><sup>19</sup></a> Twenty
-years previously he had distinguished himself in the command of a
-Boer contingent which served with the British Army during the Zulu
-campaign; and it was doubtless from the experience then gained that
-he formed the opinion that the war which he was now called upon to
-direct, could be brought to a successful conclusion only "by the
-actual conquest of every man in the field: a task doubly difficult
-owing to the extreme mobility of the enemy."</p>
-<p>In his first telegram to Lord Lansdowne he described the
-situation as one of "extreme gravity."</p>
-<p>White, with five-sixths of the British Troops in South Africa,
-was shut up in Ladysmith; a month at least must elapse before the
-Expeditionary Force, which the British Government had on September
-22 decided to send out, would be able to take the field; Mafeking
-was besieged; the diamond men of Kimberley, like a passionate child
-interned in a dark room, were screaming for release; Sir Alfred
-Milner was pleading that the defence of the Cape Peninsula, an area
-of a few thousand square miles as far removed from the front as
-Marseilles <span class="pagenum"><a name="page52" id=
-"page52"></a>{52}</span> is from Berlin, must be first attended to;
-President Steyn had overcome his scruples and was sending Free
-State commandos across the Orange River into the Cape Colony at
-Bethulie and Norval's Pont; the disaffected colonials were restive;
-and the fall of Ladysmith, which seemed probable, would lay Natal
-open from the Tugela to the Indian Ocean.</p>
-<p>It was a dismal outlook; but Buller, after a few days' review of
-the situation, was able to report that in his opinion the
-opposition would probably collapse when Kimberley and Ladysmith
-were relieved. His optimism at Capetown was destined soon to be
-superseded by pessimism on the Tugela. He compared himself to a man
-who, having a busy day before him, has overslept himself. The
-original plan of campaign, a march on Pretoria through the Free
-State, had necessarily to be postponed; and the important railway
-junctions at Naauwpoort and Stormberg were too weakly held and too
-liable to investment by the Free State commandos which had crossed
-the Orange to justify their retention, and the little garrisons
-were withdrawn. To Gatacre and French, who had just escaped from
-Ladysmith, was assigned the duty of holding the centre, while Lord
-Methuen advanced to the relief of Kimberley.</p>
-<p>It was, however, the situation in Natal which gave the most
-anxiety to Buller. The Free State commandos which had been seen
-passing Ladysmith shortly before the investment were now at
-Colenso, having driven back to Estcourt the small British force
-which was all that was left to stem the tide of an invasion. The
-Free Staters, fortunately, were not active and delayed to avail
-themselves of the opportunity. When at length, after eleven days of
-inertia, L. Botha persuaded Joubert to undertake an offensive
-movement south of the Tugela, it had passed away, as Estcourt had
-in the meantime been reinforced by troops from England under the
-command of Hildyard.</p>
-<p>Encouraged by the capture of an armoured train at <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page53" id="page53"></a>{53}</span> Chieveley,
-Joubert advanced south in two bodies, one on each side of Estcourt,
-and seized the railway at Highlands, thus cutting off Hildyard's
-communication with Pietermaritzburg; and Hildyard having no cavalry
-was unable to touch him. The raid, which for a time seemed
-dangerous, was however soon checked by troops coming up from the
-south under Barton, and Joubert found himself pressed between two
-forces each as strong as his own. After an action at Willow Grange,
-which each side claimed as a victory, Joubert, fearing lest he
-should be cut off, retired unpursued, against the wishes of the
-more pushful and energetic Botha, who was in favour of an advance
-on Pietermaritzburg.</p>
-<p>The alarms and excursions of October and November were the cause
-of the dissolution of a military apparatus which had been put
-together at home with much care and thought, and which had never
-yet been seen in warfare. Its designers and constructors were proud
-of it and they looked forward with confidence to its successful
-working. The apparatus was the British Army Corps. It was taken to
-pieces as soon as it reached South Africa; but fortunately the
-ties, ligaments, and braces which held it together yielded to
-slight pressure and little difficulty was experienced in resolving
-it into its constituent elements. The more important of these were
-despatched to Natal and the rest were distributed over the western
-and central commands.</p>
-<p>Buller, perhaps leaving the pessimistic atmosphere of Capetown
-with relief, went by sea to Durban, the defence of which was
-entrusted to the Royal Navy, and reached Pietermaritzburg on
-November 25. By this time the situation had improved all along the
-line, and it seemed that it might still be possible to resume the
-original plan of a central advance on Bloemfontein and Pretoria as
-soon as Ladysmith was relieved. The Boer raid towards southern
-Natal which caused so much consternation had been easily foiled and
-British troops were now at Frere.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page54" id="page54"></a>{54}</span>
-<p>Buller, soon after his arrival in Natal, found himself in
-command of a force of 19,000 men with whom to tackle about 21,000
-Boers under the command of L. Botha. Joubert was invalided after
-the unsuccessful Estcourt raid, and the change was, from the
-enemy's point of view, for the better. The new Head Commandant was
-a more strenuous and active leader than his predecessor.</p>
-<p>Little was known of the topography of the country in which
-Buller was about to operate. It had never been systematically
-surveyed, and the existing maps had been constructed for
-agricultural rather than for campaigning purposes, and could not be
-trusted. The Tugela formed the ditch of a natural fortress covering
-Ladysmith. On its left bank rose an almost continuous ridge or
-rampart from which the easy open ground on the right bank could be
-watched for miles, and reconnaissances kept at a distance.</p>
-<p>Reconnaissances were, however, not needed to prove to Buller
-that Colenso, where the railway passed up into the Tugela ridge,
-was immune to a frontal attack, and that Ladysmith must be relieved
-by a turning movement. Two alternatives offered themselves. The
-advance might be made through Weenen and across the Tugela some
-distance below Colenso, and thence to Elandslaagte, where the Boer
-line of communication with the Transvaal might be cut; but to
-Ladysmith this was a circuitous route. It also would necessitate
-the traversing of a rough bush country, into which Buller was
-reluctant to throw raw troops just off the transports who had not
-yet heard the sounds of war.</p>
-<p>He therefore decided upon a westerly flank march by way of
-Potgieter's Drift, twenty miles west of Colenso; and once on the
-left bank of the Tugela he would be within a day's march of
-Ladysmith and the railway into the Free State. White was
-heliographically consulted, and all the arrangements for an advance
-on December 11 were made. The force had even been set in motion
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page55" id="page55"></a>{55}</span>
-when certain disturbing news came out of the west. Gatacre had
-suffered a reverse at Stormberg, and simultaneously Methuen had
-been roughly handled at Magersfontein, and was unable to continue
-his march on Kimberley.</p>
-<p>The strategic timidity of Buller and his curious habit of
-allowing himself to be influenced by psychological probabilities
-were at once apparent. The anticipated moral effect of these
-successes upon the enemy swayed him back to the plan which a day or
-two previously he had rejected as impracticable. The plan of a
-flank march by way of Potgieter's Drift was thrown aside. It might
-have been justifiable in the presence of a dispirited enemy; but
-now the burghers on the Tugela had been suddenly encouraged by news
-of victories won on two widely separated scenes of action and were
-no doubt anxious to rival the exploits of their comrades far
-away.<a id="footnotetag20" name="footnotetag20"></a><a href=
-"#footnote20"><sup>20</sup></a> The flank march would expose the
-army to the danger of being cut off by a quickened and revived foe,
-and Buller determined not to run the risk. On December 12 he
-ordered an advance on Colenso.</p>
-<p>The course of the war in the western and central scenes of
-action up to the time of the two defeats which caused Buller to
-revise the plan of campaign for Natal must now be traced.</p>
-<p><a href="#fig-so-transvaal">Map p. 260.</a></p>
-<p>The force of nearly 10,000 men under Lord Methuen detailed by
-Buller for the relief of Kimberley, advanced from De Aar and Orange
-River Bridge along the railway. At Belmont a body of Free Staters
-under Jacob Prinsloo was found strongly posted on the heights east
-of the line, and although reinforced by Delarey from Kimberley, it
-was unable to hold to its positions, and was compelled to retreat
-eastwards on November 23.</p>
-<p>Prinsloo withdrew with his Free Staters across the border, but
-was persuaded by Delarey, who had fallen <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page56" id="page56"></a>{56}</span> back on
-Graspan about eight miles N.E. of Belmont, to rejoin him; and a
-favourable position was occupied on a group of kopjes astride the
-railway, where on November 25 another battle was fought, in which
-the Naval Brigade suffered a loss of nearly half its strength. The
-enemy, though driven back, retreated in good order, as at Belmont
-two days previously, there being no cavalry available for effective
-pursuit. Methuen pushed on to Witkoplaagte.</p>
-<p>The Boers were greatly discouraged by Belmont and Graspan,
-where, as at Talana and Elandslaagte, they had been ejected from
-strong kopje positions chosen by themselves. The moral was not lost
-upon Delarey, who determined to try whether a better stand could
-not be made in a river position, and selected the junction of the
-Modder and the Riet for the experiment. His idea was not so much to
-dispute the passage of the river as to use the deep channels as
-covered ways and as natural trenches from which the plain could be
-grazed by rifle fire. The Modder after approaching the Riet changes
-its direction abruptly three tunes above the junction, enclosing a
-diamond-shaped area which provided the Boers with a ready-made
-perimeter camp.</p>
-<p><a href="#fig-modder">Map. p. 59.</a></p>
-<p>Methuen, thinking that the enemy would as before select the good
-kopje position which offered itself on Spytfontein halfway to
-Kimberley, determined to diverge from the railway with the greater
-part of his army and circling through Jacobsdaal, Brown's Drift and
-Abon's Dam to attack Spytfontein in flank, where he had little
-doubt that he would find the Boers in position; but Modder River,
-which he was inclined to believe was only held as an advanced post,
-must first be taken. Delarey had been joined by P. Cronje, who
-unperceived by Methuen's cavalry came in with a body of
-Transvaalers from Mafeking, and was in occupation of the loop
-between the rivers.</p>
-<p>At sunrise on November 28 Methuen advanced from his camp at
-Witkoplaagte six miles south of the river. <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page57" id="page57"></a>{57}</span> The fight
-began under misapprehensions on each side. Methuen believed that
-only the river bank above the railway bridge was held in force;
-while he was credited by his opponents with the intention of
-crossing the Riet River by Bosnian's Drift of which he did not know
-the existence.</p>
-<p>Everything promised well for Delarey and Cronje, but they made
-little use of their opportunities. Methuen fought in the dark, and
-whenever the Fog of War lifted, found that the situation had
-changed. He attacked the Modder as the opening move of his flank
-march on a mythical position on Spytfontein and suddenly discovered
-before him, not a mere advanced post to be checked or masked, but
-an enemy holding a well-entrenched and defended front several miles
-in length. The maps at his disposal did not shew the extraordinary
-windings of the two rivers over part of the area on which he was
-engaged, and some of the reaches were only discovered when they
-tripped up the advancing troops. The result of a hard day's work,
-in which Methuen was wounded, was the capture of Rosmead, a village
-on the right bank below the railway bridge. The troops of the right
-attack did not succeed in crossing the river, and an attempt to
-work up the right bank from Rosmead failed. What effect the battle
-would have upon the situation, and whether on the whole it had been
-a success for Methuen, were not apparent at nightfall. The question
-was answered next morning when it was found that the Boers had
-retired to Jacobsdaal. Next day the British troops took up a
-position north of the river.</p>
-<p>So far, the Kimberley relief force had done its work well. The
-obstacles in its way at Belmont, Graspan, and Modder River had been
-thrust aside, and it was now within two easy marches of its
-destination. It seemed therefore that in three days at the most,
-allowing one day for another battle, it would be reported to Buller
-as having finished its task: and had the necessity <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page58" id="page58"></a>{58}</span> been urgent
-the relief could no doubt have been effected within that time.
-Kimberley, however, appeared able to take care of itself for a few
-weeks, and Methuen halted for twelve days at Modder River in order
-to receive supplies and reinforcements, and to strengthen his
-slender and vulnerable line of communication with the south. He
-still believed that the Boers would make their next stand at
-Spytfontein.</p>
-<p>The Boers remained but a few days at Jacobsdaal. After a council
-of war at which Cronje declared himself in favour of remaining
-there as a menace to the British line of communication which would
-attract Methuen to the town, a movement which Methuen himself had
-had in mind; while Delarey advocated the taking up of a position
-between the Modder River and Kimberley; the plan of the latter was
-adopted and the Boer forces trekked northwards to Spytfontein. They
-found, however, that between Spytfontein and the river, the
-Magersfontein group of kopjes would afford excellent positions to
-Methuen from which Spytfontein could be attacked.</p>
-<p>During Methuen's halt at Modder River Delarey and Cronje
-received considerable reinforcements. From Natal, from the Basuto
-border, and from Kimberley, commandos were summoned to Spytfontein.
-That position was, however, for the reason just stated, insecure;
-and on the December 4 the Magersfontein position was taken up and
-prepared for defence by Delarey. A low arc stretching from the
-position towards the Modder was discovered, from which a flanking
-fire could be poured in upon a frontal attack.</p>
-<p>With an unerring instinct which was more useful to him than most
-of the knowledge he could have acquired in a European Staff
-College, and with an originality which if it had been displayed by
-a young British officer in an examination for promotion would
-probably have injured that officer's prospects, Delarey dug his
-trenches not at the foot of the hill but in sinuous lines some
-little way in advance of it, by which he gained the power of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page59" id="page59"></a>{59}</span>
-meeting an attack with grazing or skimming fire, and which also
-removed the firing line from physical features on which the British
-guns could be laid. It is said that he manned the works on the
-slope with burghers firing black powder so as to draw the enemy's
-fire away from the trenches in which only smokeless powder was
-used.</p>
-<a name="fig-modder" id="fig-modder"></a>
-<div class="figcenter" style="width:50%;"><a href=
-"images/image04.png"><img width="100%" src="images/image04.png"
-alt="Modder River and Magersfontein" /></a></div>
-<p>Methuen obtained little information during his halt at Modder
-River. The country was so much intersected by the wire fences of
-the farms that cavalry scouting was difficult. He decided to make a
-direct frontal attack upon Magersfontein on December 11 after a
-bombardment on the previous evening; and here, as at Colenso, the
-text-book preliminary shrapnel practice put the enemy on the alert
-and did no harm. It greatly encouraged the burghers in their
-trenches. Only three men were touched by the projectiles hurled by
-the naval, howitzer, field, and horse batteries; and an impending
-infantry advance was clearly indicated. To the Highland Brigade
-under Wauchope, who had joined the command since the Modder River
-battle, was entrusted the execution of the night attack. He does
-not appear to have altogether approved of Methuen's scheme; but
-with the same dogged valour which he displayed many years before
-when he threw himself upon the <span class="pagenum"><a name=
-"page60" id="page60"></a>{60}</span> Gladstonian political
-Magersfontein in Midlothian, he incorporated himself in it.</p>
-<p>At 1 a.m. on December 12 in a storm of rain and thunder the
-Brigade in mass of quarter-columns marched out of its bivouac,
-guided by a staff officer's compass which the lightning and the
-rain soon made unreliable. The objective point was the southern
-edge of the Magersfontein Ridge, about three miles distant. The
-progress made over the rough and encumbered veld was slow, and it
-was difficult to judge in the darkness how much ground had really
-been covered. Wauchope either underestimated the distance made good
-or, as is more probable, did not expect to find the enemy
-entrenched in advance of the foot of the hill, and the error cost
-him his life and the lives of many other gallant Highlanders.
-Afraid lest dawn should find his Brigade too far away from the
-position to rush it, he hesitated to deploy, and when at last he
-was about to give the order, a further delay was caused by a line
-of thorn bushes. The Brigade passed through or avoided the
-obstruction and was at the halt on the point of changing formation
-when the Boers in the advanced trenches, which had been so
-stealthily excavated that no one in the British Army seems to have
-been aware of their existence, received the alarm and opened fire.
-Possibly the situation might have been saved if an order to charge
-had been given at once, and the Highlanders had heard the skirl of
-the pipes; but Wauchope had at the first shot rushed forward
-impetuously towards the flashing Mausers. With his life he measured
-the unknown distance to the trenches, and at the supreme moment his
-Highlanders lost their leader and knew not whom to follow.</p>
-<p>The sudden stroke of the impact falling upon men of dissimilar
-temperament reacted on them diversely. The majority absorbed it by
-throwing themselves upon the ground on which they stood; others
-recoiled mechanically upon the companies in rear; while to not a
-few it was a stimulus which projected them into the jaws of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page61" id="page61"></a>{61}</span>
-death gaping before them in the dim light. A mixed body, hardly
-exceeding the strength of three companies, pushed on in obedience
-to the last words that fell from Wauchope's lips, to reinforce the
-right; and succeeded in wriggling round the eastward flank of the
-enemy's advanced trenches and in shattering a foreign contingent in
-the Boer service which was holding the gap of level ground between
-the low arc and the Magersfontein Ridge. The little force of
-progressives came under the fire of the British guns which opened
-upon the ridge at daybreak, but a remnant under Wilson drove a
-keen-edged but slender wedge into the curve of the Boer position,
-and was favourably placed to storm the ridge. A few score of
-Highlanders were now fingering the key with which it seemed
-possible to unlock the sluice gates and allow the flood waters of
-war to overwhelm the foe. But War is a game of chance. The key was
-snatched away and the issue of the day reversed by a man who had
-lost his way.</p>
-<p>In the absence of Delarey, who was absent at Kimberley, P.
-Cronje was in chief command of the Boer forces. His Head-Quarters
-were at Brown's Drift on the Modder, six miles from the key of the
-position on Magersfontein. The sound of the bombardment notified
-him that an infantry attack was imminent, and he hurried off to
-make the final arrangements for meeting it. These he seems to have
-completed to his satisfaction, and he rested for an hour or two,
-rising soon after midnight. In the darkness and rain he lost his
-way on the unfamiliar ground. But chance found him at daybreak
-close to the gap which Wilson's little band of Highlanders had hewn
-in his line, and their promising advance was effectually repressed,
-as they were simultaneously fired on by Cronje's escort on their
-front and by a commando which had come up on their right rear.</p>
-<p>Daylight found the shattered and dismembered Highland Brigade
-lying in patches upon the veld, with their leader dead before their
-eyes; themselves unable to <span class="pagenum"><a name="page62"
-id="page62"></a>{62}</span> advance or retreat, conspicuous,
-hungry, thirsty, and soon to be scorched by the midsummer sun at
-the zenith; and there they lay for eight hours. Only the shells of
-the artillery, which from daylight onwards played upon the trenches
-and partially mastered the fire from them, saved the Highland
-Brigade from destruction.</p>
-<p>The Guards' Brigade under Colvile was in the first instance
-detailed as the reserve of the Highland Brigade, but the repulse of
-the latter and the probability that it would sooner or later be
-compelled to retreat gave the former a definite objective, the low
-arc held by the left of the Boer line. In marching on this the wire
-fence which was the boundary between British territory and the
-Orange Free State was crossed, and the Guards' Brigade had the
-honour of being the first body of troops to go into action in the
-enemy's country. Colvile held his own, but although he was unable
-to occupy the arc he screened the right flank of the Highlanders.
-On their left a weak Brigade under Pole-Carew was drawn up astride
-the railway, and thus apparently the firing line, which had been so
-hardly pressed during so many weary hours, was secure on either
-flank. But Pole-Carew was paralysed by the variety of the duties
-which had been assigned to him, and was unable to operate
-offensively on the enemy's right. His original orders were to act
-as camp guard and to demonstrate northwards in support of the
-Highland Brigade; and subsequently he seems to have been instructed
-to hold himself in readiness to cross over to support the Guards'
-attack on the enemy's left, with the result that his Brigade was
-never seriously engaged.</p>
-<p>The interval between the Highlanders' right facing the trenches
-and the Guards' left had never been effectively closed and early in
-the afternoon the Boers renewed their attacks upon it, and
-threatened to enfilade the line. Hughes-Hallett, who after the
-death of Wauchope succeeded to the command of the Highland Brigade
-and to whom Methuen had sent orders to hold on until <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page63" id="page63"></a>{63}</span> nightfall,
-asked Colvile in vain to support him and at last was compelled to
-throw back his right. Methuen's orders were unfortunately known
-only to Hughes-Hallett and the movement was interpreted as an order
-from the brigadier for a general retirement. The wave of retreat
-beginning on the right passed rapidly down the line, and soon all
-but a few score of men who held on gallantly as long as there was
-light were streaming back in confusion to the field batteries in
-rear. Even the shelter of the guns did not wholly avail them for
-protection, for they were shelled while rallying by the Boer guns
-which had been strangely silent during the battle; and the retreat
-was continued to the bivouac ground which so many more of them, now
-lying on the veld, had quitted seventeen hours before. The battle
-was lost.</p>
-<p>It is probable that if the work had been more evenly distributed
-the result might have been, at least, less disastrous. An
-intolerable strain was put upon one Brigade which it was unable to
-bear. The Highlanders were blundered into action, then abandoned to
-their fate for many hours, and finally withdrawn by a
-misunderstanding. The inequality of the tasks set to the various
-columns is strikingly shown in the return of casualties. To the
-total of 948 killed and wounded the Highland Brigade contributed no
-less than 752. Two of its battalions lost 37 per cent of their
-strength; while the losses of the Division were but 7 per cent.</p>
-<p>Methuen's expectations that as at Modder River after the fight
-of November 28 so also at Magersfontein the Boers would evacuate
-their positions during the night were not realized. Next day he
-retired to the Modder River Camp, where he received orders from
-Buller either to attack Cronje again or to fall back upon the
-Orange River; but at the instance of Forestier-Walker, who was in
-command of the Lines of Communication, the orders were cancelled
-and Methuen was allowed to remain.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page64" id="page64"></a>{64}</span>
-<p>Magersfontein of itself would probably have sufficed to
-disarrange the plans of Duller in Natal, but coming a few hours
-after a serious rebuff in the centre, of which the story must now
-be told, it loomed fearfully on his near horizon. Soon after he
-landed at Capetown he ordered the weak and vulnerable detachments
-at Naauwpoort and Stormberg to be withdrawn to De Aar and
-Queenstown. The movement opened to the enemy the gates of access to
-a district in the Cape Colony teeming with Dutch disaffection. The
-Free Staters, however, did not avail themselves of the opportunity
-with alacrity, as they were more or less committed to defensive
-action within their own territory; and a fortnight elapsed before
-Colesberg was occupied by a force under the command of a
-Transvaaler named Schoeman, who on November 1 had crossed the
-Orange River at Norval's Pont. A few days later the Colesberg
-district was formally annexed by proclamation to the Orange Free
-State and the transfer of allegiance was enthusiastically approved
-by a public meeting held at Colesberg on November 14. This action
-not only brought the inhabitants under the commando law of the
-adjacent Republic by which a form of conscription was enforced, but
-also overcame the scruples of the Free Staters who could still
-maintain that they were only engaged in defending their own
-territory. Simultaneously Du Plooy with a commando which had
-crossed at Bethulie annexed the Burghersdorp district; while
-Olivier with a force mainly composed of colonial rebels took over
-on behalf of the Free State all that remained of the border
-districts of Cape Colony as far as Basutoland. By the end of
-November the easy process of annexation by proclamation had
-augmented the territory of the Orange Free State by about 7,000
-square miles; and then almost as an afterthought the burghers
-occupied the important strategic post of Stormberg Junction.</p>
-<p>To meet and if possible to thrust back these intrusions French
-was sent to the Naauwpoort and Gatacre to the <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page65" id="page65"></a>{65}</span> Stormberg
-district. Buller soon found it necessary to order Naauwpoort to be
-re-occupied, as that town would have afforded a useful base to the
-enemy from which the main line of railway could be raided in the
-neighbourhood of De Aar. French arrived at Naauwpoort on November
-20 and was for some weeks engaged in protecting the lines and in
-checking rebellion.</p>
-<a name="fig-stormberg" id="fig-stormberg"></a>
-<div class="figcenter" style="width:50%;"><a href=
-"images/image05.png"><img width="100%" src="images/image05.png"
-alt="Stormberg" /></a></div>
-<p>The little force of half a battalion of infantry which evacuated
-Stormberg withdrew to Queenstown, where Gatacre arrived on November
-18. He intended to march on Stormberg as soon as he had collected a
-sufficient force; his own Division, which he had brought out from
-England, having been diverted to Natal. He soon advanced to
-Putterskraal near Sterkstroom and about thirty miles from
-Stormberg, the occupation of which by the enemy on November 25
-prevented co-operation between him and French at Naauwpoort.</p>
-<p>Meanwhile rebellion was spreading, and owing to the dilatory
-proclamation of Martial Law by the Cape Government, always
-reluctant to take action which might wound the susceptibilities of
-the Dutch population, it had assumed a formidable aspect. Buller
-was uneasy, and although at first he had cautioned Gatacre to be
-careful he now suggested his closing with the enemy.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page66" id="page66"></a>{66}</span>
-<p>On December 7, by which time considerable reinforcements had
-come in, Gatacre felt himself strong enough to tackle Olivier at
-Stormberg. His plan was to take his column by train as far as
-Molteno, whence a night march of about eight miles would bring it
-into position for attacking the Boer laager. The use of the railway
-would not only enable him to strike more suddenly and with a
-greater chance of taking Olivier by surprise but would also
-economise the strength of his force, a portion of which having left
-the transports only a few days previously was not yet in hard
-condition. The force with which he proposed to take Stormberg
-amounted to 2,600 men, who detrained at Molteno soon after sunset
-on December 9. Gatacre calculated that after a march of about six
-hours he would be able to rush the position before dawn.</p>
-<p>The Boers, to the number of 1,700 men, were in occupation of the
-Kissieberg ridge, and of a nek which runs westward from its
-southern end towards a higher hill overhanging Stormberg Junction
-called Rooi Kop. Gatacre had originally intended to attack the Boer
-position frontally, but the reports which he received on arrival at
-Molteno determined him to turn it. The change of plan was not made
-known to all the troops, with the result that the ambulance and
-ammunition wagons left the town by the Stormberg road instead of by
-the Steynsburg road, along which the rest of the column was
-marching to the new objective. No trustworthy maps were available,
-and the enterprise was dependent for its success upon the knowledge
-and fidelity of a sergeant of police and a few native constables
-who acted as guides and who professed to know "every inch of the
-way."</p>
-<p>Soon after midnight, however, Gatacre's suspicions were aroused
-by the sudden appearance of a railway which ought not to have been
-there, and it was discovered that the guides had a mile or two back
-missed a path on which the column should have diverged to
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page67" id="page67"></a>{67}</span>
-the right. They assured him, however, that they had chosen a better
-road and that he was now less than 3,000 yards from the Boer
-position. He therefore halted the column for an hour's rest, and
-hoped for the best.</p>
-<p>When the march was resumed another railway was almost
-immediately encountered. It was in fact the colliery line which had
-been crossed before the halt and which here curves almost to the
-extent of a semicircle; but Gatacre believed that he had come upon
-the main line to Steynsburg and judged that he was now N.W. of the
-Boer position; while many of the officers in the rear of the
-column, unaware of the change of plan, imagined that they were
-approaching it from the S.E. along the Stormberg road originally
-selected for the advance on which the ambulance and ammunition
-wagons had already gone astray.</p>
-<p>The direction of the march was now almost reversed, owing to
-Gatacre's misapprehension of his position; and at dawn the column
-unknown to itself reached certain cross roads on Van Zyl's farm
-which had been fixed upon as the point from which the attack should
-be delivered; but the locality was not recognized by the staff, and
-the guides, who seem to have misunderstood the object of the march,
-conducted the column still deeper into the valley beneath the
-Kissieberg ridge.</p>
-<p>Suddenly a shot from the heights startled the errant and
-plodding column. The Boers had indeed been taken by surprise, but
-were at once on the alert and the crest line was soon occupied. The
-column marching in fours halted and turned to the right and, except
-the leading companies of Irish Rifles, which were formed to the
-front in order to seize a detached hill at the end of the ridge,
-sprang up the slope, but were soon baffled by the irregular tiers
-of krantzes or rock walls on the hill side. The artillery diverged
-to the left, losing one gun in the donga which ran down the valley,
-and took post on the detached hill from which the Kissieberg ridge
-could be shelled. The companies of Irish Rifles, <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page68" id="page68"></a>{68}</span> after
-seizing this hill, passed along the nek which joined it to the
-ridge and almost won the crest line.</p>
-<p>Meanwhile the Northumberland Fusiliers and the remaining
-companies of the Irish Rifles found the task of mounting the
-encumbered slope beyond their powers, and were soon ordered to fall
-back into the valley. The artillery noticed the movement, and in
-order to cover the retreat opened upon Kissieberg; not perceiving
-in the eastern dazzle of the sun about to rise above the sky line
-that some of the infantry who had not heard the order to retire
-were still clinging to the darkened westward hillside, and these
-were shelled by their own guns.</p>
-<p>Gatacre, confident of an easy success, had thrown all his
-infantry into the firing line, and had no reserves to fall back
-upon to support the companies of the Irish Rifles which were still
-holding their own on the left flank of the attack. As soon as the
-troops had crossed the valley to reform on the opposite ridge a new
-entanglement beset them.</p>
-<p>A commando under E.R. Grobler and Steenkamp, chiefly composed of
-rebels, which had been sent by Olivier on the previous day to stir
-up trouble in the district, was halted for the night a few miles
-out on the Steynsburg road. The sound of the firing quickly called
-it to attention, and a position which seriously threatened
-Gatacre's line of retreat was quickly seized. The commando,
-however, was handled with little judgment or energy, and was soon
-checked by the field guns which had been withdrawn from the
-detached hill near the Kissieberg ridge to cover the retreat of the
-infantry; and which at one time were firing trail to trail, some
-still engaging Olivier on Kissieberg while others were shelling
-Grobler.</p>
-<p>The raid on Stormberg had manifestly failed and Gatacre ordered
-a retreat to Molteno. Thither the weary, dispirited column trudged
-all through the forenoon of December 10. A gun was abandoned on the
-way, <span class="pagenum"><a name="page69" id=
-"page69"></a>{69}</span> and even the wagon in which the breech
-block had been secreted fell also into the enemy's hands. But this
-was a comparatively insignificant loss. It was soon discovered that
-nearly a third of the infantry was absent. When the troops were
-withdrawn from the attack on Kissieberg not a few of them remained
-in the donga or under the krantzes on the hill side, while others
-appear to have held on to the ridge. By some extraordinary neglect
-or default nearly 600 men were left to their fate. No one seems to
-have missed them at the time and they were made prisoners of war
-without an effort to extricate them.</p>
-<p>In less than two hours all the fighting except the little affair
-with Grobler was over. On neither side were the casualties of
-killed and wounded heavy. No British officer was killed and of the
-eight who were wounded four had been struck by shells not fired by
-the enemy.</p>
-<hr />
-<p>Stonmberg on December 10, followed by Magersfontein on December
-13, brought about Colenso on December 15. The latter was Buller's
-attempt to retrieve the former mishaps.</p>
-<p>A naturally strong position on the left bank of the Tugela had
-by the efforts of the Boers during the previous three weeks been
-almost perfectly secured. They showed, however, some hesitation
-with regard to Hlangwhane, a detached hill on the right bank from
-which the Tugela line could be enfiladed. It was a somewhat
-precarious position as it was accessible from the left bank only by
-two bridle drifts. It had been originally held by the Boers, but
-the garrison was withdrawn when Barton's Brigade appeared at
-Chieveley; and now all Botha's persistence, and even a reference to
-Kruger and Joubert at Pretoria, were required to induce the
-burghers to re-occupy it on December 15. From the south Hlangwhane,
-though separated from the Colenso kopjes by the river, appears to
-be an integral continuation of them.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page70" id="page70"></a>{70}</span>
-<a name="fig-colenso" id="fig-colenso"></a>
-<div class="figcenter" style="width:50%;"><a href=
-"images/image06.png"><img width="100%" src="images/image06.png"
-alt="Colenso Battlefield" /></a></div>
-<p>The enemy's general idea was a defensive occupation of the
-Colenso position, although Botha, with characteristic spirit,
-proposed to send a commando across the river to face the British on
-the open. The initiative, always a disadvantage when attacking an
-enemy strongly posted and entrenched, was thus imposed upon Buller.
-It was not doubted that he would be compelled to make a frontal
-attack on Colenso and in this the Boers showed the more correct
-appreciation of the situation. Botha hoped to lure Buller on and
-was prepared even to allow him to cross the river; and having
-crushed him to act upon the British flanks, an operation which the
-wide extension of Botha's front from Hlangwhane to Robinson's farm,
-a distance of seven miles, gave him a good chance of being able to
-carry out. If necessary, reinforcements could be drawn from the
-investing circle around Ladysmith, which seemed to be detaining
-more burghers than were necessary for the maintenance of the
-siege.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page71" id="page71"></a>{71}</span>
-<p>Buller proclaimed his intention of attacking Botha by a
-preliminary bombardment of the Colenso kopjes on December 13 and
-14; but the burghers lay low and gave so little indication of their
-presence that it almost seemed that they had abandoned the line of
-the Tugela. The British Army was encamped near Chieveley four miles
-south of Colenso.</p>
-<p>On the evening of December 14 the scheme of attack was delivered
-to the Brigadiers. The leading idea of it was a frontal attack to
-be delivered from the village of Colenso, where the Tugela is
-crossed by an iron railway bridge as well as by an iron wagon
-bridge. The latter had been left intact by the enemy, possibly in
-order to entice the British troops across the river. Buller appears
-to have been unaware how far the Boer trenches extended towards the
-west, and to have assumed that only the kopjes immediately opposite
-Colenso were occupied. Hildyard's Brigade was ordered to march in
-the direction of the "iron bridge,"<a id="footnotetag21" name=
-"footnotetag21"></a><a href="#footnote21"><sup>21</sup></a> to
-cross at that point, and then to "seize the kopjes north of the
-iron bridge." The attack on the enemy's right, which was believed
-to be weak, was assigned to Hart's Irish Brigade. He was instructed
-to cross the Tugela at a bridle drift about two miles west of
-Colenso and work down the left bank towards the occupied kopjes.
-Two infantry Brigades were retained as reserves to be used when
-required; and the mounted Brigade was ordered to move towards
-Hlangwhane and occupy it, if possible, and cover the right flank;
-but the weakness of the Boer position on that hill, which was cut
-off by the river <span class="pagenum"><a name="page72" id=
-"page72"></a>{72}</span> from the main line of defence, does not
-seem to have been realized. A few batteries were sent with Hart,
-but the bulk of the artillery was ordered east of the railway to
-support Hildyard.</p>
-<p>Buller's scheme has been severely criticized ever since its
-failure, but Clery who was in nominal command of the Natal force,
-and in whose name the battle orders were issued, as well as the
-other general officers, acquiesced in it. But in fact hardly any
-scheme could have been devised more likely to play into Botha's
-hands. Buller hoped to get a footing on the left bank and Botha
-hoped that he would succeed in doing so. Botha's special idea was
-to allure the troops of the frontal attack to his own side, where
-he could easily pound them from his kopjes and carry out his
-general idea of netting the British flanks.</p>
-<p>Buller had not then been in action with the Boers and he
-probably underrated their tactical capacity; but already he seems
-to have contemplated the possibility of the loss of Ladysmith, for
-in his despatch of December 13 to Lord Lansdowne, in which he
-justified his sudden change of the plan of campaign, he said that
-"it would be better to lose Ladysmith than to leave Natal open to
-the enemy."</p>
-<p>Nor did the Boers enter into the contest with much confidence.
-They had not yet tried Buller's mettle and his name was to them a
-tradition of courage handed down from the Zulu war, in which some
-of the older burghers now opposing him on the Tugela had served
-under him. The curious omission to inform White in Ladysmith that
-an attack on Colenso was to be made on December 15 may have arisen
-from Buller's doubts as to its issue, or from reluctance to
-heliograph a message in a cipher of which the enemy might have the
-key.</p>
-<p>The story of the Battle of Colenso is mainly the narrative of
-the action of two important components of the Army of Natal. Each
-of these was led by a dangerously <span class="pagenum"><a name=
-"page73" id="page73"></a>{73}</span> brave man, whose impetuosity
-crippled the tactical scheme and whose method of working his
-command was, at least, unusual. If in Hart and Long, who commanded
-the Artillery, the quality of personal courage had been less
-prominent it is probable that Colenso would not have filled up the
-cup of Stormberg and Magersfontein in that dark midsummer December
-week.</p>
-<p>The naval guns on the west of the railway had the honour of
-opening the battle, and shelled Fort Wyllie for some time without
-eliciting any response. Long joined Hildyard with another naval
-battery and two field batteries. He was not only an impetuous man
-but he also belonged to the short range school of
-artillerists;<a id="footnotetag22" name=
-"footnotetag22"></a><a href="#footnote22"><sup>22</sup></a> and he
-soon outpaced his infantry escort and came into action with his
-field batteries in the open a little in advance of a shallow
-intersecting donga, and within 1,100 yards of the Boer
-entrenchments across the river. The naval battery had been
-compelled by the flight of the Kaffir ox drivers to outspan astride
-a deeper donga about a quarter of a mile in rear, to which Long had
-sent back his gun teams. A terrific rifle and shrapnel fire, which
-the infantry escort which soon came up was powerless to subdue, was
-now opened upon the guns, and for an hour the batteries were beaten
-on until the casualties left but four men to each gun, and
-ammunition was running short. Long, who was one of the first to be
-wounded, withdrew the dwindled gun detachments to the shallow donga
-and sent back for a fresh supply of ammunition, intending to resume
-fire as soon as the general attack developed.</p>
-<p>All the while the batteries had been unsupported except by the
-escorting companies, which were not under Long's orders, and no
-attempt was made by Hildyard's or Barton's brigade in rear to
-relieve or divert the pressure on the guns, which had succeeded in
-silencing <span class="pagenum"><a name="page74" id=
-"page74"></a>{74}</span> temporarily some of the Boer artillery and
-in checking the rifle fire.</p>
-<p>Earlier in the action Buller had been informed that the guns
-were "all right and comfortable," but later reports gave him the
-impression that this cheery optimism was delusive, and that owing
-to loss of men and exhaustion of ammunition the artillery told off
-to support Hildyard was now permanently out of action. The rest of
-the artillery was engaged in assisting Hart, who was in trouble,
-and Buller came to the conclusion that the attack on the Colenso
-kopjes must be withdrawn.</p>
-<p>Hart's Brigade was ordered to march "towards the Bridle Drift at
-the junction of the Doornkop Spruit and the Tugela, and to cross at
-that point." Here was yet another ambiguity. As there were two
-"Iron Bridges" so also were there two "Bridle Drifts," one on each
-side of the isthmus of the river loop, and yet another at the head
-of it. The West Drift was unfordable on the morning of December 15,
-and a hasty sketch which had probably been filled in from hearsay
-evidence and which was Hart's only map, showed the Doornkop Spruit
-as entering the Tugela below that Drift instead of just above the
-East Drift.<a id="footnotetag23" name="footnotetag23"></a><a href=
-"#footnote23"><sup>23</sup></a> The sketch also duplicated the
-loop.</p>
-<p>In dense formation, although the enemy was reported to be in
-force on his front, Hart crossed the Doornkop Spruit without
-recognizing it and advanced to the West Drift guided by a Kaffir
-who lived close by. The native seems either to have had misgivings
-as to the fordability of the Drift or to have been carelessly
-instructed, for as the column approached the river he pointed to a
-Drift which was not the East Drift, but the Drift at the head of
-the loop near his own <span class="pagenum"><a name="page75" id=
-"page75"></a>{75}</span> kraal; and Hart was induced to change
-direction and lead the Brigade into the loop.</p>
-<p>At 6 a.m. against the orders of Botha, who wished to lure on his
-foe, the Boer guns commanding Hart's loop suddenly opened on the
-dense battalions, and the trenches on the left bank took up the
-firing. The Kaffir guide disappeared in terror. But Hart still
-believed that there was a drift to be found somewhere or other and
-pushed his Brigade, like a shoal of herrings driven into a purse
-net, up the loop; and some companies even reached the kraal near
-the head of it. Without artillery&mdash;for Hart had not brought up
-the field batteries assigned to him&mdash;and exposed to a
-concentrated fire from front, left, and right, the unhappy Irish
-Brigade, which suffered 400 casualties in less than three quarters
-of an hour, was helpless. Hart began to deploy, but Buller who from
-Naval Gun Hill was watching, possibly with astonishment, the
-entanglement in the loop ordered him to withdraw, at the same time
-sending two battalions to dig him out of his hole. It was not an
-easy task and it was made more difficult by the gallant reluctance
-of the Irishmen to retreat before the enemy. Thus Hart and Long,
-the former with his Hibernian zeal to move in the line of the
-greatest resistance, the latter with his rash generalization that
-entrenched Boers could be coerced as if they were Omdurman
-dervishes in the open, brought about the reverse at Colenso.</p>
-<p>By this time it was evident to Buller that his scheme must fail.
-He had already arranged the extrication of Hart and now the
-extrication of Long called for immediate action. He therefore rode
-across to the deep donga east of the railway; on his way informing
-Hildyard, whose brigade was awaiting an opportunity to carry out
-its orders, that the attack was abandoned and that the brigade must
-cover the withdrawal of the field batteries. He ordered the naval
-battery to retire, and sent back the ammunition wagons, which after
-long <span class="pagenum"><a name="page76" id=
-"page76"></a>{76}</span> delay were on their way to the field guns:
-and acknowledged that he was baffled.</p>
-<p>Hildyard occupied Colenso but was unable to prevent the Boers
-re-opening fire from Fort Wyllie on the desolate batteries lying on
-the veld. No troops could move across the open; and only individual
-efforts could now save the guns. Not a few officers and men offered
-for the forlorn hope, and at the first attempt two guns were
-rescued. A later attempt was not successful, and at 11 a.m. Buller
-ordered a general retirement and the abandonment of the guns. The
-main naval battery remained in position west of the railway for
-some hours, and in its presence the Boers were afraid to cross the
-river and take possession of the derelict but not disabled guns;
-which were not captured until all the British troops had left the
-field except a few gunners and infantry details who had taken
-refuge in the deep donga and whom the order to retreat had not
-reached; and these were made prisoners of war.</p>
-<p>The mounted Brigade under Lord Dundonald acting on the right
-flank with orders to take Hlangwhane, if possible, was too weak to
-support the main attack effectively. Assistance was refused at
-first by Barton and afterwards by Buller, who thought that
-Hlangwhane would be of little use to him without the possession of
-the Colenso kopjes; yet these could have been enfiladed from it. As
-the Brigade retired it passed within striking distance of the field
-guns and their captors; but nothing could be done as ambulances and
-groups of prisoners were bemingled in the throng. Dundonald seems
-to have been alone in his recognition of the value of the
-Hlangwhane position.</p>
-<p>A retirement to Chieveley and Frere completed the triad of
-December disasters. Buller, of whom so much was expected, had
-failed in his first attempt to measure swords with the burghers.
-His 19,000 men and forty-two guns fighting for six hours inflicted
-on the enemy a loss of less than two score. His casualties exceeded
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page77" id="page77"></a>{77}</span>
-1,100, he lost ten guns, and he then returned to the place from
-which he came. He thought that he had fought a battle, but in
-reality he had only made a reconnaissance in force, a dangerous
-operation only justifiable by urgent necessity.<a id=
-"footnotetag24" name="footnotetag24"></a><a href=
-"#footnote24"><sup>24</sup></a></p>
-<p>Possibly if Buller, who was practically without a staff, had
-allowed a freer hand to Clery, that authority on Minor Tactics
-might have done better. It has been said that the defeat was due to
-insufficient reconnaissance; and this is to a certain extent true,
-for a more accurate knowledge of the terrain and the dispositions
-of the enemy would have clearly demonstrated the hopelessness of a
-frontal attack on the Colenso Kopjes, and the attempt would never
-have been made. Again, as at Magersfontein four days before, a
-considerable portion of the troops was not seriously engaged; and
-the total casualties in eight battalions were but 120.</p>
-<p>The loss of the guns is the chief fact in the story of Colenso.
-What were Buller's intentions with regard to the Naval battery and
-the two Field batteries which he sent to "a point from which they
-could prepare the crossing for Hildyard's Brigade," and how did
-Long understand and carry out his orders.</p>
-<p>The battle orders had been orally anticipated by Buller, who
-before they were issued, explained his intentions personally to
-Long: and, as often happens in conferences, the impression retained
-by one conferent differed from that intended to be conveyed by the
-other. Long believed that he was instructed to shell the Kopjes and
-entrenched positions behind Fort Wyllie, which he did not at first
-know was held by the enemy, and he opened at a range of a mile; and
-Buller's statement that he was ordered to open fire with the
-long-range naval guns only, the position not being within reach of
-the field batteries, is contradicted; while Buller complained that
-Long had taken up a position within <span class="pagenum"><a name=
-"page78" id="page78"></a>{78}</span> 1,200 yards of a fortified
-hill and less than a quarter of a mile from cover occupied by the
-enemy. There is, indeed, a small area of low trees and scrub near
-the right bank of the Tugela a few hundred yards on the right front
-of the line of guns, but there is no evidence that the Boers had
-ever crossed the river to hold it.</p>
-<p>When the field guns, after firing nearly 100 rounds each, became
-silent, Buller, who was already perturbed by Hart's discomfiture,
-jumped to the conclusion that they were exterminated, and that it
-would be useless to proceed with the attack without them; but the
-gunners were only waiting for more ammunition. Not until the
-following day did he know that men enough to fight the guns were
-still untouched. If the whole of his force had been seriously
-engaged he would perhaps have been justified in his decision not to
-hold on to Colenso with exhausted and parched troops in the burning
-heat of the South African midsummer in the hope of rescuing the
-guns at night; but several battalions had been doing little more
-than watching the fight during the morning, and he might have left
-them on the field; and it is clear from a telegram sent by Botha
-early in the afternoon that if the Naval battery had remained with
-an effective infantry support no attempt would have been made by
-the Boers to cross the river, and that the guns would not have been
-lost.</p>
-<p>The repulse at Colenso staggered Buller's humanity. He was a
-brave man on the right of whose many war medals hung the Victoria
-Cross which he had won not far away from the field on which he was
-now fighting; but he was lacking in bull-dog tenacity, and in the
-ascetic temperament which is quickened rather than disheartened by
-failure. He returned to his tent, wrung his hands, and announced to
-those whom it might concern that all was lost. In the telegram in
-which he reported his defeat to Lord Lansdowne and of which the
-frankness, the candour, and the copious yet not egotistical use of
-the first personal pronoun <span class="pagenum"><a name="page79"
-id="page79"></a>{79}</span> were in curious contrast to the formal
-and sterilized paragraphs of an official account, he confessed that
-with the force at his disposal he had little hope of relieving
-Ladysmith and he proposed that he should let it go. He ordered the
-staff to select a defensive line eastward from Estcourt which his
-army might occupy until the end of the hot season.</p>
-<p>His message to White in Ladysmith was still more pessimistic,
-and with an intention that was chivalrous but was not war he
-"spatchcocked"<a id="footnotetag25" name=
-"footnotetag25"></a><a href="#footnote25"><sup>25</sup></a> into it
-a suggestion that White should surrender, and even indicated how
-the gain to the enemy could be minimised. The magnanimity of Buller
-was manifest: he desired to give White the opportunity of
-surrendering without incurring the full responsibility for the act,
-but the lack of military instinct in Buller's mind was likewise
-manifest. To this message, which was suspected in Ladysmith to have
-originated in the Boer laagers, White replied that he had no
-intention of surrendering.</p>
-<p>Nor did Buller's pessimism turn the Home Government from its
-purpose. He was ordered to hold on, and on December 17 Lord Roberts
-accepted the chief command in South Africa. In announcing the
-appointment, the War Office explained that Buller was superseded
-because it was advisable to relieve him of responsibility for the
-operations outside Natal, which he could not effectively control
-from his detached position on the right flank. The Vth Division
-under Sir C. Warren which had been ordered at his request a month
-before, and which he found was available for service on the Natal
-side, was on the point of landing in South Africa; the VIth
-Division was embarking at home; the components of a VIIth Division
-were being assembled, and he became less despondent.</p>
-<p>The War Office thought that the Magersfontein mishap called for
-the supersession of Methuen, and when Warren <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page80" id="page80"></a>{80}</span> reached
-Capetown with the Vth Division he found orders from home directing
-him to assume command of the force at Modder River. It would
-probably have been better for Buller if he had freely acquiesced in
-the idea of Pall Mall and had allowed Warren, but not necessarily
-the Vth Division, to operate in a country with which he had become
-acquainted twenty years before in the Bechuanaland Expedition, but
-he could not foresee Spion Kop; and Warren while moving towards the
-Orange was suddenly recalled to Capetown and ordered to reinforce
-the Army of Natal with the Vth Division; and Methuen was allowed to
-retain his command at Modder River.</p>
-<p>The transfer of the Vth Division to Natal was undoubtedly called
-for; but the position in the districts of Cape Colony bordering on
-the Free State was alarming. A belt extending from Barkly East near
-the Basuto border westwards and northwards as far as the Molopo
-River, and interrupted only near the Orange and Modder Rivers, had
-been annexed by the Boers and was more or less effectively occupied
-by them; and had they acted with enterprise and concurrence during
-the period of Lord Roberts' journey from England, the task before
-the new Commander-in-Chief would have been still more formidable.
-In rear of French and Gatacre was an indefinite area through which
-ran the British lines of communication, and which, if not indeed
-actually under arms, was ready to spring up whenever a favourable
-opportunity presented itself.</p>
-<p>Of the four Generals set to stem the tide of war until the
-arrival of Lord Roberts, French alone did not restrict himself to
-restraining its flow. A policy of "worry without risk" had been
-recommended to him by Buller, and he carried it out with good
-effect. He thrust Schoeman out of Arundel and Rensburg, and
-occupied a commanding position outside Colesberg, which he
-maintained until he was summoned on January 29 to confer with Lord
-Roberts at Capetown, where he was <span class="pagenum"><a name=
-"page81" id="page81"></a>{81}</span> confidentially informed of the
-plan of campaign. Clements, who a few weeks before had reinforced
-him with a brigade of the recently landed VIth Division under
-Kelly-Kenny, took over the command of the troops before Colesberg.
-But the force which he had to his hand had been considerably
-reduced by the withdrawal of the cavalry and nearly half the
-infantry to serve elsewhere, while Schoeman and Delarey, who had
-come from Magersfontein, had been strongly reinforced.</p>
-<p>The Boers doubted not that the positions taken up by Gatacre and
-French indicated that the impending advance of the British Army
-into the Free State would be by way of Bethulie and Norval's Pont,
-and were accordingly disposing all their available men, one
-commando even being sent to Colesberg from Natal; but fortunately
-they were at first unaware that Clements had been almost
-simultaneously weakened. He soon found that he was not strong
-enough to hold on to the Colesberg positions and on February 14
-retired to Arundel; losing on the way two companies of infantry
-which had been mislaid and forgotten and which after a gallant
-running fight of three miles were captured.</p>
-<p>But now ominous reports of Lord Roberts' movements in the West
-began to come in, and the Boers realized that they had
-misinterpreted the signs which had been so ostentatiously
-displayed. They hesitated and wavered, and on February 20 hurried
-away from Colesberg to succour Cronje and the threatened capital of
-the Free State.</p>
-<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote19" name=
-"footnote19"></a><b>Footnote 19:</b><a href=
-"#footnotetag19">(return)</a>
-<p>Buller aroused a "now-we-shan't-be-long" feeling. He would
-certainly be in Pretoria by Christmas. It is said that a large
-number of plum-puddings intended for the soldiers' dinners on
-December 25 were addressed to Pretoria "to await arrival," by their
-good friends at home.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote20" name=
-"footnote20"></a><b>Footnote 20:</b><a href=
-"#footnotetag20">(return)</a>
-<p>The history of the war showed, however, that generally the Boers
-fought more strenuously and effectively when the tide was against
-them than when it was flowing with them.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote21" name=
-"footnote21"></a><b>Footnote 21:</b><a href=
-"#footnotetag21">(return)</a>
-<p>The two chief authorities on the events of the day are not in
-agreement as to which of the iron bridges was meant; and in the
-absence of information of what was in the mind of the staff officer
-who drew up the battle orders the question cannot be answered. The
-context and certain expressions in other paragraphs seem to show
-that the railway bridge was indicated. It was, indeed, broken but
-there were drifts used by the natives above and below it. Probably
-the river had not been carefully reconnoitred and the two bridges
-were confused, or one only was believed to exist.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote22" name=
-"footnote22"></a><b>Footnote 22:</b><a href=
-"#footnotetag22">(return)</a>
-<p>At the battle of Omdurman he had put short range principles
-successfully into practice against dervishes.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote23" name=
-"footnote23"></a><b>Footnote 23:</b><a href=
-"#footnotetag23">(return)</a>
-<p>The mistake in Hart's map is shown by a broken line in the
-sketch map. It is, curiously enough, reproduced in the Colenso map
-not only of the <i>Times</i> History, but also of the German
-Official Report on the War.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote24" name=
-"footnote24"></a><b>Footnote 24:</b><a href=
-"#footnotetag24">(return)</a>
-<p>See <i>Combined Training</i>, 1905, p. 109.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote25" name=
-"footnote25"></a><b>Footnote 25:</b><a href=
-"#footnotetag25">(return)</a>
-<p><i>Sic</i> in his speech of October 10, 1901, but he probably
-meant "sandwiched."</p>
-</blockquote>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page82" id="page82"></a>{82}</span>
-<h2><a name="chap4" id="chap4">CHAPTER IV</a></h2>
-<h3>Kimberley and the Siege of Rhodes</h3>
-<p>More than thirty years before the outbreak of the Second Boer
-War a Dutch child in the Hopetown District of Cape Colony found,
-while playing carelessly near the left bank of the Orange, a pretty
-pebble that was destined to mould the History of South Africa.</p>
-<p>He took the bagatelle home to his father's farm, where a
-neighbour, one Van Niekirk, saw it and was struck by its
-brilliancy. It chanced that the Irishman O'Reilly was passing that
-way and to him it was entrusted to take to Colesberg for expert
-opinion upon its value. Here certain Jews declared that it was but
-a white topaz not worth one shilling and it was disdainfully cast
-out into the road, from which it was with difficulty recovered by
-O'Reilly, whose belief in it though shaken was not wholly
-abandoned. Through a mutual friend, Lorenzo Boyes, Acting Civil
-Commissioner of the District, the pebble came to the notice of an
-expert mineralogist named Atherstone at Grahamstown, but it was
-held so lightly in esteem by the sender that it reached Atherstone
-as an enclosure in an ordinary unregistered letter. Atherstone
-examined it, and when it had not only spoilt all the jeweller's
-files in the town but had also passed an examination by polarized
-light, pronounced that it was a diamond worth &pound;500. His
-certificate to its character, which had been so ignorantly
-disparaged, was the origin of the Diamond industry of South Africa.
-Another diamond was soon picked up near Hopetown which without
-difficulty or misadventure rose to its own plane in mineralogy. Its
-career was short and its destiny <span class="pagenum"><a name=
-"page83" id="page83"></a>{83}</span> happy. It was purchased by the
-first Earl of Dudley for the adornment of his second wife.</p>
-<p>When it was noised abroad with the customary exaggeration that
-the monopoly of Golconda and the Brazils was at an end and that
-diamonds grew wild on the South African veld, a wide extent of
-country was explored and the precious crystallized carbon was found
-in districts separated by many hundreds of miles. In certain
-places, one of which became known as the town of Kimberley, it was
-ascertained to recur in a constant proportion of the contents of
-the "pipes" or volcanic tubes which rose through the surface
-strata.</p>
-<p>The pioneers of Kimberley took possession of the diamondiferous
-grounds without ascertaining to whom they belonged, and when their
-value became positive the question of ownership arose. The
-boundaries of the districts administered by the Cape Colony, the
-Orange Free State, and the Transvaal respectively were, as regards
-territory, supposed to be of little account, vague, ill-defined,
-and unsurveyed; and the districts themselves were occupied by
-native tribes of nomad habits. About the middle of the XIXth
-century a Hottentot chief named Waterboer came up out of the West
-and squatted in the districts lying between the Orange and the
-Vaal. His rights, such as they were, were assumed or acquired by
-the Cape Government, which soon became involved in controversy with
-the Orange Free State as to their extent and nature. Finally the
-British Empire secured a good title to the estate by the payment of
-&pound;90,000. But the Orange Free State not unnaturally, when the
-value of the Diamond Fields increased day by day, soon began to
-think that it had parted with a profitable possession for an
-inadequate return. The feeling rankled; and the confident
-expectation of recovering Kimberley sold for a song tempted
-Bloemfontein into the fatal alliance with Pretoria.</p>
-<p>In 1871 a sickly youth named Cecil Rhodes came <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page84" id="page84"></a>{84}</span> from England
-to South Africa in search of health, which after a short sojourn in
-Natal he found at Kimberley. The prospects of the place favourably
-impressed him, and he soon laid in it the foundations of his
-fortune; but six years later the future of Kimberley was still
-precarious and the discovery of gold in a remote district of the
-Transvaal sucked thither the greater proportion of the citizens,
-who, however, found that they had not bettered themselves by the
-change and returned to the pipes: and soon nearly a hundred
-companies, syndicates, and private adventurers were groping for
-diamonds over an area of less than two hundred acres. The waste of
-energy was manifest to Rhodes, who in 1888 completed, with the help
-of the Rothschilds, the task upon which he had been engaged for
-some years, the amalgamation of the conflicting and overlapping
-diamond interests under the name of the De Beers Consolidated
-Mines. It was soon found that the new industry was insufficiently
-protected by the existing criminal law and a new felony was created
-by the Illicit Diamond Buying Act.</p>
-<p>It has been for several centuries the practice of Great Britain
-to entrust to private companies the imperial responsibilities which
-she is reluctant to assume and to let out to contractors, who can
-be repudiated if they fail and expropriated if they succeed, the
-job of expanding an Empire. Of this policy the most prominent
-instance is the East India Company, a commercial venture which
-obtained from Queen Elizabeth a charter empowering it to trade with
-the East and which, though connected with Great Britain only by the
-slender thread of an ocean track of 12,000 miles, maintained itself
-for two centuries and a half with ever increasing territory and
-authority until it became a great military Empire. Other examples
-of lower degree are the Hudson's Bay Company and the Borneo
-Company. The De Beers Company provided out of its abundance large
-sums for exploration and settlement in South Africa and for
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page85" id="page85"></a>{85}</span>
-the furtherance of the Imperial idea, and it is said that Rhodes
-spent the whole of one night in arguing with some of the
-materialistic magnates of Kimberley, before he could induce them to
-consent to the employment of the resources of the Company in the
-advancement of his schemes of Empire. He found, however, that these
-could not be satisfactorily promoted by a Company whose primary
-interests were commercial rather than imperial; and in 1888 he
-obtained a charter for the British South Africa Company, an
-offshoot of the De Beers Company, formed for the purpose of
-extending the British Empire towards the Equator.</p>
-<p>The question of the defences of Kimberley engaged the attention
-of the De Beers Company some years before the outbreak of the war.
-Its vulnerability to attack from the Orange Free State, the border
-of which ran close to the town, was obvious; and in 1896 a depot of
-arms and ammunition was formed. A military plan of the place was
-sent to the Imperial authorities and a defence force was also
-organized. This, however, had in 1899 ceased to exist owing chiefly
-to the action of Mr. Schreiner, at that time the Premier of the
-Cape Colony, who in June refused, with complacent optimism, to
-furnish it with arms, saying that, "there is no reason for
-apprehending that Kimberley is in danger of attack," and that "the
-fears of the citizens are groundless and their anticipations
-without foundation." A battery of artillery was, however,
-surreptitiously brought up from King Williamstown.</p>
-<p>The policy of Schreiner during the months preceding the war is
-obscure. While refusing help to Kimberley he was allowing munitions
-of war, which were way billed as pianos and hardware, to pass
-through the Cape Colony to the Transvaal and the Orange Free State.
-He does not appear to have been actively disloyal to the Imperial
-Government and in his own way he probably did his best to keep the
-peace. His mind was cast in a mould which is not uncommon in the
-British Empire <span class="pagenum"><a name="page86" id=
-"page86"></a>{86}</span> but which is rarely found outside it. He
-was more anxious to stand well with its enemies, and like the
-Unjust Steward to have a claim to a place in their houses, if they
-were successful, than to work for its security. It was with great
-difficulty that Sir A. Milner as late as September 18 obtained his
-consent to the dispatch of a few regulars to Kimberley to form the
-backbone of a defensive force. He seems to have retained almost to
-the end, in spite of all indications to the contrary, the belief
-that the war would be averted or at least that the Orange Free
-State would not join in it. Yet in this he erred in good company.
-Mr. Balfour said that if on September 28 he had been asked whether
-war with the Orange Free State was a probable contingency he would
-have replied that war with Switzerland was one equally probable;
-and Lord Lansdowne declined before September 23 to discuss with
-Lord Roberts the question of operations in the Free State. Buller,
-with surer insight, had foreseen the alliance as far back as
-1881.</p>
-<p>The War Office, however, was to a certain extent on the alert
-and distrusted the optimism of Schreiner and of a high military
-official who had been for some years in South Africa. Officers were
-sent to Kimberley to organize a scheme of defence, but having
-regard to the susceptibility of the Capetown Government it was done
-secretly and confidentially and Schreiner was outwitted. By October
-7 the town, which was under the command of Colonel Kekewich, was
-secure against a <i>coup de main</i> though not against a vigorous
-and sustained siege. Little more than an eighth of the garrison was
-composed of regular troops; the artillery was out of date; rifles
-and ammunition were deficient. On October 13 Rhodes threw himself
-into Kimberley and became for better or worse a power in the town.
-As soon as the siege began the relative value of the chief products
-of the mines was inverted: water, the most generous gift of nature
-and hitherto an embarrassment <span class="pagenum"><a name=
-"page87" id="page87"></a>{87}</span> in the workings, became for
-the time being more valuable than the diamonds.</p>
-<p>On October 12 the curtain of the great drama was raised and the
-first scene presented. It showed the capture of an armoured train
-on the railway between Kimberley and Mafeking. Kimberley under any
-circumstances was a prize worth winning. But Kimberley taken with
-Rhodes as a prisoner of war, the man who had curbed and checked on
-every side the expansion of the Republics, who had taken
-Matabeleland on the north and Bechuanaland on the west into the
-fold of the British Empire, would be more than a prize, would be a
-triumph. Rhodes metaphorically in chains, and actually paraded as a
-captive in the streets of Bloemfontein and Pretoria was an alluring
-prospect.</p>
-<p>Great, however, as were the advantages to be gained by the early
-capture of Kimberley, the object was not pursued with energy and
-determination. When the siege began on November 6 the situation was
-in favour of the attack. The Boers were in possession of the
-railway from Orange River Station to Mafeking: Kimberley was
-ill-supplied with the munitions and weapons of war and was defended
-by a force mainly composed of irregulars; it was encumbered with a
-large native population; and the civil and military authorities
-were not working in harmony.</p>
-<p>The defence throughout was more active than the attack.
-Reconnaissances and raids against the enemy's positions were made
-with effect; and the bombardment which followed a rejected summons
-to surrender did little harm. Communication with the outer world
-was not seriously impeded. Cattle grazed almost with impunity
-inside the line of investment and several thousands of the natives
-escaped.</p>
-<p>But the difficulties of Kekewich, who had been in command since
-September 20, were not confined to those created by the military
-situation. He was thrown into close association with the man who
-was one of the <span class="pagenum"><a name="page88" id=
-"page88"></a>{88}</span> indirect causes of the war, and who had
-little confidence in military men, or sympathy with their ideas and
-methods. Rhodes had come into his own Kimberley and for the first
-time he was not master in it. He found himself a sterilized
-dictator acting in an atmosphere too tenuous to support his
-vitality but sufficient to preserve it from extinction. He was
-subject to the authority of the military commandant, a galling
-position for a distinguished statesman who had not a high opinion
-of the professional capacity of the British officer. From the age
-of eighteen he had been his own master except during the intervals
-which he had spared from South Africa and spent at Oxford, when he
-was temporarily subject to the lax discipline of a University.
-While his contemporaries were amusing themselves at college, or
-performing routine duties in the Army or the Civil Service, or
-preparing to enter a profession, Rhodes was spending the critical
-years of his life in outlining the future and scheming for a South
-African Empire to be erected on the foundation of the Kimberley
-Mines.</p>
-<p>It was inevitable from the nature of the case and from his
-intimate concern in the fortunes of Kimberley that he could not see
-South African affairs at large in their true perspective. The
-sparkle of his diamonds made him curiously colour-blind and out of
-this defect in his mental vision sprang the mischief. Kimberley,
-for the time being at least, stood so closely in the foreground
-that other objects were thrown out of focus. Nor did the disturbing
-influence of the glare and halation of Kimberley only affect the
-vision of the diamond men within the town. It closed the eyes of
-the besiegers without it to a great strategical opportunity which
-soon passed away.</p>
-<p>The figure of Rhodes in Kimberley was the magnet which attracted
-and detained commandos which could have been more usefully employed
-elsewhere, and his presence, so far as it had this effect, was of
-great service to the perilously weak British force during the first
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page89" id="page89"></a>{89}</span>
-few weeks of the war. If the commandos squatting before Kimberley
-had instead been sent to raid southwards towards the Karroo, and to
-inflame the Dutch districts in the Cape Colony, they would have met
-with little resistance, and advancing with daily increasing numbers
-would have had little difficulty in planting themselves firmly in
-the heart of the enemy's country. For the moment the war in the
-west was waged not against Great Britain but against the Man of
-Kimberley.</p>
-<p>The diamond men, with Rhodes at their head, forgetting that the
-object of the war was the redress of the Outlanders' wrongs in the
-Transvaal, began to bellow for relief even before the Boers had
-completed the investment of the town. Telegrams couched in
-extravagant and almost hysterical language and betraying the
-egotism and the want of self-control of the senders were repeatedly
-despatched. One of these, in which on October 19 the De Beers
-directors asked for information as to the plans of the military
-authorities at Capetown, "so as to enable us to take our own steps
-in case relief is refused," was thought not unnaturally by Buller
-to hint at surrender; and although this was not the intention of
-the senders it is probable that they did not regret the
-interpretation that was put upon it.</p>
-<p>Fortunately, however, Kekewich was a cool-headed man who did not
-suffer himself to be hustled. While preserving amicable personal
-relations with Rhodes, he was careful to let Capetown know that the
-situation in Kimberley was by no means desperate and that it would
-be able to hold out for several weeks.</p>
-<p>The impetuous and childish letters and telegrams sent out by the
-diamond men induced Buller, who said afterwards that "although I
-had every confidence in Colonel Kekewich's military capacity I did
-not trust the other powers within the city," to send Lord Methuen
-northwards on November 10 with instructions to help Kimberley by
-removing unnecessary non-combatants and natives, and "to let the
-people understand that <span class="pagenum"><a name="page90" id=
-"page90"></a>{90}</span> you have not come to undertake its
-defence, but to afford it better means of maintaining its
-defence."</p>
-<p>The news of Methuen's approach did not allay the excitement of
-the townsmen. His movement was not an essential part of the general
-plan of campaign but only a raid in force with the object of
-putting men and supplies into Kimberley and enable it to hold on
-until pressure elsewhere upon the Boers should raise the siege
-automatically.</p>
-<p>The dignity and the self-respect of the diamond men was
-affronted. Like the Syrian captain Naaman, when offered relief of
-his leprosy by the prophet Elisha, they resented the simple process
-by which their own relief was to be effected. They had looked to an
-Army Corps at least marching on Kimberley with all the pomp of war
-and speedily enabling it to resume its normal occupation of diamond
-grubbing; and now they found that the town was not considered of
-much account in the scheme of the military, who regarded it as a
-mere besieged place of little strategical importance; which, after
-some assistance, was to be left dependent for its safety upon its
-own exertions while the main army advanced through the Free
-State.</p>
-<p>On December 4 Kekewich was instructed to make arrangements for
-the deportation of a large proportion of the white and coloured
-population, Methuen hinting that Rhodes himself might be included.
-Although Rhodes had a few weeks before complained of the
-difficulties caused by the presence of non-combatants and had even
-endeavoured to send them away, he now vehemently opposed their
-removal. His reasons for so doing are not very clear, but they
-appear to be part of the systematic obstruction which he offered to
-every proposition of the military authorities which tended to
-restrict the output of diamonds. His objections were transmitted to
-Buller, who speedily put the question in its proper light by
-telegraphing to Kekewich that "what we have to do is to keep the
-Union Jack flying <span class="pagenum"><a name="page91" id=
-"page91"></a>{91}</span> over South Africa without favour to any
-particular set of capitalists," and Methuen met his protest with
-the answer that "Rhodes has no voice in the matter." After the
-defeat at Magersfontein the plan of deportation had necessarily to
-be given up.</p>
-<p>In his own proper sphere of a civilian working with civilians
-Rhodes was usefully active and his services were great. He employed
-the persons thrown out of work by the closing of the mines in
-labour for the general benefit of the town, and did much to relieve
-the distress among the poorer inhabitants.</p>
-<p>The manufacture of a heavy gun, to which the name of Long Cecil
-was given, in the De Beers engineering establishment, was soon
-countered by the Boers, who brought into action a gun throwing a
-much heavier shell which had been disabled by the Naval Battery at
-Ladysmith, repaired at Pretoria, and was now mounted before
-Kimberley. The appearance of Long Tom, supervening on a reduction
-on the daily rations, caused a panic among the civilians. On
-February 9 Rhodes threatened to call a public meeting to consider
-the situation unless he was informed of the plans for the relief of
-the town: but Kekewich was authorized by Lord Roberts not only to
-forbid the holding of the meeting, but even if necessary to arrest
-Rhodes. A private meeting was then held at which a remonstrance was
-drawn up for transmission to Lord Roberts through Kekewich; and for
-the second time a communication from the Kimberley men was
-interpreted as a threat to surrender. It was probably sent with
-that intent in order to elicit information as to Lord Roberts'
-plans.</p>
-<p>Kekewich meanwhile was finding his position almost intolerable,
-and his representations convinced Lord Roberts of the necessity of
-raising the siege of Rhodes without delay and at any cost. It was
-effected on February 15 by French's brilliant cavalry movement; but
-at the cost of the convoy of 170 wagons which were snapped up by De
-Wet at Waterval Drift, and of an <span class="pagenum"><a name=
-"page92" id="page92"></a>{92}</span> Army compelled to march and to
-fight for nearly four weeks on reduced rations. But the harvesting
-of the crop of diamonds was resumed, and as far as Kimberley was
-concerned the war was at an end.</p>
-<p>Although the siege lasted for more than three months the
-casualties were few, only 40 persons being killed and 123 wounded
-by acts of war. The privations suffered by the inhabitants,
-especially during the last few weeks, were no doubt great, but
-certainly not greater than the privations which unhappily are
-endured by the unemployed in Great Britain during a hard winter.
-The siege was conducted without much vigour and determination, and
-the most important operation on the side of the defence was a
-sortie on November 29 after the news had come in of Methuen's
-approach.</p>
-<p>The relief of Kimberley closed the public career of the most
-conspicuous figure in the British Empire; and with great dignity
-and self-restraint, which might well have been imitated by other
-persons whose conduct during the war was impugned, Rhodes refrained
-from publishing a Kimberley book.</p>
-<p>If the Siege of Kimberley brought out the weak side of his
-character, his egotism and impatience, his lack of power to adapt
-himself even temporarily to unaccustomed conditions, it will be
-remembered that these defects were inherent and that his marvellous
-success in life had accentuated them. The acts of a public man are
-so variously regarded by his opponents and his admirers, are seen
-by them in such different lights, that there can rarely be any
-general agreement on the question of the ratio between his merits
-and his failings; but the chief phases of his life afford the raw
-material out of which each man for himself can form an estimate of
-his character.</p>
-<p>Like many men who have afterwards become famous in the secular
-world, Cecil Rhodes was intended for the Church. His health
-suffered from the rigours of the East Anglian climate and he was
-sent out to South <span class="pagenum"><a name="page93" id=
-"page93"></a>{93}</span> Africa. His brother's farm in Natal, to
-which he was consigned, he found derelict on his arrival, but he
-was soon growing cotton on it, against the advice of the local
-experts, but with eventual success. At the age of 18 he was
-prospecting for diamonds at Kimberley, and forming the opinion
-during a visit to the Transvaal that an insufficient proportion of
-the South African Continent belonged to the British Empire. In
-1872, being then 19 years of age, he went to Oxford, but in a few
-months his health broke down and another voyage to the Cape became
-necessary. In 1876 he returned to the University and remained there
-for two years when South Africa recalled him. As soon as he could
-be spared he went back to his college and, eight years after
-matriculation, completed his undergraduate course. It was a high
-compliment to the value of a Pass Degree at Oxford, where, however,
-he formed the opinion, which was not publicly divulged until his
-will was opened twenty-one years later, that Oxford Dons were
-"children in finance."</p>
-<p>His election to the Cape Parliament in 1881 as Member for
-Kimberley placed him in a favourable position to advance his
-schemes for the northward extension of the British Empire. When the
-trespasses and encroachments of the Transvaal Boers beyond the
-limits assigned to them under the Convention of 1884 made it
-advisable to incorporate Bechuanaland he was unable to persuade the
-Cape Government to undertake that responsibility, but with the
-assistance of Sir Hercules Robinson and the support of Mr.
-Chamberlain he induced the Imperial Government to take action.
-President Kruger had connived at the establishment on native
-territory under British protection of two little republics of
-raiders, to which the names of Goshen and Stellaland were assigned;
-and a costly expedition under Sir C. Warren was needed to bring him
-to his senses. In 1885 Bechuanaland became an integral part of the
-British Empire.</p>
-<p>In 1888 he again opened the flood gates of Imperialism,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page94" id="page94"></a>{94}</span>
-and secured by means of a treaty with Lobengula the reversion of
-the native territory north of the Transvaal, at which two European
-nations were nibbling, and which in his honour received the name of
-Rhodesia.</p>
-<p>He became Premier of the Cape Colony in 1890 by the help of the
-Dutch vote and from that time gradually sank from the zenith of his
-success. His good fortune left him when he attained his ambition.
-The Jameson Raid, for which he was not personally, though he
-confessed himself morally, responsible, ended his political career.
-His last good service to the Empire was given during the Matabele
-rising. He accompanied the troops sent to suppress the rebellion;
-and when the operations seemed likely to be indefinitely prolonged,
-he brought it to an end by going fearlessly and almost unattended
-among the natives, whose confidence he won by meeting them
-trustfully in council and listening to their grievances.</p>
-<p>His physical vitality, always inadequate, was seriously impaired
-by the strain of the siege. He never fully recovered his strength
-and he died on March 26, 1902, two months before the Second Boer
-war was brought to a close by the Vereeniging Treaty.</p>
-<p>He was a rich but honest man, and the great wealth which he
-amassed never led him to attach undue importance to the possession
-of it. He valued it not for his own advantage, but for its help in
-advancing his political and imperial schemes. He employed it
-creditably and without ostentation, and spent none of it in social
-display in London. By his will he left the greater portion of it to
-the University of Oxford for the establishment of an amiable if
-somewhat quixotic system of bringing the various branches of the
-Anglo-Saxon race into association at a centre of learning and
-athletics, where they were to be leavened by a Teutonic
-admixture.</p>
-<p>The vision of posthumous reputation allured him, and he
-delighted in the hope that the name of his own <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page95" id="page95"></a>{95}</span> Rhodesia,
-like the cities which still bear the name of Alexander, would be on
-the lips of men of generations as far distant from his own as his
-own was from the days of the Great Macedonian.</p>
-<p>He presented a pair of sculptured lions to President Kruger.
-Almost on the eve of the war he asserted confidently that Kruger
-would not fight. It is probable that this was not his belief, but
-that it was said in order to provoke the President into rejecting
-the overtures of the British Government, and to make inevitable the
-war which he foresaw was the only way of settling the South African
-question.</p>
-<p>Not a few incidents in his life are difficult to explain. The
-donation of &pound;10,000 to the funds of the Parnellite Party by
-an ardent English Imperialist who had never expressed any
-particular enthusiasm for Home Rule may have been a <i>douceur</i>
-to prevent the Irish members from attacking him in the British
-Parliament. He had not forgotten that Parnell inaugurated the
-policy of obstruction carried to the length of all-night sittings
-upon the occasion of the discussion of a Cape Colonial question in
-the House of Commons. Possibly Rhodes was a Home Ruler not in spite
-of his Imperialism but because of it. Home rule was necessary to
-it. The function of the Imperial Parliament was the general control
-of the affairs of the Empire, leaving local politics to be dealt
-with by local legislatures.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page96" id="page96"></a>{96}</span>
-<p>The strong and dominant personality of Cecil Rhodes came to the
-front at a time when the British Empire was beginning to show signs
-of lassitude and appeared to be growing tired of itself. Patriotism
-was being slowly transmuted into a limp and sickly cosmopolitan
-altruism. He checked this decadence, at least for the time being,
-but passed away before he was able to subdue it.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page97" id="page97"></a>{97}</span>
-<h2><a name="chap5" id="chap5">CHAPTER V</a></h2>
-<h3>A Tragedy of Errors</h3>
-<p>The lassitude induced by the battle of Colenso affected each
-combatant on the Tugela. The Boers put the finishing touches to
-their works on the left bank, and at their leisure continued the
-position across the river eastwards from Hlangwhane. They did not
-seem to have been withdrawn in force<a id="footnotetag26" name=
-"footnotetag26"></a><a href="#footnote26"><sup>26</sup></a> to
-assist the besiegers of Ladysmith in the great assault on Wagon
-Hill and Caesar's Camp on January 6, for a demonstration ordered by
-Buller at White's request during the crisis showed that the Tugela
-front was as strongly held as ever.</p>
-<p>On January 8, Buller, whose Head Quarters were at Frere, was
-reinforced by the Vth Division under Warren, and he now resumed his
-original plan, out of which he had been scared by Magersfontein, of
-advancing on Ladysmith by way of Potgieter's Drift, rejecting an
-alternative plan proposed by Warren, which differed little from
-that by which the relief of Ladysmith was effected six weeks later,
-of a direct advance by way of Hlangwhane and Pieter's Hill. Between
-Buller's army and Ladysmith lay not only the tortuous and difficult
-Tugela, but also a barrier of heights and ridges through which
-there were but four or five possible ways of access, one of which
-had already been tried without success, to the beleaguered city
-lying on a plain considerably above the level of the open ground on
-the right bank of the Tugela.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page98" id="page98"></a>{98}</span>
-<p>Buller, having selected the route which seemed at the time to be
-the line of least resistance, began on January 9 to transfer the
-bulk of his force from Frere to Springfield, a distance of sixteen
-miles, but owing to difficulties of transport and the necessity of
-accumulating a large stock of supplies at the new base, it was six
-days before the concentration was effected. One brigade was left at
-Chieveley to watch the Boer front at Colenso.</p>
-<p>In Orders issued at Frere on January 9, Buller announced that he
-"proposed to effect the passage of the Tugela in the neighbourhood
-of Potgieter's Drift, with a view to the relief of Ladysmith." His
-scheme was based upon imperfect information and misleading maps,
-and was in fact not so much a surprise flank attack, as all his
-movements had to be made in full view of the enemy, as an attack
-from a position higher up the river that must be frontal, because
-the enemy would have ample time to make it so: and herein lay its
-weakness. When, however, he personally surveyed the situation from
-Mount Alice, which overlooks Potgieter's Drift, the aspect of the
-curving amphitheatre showed the danger of attempting to force the
-river at that point. On the N.E. was Vaalkrantz and Doornkop, and
-the high ridge of Brakfontein, which the enemy had already begun to
-entrench, and over which passed the road by which he proposed to
-reach Ladysmith, everywhere commanded by the heights, filled the
-quadrant towards Spion Kop on the N.W.</p>
-<p>On January 13, Buller reported to the War Office that, having
-found the Potgieter's Drift scheme impracticable, he proposed as
-"the only possible chance for Ladysmith" to send Warren across at
-Trickhardt's Drift, five miles higher up the river. The new scheme
-was based upon a theory which had been evolved out of the
-experiences of autumn manoeuvre battles collated on the office
-desks of Pall Mall, that the easiest method of defeating the enemy
-with a small casualty list was <span class="pagenum"><a name=
-"page99" id="page99"></a>{99}</span> to contain his front and
-attack one or both of his flanks; and General Officers had come to
-regard this as the regulation opening to which they were bound to
-conform.</p>
-<a name="fig-vaalkrantz" id="fig-vaalkrantz"></a>
-<div class="figcenter" style="width:50%;"><a href=
-"images/image07.png"><img width="100%" src="images/image07.png"
-alt="Spion Kop and Vall Krantz Positions" /></a></div>
-<p>Buller divided his force into two unequal portions. Warren with
-the stronger portion was to attack the Boer right which Buller
-believed to be weak, while Lyttelton with the remainder
-demonstrated at Potgieter's Drift. To himself Buller reserved the
-part of the Chorus in a Greek play, taking a general interest in
-the action, yet not personally concerned in it; and in that
-capacity he issued a stirring appeal to the relieving force.</p>
-<p>On January 15 "secret instructions" were given to Warren. He was
-recommended, after crossing the Tugela at Trickhardt's Drift, to
-proceed west of Spion Kop, and to pivot his right and swing round
-on to the open plain in rear of the Boer position facing
-Potgieter's Drift.</p>
-<p>Warren, who was not of opinion that the Boer right was weak,
-marched out of Springfield on the evening of January 16. Lyttelton
-had already started, and during the night occupied a position on
-the north side of the river near Potgieter's Drift.</p>
-<p>The task before Warren was hard. In order to carry out Buller's
-plan he must cross an unbridged river and struggle through a
-country of which little was known. Next day two bridges were thrown
-over the Tugela above Trickhardt's Drift, which recent rains had
-made dangerous, and Hart's and Woodgate's Brigades were transferred
-to the left bank to cover the crossing: but it was not until sunset
-on January 18 that the entire force with its tedious transport was
-established on the north side of the river.</p>
-<p>The mounted troops under Dundonald were sent out at mid-day to
-reconnoitre towards the N.W. and in the course of the afternoon his
-advanced squadrons came upon a Boer commando which was easily dealt
-with, but before the issue was decided, he had reported that he was
-engaged near Acton Holmes, and asked for <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page100" id="page100"></a>{100}</span> help.
-Warren assumed that the mounted troops, which he had sent out to
-reconnoitre, had wilfully and prematurely forced on an action, and
-were now in trouble; and it was not until the next morning, after
-an infantry brigade had been moved out to support them, that Warren
-heard from Dundonald, whose previous messages had not clearly
-described the situation, that he was able to take care of himself.
-Dundonald had at first expected that the main body would follow
-him, and his reports seem to show that he had hoped to induce
-Warren to move towards Acton Holmes. He was rebuked for assuming,
-not unnaturally, that the objective of the operations was
-Ladysmith, and instructed that the objective was a junction with
-the other portion of Buller's force. He was summoned to Warren's
-headquarters and ordered to abstain from further attempts to ride
-round the enemy's right. Thus, as before at Hlangwhane, a promising
-cavalry movement by Dundonald was thrown away.</p>
-<p>The deliberate march of the British Army from Frere and the
-delay at the Drifts gave the Boers ample time to prepare for the
-attack. On January 19, on which day Warren moved to Venter's Spruit
-three miles from Trickhardt's Drift, they were in occupation of the
-whole line from Vaalkrantz to the Rangeworthy Heights. Fourie was
-in command of the left, Schalk Burger of the centre, which included
-the important features of Green Hill, Spion Kop, and the Twin
-Peaks; and L. Botha of the right, in which was Bastion Hill.</p>
-<p>There were two roads by which Warren could advance; one running
-by Fairview northwards from Trickhardt's Drift between Green Hill
-and Three Tree Hill, and the other eight miles longer by Acton
-Holmes. The length of the latter and a report from White that
-several commandos were on their way to Acton Holmes from Ladysmith,
-led Warren to adopt the former route.</p>
-<p>He informed Buller of his decision, adding that certain "special
-arrangements" which he had made <span class="pagenum"><a name=
-"page101" id="page101"></a>{101}</span> would oblige him to remain
-near Trickhardt's Drift, and that he must therefore have further
-supplies. The "special arrangements" were in fact the steps which
-every general would take before attacking a strong position not
-immediately accessible; namely to acquire ground from which it
-could be threatened and shelled. Clery was ordered to direct the
-operation, which Warren believed would entail "comparatively little
-loss of life."</p>
-<p>Early on January 20 Clery with one brigade and artillery
-advanced up the re-entrant which springs from the river towards the
-east end of the Rangeworthy Heights, and posted his guns half way
-up the valley on Three Tree Hill. Hart, with a brigade of five
-battalions, was sent to occupy the irregular southern crest of the
-heights running from Three Tree Hill towards Bastion Hill. He drove
-the Boers out of their advanced trenches, but found that the
-northern and higher crest to which they had retired, could only be
-won by a frontal advance across open ground. He and his brave
-Irishmen were as ready as ever to push on in the line of the
-greatest resistance, but he was ordered by Clery to forbear.
-Meanwhile Dundonald, not deterred by the damping of his trek on the
-18th, and while obeying an order from Warren to come to heel,
-seized Bastion Hill, thereby securing Hart's left flank on the
-crest. So far as they went, the operations of January 20 were
-successful. Warren's pivot movement was in train, the whole of his
-force was now threatening the Boer right which was widely extended
-but deficient in depth; and the day's casualties were few.
-Following the example of Buller, who delegated his authority to
-Warren, the latter entrusted the conduct of the day's operations to
-Clery, who in succession ordered the chief movement to be carried
-out by Hart. Next day the mounted troops on Bastion Hill were
-relieved by infantry.</p>
-<p>Buller was aware that the Ladysmith garrison, weakened by
-sickness and privation, could give him little or <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page102" id="page102"></a>{102}</span> no help;
-but at least during the earlier phase of the Trickhardt's Drift
-operations he was confident. On January 17 he told White that
-"somehow he thought he was going to be successful this time," and
-that he hoped to be within touch of Ladysmith in six days. His Head
-Quarters were at Spearman's Camp, a few miles south of Mount Alice,
-whence he rode over daily to note and criticize the tactics.</p>
-<p>It now occurred to Warren that he might have been mistaken as to
-the significance of the position occupied by the enemy on the
-Rangeworthy Heights, and that it might be in reality a screen to
-hide a trek of the Free Staters back to their own country; and on
-this supposition, which was founded upon reports that the Siege of
-Ladysmith had been raised and that some wagons had been seen on
-trek westwards towards the Drakensberg passes, he applied for
-reinforcements to enable him to block the way.</p>
-<p>Buller sent him Talbot Coke's brigade with some howitzers; and
-came over to consult with him on January 22. The situation was not
-satisfactory. Time was being wasted, Warren's "special
-arrangements" had done little, and now he had a new idea. Buller
-still advocated an attack on the enemy's right, while Warren wished
-to persevere with his advance by the Fairview Road; but he pointed
-out that Spion Kop, which his reading of the "secret instructions"
-had led him to regard as out of bounds, must first be taken. No
-definite action seems to have been decided on, and Warren was left
-to act within certain limits on his own responsibility. Finally,
-with the approval of the four infantry generals, he resolved to
-seize Spion Kop that night. The attack, however, was postponed
-until the following night, to give time for the position to be
-reconnoitred.</p>
-<p>Spion Kop is a ridge of which the chief features are a pair of
-high peaks joined by a nek to a plateau, from which a spur, ending
-in a kopje called Conical Hill, <span class="pagenum"><a name=
-"page103" id="page103"></a>{103}</span> juts out at right angles to
-the nek, which becomes a spur of the plateau at a Little Knoll east
-of the summit. Its tactical importance was derived from its height,
-as the summit, though not the peaks, is higher than any of the
-ground held by the enemy; and from its position, as it was on the
-obtuse angle formed by the meeting of Botha's line on the Boer
-right with Schalk Burger's on the centre, and enfiladed each of
-them. It was accessible from the British front by a slope which
-rises from the lower ground to another spur running S.W. from the
-plateau.</p>
-<p>On the morning of January 23, Buller saw Warren, and again
-pressed him to make an attack on the Boer right; but finding that
-the orders for the assault on Spion Kop had already been issued, he
-refrained from vetoing it. He threatened, however, that if
-immediate action in some direction were not taken, Warren's force
-would be withdrawn to the south of the Tugela.</p>
-<p>On the previous day Warren, betraying the Engineer officer
-unused to handling large bodies of men, and unfamiliar with the
-military unities, rearranged his command with a straight edge, and
-distributed it in one way for tactical, and in another for
-administrative purposes. All the troops lying west of an imaginary
-line became the left attack under Clery, while those east of it
-became the right attack. The latter, under Talbot Coke, were
-ordered to seize the Spion Kop position by night, and entrench it
-before daybreak, the actual assault being made by Woodgate with two
-battalions, some mounted infantry on foot, and a few Engineers. At
-sunset on January 23, the curtain fell upon the first act of the
-Tragedy of Spion Kop.</p>
-<p>On the night of the January 23 Spion Kop was held as an
-observation post by a party of seventy burghers. When Buller first
-appeared at Potgieter's Drift, it was on the right of the Boer
-line, but now it was only the right of the centre under Schalk
-Burger. Little was known of its features and tactical value, beyond
-the <span class="pagenum"><a name="page104" id=
-"page104"></a>{104}</span> information obtainable by a telescopic
-reconnaissance. It was a prominent object in the Boer position, and
-it seemed to be within the grasp of a night adventure. Woodgate
-left his rendezvous at 9 p.m., but it is doubtful whether he would
-have reached the summit before daybreak but for Thorneycroft, who
-was in command of the mounted infantry which bore his name, and who
-had before nightfall picked out and noted the recognizable objects
-on the slope. A staff officer from Head Quarters, who accompanied
-the column to direct the march, had had no opportunity of making
-himself acquainted with the way of access to Spion Kop, and
-Thorneycroft was ordered to act as guide.</p>
-<a name="fig-spion" id="fig-spion"></a>
-<div class="figcenter" style="width:50%;"><a href=
-"images/image08.png"><img width="100%" src="images/image08.png"
-alt="Sketch Plan of Spion Kop" /></a></div>
-<p>The summit, but fortunately little more than the summit, was
-veiled in mist, and the crest was reached. Bayonets were fixed
-before the Boer picket was alarmed and opened fire, but the
-ammunition was spent without effect, as Thorneycroft's men had by
-order thrown themselves on the ground as soon as they were
-discovered. A charge into the mist drove back the picket and scared
-the main body off the summit. Thus before dawn on <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page105" id="page105"></a>{105}</span> January
-24, Warren was in possession of the hill which was believed to be
-the key of the Boer position, and the chief obstacle in the way of
-his advance seemed to be thrust aside: but the mist on Spion Kop
-was the forecast of the Fog of War which was soon to envelope
-him.</p>
-<p>Woodgate, having the men, the tools and the ground, at once
-began impulsively to dig, without endeavouring to inform himself of
-the features of the position he had so easily won. A sort of a
-trench had been scratched on the summit by the weary men, when the
-mist rolling away for a little while disclosed the startling
-topography of the position. The surface of the plateau sloped
-gently at first, and then abruptly fell away, and the trench was
-found to be of little use. The enemy could approach on dead ground
-to within two hundred yards of it. Woodgate, seeing that the real
-defensible line was not the highest part of the summit, but the
-edge lower down, where the steep descent began, sent working
-parties to the front, but they at once came under fire. Soon the
-mist again enveloped the hill, and having disposed his force, he
-reported to Warren that he had established himself on Spion
-Kop.</p>
-<p>The Boer outpost which had been driven from the summit belonged
-to Schalk Burger's command. With Botha's co-operation a storming
-force was soon brought together, and almost every point from which
-Spion Kop could be brought under fire was seized, even the Little
-Knoll near the summit, which enfiladed the main trench. Joubert
-telegraphed from Ladysmith that the position must be re-captured,
-and Kruger at Pretoria asked what was being done to win it
-back.</p>
-<p>Little did Woodgate's force realize what the morning mist was
-hiding. Soon after 8 a.m. the sun dissolved the veil, and the storm
-burst. From the right the men in the trench and lower crest were
-enfiladed by the Little Knoll and the Twin Peaks; on their front
-and left they were rained on by bullet and shrapnel from Conical
-Hill, Green Hill, and beyond; with such effect <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page106" id="page106"></a>{106}</span> that the
-lower crest had to be temporarily abandoned. Woodgate was soon
-mortally wounded and the command devolved upon Crofton. Spion Kop
-was the first position of great tactical importance won by the
-British Army on the Tugela, and the Boers were determined to
-recover it.</p>
-<p>The naval guns posted on Mount Alice and at Potgieter's Drift
-opened fire not only on the Little Knoll near the Spion Kop plateau
-and on the Twin Peaks, but were also pitching their shells over the
-summit on to the Boer positions supposed to be in line with it, and
-a field battery on Three Tree Hill shelled the open ground on which
-the enemy was advancing.</p>
-<p>Heliograms and flag messages from Spion Kop, orally handed in
-and incorrectly transmitted by scared signallers, bewildered the
-recipients and increased the density of the Fog of War upon the
-Tugela. To Lyttelton was flashed an appeal for help without a
-signature. A message sent by Crofton soon after he assumed command,
-in which he reported Woodgate's death and said that reinforcements
-were urgently required, was transmuted into a despairing cry which
-made Warren think that he had lost his head, and which led to his
-supersession. Warren replied that there must be no surrender, and
-that Coke was on his way up with reinforcements.</p>
-<p>Warren and Lyttelton, as well as the Umpire in Chief, Buller,
-were too far away to be able to appreciate the situation on Spion
-Kop, or to know how much or how little of the ridge was in
-possession of the British troops. Lyttelton's naval guns, playing
-upon the Little Knoll, were twice silenced by a message from
-Warren, who was under the impression that the whole of the ridge
-from the Twin Peaks to the main position on Spion Kop was held. A
-demonstration made earlier in the day by Lyttelton towards
-Brakfontein was checked by Buller, who was unwilling to engage the
-enemy in that direction.</p>
-<p>The Boers, a small party of whom before Woodgate's death had
-climbed the dead ground, and had come <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page107" id="page107"></a>{107}</span> within
-fifty yards of the main trench, again attained the outer crest, and
-a counter attack led by Thorneycroft in person partially failed,
-and although the verge was not wholly abandoned, only the main
-trench filled with dead, wounded, and unwounded men parched with
-thirst, remained for effective resistance. Woodgate had already
-paid the penalty for the hasty and fatal act of squatting down in
-an indefensible position, and lay among the other victims strewn
-upon the plateau; but the British soldier is not easily discouraged
-by the errors of his leaders. The cry "<i>nous sommes trahis</i>"
-is never heard from his lips, and when called upon on active
-service,</p>
-<div class="poem">
-<div class="stanza">
-<p>To live laborious days and shun delights,</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<p>he rarely fails to do his duty.</p>
-<p>At mid-day the situation on Spion Kop was hazardous but not
-hopeless. Reinforcements had arrived and were quickly absorbed in
-the works which they quickened with patches of new vigour, but the
-terrible hail of bullet and shrapnel was not abated. No definite
-orders had been given to Clery, who was on the southern crest of
-the Rangeworthy Heights, except that he was to "use his discretion
-about opening fire against the enemy to his front, with a view to
-creating a diversion," a discretion which he exercised by doing
-nothing.</p>
-<p>Shortly before noon a step was taken by Buller, who was four
-miles away on Mount Alice, which enlarged the area of the Fog of
-War and brought Spion Kop within its chilling grasp. Thorneycroft
-was ordered to take command on the summit with the local rank of
-Brigadier-General, although there were several officers present
-senior to him: but many hours elapsed before the appointment was
-made known to all of those whom it most concerned. Coke, who was
-now on the S.W. spur, was unaware of it, and without communicating
-with Thorneycroft, sent at 12.50 p.m. to Warren a message which was
-not delivered till 2.20 p.m., that as the summit was crowded and
-the defence was maintaining <span class="pagenum"><a name="page108"
-id="page108"></a>{108}</span> itself, he had stopped further
-reinforcements.</p>
-<p>Almost simultaneously with the despatch of this not unfavourable
-report, and long before it was received by Warren, two companies
-posted in a detached trench on the right threw up their hands, but
-not before they had lost all their officers. Out of the crest line
-sprang the Boers, who having made them prisoners, endeavoured to
-impose the surrender upon the men in the main trench.<a id=
-"footnotetag27" name="footnotetag27"></a><a href=
-"#footnote27"><sup>27</sup></a> Thorneycroft saw that if these
-wavered, as they seemed inclined to do, all was lost; and rallying
-the details within reach, he succeeded in thrusting back the
-intruders, who, however, had already sent their prisoners below the
-hill. His prompt action stayed the wave of doubt which threatened
-to flood the position, and compelled it to break before it could do
-much harm.</p>
-<p>At 3.50 p.m. Coke, who was still on the S.W. spur, and therefore
-not in direct touch with Thorneycroft, informed Warren that the
-enemy was being gradually cleared from the summit, and that he had
-been reinforced with the Scottish Rifles from Potgieter's Drift by
-Lyttelton, whom Warren, after receiving Crofton's mis-transmitted
-message, had ordered to co-operate. He had already forwarded a
-letter written at 2.30 p.m. by Thorneycroft, stating that the force
-on Spion Kop was being badly punished by artillery, was in want of
-water, and was insufficient to hold the position. To this letter he
-had added a note of his own which showed that he did not attach
-much importance to it, saying that he had ordered more troops on to
-the plateau, where "we appear to be holding our own." This letter,
-with Coke's covering note, did not reach Warren until after he had
-received Coke's message sent nearly an hour later, and he assumed
-that the latter indicated the existing hopeful situation with which
-he had to deal. Of the physical features of the Spion Kop position
-he knew little more than <span class="pagenum"><a name="page109"
-id="page109"></a>{109}</span> what his telescope told him, and he
-read optimistically the meagre, inconsistent, and misleading
-reports which reached him occasionally from the summit. He hoped
-during the night to place some naval guns on the plateau: he was
-informed that an accessible spring of water had been discovered:
-reinforcements were at hand: there was nothing more to be done.</p>
-<p>Lyttelton, when ordered to "assist from his side," acted with
-intelligence and discernment. Noticing that Spion Kop, whither he
-had already dispatched the Scottish Rifles, was full of men, he
-sent the King's Royal Rifles towards the flanking position on the
-Twin Peaks, and the battalion supported by the naval guns, and
-ignoring messages of recall prompted by Buller, who was watching
-the advance with anxiety, worked its way up and expelled a
-Transvaal contingent and a small body commanded by an Irish
-renegade, all of whom were hurled by the impact into a flight of
-eight miles. The position was at once entrenched and at 5 p.m. the
-right flank of Spion Kop was secured, but only for a time. Again,
-as after Lord Dundonald's movement on Acton Holmes, a promising
-enterprise was thrown away. Buller had from the first disapproved
-of Lyttelton's action, which still more widely distributed his
-already scattered command. He was too far away to see its bearing
-upon the situation, and now ordered him to recall the King's Royal
-Rifles, who after sunset were withdrawn from the position, which
-they had so gallantly captured in spite of warnings signalled from
-Spion Kop that it was strongly held by the enemy.</p>
-<p>On Spion Kop the Fog of War hung more densely than ever. Coke,
-who was lame and unable to move freely about the position, believed
-that Hill, who had come up with a reinforcement soon after noon,
-and who was next in seniority to Crofton, was in command on the
-summit. He thought that Crofton had been wounded, and neither saw
-Thorneycroft nor knew until the following day that Warren had given
-him the <span class="pagenum"><a name="page110" id=
-"page110"></a>{110}</span> local rank of Brigadier-General at
-Buller's suggestion. Thorneycroft was a junior major in the Army,
-having the local rank of Lieutenant-Colonel: and with two colonels
-senior to him present as well as a major-general, he was doubtful
-as to his status. No instructions reached him from Coke; he was
-unaware that the Twin Peaks had been taken by one of Lyttelton's
-battalions, and he was without means of signalling to Warren. He
-had no information of the measures which were being taken, such as
-the dispatch of guns, to make the retention of Spion Kop
-possible.</p>
-<p>The men on the summit were utterly exhausted by fatigue, hunger,
-thirst, want of sleep, and exposure to the summer sun beating down
-upon the rocky surface, and their ammunition was running short. At
-5.50 p.m. Coke reported "that the situation is extremely critical"
-and that the men "would not stand another day's shelling," but it
-was two hours before the message reached Warren. He ordered Coke to
-come down to consult him. Coke endeavoured to obtain permission by
-flash signal to stay where he was, but no oil could be obtained for
-the lamp, so regarding the order as imperative, he quitted Spion
-Kop at 9.30 p.m., leaving, as he thought, Hill in command. For four
-hours he strayed in the Fog of War before he found Warren's Head
-Quarters, which had come under shell fire, and which, unknown to
-him, had been moved from their original position.</p>
-<p>Between 8 and 9, Warren received a letter written at 6.30 p.m.
-by Thorneycroft, who reported that the enemy's shell fire rendered
-the permanent occupation of Spion Kop impossible, and asked for
-instructions.</p>
-<p>Coke's departure left the position without a clearly recognized
-commander, although he had done little more than attend to and
-distribute the supports and reinforcements on the S.W. spur. After
-the dispatch of Thorneycroft's letter at 6.30 p.m., the situation
-grew more hopeless every minute. The enemy's artillery was out of
-reach, the nature of the ground and the want of tools <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page111" id="page111"></a>{111}</span> made it
-impossible to cut properly designed trenches, rations and water
-were exhausted, and nothing was known of assistance to be brought
-up during the night except that a mountain battery, which would be
-of little use against the enemy's guns, was at the foot of the
-slope.</p>
-<p>For these reasons Thorneycroft justified in his official report
-his decision to retire from Spion Kop. With the acquiescence of all
-the senior officers, except Hill, who could not be found, he
-ordered a withdrawal at 10 p.m. The alternative seemed to be a
-Majuba surrender next morning. At 10.30 p.m. as the troops were
-beginning to move off the hill, he received a letter from Warren,
-asking for his views on the situation, and as to the measures to be
-adopted. It was now unnecessary to give these, and he sent a brief
-reply that he was obliged to abandon Spion Kop as the position was
-untenable.</p>
-<p>The retirement was not made without protests from Hill and from
-Coke's staff officer who was still on the plateau. The former,
-eleven hours after Thorneycroft's appointment as Brigadier-General,
-believed, as he had every right to do, that he was in command, and
-halted the men; the latter sent round a memorandum to the
-commanding officers, asserting that there was no authority for the
-withdrawal. But the force of Thorneycroft's local rank prevailed,
-and the retreat was not stayed. Near the foot of the slope he found
-the mountain battery, and met a fatigue party on its way to prepare
-emplacements for two naval guns which were coming up, and received
-a message from Warren urging him to hold on to the position. It was
-too late. Ordering back the party and the battery, he went on to
-report himself to Warren, and arrived at Head Quarters almost
-simultaneously with Coke.</p>
-<p>The Boers meanwhile were greatly discouraged by their expulsion
-from the Twin Peaks, and their failure to occupy the main position
-on Spion Kop. The guns which had tormented Thorneycroft for so many
-hours, <span class="pagenum"><a name="page112" id=
-"page112"></a>{112}</span> and which were the chief cause of his
-retirement, were withdrawn, and Schalk Burger's commandos oozed
-away towards Ladysmith. But there was, however, a stalwart and not
-inconsiderable remnant of burghers who responded to Botha's
-expostulations, and stood fast as a forlorn hope determined to win
-back Spion Kop and the Twin Peaks. Their constancy was rewarded,
-and when at sunrise on January 25 they once more climbed the hill,
-they found to their astonishment and relief that it was still
-held&mdash;by more than 300 bodies of their fallen foes.</p>
-<p>Such in brief is the tale of Spion Kop so far as it can be
-disentangled from the accumulation of messages, orders, reports,
-dispatches, and personal accounts, which obscure the subject. Many
-of these are inconsistent, not a few contradictory, and sufficient
-evidence might be found to support plausibly half a dozen
-conflicting theories of the cause of the disaster, and as many
-variants of the narrative.</p>
-<p>At 2 a.m. Warren heard from Thorneycroft's lips&mdash;the
-latter's written message sent off at 10.30 p.m. on the previous
-evening not having reached him&mdash;of the evacuation of Spion
-Kop. At sunrise he was joined by Buller, who viewed the situation
-in a spirit of philosophic detachment. He had never cordially
-approved of the Spion Kop adventure, and was not surprised to hear
-that it had failed. Warren was inclined to persevere, but Buller
-decided to retire south of the Tugela and assumed the direct
-command of the Army, which on January 27 was once more drawn up on
-the right bank after an absence of ten days; with most of its
-superior officers discredited, with Ladysmith unrelieved, and the
-nation at home aghast at the disaster.</p>
-<p>The lonely figure of Thorneycroft, the only man of action on the
-summit energizing and quickening the defence, stands out
-prominently in the confusion, gloom, and half lights of Spion Kop.
-Buller's impulsive intervention made him responsible for the
-position, and he <span class="pagenum"><a name="page113" id=
-"page113"></a>{113}</span> tried to do his best. If the final act
-was an error of judgment, there is little doubt that but for
-Thorneycroft, the Boers would have rushed the plateau on the
-afternoon of January 24. He received no effective support from
-Clery and little from Warren, and was out of touch with Coke and
-the Colonels. His uncertainty as to his authority caused him to
-refrain from exercising it fully until the last moment. For the
-pain which the decision to withdraw must have given him, he
-deserves much sympathy. But although it was approved of by Buller,
-who probably felt bound to support his nominee, it was at least
-premature. He might reasonably have expected that an effort would
-be made during the night to relieve him, and might have postponed
-it for a few hours. It is unjust to judge a man in the light of
-eventualities which he could not reasonably be expected to foresee,
-but subsequent accounts from the Boer side show that the attack
-would not have been renewed the next morning if the enemy had found
-the Twin Peaks, for the evacuation of which Buller and not
-Thorneycroft was responsible, and Spion Kop still occupied.</p>
-<p>Not only the inconvenience, but also the danger of suddenly
-conferred local rank were illustrated on January 24. Buller,
-hastily concluding from a garbled message that Crofton was
-incompetent, asked Warren to put Thorneycroft in charge.
-Thorneycroft heard of his appointment orally through an officer who
-had chanced to be at the signalling station, and the written
-message which never reached him was, it is said, picked up next day
-by a Boer! If the exigencies of war should ever require the sudden
-promotion of a junior officer to a position of great
-responsibility, it should not take effect until all concerned are
-notified. The defence of Spion Kop was, during the greater part of
-the day, conducted by a syndicate of officers acting severally.</p>
-<p>The curtain had fallen, the drama was over, and the critics took
-up their pens. With Thorneycroft's report <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page114" id="page114"></a>{114}</span> on the
-retirement from Spion Kop began a controversy which lasted for more
-than two years. Warren enclosed it in his own report to Buller,
-with the suggestion that a Court of Enquiry should be held to
-investigate the circumstances of the unauthorized withdrawal, and
-in succession each grade of the military hierarchy passed censure
-on the grades below. In Buller's covering despatch of January 31
-with which he forwarded to the War Office, through Lord Roberts,
-Warren's Spion Kop report, he commented very unfavourably on
-Warren's arrangements and disposition of troops; and said that
-Thorneycroft had "exercised a wise discretion, and that no
-investigation was necessary": while to Warren's general report on
-the whole operations of January 17-27, he attached a memorandum to
-the Secretary of State for War, "not necessarily for publication,"
-in which he not only blamed himself for not having taken command on
-the 19th, when he saw "that things were not going well," but also
-said that he could "never employ Warren again in an independent
-command"; as his slowness had allowed the enemy to concentrate and
-to increase the force opposed to him more than twenty-fold.</p>
-<p>With this accumulation of censure Lord Roberts dealt in his
-despatch to Lord Lansdowne of February 13, written at a drift on
-the Riet River during the advance on Kimberley. The
-Commander-in-Chief confirmed all the censures passed by his
-subordinates and added some of his own. Buller was rebuked for not
-having intervened when he saw that a most important enterprise was
-not being "conducted in the manner which in his opinion would lead
-to the attainment of the object in view with the least possible
-loss of life on our side"; Warren was reproved because he did not
-visit Spion Kop during the crisis, and had instead ordered Coke to
-come to him; and while Thorneycroft's gallantry and exertions,
-without which the troops would probably have been driven off the
-hill during the day, were acknowledged, his action in ordering the
-retirement without endeavouring to communicate with Coke or Warren
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page115" id=
-"page115"></a>{115}</span> was pronounced to be a "wholly
-inexcusable assumption of responsibility and authority."</p>
-<p>Never before had such an inconvenient batch of despatches been
-laid upon the desks of Pall Mall. To publish them and to proclaim
-to the world that the Natal Generals, when they were beaten by the
-enemy, had began to fight among themselves, was impossible. If they
-were withheld from publication, many awkward questions would be
-asked. The War Office temporized, and endeavoured to steer a middle
-course. Would Buller kindly substitute a simple narrative for his
-despatch? This Buller refused to do, and in April, 1900, the War
-Office published the despatches, imperfectly sterilized. As they
-now appeared, they were neither a simple narrative, nor a full
-revelation. Lord Roberts' criticisms on Buller were cut out. The
-memorandum, "not necessarily for publication," in which Buller
-reflected severely on Warren's incapacity was withheld. Only the
-censure passed upon Thorneycroft was allowed to appear. The junior
-officer was made the scapegoat of his superiors' mistakes. Of all
-the officers concerned, he alone had failed. The War Office had
-taken a politic but not straightforward course. The blame must be
-laid upon some one, and if it were laid upon Thorneycroft alone it
-would affect public opinion less mischievously.</p>
-<p>It soon became suspected, however, that certain things were
-being kept back, and the controversy dragged on for two years;
-Buller to the end maintaining that as he was not present at, nor in
-command of, the Spion Kop operations, it was not incumbent on him
-to write a simple narrative of them; and that his duty was to write
-a critical account of the affair, such as would be sent in by an
-Umpire in Chief during peace manoeuvres.</p>
-<p>Not until April, 1902, did the Epilogue of the Tragedy of Errors
-appear. The despatches, with the memorandum "not necessarily for
-publication," were published in full, as well as the "Secret
-Orders" given to Warren at Springfield, which were its
-Prologue.</p>
-<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote26" name=
-"footnote26"></a><b>Footnote 26:</b><a href=
-"#footnotetag26">(return)</a>
-<p>A detachment numbering about 600 only was sent.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote27" name=
-"footnote27"></a><b>Footnote 27:</b><a href=
-"#footnotetag27">(return)</a>
-<p>In the Fog of War some of the British soldiers thought that the
-Boers were coming up to surrender themselves, and acted in this
-belief for a brief period.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page116" id=
-"page116"></a>{116}</span>
-<h2><a name="chap6" id="chap6">CHAPTER VI</a></h2>
-<h3>More Tugela Troubles</h3>
-<p>By a process of elimination Buller hoped in time to find the
-road to Ladysmith. He had tried in succession, but without success,
-Colenso, Potgieter's Drift, and Trickhardt's Drift. He now informed
-White that he intended to make another attempt, but Lord Roberts
-advised him to postpone it until his own advance should draw off
-the Free Staters and weaken the barrier on the line of the
-Tugela.</p>
-<p>The situation in the besieged town was growing worse every day,
-but a proposal made by White as well as by the War Office that the
-garrison should endeavour to break out, was not sanctioned by Lord
-Roberts. White also was opposed to Buller's making another attempt
-to cross the Tugela, as he considered that the force would be more
-usefully employed in preventing the enemy from concentrating on
-Ladysmith.</p>
-<p><a href="#fig-vaalkrantz">Map, p. 98.</a></p>
-<p>Buller's new plan was an advance by way of Vaalkrantz. Here the
-river winds in two salient loops towards the north, with a
-re-entrant loop between them, and there is a slight break in the
-heights on the left bank. The Brakfontein ridge slopes down towards
-Vaalkrantz Hill, between which and Green Hill there is a dip
-through which a road passes on to the open ground towards
-Ladysmith, eleven miles distant.</p>
-<p>Buller proposed to occupy the ridge of Vaalkrantz with
-artillery, and after a feint attack on the Boer position on
-Brakfontein, to push through under cover of <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page117" id="page117"></a>{117}</span> the guns.
-It was believed that the enemy's extreme left lay on Vaalkrantz,
-which was commanded by Mount Alice and Zwart Kop. Lord Roberts when
-informed of the project was not hopeful of its success, but did not
-veto it, although he thought that Buller would be better advised to
-abstain from offensive tactics.</p>
-<p>The feint attack on Brakfontein was to be made by seven Field
-Batteries and a Brigade of Infantry, and was to be continued long
-enough to convince the enemy that it was "meant". It was then to be
-withdrawn and the real attack set in motion. The advance of the
-feint would be covered by heavy guns posted on Mount Alice, and
-concealed batteries on Zwart Kop would open on Vaalkrantz in
-support of the real attack.</p>
-<p>The bulk of the infantry was posted in the east loop, so as to
-appear ready to cross the river and support the feint attack
-between the loops. As soon as the guns had driven the enemy into
-their trenches on Brakfontein, a pontoon bridge was to be thrown
-across the river south of Hunger's Drift, and the guns on Zwart Kop
-were to open on Vaalkrantz, and when this had been sufficiently
-bombarded, it would be carried by the infantry, and guns would be
-brought up to enfilade the Boer line; while the cavalry "when
-feasible" would push through under the ridge and threaten it from
-the rear.</p>
-<p>It was a pretty tactical scheme, with much of the War-Game about
-it, and it depended for its success upon the practicability of
-using Vaalkrantz as an artillery position, and upon the correctness
-of the assumption that the enemy was not in force eastward of
-it.</p>
-<p>Buller was not successful in placing his guns on Zwart Kop
-unnoticed by the enemy, who was warned in time. After Spion Kop,
-Botha went to Pretoria, and Schalk Burger took furlough. B. Viljoen
-was now in command. He saw the danger and applied to Joubert at
-Ladysmith for help, who thought he was over-anxious <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page118" id="page118"></a>{118}</span> but sent
-him a heavy gun. Little however would have been done but for the
-intervention of the two civilian Presidents. Steyn appealed to
-Kruger who, having tried without success to induce Joubert to take
-command on the Upper Tugela, fell in with Steyn's suggestion that
-Martin Prinsloo, a Free Stater, should go there; and Botha was
-ordered back from Pretoria. Prinsloo took command of the
-Brakfontein position, Viljoen remaining on Vaalkrantz.</p>
-<p>At sunrise on February 5 began Buller's third attempt to relieve
-Ladysmith. Wynne, who had succeeded Woodgate in command of the 11th
-Brigade, advanced in two lines up the slope towards Brakfontein,
-supported by the fire of forty-four guns. Nearly six hours passed
-before any reply was vouchsafed by the enemy. At mid-day some guns
-on Wynne's left front opened on the batteries, but not a shot was
-fired by the Boers in the trenches.</p>
-<p>Already one field battery had been detached from the left of the
-line of guns, the first movement in the real attack, and had taken
-up a position to cover the pontoon troop which was throwing a
-bridge across the Tugela near Hunger's Drift. At noon the
-completion of the bridge was signalled to the feint attack. The
-batteries fronting the Brakfontein ridge were withdrawn, and
-Wynne's brigade which, having been marched up the slope, was now
-marched down again, came under a heavy but almost innocuous
-infantry fire, which at last broke out on Brakfontein.</p>
-<p>To the Boers it appeared that another attack, determined while
-it lasted, but devoid of backbone, had been kept at bay. The guns
-on Zwart Kop opened on Vaalkrantz as soon as the detached battery
-was seen to be in motion; and the other batteries came into action
-as they arrived from the Brakfontein demonstration. There was some
-annoyance from casual rifle fire and a Maxim posted on the heights
-S.E. of the loop, but it did not seriously interfere with the work
-of the bridge-builders.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page119" id=
-"page119"></a>{119}</span>
-<p>The rules of the game were strictly obeyed, and there was "a
-thorough preparation by artillery" before the infantry was allowed
-to advance. The movement was delayed until half a hundred guns were
-playing upon Vaalkrantz and the chance of a <i>celer et audax</i>
-exploit was lost. At 2 p.m. Lyttelton with two battalions of the
-4th Brigade was permitted to cross the pontoon and with these he
-worked up under the protection of the left bank, and emerging upon
-Munger's Farm, rose thence to the southern edge of Vaalkrantz, and
-took hold of the ridge. Here he was joined by a battalion of
-Hildyard's Brigade, whose original orders to occupy Green Hill were
-cancelled, and later on by the remaining battalions of his own
-brigade; which Buller, wavering for a time, had held back, as the
-pontoon and the open ground were under fire from the right flank.
-At 4 p.m. Lyttelton was established on the main hill of Vaalkrantz,
-and during the night the position was entrenched. The occupation,
-however, brought two facts to light. Half a mile to the north of
-the main hill was another hill, only a few feet lower,
-unapproachable and in the enemy's possession; and it was not
-practicable, as Buller had hoped, to bring up artillery on to the
-position seized by Lyttelton.</p>
-<p>At daylight on February 6, the situation was favourable to the
-Boers. Botha had arrived and had taken over the command from
-Prinsloo. The heavy gun sent from Ladysmith had been mounted on
-Doom Kop, which was now held by reinforcements under L. Meyer;
-other good positions east of Vaalkrantz had been strengthened; and
-some of the guns on the Brakfontein position had been moved round.
-Vaalkrantz standing between Doorn Kop and the Twin Peaks, was
-shelled simultaneously from the left front, and the right rear, as
-well as from Green Hill;<a id="footnotetag28" name=
-"footnotetag28"></a><a href="#footnote28"><sup>28</sup></a> it
-seemed as if Spion Kop were about to be repeated.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page120" id=
-"page120"></a>{120}</span>
-<p>Buller opened on Green Hill with artillery, and on the hill
-north of the main hill of Vaalkrantz, in the hope of making the
-North Hill assailable. In view of a retirement, a pontoon bridge
-was, at Lyttelton's request, thrown across the river under the main
-ridge. He discouraged a proposal made by Buller to attack the North
-Hill by a force creeping along the foot of the westward slope of
-Vaalkrantz, covered by fire from the ridge.</p>
-<p>Buller was now stalemated. The artillery fire had not cleared
-the way to the North Hill, and Lyttelton was unable to move on it,
-but he said that he could hold on for the rest of the day if no
-more artillery were brought to bear on him from the S.E.</p>
-<p>Finally Buller determined to shift the responsibility. He
-reported the capture of Vaalkrantz to Lord Roberts, and in effect
-asked what he should do with the white elephant. To carry out his
-plan would "cost from 2,000 to 3,000 men," and he was "not
-confident of success." Was Ladysmith worth it? Yes, replied Lord
-Roberts without hesitation, Ladysmith was worth it and it must be
-done.</p>
-<p>In the evening Lyttelton, having thwarted an attempt by the
-enemy to recover Vaalkrantz, was relieved by Hildyard. On the
-following afternoon, Buller, in spite of Lord Roberts' message,
-made up his mind to withdraw. Further reconnaissances had shown
-that the North Hill, even if taken, could hardly be held. A council
-of war was summoned, at which, as might have been anticipated, Hart
-alone was for persevering, and at which Warren again put forward
-the scheme rejected by Buller at Frere, but now gladly adopted by
-him, of advancing on Ladysmith by way of Hlangwhane.</p>
-<p>Orders were issued for the withdrawal of the force from
-Vaalkrantz during the night. It was skilfully carried out, and
-Buller was once more ferrying his men across the Tugela, having for
-the third time failed to reach Ladysmith.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page121" id=
-"page121"></a>{121}</span>
-<p>On February 8 the Army was retracing its steps on the road by
-which four weeks before it had marched from Springfield to
-Potgieter's Drift; and on the 11th it was concentrated at
-Chieveley, from which eight weeks before it had been thrown at the
-Colenso heights. All the Tugela operations had been conducted in a
-rarified medium. Want of determination, want of system, the absence
-of maps, the lack of a sufficient staff, were responsible for two
-months of misadventure. Buller, like the Boers, was easily
-discouraged by failure, but unlike them was unable to quicken
-himself readily for a renewed effort. He lost confidence in
-himself, and then in his subordinates. Like a nervous child, he
-opened the door of a dark chamber, but was afraid to enter. The
-terror of the unknown drove him back in a panic. When his plans,
-which were usually well thought out, miscarried, he became peevish,
-and scarcely made an attempt to reconstruct them. Only an Army of
-which the backbone was the stolid, unimaginative Englishman of the
-lower classes, and which believed that its leader was doing his
-best, could have remained undemoralized by the campaign on the
-Tugela.</p>
-<p>Buller possessed one quality which to a great extent outweighed
-his shortcomings as a military commander: namely the power of
-inspiring confidence. His men believed in him, and would do
-anything for him. They liked him for his bluff, John-Bullish, and
-rampant manner. The enlisted man is a curious differentiation from
-the class to which he belongs. His democratic instincts become less
-acute when he shoulders the Lee-Metford, and he readily
-accommodates himself to the will of a benevolent despot of robust
-appearance, and blunt and somewhat contemptuous address; whom in
-fact he prefers to the ascetic, dispassionate General Officer of
-quiet habit and speech.</p>
-<p>The criticisms passed upon Buller were far more friendly in the
-men's than in the officers' bivouacs. Possibly the men's opinions,
-as being the more natural <span class="pagenum"><a name="page122"
-id="page122"></a>{122}</span> and spontaneous, were also the more
-correct. The enemy conducted the war upon principles which were
-strange to the British Army, and to which it had to adapt itself
-painfully; and the men seem to have recognized sooner than the
-professors the difficulties of the situation, and to have been less
-intolerant of ill-success.</p>
-<p>Few general officers have ever revealed in their official
-communications more of the workings and the moods of their minds
-than did Buller in Natal. His telegrams and despatches always
-reflected the thoughts of the moment. After the Colenso fight, he
-candidly referred to it as my "unfortunate undertaking of to-day."
-Six days before the Vaalkrantz affair he told Lord Roberts that
-"this time I feel fairly confident of success"; and on the eve of
-the attack he said that "while I have every hope of success, I am
-not quite certain of it."</p>
-<p>After the retirement, it was, "wherever I turn I come upon the
-enemy in superior force to my own." He subjected his personal and
-individual ideas and feelings to no restraint, and they
-incontinently leavened all his messages which were now confident,
-now diffident, and now querulous, and which read as if they were
-quotations from his private diary. From Vaalkrantz he heliographed
-to White that the enemy was too strong for him, and that the
-"Bulwana big gun is here"; and could White suggest anything better
-than an advance by way of Hlangwhane? In his telegrams from
-Chieveley to Lord Roberts, he complained of want of support, and of
-the feebleness of the resistance made by the Ladysmith garrison,
-which he professed to believe did not detain more than 2,000 men.
-Yet in recording his weakness, it must in justice be said that he
-gained and never lost the confidence of the rank and file of the
-relieving force, and that under any other leader it would probably
-have succumbed to its misfortunes.</p>
-<p>On February 12 the re-concentration of Buller's Army at
-Chieveley was complete. The enemy's front had been greatly
-strengthened since the attack on <span class="pagenum"><a name=
-"page123" id="page123"></a>{123}</span> Colenso. The Boers saw what
-Buller could not be persuaded to believe, that Hlangwhane was the
-key of the position, and extended their line thence in a curve
-through Green Hill and Monte Cristo, with a detached post outside
-it on Cingolo. These four hills and the ground between them Buller
-proposed to occupy, and then pass between Cingolo and Monte Cristo
-to a drift of the Tugela N.E. of Monte Cristo, cross the river and
-advance by the Klip Riyer on Bulwana. The two "iron bridges" at
-Colenso were impassable, but the Boers had thrown a bridge across
-near Naval Hill by which, and also by a ferry higher up,
-communication was kept up with their left flank.</p>
-<p>The initial movement on February 12 was made appropriately
-enough by Dundonald, who two months before had seen the value of
-the Hlangwhane position, and who now perhaps as he marched out,
-realized the truth of the proverb <i>tout vient &agrave; ce qui
-sait attendre</i>. He occupied Hussar Hill temporarily as a
-reconnaissance to give Buller an opportunity of surveying the
-ground over which he was about to operate. The Intelligence
-officers reported that the enemy was strongly posted at several
-points within the area and unmasked some of his slim tricks. In
-order to conceal the line of the trenches, the excavated earth was
-piled up some distance towards the front, and tents not intended
-for occupation were pitched to divert fire from the positions in
-which he lay. The war-craft which comes by instinct to
-nationalities not in an advanced state of civilization and leading
-simple lives face to face with wild animals and native tribes, and
-which the conventionally trained European soldier only learns by
-experience, strengthened the Boer commandos without an augmentation
-of individuals liable to be killed or wounded. The veld trenches
-which kept Methuen at arm's length at Magersfontein and the Boer
-devices on the Tugela seem to show that War is not a Science, but
-an Art, easily acquired by unprofessional soldiers.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page124" id=
-"page124"></a>{124}</span>
-<p>On February 14 the movement began and a front at Hussar Hill was
-taken up, but owing to the heat and the scarcity of water, little
-was done during the next two days, except a bombardment of the Boer
-trenches and gun positions. The advance of the relieving force has
-been likened to the deliberate progression of a steam roller.</p>
-<p>Clery having been invalided, the IInd Division was temporarily
-under the command of Lyttelton, whose orders for February 17 were
-to move upon Cingolo Nek and Green Hill. Dundonald was instructed
-to work in rear of the infantry and outflank any detachment of the
-enemy that might appear on the Nek. But Dundonald was not a
-military pedant devoid of initiative and tied to the letter of his
-instructions, and when the difficulties of the ground broke the
-touch between him and Lyttelton he was perhaps not sorry to find
-himself disengaged; and when he saw that the Boers were entrenched
-on Cingolo Ridge, he attacked instead of outflanking it.</p>
-<p>While the commando on the ridge was occupied with the infantry,
-it was suddenly surprised from the flank by Dundonald's men, and
-was driven out of the trenches. Meanwhile one of Lyttelton's
-battalions, which in ignorance of Dundonald's movement, had been
-sent to clear Cingolo of some Boers who were firing on the advance
-and checking it, found when it reached the ridge that it had been
-forestalled in the capture.</p>
-<p>When Lyttelton became aware that the enemy had been expelled, he
-proposed to avail himself of the success without delay, and push on
-to the Nek and Monte Cristo, while Warren's Vth Division attacked
-Green Hill; but Buller objected to an advance which could not be
-completed before nightfall. Lyttelton bivouacked S.W. of the ridge
-and Dundonald on the detached hill at its northern end. During the
-night, field guns were brought up the slopes and with much
-difficulty emplaced in a position from which shell fire could be
-directed on Monte Cristo.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page125" id=
-"page125"></a>{125}</span>
-<p>If the movement of the day was not remarkable for speed and
-enterprise, it was at least directed with skill and without
-excessive caution; and Dundonald showed that his military spirit
-had not been chilled by previous rebuffs, one of them administered
-almost on the spot where he was now in activity.</p>
-<p>At daylight on February 18, the movement was resumed, the
-immediate objective being the capture of Monte Cristo and Green
-Hill. One brigade was sent through the Nek on to the eastward
-slopes of Monte Cristo, while the other attacked the hill from the
-south. With the help of the ever-ready Dundonald the IInd Division
-established itself on the main hill of the ridge early in the
-afternoon. The Fusilier Brigade of the Vth Division was meanwhile
-acting in support; and advancing as soon as Monte Cristo was seen
-to be occupied, easily took hold of Green Hill. The enemy was now
-expelled from all the positions commanding the proposed line of
-advance over the Nek, and was retreating westward towards the
-positions near the right bank of the Tugela, but no attempt was
-made to pursue him. The motto of Buller's Army was <i>festina
-lente</i> and its track towards Ladysmith was in zigzag.</p>
-<p>On the following day Hlangwhane was occupied by the British
-troops, and before noon on February 20, all the Boers had withdrawn
-to the left bank of the Tugela, and Buller was favourably placed
-for the advance by way of the Klip River on Bulwana. A
-reconnaissance, however, caused him to change his mind and to
-resume the movement at an acute angle by doubling back towards
-Hlangwhane and crossing the river by a pontoon bridge west of the
-hill.</p>
-<p>His new plan was to capture a position between the Onderbroek
-and Langewacht Spruits, which appeared from a distance to be one
-hill, but which in reality was two, Wynne's Hill and Horseshoe
-Hill, which were separated by a donga. On the morning of February
-21 he signalled his intentions to White, saying that he
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page126" id=
-"page126"></a>{126}</span> thought he had "only a rearguard before
-him"<a id="footnotetag29" name="footnotetag29"></a><a href=
-"#footnote29"><sup>29</sup></a> and that he hoped to be in
-Ladysmith next day.</p>
-<p>After the capture of Monte Cristo and the Hlangwhane position,
-some of the commandos seem to have trekked away towards the north,
-and even Botha for a time appears to have lost heart and to have
-suggested to Joubert that the siege of Ladysmith should be raised.
-The Boer leaders had already, like King Arthur,</p>
-<div class="poem">
-<div class="stanza">
-<p>Heard the steps of Modred in the west,</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<p>and their army in Natal had been weakened, before Buller's final
-advance, by the departure of commandos going to succour their
-brethren not only on the Modder, but also in the Cape Colony.</p>
-<p>The situation on the Tugela was reported to Pretoria almost
-simultaneously with the news that Cronje was hemmed in at
-Paardeberg. But owing it may be to the distance which intervened
-between Kruger and the scene of action, the dour old
-<i>voortrekker</i> of Colesberg would not hear of any voluntary
-retirement before the enemy who had driven him out of the Cape
-Colony sixty years before. He sent an appeal to the Boers of the
-Tugela which, in an intense human document, displayed his steadfast
-and touching faith, and which might have been addressed by his
-prototype Cromwell to the Ironsides.</p>
-<p>He rebuked the burghers for their cowardice, which he attributed
-to the waning of their trust in the power of the Almighty to help
-them in their distress, and with many instances and quotations from
-Holy Writ, he adjured them to stand fast in faith. He was confident
-that the cause which he in all sincerity believed to be the cause
-of the Church of Christ would prevail in the end, and justifiably
-encouraged by successes in the field against superior numbers he
-exhorted the commandos to endure without flinching the purification
-by fire. Kruger's passionate appeal availed, and the <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page127" id="page127"></a>{127}</span> waverers
-returned to their posts. The incident disclosed the power of the
-factor of moral force, wherein the Boer strength lay; and it will
-in a great measure account for the prolongation of the war. When
-their cause seemed hopeless, they comforted themselves with the
-honest and irradicable belief that its righteousness was the
-assurance of final success. Though most of their leaders were
-incompetent, though they themselves were easily discouraged;
-disobeyed orders; often malingered and mutinied; quitted the field
-with their wagons which they were reluctant to abandon, under such
-frivolous pretexts that the <i>verlafpest</i> or leave-plague
-became a bye-word; though time after time their power of resistance
-seemed to be exhausted; though in their thousands they were
-distributed over the British Empire as prisoners of war; though
-their confident expectation of European intervention was not
-realized; though they were always greatly outnumbered; they
-continued stubbornly to defy for the space of two years and seven
-months the most numerous and the most efficient Army which has ever
-left the shores of Great Britain, until at last they were worn down
-by mechanical friction and attrition, and not by the stroke of war.
-When the Boers were driven out of the Hlangwhane positions, they
-took up a new position facing S.E. on the left bank of the Tugela.
-Their right was near the head of Hart's loop, and their centre came
-within a few hundred yards of the river at Wynne's Hill, whence the
-line was carried on towards Pieter's Hill.</p>
-<p>At noon on February 21 Buller began once more to send his men
-across the Tugela, intending to content himself that day with
-establishing his force "comfortably" on the position north of the
-railway bridge enclosed by the bend of the river, which was now
-free of the enemy. He ordered Talbot Coke with the 10th Brigade of
-Warren's Division to pass over the Colenso Kopjes on to the open
-ground beyond, from which the Onderbroek valley could be enfiladed
-by artillery. He had <span class="pagenum"><a name="page128" id=
-"page128"></a>{128}</span> received information that the enemy were
-there in force, and in the belief that "what Boers there were, were
-hiding in that kloof," he changed his plan of moving northwards at
-once on Wynne's Hill.</p>
-<p>On February 21 Coke advanced in three lines, but soon after he
-had cleared the hilly ground, his scouting line came under fire
-from the Grobelaar slopes, and his right flank was also involved
-from the direction of Wynne's Hill. His Brigade was pinned to the
-ground by rifle and shell fire until nightfall, when it was retired
-to the Colenso Kopjes, where Wynne's Brigade of Warren's Division
-had arrived during the afternoon.</p>
-<a name="fig-ladysmith-advance" id="fig-ladysmith-advance"></a>
-<div class="figcenter" style="width:50%;"><a href=
-"images/image09.png"><img width="100%" src="images/image09.png"
-alt="Map of the Final Advance on Ladysmith" /></a></div>
-<p>The route march to Ladysmith was checked. Instead of a mere
-rearguard to be driven in, as Buller had fondly believed, a
-strongly posted line, extending nearly four miles S.W. from Wynne's
-Hill, had to be attacked. The enemy had been so much encouraged by
-the failure of Coke's movement, that Botha telegraphed to Kruger
-that he had hopes of a "great reverse."</p>
-<p>Warren thought that it would be necessary to diverge from the
-advance and take the Grobelaar slopes, and White reported that Boer
-reinforcements were coming in <span class="pagenum"><a name=
-"page129" id="page129"></a>{129}</span> from the north. Towards
-evening on February 21, it seemed not unlikely that another
-Colenso, Spion Kop, or Vaalkrantz would soon be debited to Buller.
-The line of approach to Ladysmith was held by the enemy, and the
-British Army of relief, the greater part of which had crossed to
-the left bank of the Tugela, was entangled in the Colenso Kopjes,
-and the river loop.</p>
-<p>Warren's general idea for the 22nd, of which Buller approved,
-was to attack Wynne's Hill with the 11th Brigade, leaving Horseshoe
-Hill to be dealt with by the artillery. Although the Boers on the
-Grobelaar slopes had been well pounded for some hours by the field
-batteries, Wynne considered that it would be unsafe to advance
-unless these slopes were actually taken, but he was overruled. He
-had also been promised support on his left rear, but only two of
-the battalions detailed for the purpose were at hand and these were
-fully occupied in offering a front to the Boers on Grobelaar, while
-the movement was in progress; and he advanced against the enemy's
-centre unsupported except by the long range fire of a brigade on
-Naval Hill across the river.</p>
-<p>He had expected that the promised supports would secure his left
-flank by seizing Horseshoe Hill, and in default he was compelled to
-detach a portion of his own scanty force against it. At sunset the
-cutting edge of the advancing wedge was touching the enemy, but was
-unable to break into him, and Briton and Boer were face to face on
-Wynne's Hill and on Horseshoe Hill.</p>
-<p>Reinforcements were brought up and defences were constructed
-during the night, while the Boers continually fired upon the
-confused units labouring in the darkness. The enemy had an
-entrenched position on Hart's Hill which enfiladed Wynne's Hill,
-and which Warren had not been able to take, as Buller hoped, with
-the 11th Brigade.</p>
-<p>Next morning the 5th Brigade under Hart, which was in reserve
-near the river loop, was sent against <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page130" id="page130"></a>{130}</span> Hart's
-Hill. He advanced, wherever possible, under cover of the steep left
-bank of the river along a trail so narrow that the men were
-compelled often to move in single file; and at one place, where the
-Langewacht Spruit enters the Tugela, it was necessary to make a
-detour and cross the spruit by the railway bridge, and to quit the
-dead ground and emerge on to a defile under heavy fire. The advance
-of the Brigade was retarded by the stringing out of the battalions,
-and from time to time Hart's Hill was shelled without seriously
-harming the enemy, who as usual was not posted on the apparent
-crest, but some distance in rear of it.</p>
-<p>Two battalions of the 4th Brigade, which had been lent to Hart,
-were so far behind that as only two or three hours of daylight
-remained, he decided to attack without them. For impetuous
-gallantry the advance of the Irish regiments was not surpassed by
-any other exploit in the War. Working up on difficult ground to the
-sound of the Regimental calls, and then almost brought to a
-standstill by the barbed wire fences of the railway, which became a
-trap of death, they rushed the slope, pushing the enemy's outposts
-before them, and won the crest: and then in the failing light which
-compelled the supporting artillery to discontinue the bombardment
-and relieve the enemy from the pressure of shrapnel, they saw the
-Boer positions still above them. The crest was false.</p>
-<p>It was a cruel disappointment to brave men who had struggled so
-well, but they did not flinch. A charge was made across the
-plateau, but it soon was withered by fire and few of the men
-reached the Boer trenches. Two more battalions of the 4th Brigade
-arrived at dawn, but the reinforcement came too late. The troops
-were reorganized, as far as possible, on the slope leading down
-from the crest, but were eventually compelled to retire across the
-railway to the lower ground by flanking fire, which Hart succeeded
-in silencing, and was able to reoccupy the dead ground below the
-false crest with fresh troops.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page131" id=
-"page131"></a>{131}</span>
-<p>The failure of the attack did not deter Buller from pursuing his
-plan, and on February 24 he proposed to renew it and to operate
-against Railway Hill, which stands fourth in the line of hills
-running in a N.E. direction from Horseshoe Hill to Pieter's Hill;
-but by Hart's suggestion the movement was postponed, and in the
-end, abandoned. The greater part of his Brigade was dangerously and
-densely posted on the lower ground, and when during the night a
-surprise party of Boers opened fire, there was some fear of a
-general panic. The situation was precarious. The Boer line had not
-been pierced: on each side it outflanked Buller and fronted the
-Tugela loops in which the greater portion of his force was huddled.
-It was fortunate for him that DeWet had gone to the Modder.</p>
-<p>On the night of February 24 began the third movement in zigzag.
-The general direction of the first was N.E.; of the second W.S.W.;
-of the third East. It was discovered that there was a path by which
-troops could pass east of Naval Hill down to the right bank out of
-the enemy's reach, and that they could cross the Tugela by pontoon.
-Buller then determined to transfer the bulk of his force back to
-the Hlangwhane side of the river over the pontoon bridge by which
-he had crossed to the left bank three days before. The plan
-involved not only the concentration of a clubbed and unwieldy force
-on the right bank, but also the necessity of keeping it there until
-the passage of the last detail allowed the pontoon bridge to be
-taken up and moved to the new place of crossing, three miles
-below.</p>
-<p>An armistice, restricted to the arena of the recent fighting,
-was granted by the Boers on February 25, for the purpose of
-bringing away the wounded and burying the dead; and during the
-barter of news on the very narrow strip which separated the British
-fallen from the enemy's positions, the burghers refused to believe
-that Cronje was surrounded at Paardeberg, and retorted that
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page132" id=
-"page132"></a>{132}</span> Lord Roberts had lost all his transport
-and supplies at Waterval Drift, and was helpless.</p>
-<p>The cessation of the music of war during the armistice dismayed
-the garrison of Ladysmith, which feared that it must indicate
-another failure; for owing to spies and the leakage of plans,
-Buller was afraid of informing White fully of his position and
-intentions, and during the final advance he usually restricted
-himself in his heliograms to the expression of his hopes or to the
-reasons for their non-fulfilment.</p>
-<p>On the enemy's side, in spite of a strong line held in
-sufficient numbers, the moral position was weak. Botha, who
-commanded the Boer right, distrusted Meyer, who was in charge of
-the threatened left. The war-sick burghers skulked in their
-laagers, and it is said that even necessary movements within the
-line were not ordered, from a fear lest the burgher, when once on
-his feet, would march in the direction which soonest took him out
-of his enemy's reach. To Botha, Buller's retirement across the
-Tugela came as a gleam of hope. If it did not signify a retreat, as
-he suggested to Joubert, it at least indicated that the attack on
-the line of hills would not be immediately renewed.</p>
-<p>On February 26, the preparations for the fifth attempt to
-relieve Ladysmith were completed. Horse, Field, Howitzer, Mountain,
-and Naval Guns, to the number of nearly three score and ten, were
-in position on the northern features of Hlangwhane, Naval Hill and
-Fuzzy Hill, and also on Clump Hill, N.W. of Monte Cristo. The
-relieving force was arranged in two commands; the troops west of
-the Langewacht Spruit being placed under Lyttelton, the rest being
-assigned to Warren. On Hlangwhane was Barton with the 6th Fusilier
-Brigade; and W. Kitchener, now in command of the 11th Brigade, was
-also on the right bank. On the left bank near Hart's Hill were
-Norcott and Hart with the 4th and 5th Brigades. Under Lyttelton was
-the 2nd Brigade, the 10th Brigade, though in his section, being
-placed under Warren's orders.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page133" id=
-"page133"></a>{133}</span>
-<p>On the previous day, a mounted brigade had been sent to the east
-to deal with an expedition under Erasmus against the British lines
-of communication south of Colenso. He led it timidly, and it was
-easily checked, and the brigade was brought back to the river.</p>
-<p>Buller's scheme for the operations of February 27, was an attack
-on Pieter's Hill by Barton, followed in succession by attacks on
-Railway Hill by Kitchener, and on Hart's Hill by Norcott, supported
-by artillery fire from the positions on the right bank. By the
-evening of February 26 the troops for the main attack had recrossed
-the Tugela, and the pontoon bridge west of Hlangwhane could now be
-removed. Early in the forenoon of February 27, it was thrown over
-the river S.E. of Hart's Hill, where the left bank afforded a
-covered way of approach to Pieter's Hill, and the fourth and final
-member of the zigzag advance was traced, on this occasion towards
-the north. For the seventh time Buller ferried the Tugela with his
-men, who impelled alternately by the impulse of his initiative and
-by the resilience of the enemy, had been tossed like a tennis ball
-from bank to bank at Trickhardt's Drift, Vaalkrantz, and
-Hlangwhane, yet whom nothing could dishearten. As they heard the
-news of Cronje's surrender at Paardeberg, they were crossing the
-newly placed pontoon bridge, and on it they set up a signpost
-bearing the legend "To Ladysmith."</p>
-<p>Barton led the way across the bridge, then turning to the right,
-crept down the left bank of the river for two miles, and mounted
-the slopes of Pieter's Hill, when he became aware of the great
-strength of the Boer position. It was hedged in by a river, a
-wooded donga, and a valley; along its westward face ran a line of
-kopjes, ending in a detached rocky hill; and it was supported by
-fire from Railway Hill. The nearer kopjes were carried without much
-difficulty, but a sweeping movement to clear the plateau as with
-the swing of a scythe, was checked by heavy fire from the east, and
-failed to <span class="pagenum"><a name="page134" id=
-"page134"></a>{134}</span> gather in the rocky hill which commanded
-the outlying kopjes, and which the enemy succeeded in reinforcing
-during the fight, and in holding for several hours.</p>
-<p>Until the development of the attack on Railway Hill by
-Kitchener, Barton's Fusiliers were able to do little more than
-maintain themselves, as their reserves had been absorbed and their
-ammunition was running short. A final attempt was made, with
-partial success, at the close of the day, to occupy the rocky hill,
-but at the cost of many casualties. The enemy was not entirely
-expelled, but those who remained disappeared during the night.</p>
-<p>Kitchener followed in Barton's track as far as the gorge which
-separates Pieter's from Railway Hill. In spite of the Boer rifles
-and of the shrapnel of the British gunners on the right bank
-playing upon the Hill, whose attention was eventually drawn to the
-situation by the bold advance of two companies to a position from
-which they could be seen and recognized through the gunners'
-telescopes, the eastward edge of Railway Hill was won. But a
-portion of Kitchener's command in rear was magnetically attracted
-away from the direction of the advance by a flanking fire from
-Hart's Hill and, by diverging towards it, broke the continuity of
-the line facing the position entrenched by the Boers. Kitchener
-was, however, able to fill the gap, and he expelled the burghers,
-most of whom fled before the charge got home; and Railway Hill was
-won.</p>
-<p>Norcott's Brigade was nearer to its objective than either of the
-brigades which had preceded it, as it was lying south of Hart's
-Hill between the railway and the river; and although deprived of a
-considerable portion of his command by a demand for help which
-purported to have come from Railway Hill, he finished his task in
-three hours. He toiled up the dead ground to the apparent crest of
-Hart's Hill, and then came face to face with the higher position,
-which three days before had so cruelly baffled the Irish Brigade.
-But the Boers <span class="pagenum"><a name="page135" id=
-"page135"></a>{135}</span> were not now in a mood to stay. The
-shrapnel from the right bank, which they had not to meet when Hart
-charged across from the crest in the failing light, was now hailing
-on them. All but a few stalwarts took to flight, and Hart's Hill
-was taken before sunset on February 27.</p>
-<p>The capture of the hills supervening on the bad news from
-Paardeberg shattered the Boer Armies in Natal. Botha's left had
-been defeated; and although his right had not been seriously
-attacked by Lyttelton, but only prevented from effectively
-reinforcing the hill positions, it fell away towards the north. He
-was not able to stay the general retreat, but he hoped at least to
-join Joubert and cover it with the aid of the besieging force.
-Joubert, however, had already raised the Siege and was retreating
-towards Elandslaagte.</p>
-<p>Next morning Barton on Pieter's Hill vainly appealed for
-permission to press forward, but Buller would only put the two
-mounted Brigades under Dundonald and Burn-Murdoch on to the enemy's
-trail. Dundonald made for Ladysmith, and Burn-Murdoch was
-instructed to act on the right front towards Bulwana, but was soon
-called upon to assist Dundonald in driving in a Boer rearguard. He
-then resumed his advance, and from the east covered Dundonald, who
-being fired on from Bulwana thought it advisable to send his
-Brigade to a safer position in rear, and having done so, rode on at
-the head of a body of colonial troops, and as the sun was setting
-on February 28, marched into Ladysmith and ended the four months'
-Siege. It was a fitting exploit to be performed by the grandson of
-that Lord Cochrane who at Aix Roads nearly a century before had
-similarly chafed and strained at the leash of a superior officer's
-reluctance.<a id="footnotetag30" name="footnotetag30"></a><a href=
-"#footnote30"><sup>30</sup></a> Burn-Murdoch came into action with
-a <span class="pagenum"><a name="page136" id=
-"page136"></a>{136}</span> rearguard covering Bulwana, which was
-evacuated during the night. He bivouacked near the Klip River, and
-next morning proposed to pursue the enemy, but Buller whistled him
-to heel. The relieving force advanced with deliberation, and on
-March 3, entered Ladysmith, and unravelled the Natal entanglement
-which at one time seemed likely to wreck the South African
-Campaign.</p>
-<p>The flight of the Boers continued for three days. Ladysmith,
-which lay directly in the line of the retreat, divided it into two
-streams, one of which flowed towards the Drakensberg, while the
-other went in the direction of Elandslaagte and Glencoe, some of
-the fugitives not outspanning until they reached Newcastle. So
-great was the demoralization that Kruger hurried down from Pretoria
-to Glencoe in the hope of staying it. He succeeded in persuading
-the burghers to hold the line of the Biggarsberg, but was almost
-immediately summoned away to the arena in the west; and only a few
-hours after he was upbraiding the fugitives from Ladysmith and the
-Tugela for their irresolution and want of faith, the fugitives of
-the Modder were streaming past him at Poplar Grove.</p>
-<p>Buller has been severely criticized for allowing the Boers to
-retreat unpursued, taking with them all but two of their guns.
-Assuming however that his appreciation of the situation was
-correct, he probably acted wisely. He thought that his first duty
-was to put food into Ladysmith. All his guns, except one Field
-Battery at Colenso and one Horse Artillery Battery with
-Burn-Murdoch, as well as all his supply and regimental transport,
-were still on the right bank of the Tugela, for the crossing of
-which he had but one pontoon bridge. He therefore decided that the
-wagons must have precedence, and that the army must wait.</p>
-<p>He was misled by his recollections and by his experience of the
-Parthian tactics of the burghers whom he commanded during the Zulu
-War of 1879, and from <span class="pagenum"><a name="page137" id=
-"page137"></a>{137}</span> whom he says he learnt "all that he
-knew" about rearguards. He believed "that an attempt to force a
-Boer rearguard is merely a waste of men." Yet only a week had
-passed since he told White that he thought there was "only a
-rearguard" between him and Ladysmith.</p>
-<p>Thus in the glamour of an ancient rearguard reputation the enemy
-disappeared.</p>
-<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote28" name=
-"footnote28"></a><b>Footnote 28:</b><a href=
-"#footnotetag28">(return)</a>
-<p>Not the Green Hill near Spion Kop. There were several Green
-Hills on the left bank of the Tugela.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote29" name=
-"footnote29"></a><b>Footnote 29:</b><a href=
-"#footnotetag29">(return)</a>
-<p>White, however, said that he saw no signs of a general
-retreat.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote30" name=
-"footnote30"></a><b>Footnote 30:</b><a href=
-"#footnotetag30">(return)</a>
-<p>The Cochrane daring and resourcefulness were not confined to the
-men of the clan. During the Jacobite troubles Grizel Cochrane, when
-her father was sentenced to death for treason, turned
-highway-woman, and held up the coach which was bringing his death
-warrant from London, and abstracted it from the mail-bag.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page138" id=
-"page138"></a>{138}</span>
-<h2><a name="chap7" id="chap7">CHAPTER VII</a></h2>
-<h3>Ladysmith at Bay</h3>
-<p>Eighty-seven years before the outbreak of the South African War,
-the British Army was besieging the city of Badajoz, in Spain. When
-it was taken by assault, a Spanish matron and her sister were
-molested and came for protection to the British Camp, where they
-were received by Harry Smith, a young Captain in the 95th Regiment,
-who when the Peninsular War was over, married the girl fugitive,
-Juana Maria de los Dolores de Leon.</p>
-<p>After a distinguished military career in the East Indies and
-elsewhere, Sir Harry Smith went out to South Africa in 1848 as
-Governor of the Cape Colony, and its dependencies; and in that year
-he proclaimed the country between the Orange and the Vaal to be
-British Territory.</p>
-<p>The Boers of the Great Trek resented the annexation, and one
-Pretorius took the field, but was beaten on August 29 at the battle
-of Boomplatz by Smith, who had under his command six companies of
-infantry and two squadrons of cavalry; a force which strangely
-contrasts with the masses of soldiery opposed to Pretorius'
-successors, Joubert, Botha, Cronje, De Wet, and Delarey.</p>
-<p>Harrismith, in the Free State, was named after him; his services
-in the Sikh War were commemorated by an Aliwal on the Orange; while
-upon a new township in Natal, she who was once Donna Juana Maria de
-los Dolores de Leon of Badajoz on the Guadiana, bestowed the
-commonplace designation for which she had exchanged her retinue of
-tuneful Spanish, and it was called Ladysmith.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page139" id=
-"page139"></a>{139}</span> <a name="fig-ladysmith-siege" id=
-"fig-ladysmith-siege"></a>
-<div class="figcenter" style="width:50%;"><a href=
-"images/image10.png"><img width="100%" src="images/image10.png"
-alt="The Siege of Ladysmith" /></a></div>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page140" id=
-"page140"></a>{140}</span>
-<p>After fifty years of obscurity, Ladysmith suddenly became the
-pivot upon which the fortunes of the British Empire were poised.
-Its loss, at least during the early weeks of the siege, would not
-only have thrown a British Army into captivity, but would have left
-an encouraged and very mobile enemy, replenished with the spoils of
-war, free to march irresistibly towards the sea.</p>
-<p>In November, Buller was prepared, if Ladysmith should fall, to
-abandon the whole of Natal except Durban. He had private
-information that, if the Boers reached the coast, a certain
-European power would intervene. There was also the fear that
-another reverse would call out the disaffected Dutch in the Cape
-Colony, and the danger lest the British nation, treacherously
-harassed by the cries of the disaffected at home, who sympathize
-with the misfortunes of every nation but their own, would again
-write off South Africa as a bad debt, and offer peace on
-ignominious terms. In India the news of the capture of White, a
-former Commander in Chief, and of his removal as a prisoner of war,
-would have seriously, if not fatally, impaired the British
-<i>raj</i>.</p>
-<p>At a later period, when the reinforcements had arrived and the
-plan of campaign had been altered to suit the situation in Natal,
-the loss of Ladysmith would not have so vitally affected the
-position in South Africa; and, in fact, Buller on December 16,
-authorized White to surrender.</p>
-<p>On November 1, the commanders of the allied forces, Joubert and
-A.P. Cronje, decided to invest and bombard Ladysmith, confidently
-expecting that the only obstacle in the way of the procession to
-the sea would soon be removed by the fall of the intimidated town.
-They were even urged by some of the subordinate leaders, who, as a
-rule, were never so venturesome as when there was no immediate
-prospect of meeting the enemy, to mask White and march at once upon
-Durban, but Joubert would only sanction a minor effort in that
-direction which was postponed until it was too late to be
-effective.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page141" id=
-"page141"></a>{141}</span>
-<p>The last man to leave Ladysmith was French. He was ordered to
-Capetown to meet Buller, who was persuaded by his report on the
-situation that White's force was insufficient to keep Natal from
-being overrun, and that the worst might be feared. The escape of
-French, by a margin of a few minutes only, made him available for
-employment in an arena more suited to his capacity than a besieged
-town; and his subsequent good work in the Cape Colony, south of the
-Orange River, and during the advance on Kimberley and Bloemfontein,
-showed how ill the fortune of war served the Boers, when they just
-failed to capture the train which was taking out of their clutches
-the soldier who was to relieve Kimberley and head off Cronje at
-Paardeberg before the relief of Ladysmith was effected.</p>
-<p>White has been blamed for keeping the whole of his strong force
-of cavalry in Ladysmith. He had with him four regiments of regular
-cavalry besides five irregular colonial corps. For the space of
-three months the action of the British Army was hampered by the
-absence of the mounted troops interned in Ladysmith and engaged in
-garrison duties, until at last the horses were either killed for
-food, or, when forage was exhausted, turned out on the bare veld
-under the enemy's fire, to support themselves as they could. White
-justified, or it may be, excused, his retention of the cavalry, by
-its mobility, which virtually increased the effective strength of
-the garrison, and enabled him to reinforce rapidly any threatened
-section of the defence, as for example, during the attack on
-Caesar's Camp. It is no doubt arguable that cavalry was more useful
-within the lines of investment than it would have been, if
-squandered over the whole area of the concurrent operations
-elsewhere; and if so, the limits of its tactical employment have
-been considerably extended.<a id="footnotetag31" name=
-"footnotetag31"></a><a href="#footnote31"><sup>31</sup></a></p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page142" id=
-"page142"></a>{142}</span>
-<p>White's force, which numbered about 13,000 men, occupied a
-perimeter of fourteen miles on the hills and kopjes nearest to the
-town, and was enveloped by an outer perimeter of thirty six miles
-held by 23,000 Boers. The positions N.E. of the Klip River were
-occupied by the Transvaalers, and the opposite semi-circle by the
-Free Staters.</p>
-<p>On November 2, began the bombardment, which the enemy fondly
-hoped would bring White on his knees within a week; the first death
-casualty during the siege being a naval officer who had reached
-Ladysmith only a few hours before the investment with a
-re-inforcement of long-range naval guns from the fleet; and during
-the next two days it was continued from Pepworth, Bulwana, and
-elsewhere, with such effect as to induce White to ask, at the
-instigation of the civilian authorities, permission to send away
-the women, children, and other non-combatants. This somewhat
-<i>naive</i> request was naturally disallowed by Joubert, who,
-however, consented to the formation of a neutral camp for them and
-the sick and wounded at Intombi, within the area of the siege, and
-dependent for its supplies and maintenance upon the resources of
-the garrison. Joubert put into Ladysmith 200 derelict Indian
-coolies from the Natal collieries, an act which was perhaps
-justified by the code of war, which sanctions the employment of any
-means by which the difficulties of a besieged town can be
-increased; but a subsequent attempt made by Schalk Burger during
-Joubert's advance on the raid towards the south, to saddle White
-with the Indian refugees from the Transvaal was successfully
-resisted.</p>
-<p>On November 9, the enemy was foiled in an attack on Observation
-Hill and Wagon Hill which were not then held in force, and for
-eight weeks the siege was carried on with so little vigour, and
-confronted with so much skill, that the British casualties in
-killed and wounded during that period numbered less than 250. When
-the Boers found that the walls of Ladysmith did not at once
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page143" id=
-"page143"></a>{143}</span> fall to the sound of the artillery, they
-began with equal confidence to rely upon the indirect casualties
-caused by sickness and privation, and awaited the result without
-impatience in their laagers. During the last fortnight of November
-a strong column under Joubert was detached to raid into Southern
-Natal. It was prudently but not enterprisingly led, did little
-harm, and returned with slight loss.</p>
-<p>Meanwhile the enemy's artillery had been considerably
-re-inforced, and the British gun ammunition was beginning to run
-short. The capture of a large herd of cattle by the Boers, who
-neatly drew the animals away from the town by exploding shells
-behind them, entailed a reduced meat ration. In order to co-operate
-with the relieving force under Clery, who at the end of November
-was within signalling distance, White exercised a part of the
-garrison as a striking column, which, when the time came, he
-proposed to take out under his own command, and to clear the line
-of approach from the South.</p>
-<p>Three weeks after the abortive attack of November 9, Joubert
-returned from his expedition to Estcourt. A council of war was
-held, and an assault on the Platrand<a id="footnotetag32" name=
-"footnotetag32"></a><a href="#footnote32"><sup>32</sup></a> was
-determined on for the 30th. On the previous evening the commandos
-detailed as covering parties on the left flank went into position
-on Rifleman's Ridge, and awaited the main attack. Meanwhile much
-had happened in the laagers. The decisions of the Boer Krijgsraad
-seem to have been subject to confirmation by a minor convention
-composed of the subordinate officers. These took counsel during the
-night, and resolved that "the plan was too dangerous to attempt."
-When the covering parties opened fire at dawn there was no
-assaulting column to cover.</p>
-<p>The activity during December was confined to the defence. On the
-night of the 7th a raid on Gun Hill, an underfeature of Lombard's
-Kop, silenced&mdash;at least in Natal&mdash;two heavy guns which
-were worrying the <span class="pagenum"><a name="page144" id=
-"page144"></a>{144}</span> garrison. By the rules of the game the
-pieces were injured beyond repair by the gun-cotton charges which
-the sappers had fired in the breeches and muzzles; but the heavier
-gun was removed to Pretoria, where it was made serviceable. It was
-eventually sent to Kimberley, and its arrival greatly alarmed the
-timid and irresolute diamond men, whose life was easy and almost
-luxurious when compared with the privations which the steadfast
-garrison of Ladysmith endured for four months. On the same night
-Limit Hill, which the enemy seized a few days after the investment,
-was recovered.</p>
-<p>A heavy gun was emplaced by the Boers to the front of the
-northward section of the defence, on a hill in the angle between
-the Bell Spruit and the railway to Harrismith. The approach to it
-was commanded by Bell's Kopje and Thornhill's Kopje, but a
-Battalion of Rifles under Metcalfe wriggled in between them at
-midnight on December 11, without alarming the enemy, and almost
-reached the crest of the eminence which was thereafter known as
-Surprise Hill, before the Boers opened fire. The assaulters
-encircled the emplacement, but could not find the gun. In a little
-time it was discovered outside the work, and disabled, but not
-permanently. The Boers on the flanking kopjes were now on the
-alert; and the battalion as it withdrew down the slope met in the
-darkness a small but determined detachment which had formed up
-athwart the line of retirement. The obstacle was rushed with the
-bayonet, and the expedition returned to Ladysmith with a loss
-exceeding 12 per cent of its strength.</p>
-<p>The gun raids were almost the only offensive action taken by the
-defence during the siege, and though successful as far as they
-went, they did not greatly reduce the strength of the enemy's
-artillery and were not continued. He had still more than a score of
-pieces with which he daily bombarded the town; but no attempt to
-assault it by a moving force was made for some weeks. His
-confidence in the final issue was unimpaired; he <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page145" id="page145"></a>{145}</span> had but
-to squat in his trenches worrying the garrison with shell fire, and
-the inevitable surrender must come.</p>
-<p>His complacent view of the situation was manifested by his use
-of the besieging force as a depot which was from time to time
-called upon to furnish drafts for service elsewhere. Joubert's
-absence on the raid towards the south did not sensibly diminish the
-retaining power of the attack, and although the loss of several
-thousand Free State burghers who were transferred to Cronje's
-command on the Modder or to Delarey's at Colesberg was in part made
-up by a reinforcement of Transvaalers, the force sitting round
-Ladysmith had to assist in the defence of the line of the Tugela
-against Duller; yet, albeit weakened by that necessity, it was
-still able without much effort to pin White down to the banks of
-the Klip River. The inactivity of the garrison, as well as the
-daily increasing hospital camp at Intombi under the shadow of
-Bulwana and the mournful processions to the cemetery hard by,
-showed that sickness, the waning physical and moral strength of
-those who were still on duty, and the expenditure of stores,
-supplies, and ammunition, were slowly impairing White's power of
-resistance; and that the numbers of the besieging force, which
-later on Buller believed did not exceed 2,000 men, could be safely
-reduced.</p>
-<p>The Boers believed that "their strength was to sit still," and
-they were not far wrong. Early in the New Year, however, external
-pressure emanating from Pretoria and Bloemfontein was brought to
-bear upon Joubert, and he sanctioned another assault on the
-Platrand, which was from the first considered to be the key to
-Ladysmith. It is a series of plateaux, about two miles long and
-varying in breadth from half a mile to a few hundred yards. Its
-chief features are Caesar's Camp and Wagon Hill. A mile north of
-the centre of the position is Maiden's Castle. The contours on
-Caesar's Camp and Wagon Hill are pinched in in three places and
-divide the Platrand into four positions of unequal <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page146" id="page146"></a>{146}</span> area, the
-smallest being Wagon Point, an underfeature on the extreme right of
-Wagon Hill. The latter is joined by a nek to Caesar's Camp, the
-plan of which owing to the contraction of the contours somewhat
-resembles the outline of a dumb-bell. The highest point of the
-position is a knoll on Wagon Hill, and the front slopes southwards
-down to Bester's Valley and Fourie's Spruit. On each flank were
-hills occupied by the enemy's artillery.</p>
-<p>The strength of the assaulting column as detailed was composed
-of approximately equal numbers of Free Staters and Transvaalers and
-amounted to upwards of 4,000 burghers. To the former Wagon Hill was
-assigned as their objective, to the latter Caesar's Camp, which was
-held in greater strength. Early on the morning of January 6, the
-sentry of the picket posted on the nek between Wagon Hill and Wagon
-Point, became aware of movement on the slope and gave the alarm.
-Soon after, a party of Engineers and Infantry preparing gun
-positions on Wagon Point in view of a contemplated operation in
-support of Buller's expected advance by way of Potgieter's Drift,
-were fired on at short range by a body of Free Staters, who had
-succeeded in climbing to the nek, and who then threatened a redoubt
-in the western shoulder of the knoll on Wagon Hill, which commanded
-Wagon Point. The first rush was checked by the Natal Volunteers,
-who opened with a Hotchkiss gun from the knoll at a range of less
-than 100 yards, and threw the leading ranks of the enemy into
-confusion. The working parties were thus given time to take up
-their rifles, and to organize themselves more effectively for
-defence.</p>
-<p>A counter-attack was made from the adjacent post on the eastern
-shoulder, but it failed to dislodge the enemy, a small party of
-whom diverged towards their left, and circled round Wagon Point to
-the rear of the position between Wagon Hill and Maiden's Castle.
-Here they lighted upon the heavy gun at the foot of the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page147" id=
-"page147"></a>{147}</span> northward slope for which an emplacement
-had just been made on Wagon Point, and although the gun was
-successfully defended by the escort, the insecurity of the Platrand
-position was shown by the attempt.</p>
-<p>While the Free Staters were assaulting Wagon Hill and Wagon
-Point, the Transvaalers obtained a footing on the edge of the
-Caesar's Camp position; but their supports failed them. A
-considerable proportion of the burghers detailed for the attack on
-Caesar's Camp, most of them Transvaalers, again either refused, as
-on November 9, to take part in it, or shirked during the advance.
-But at dawn, after a struggle in the dark at such close quarters
-that the face of each combatant was often for the first time
-revealed by the flash of his adversary's rifle, the enemy had his
-finger on the key to Ladysmith; and was clinging, like swallows on
-the eaves, to the whole length of the Platrand from Wagon Point
-along a sinuous contour line which curved round the eastern
-shoulder of Caesar's Camp, and awaiting the supporting bombardment
-which, as soon as there was light enough for the alignment of the
-sights, would be opened upon the position from the flanking guns on
-Bulwana and Rifleman's Ridge, and from Middle Hill on the
-front.</p>
-<p>The normal garrison of the Platrand, which, since the attack on
-November 9 had been entirely included in the perimeter of the
-defence, numbered not more than about 1,000 men, but it was under
-the command of Ian Hamilton.</p>
-<p>When the firing began he was in his bivouac near Caesar's Camp.
-He quickly collected what troops he could lay his hands on, and
-went to Wagon Hill, where he found the situation so serious that he
-asked White to re-inforce him. At daybreak the Boer artillery
-opened upon the position, and it is probable that it would have
-been lost, but for the action of two field batteries which, at a
-critical moment, came out of Ladysmith and diverged so as to
-protect each flank.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page148" id=
-"page148"></a>{148}</span>
-<p>Already on the Wagon Point flank, the enemy had worked round and
-had threatened the heavy gun, and on the other flank he was holding
-the eastern shoulder of Caesar's Camp. Wagon Point was saved from a
-turning movement by one battery, while the other, though itself
-under artillery fire from Bulwana, opened on the Boers clinging on
-to the eastern shoulder, and by checking the advance of their
-supports, caused them to withdraw the hook with which they were
-grappling that flank. But more than this the British guns could not
-do, and the Boers holding on to the front crest could not be
-touched by shrapnel, and were maintaining themselves against the
-defenders of Caesar's Camp; while a combat of even greater
-intensity was being waged on Wagon Hill.</p>
-<p>Here an attempt made by a few companies of Highlanders to
-outflank the Boer line on the crest by working round the shoulder
-of Wagon Point, had failed, as the men were exposed to an
-irresistible fire as they turned the corner. On Wagon Hill the
-enemy was holding on to the front of the redoubt on the knoll and
-each attempt to dislodge him was unsuccessful.</p>
-<p>Towards noon there was a lull in the storm. After nine hours'
-fighting, the combatants were face to face on the plateau and the
-advantage lay apparently with the attacking Boers, who, in spite of
-the strong re-inforcements which had been sent up by White, were
-still clinging to the southern crest of Caesar's Camp, and who on
-their left had won a footing close to the knoll on Wagon Hill, and
-were effectively checking the details on Wagon Point. White having
-used up all the infantry which he could safely spare from the other
-positions on the perimeter, now sent the cavalry to the rescue.</p>
-<p>The pause in the fight, which seems to have been occasioned by
-the exhaustion and discouragement of the enemy, and which,
-perforce, had to be acquiesced in by the defence, led White to
-report to Buller soon after noon, that the Boers had been beaten
-off for the time <span class="pagenum"><a name="page149" id=
-"page149"></a>{149}</span> being, but that a renewal of the attack
-was probable. It came at the moment when he was sending the
-despatch from his Head Quarters on Convent Hill, and when Ian
-Hamilton was preparing a counter-attack round the shoulder of Wagon
-Point. A small body of Free Staters rushed the summit of Wagon
-Point, and by their impact drove many of the defenders down the
-reverse slope. But those who remained were resolute. After a hand
-to hand fight between Boer commandants and British officers around
-the emplacement which had been prepared for the heavy gun, the
-position was recovered and a reinforcement of dismounted Hussars
-came up in time to secure it.</p>
-<p>On Wagon Hill also the struggle was renewed, and here also the
-defence was strengthened by some dismounted cavalry which had been
-waiting in support in rear of Caesar's Camp. It was evident that if
-the enemy were not dislodged from Wagon Hill during daylight, he
-would be able to establish himself irremovably after dark, when all
-the waverers would come up under the protection of the night. At 3
-in the afternoon White reported to Buller that the attack had been
-renewed and that he was "very hard pressed." He called the Devons
-to his aid from their post on the northern section of the
-perimeter, and in a storm of rain and thunder, themselves a
-resistless tempest, they cleared Wagon Hill with magazine and
-bayonet.</p>
-<p>On Caesar's Camp the enemy had already wavered, and the crest
-was in possession of the defence; and now all along the line from
-Wagon Point to the eastern shoulder the Boers were scuttling down
-the slopes toward the flooded dongas below under a hail of rifle
-fire. The battle, which had begun soon after midnight, was
-continued until near sunset and resulted in the discomfiture of the
-only serious attempt made by the Boers to capture Ladysmith by
-offensive action. The success was due primarily to the
-determination of an enfeebled garrison, which had already undergone
-a siege of nine weeks; and <span class="pagenum"><a name="page150"
-id="page150"></a>{150}</span> secondarily to the tactical mistakes
-of the enemy, who had allowed troops to concentrate upon the
-Platrand which should have been contained and pinned to their posts
-at other sections of the perimeter of defence. Not a few of the
-commandos detailed for the assault on the Platrand flinched, yet it
-almost succeeded; and if these had been distributed to positions
-elsewhere, they would not have incurred great danger, and their
-presence would probably have prevented the transfer of the Devons
-and of the mounted troops to Wagon Hill at the critical moment.</p>
-<p>The battle casualties of January 6 outnumbered in the proportion
-of 6 to 4 the entire losses due to the acts of the enemy during the
-whole four months' investment before and after that date. Twice
-Wagon Point was occupied only by the wounded and the dead. Much of
-the fighting was either hand to hand or at such short range that
-the effect of the bullet could be almost read in the expression on
-the face of the stricken opponent; now of anguish, despair, or
-hatred, now of a gentle sinking to sleep after toil. The homely
-name of Wagon Hill, far away from the fatherland under the southern
-sun, will abide for all time in the chronicles of the deeds of the
-British private soldier. It was his own battle, by which he saved
-Ladysmith. Next day a message from home reached White.</p>
-<p>"Heartily congratulate you and all under your command for your
-brilliant success. Greatly admire conduct of Devonshire Regiment."
-The Sender was Queen Victoria.</p>
-<p>The failure of the attack on the Platrand deterred the Boers
-from further attempts to break into Ladysmith, which was left like
-Paris thirty years before to "stew in its own juice." An ingenious
-but impracticable method of bringing the place to its senses by
-damming the Klip River below the town in the hope of isolating it
-by flood was put in hand, and some alarm was created, but the loyal
-stream refused to rise. The garrison was <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page151" id="page151"></a>{151}</span> too much
-weakened by disease and famine to be able to assist effectively
-Buller's promised advance by way of Potgieter's Drift, and in fact
-he never came near enough to Ladysmith to make co-operation
-possible. A mobile column was for the second time organized by
-White, but it is doubtful whether it could have taken the
-field.</p>
-<p>Perhaps some poet of a future generation may follow the example
-of the Homeric syndicate and select the Siege of Ladysmith as the
-theme of a great Epic, romantically but unhistorically interwoven
-with the legend of Juana Maria of Badajoz. On the Boer side the
-struggle was carried on with much of the simplicity of Homeric
-times and the Siege of Troy. The debates in the war councils; the
-doubts of the subordinate commanders; the devices and stratagems,
-such as the attempt to dam the Klip River, and the proposal to
-disguise an assaulting commando in the helmets and accoutrements of
-the slain opponents; the abstinence of some of the leaders from the
-fray; the single combats on Wagon Point; the democratic
-organization of the Boer forces; the difficulty of keeping the
-burghers to their duty when the attraction of a domestic and
-pastoral life presented themselves in an alluring form; were not of
-these days nor even of the Puritan period, but belonged to a
-remoter age when every man was a soldier or a shepherd according to
-the exigences of the moment. Many a Boer leader, like Ajax, defied
-the lightning&mdash;when it was not playing directly upon him. Not
-one of them comes prominently into the foreground in the great
-South African siege.</p>
-<p>De Wet's brief service in Natal came to an end before the
-investment, and in the light of his exploits elsewhere, it is
-interesting to speculate upon what might have happened if he had
-been in command of the attack on January 6. In all probability it
-would have succeeded. The Boers rarely failed when commanded by a
-resolute leader who knew his own mind and was <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page152" id="page152"></a>{152}</span> able to
-impose his own will upon them. In isolated enterprises daringly
-conducted, they were usually efficient, and sometimes irresistible,
-but like most primitive communities in which the military instinct
-is individual rather than collective, they were incapable of
-forming themselves into a coherent and unified Army for action in
-mass. De Wet, in his <i>Three Years' War</i>, protests against the
-British theory that the burghers were only fit to engage in
-<i>guerilla</i>, which, possibly from ignorance of the meaning of
-the word, he seems to regard as an unworthy term of reproach; but
-the theory was in reality a grudging recognition of a suppressed
-factor in the problem of the war which the professors had
-overlooked. His own exploits go far to prove its soundness.</p>
-<p>Like mariners adrift upon the ocean in an open boat, their food
-and their water dwindling hour by hour, who eagerly watch a white
-topsail or a faint wreath of smoke which seems for a time to be
-approaching, yet soon sinks beneath the horizon and leaves them
-alone upon the waste; the garrison of Ladysmith was cruelly
-tantalized by Buller's fitful appearances on the Tugela. Again and
-again the boom of his guns growing clearer and clearer and his
-heliographs sparkling more distinctly deluded the defenders with
-the hope that the day of their deliverance was at hand. During the
-Spion Kop affair, the confidence was so great that for a day or two
-full rations were issued. The summit could be seen crowded with
-people on January 25 who surely must be Buller's men. Not so; they
-were the Boers who, to their astonishment, had found the summit
-unoccupied, and were burying the dead and collecting the wounded.
-The roar of war died away; was heard again from Vaalkrantz, soon to
-sink into silence on February 7, when Buller announced that the
-enemy was too strong for him. It was renewed at Hlangwhane, Monte
-Cristo, and Pieter's Hill, but former disappointments had made the
-garrison insensible to hope and it <span class="pagenum"><a name=
-"page153" id="page153"></a>{153}</span> fell upon apathetic ears.
-When at last Dundonald's little band was seen approaching, the
-chilled and dazed soldiers of the garrison could scarcely realize
-that they were saved.</p>
-<p>After January 6 the increasing sickness and the deficiency of
-food became the chief facts of the Siege. More than three-score
-horses were sacrificed daily to provide a meat ration for the
-garrison. The men slaked their thirst with the turbid water of the
-Klip River, and munched a makeshift biscuit made of Indian corn and
-starch. "Chevril" soup and potted horse were luxuries. At Intombi
-nearly 2,000 sick and wounded were lying without hospital diet or
-comforts.</p>
-<p>On January 27 the situation was so grave that White, when he
-heard from Buller that the attempt on Spion Kop had failed,
-proposed as a last and desperate resource, but one which, at least,
-would not involve the moral effect of a surrender, to abandon
-Ladysmith, his sick and wounded, and his heavy guns, and with about
-7,000 men and 36 field guns to endeavour to join Buller. Even if
-another Buller failure did not sooner doom the garrison he could
-only hold out until the end of February.</p>
-<p>With this proposal Buller temporized and communicated it to Lord
-Roberts, who sent an encouraging message to White, in which he
-asked the garrison to accept his congratulations for its heroic
-defence and expressed his regret at the delay of the relief and his
-hope that the term would not be the limit of possible endurance;
-though he fully expected that his own operations in the Free State
-would before its expiration relieve the pressure on Ladysmith.
-Buller doubted Lord Roberts' forecast and preferred to "play his
-hand alone," and nothing came of the proposed break out of
-Ladysmith. White in his acknowledgment of Lord Roberts' message
-said that by sacrificing most of his horses, he could hold out for
-six weeks.</p>
-<p>There was good reason to believe that by this time <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page154" id="page154"></a>{154}</span> the
-besieging force numbered not more than 4,000 men, who, however,
-could be reinforced in a few hours from the 16,000 burghers
-standing up to Buller on the Tugela. The enfeebled garrison was,
-however, not in a condition to act against the attenuated cordon
-from which a constant bombardment was maintained. As the month of
-February wore on, the news of Lord Roberts' entry into the Orange
-Free State infused more hope into the garrison than the too
-familiar sound of Buller once more in action on the Tugela, and so
-little was expected of Buller that the lull in the fire during the
-Sunday armistice on February 25 was interpreted as another repulse;
-and the rations which had been increased, when a message came that
-he would be in Ladysmith on February 22&mdash;which he soon found
-was a too confident expectation&mdash;were again reduced. The
-darkness before the dawn was very black. The news of Paardeberg
-reached Ladysmith on the afternoon of the 27th; towards sunset next
-day Dundonald marched in. White endeavoured to organize a column to
-pursue the commandos retreating before Buller, but found that the
-toll of war had been paid so heavily by the Natal Field Force that
-little more than the strength of one company in each battalion was
-fit for service.</p>
-<p>Not the least of the trials undergone by the Ladysmith staff
-were the heliograms from the Tugela and the constant surprises of
-the <i>d&eacute;chiffrage</i>. Sometimes pessimistic, sometimes the
-reverse and frequently trivial, there was scarcely an occasion on
-which they were helpful. The troubles of the relieving force
-figured largely in them.</p>
-<p>The sequel to the Colenso disaster was a suggestion that White
-after burning his ciphers<a id="footnotetag33" name=
-"footnotetag33"></a><a href="#footnote33"><sup>33</sup></a>&mdash;a
-precaution which he naturally would take&mdash;and firing away his
-ammunition, should negotiate with the enemy for the <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page155" id="page155"></a>{155}</span> surrender
-of the town. To this White made the manly and dignified reply that
-there was no thought of surrender; and to his own men he issued a
-soldier-like order of the day, in which he told them that they must
-not expect relief as early as had been anticipated, and expressed
-his confidence that the defence would be continued in the same
-spirited manner in which it had hitherto been conducted; and
-dutifully he applied himself to his task.</p>
-<p>A few days later he was bidden by Buller to "boil all his
-water." From Potgieter's Drift, Buller heliographed that "somehow
-he thought he was going to be successful this time"; that it was
-"quite pleasant to see how keen the men were"; that he hoped to be
-"knocking at Lancer's Hill" in six days' time; but after Spion Kop
-it was, "we had awful luck on the 25th."</p>
-<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote31" name=
-"footnote31"></a><b>Footnote 31:</b><a href=
-"#footnotetag31">(return)</a>
-<p>As the officer in command of the Naval Brigade neatly put it:
-"the proof of the pudding is in the eating. The cavalry soldiers
-did excellent service in the lines&mdash;and we ate their
-horses."</p>
-</blockquote>
-<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote32" name=
-"footnote32"></a><b>Footnote 32:</b><a href=
-"#footnotetag32">(return)</a>
-<p>The Boer name for Caesar's Camp&mdash;Wagon Hill Position.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote33" name=
-"footnote33"></a><b>Footnote 33:</b><a href=
-"#footnotetag33">(return)</a>
-<p>This instruction was not included in the original heliogram, but
-was annexed to it as an afterthought in a supplementary
-message.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page156" id=
-"page156"></a>{156}</span>
-<h2><a name="chap8" id="chap8">CHAPTER VIII</a></h2>
-<h3>Deus ex Machina, No. II</h3>
-<p>On January 10, 1900, Lord Roberts reached Capetown in the
-<i>Dunottar Castle</i>, the ship which ten weeks previously had
-brought Buller to South Africa, and resumed the task which he was
-not allowed to finish in 1881. The terms of peace imposed upon the
-British Government by the Boers after Majuba Hill resulted in an
-armistice of eighteen years, and he was still the soldier to whom
-the nation instinctively turned when it was again in trouble in
-South Africa.</p>
-<p>With one unimportant exception all his war experience had been
-gained in India or near its frontiers; but India is a spacious
-arena where spacious ideas can be freely developed. His mind had
-not been scored into grooves by years of desk duties in Pall Mall,
-or subjected to the necessity of accommodating itself to obsolete
-methods and House of Commons' views. The Indian Army, of which he
-obtained the command after serving in it in each commissioned rank,
-more closely approaches in its training, organization, and
-readiness for active service, the military standard set up by the
-chief continental nations, than the British Army; of which a
-distinguished German officer said at the time of the Boer War that
-it was meant for detachment warfare only and not to win great
-battles.</p>
-<p>With Lord Roberts came, as Chief of the Staff, Lord Kitchener of
-Khartoum, a hard and ready man who for fifteen years had been
-scouring the Nile. All his war service had been in Egypt, where
-recently he had not only smashed the dervishes and secured the
-Soudan, <span class="pagenum"><a name="page157" id=
-"page157"></a>{157}</span> but by his diplomatic tact in the
-Fashoda affair had relaxed the tension of a dangerous international
-situation. He belonged to the Royal Engineers, who are, like the
-Army Service Corps, a semi-combatant body engaged in technical
-duties that do not offer much opportunity of gaining experience in
-the art of war or of practice in handling troops, but who have,
-nevertheless, given to the nation not a few soldiers of
-distinction. It was, perhaps, for this reason that Lord Roberts
-generally employed Lord Kitchener as an expert military foreman,
-entrusted with the supervision of the work of others.</p>
-<p>The situation in South Africa at the time of Lord Roberts'
-arrival was as follows:&mdash;</p>
-<p>Methuen was established at Modder River; Mafeking and Kimberley
-were holding out, and the latter at least seemed to be in no
-immediate danger; French was in a good position before Colesberg;
-Gatacre was maintaining himself without difficulty at Sterkstroom;
-the garrison at Ladysmith, after sixteen hours' fighting, had
-recently warded off a determined attack; the disaffected districts
-in the Cape Colony had not risen; and the despondent Buller,
-quickened by reinforcements and stimulated by the approach of the
-<i>Dunottar Castle</i>, was about to make another attempt to
-relieve Ladysmith.</p>
-<p>Schemes for a South African campaign had been for some time
-under consideration by the War Office, but as the attitude of the
-Free State could not be forecasted, they were more or less
-provisional. As late as the end of September the Premier and the
-War Minister scouted the idea of war with the Free State, and the
-official plan of a central advance on Bloemfontein by way of
-Bethulie and Norval's Pont, which held good until some little time
-after Lord Roberts' arrival, must therefore have been
-subterraneously drawn up without their knowledge. It was no doubt
-an excellent solution of a strategical problem studied by men in an
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page158" id=
-"page158"></a>{158}</span> office with a map of South Africa before
-them which showed several lines of communication converging on the
-Orange River; and Buller was about to carry it out when he was
-called aside to Natal.</p>
-<p><a href="#fig-so-transvaal">Map, p. 260.</a></p>
-<p>Lord Roberts had, however, two years before drawn up a scheme
-for an advance on the Transvaal by way of the Kimberley line as far
-as Mafeking and thence across country to Pretoria, and before
-leaving England he modified it so as to adapt it to action in the
-Free State. He proposed to leave the Kimberley line at some point
-between the Orange River and the Modder River, and to march in a
-S.E. direction on the Bloemfontein line. He was a firm believer in
-the indirect results of military movements, and he expected that
-his arrival at Springfontein or Edenburg and the menace to the Free
-State capital "must draw the Free Staters back from Kimberley and
-Natal," and that the occupation of it "would render the Boer
-positions south of the Orange River untenable." The official plan
-of an advance from the centre would force back the Free Staters
-engaged in the Cape Colony, and instead of isolating them would
-enable them to reinforce Cronje.</p>
-<p>After his arrival at Capetown, circumstances however compelled
-Lord Roberts to modify his plan of campaign. The news of the Spion
-Kop affair, anxiety on account of Kimberley, the presence of Cronje
-at Magersfontein and other considerations, determined him to march
-through the Free State by a more northerly route which would enable
-him to relieve Kimberley <i>en passant</i> and to give battle to
-Cronje.</p>
-<p>The secret of the plan, which was known only to Lord Roberts'
-personal staff, was well kept, and operations were continued
-without reference to it. The earlier orders issued by him seemed to
-indicate that the central advance was still to be carried out. The
-VIth Division under Kelly-Kenny was sent to Naauwpoort; French was
-instructed to make a demonstration against Norval's <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page159" id="page159"></a>{159}</span> Pont; and
-Methuen was warned that it might be necessary to withdraw part of
-the Modder River force.</p>
-<p>The Boers, who had captured at Dundee some intelligence papers
-which disclosed the original plan of campaign, were now more than
-ever convinced that the British Army must advance by way of
-Norval's Pont and Bethulie, and did not discover their error until
-it was too late to rectify it.<a id="footnotetag34" name=
-"footnotetag34"></a><a href="#footnote34"><sup>34</sup></a> When
-Lord Roberts had made all his preparations, which involved the
-entire reorganization of the transport, and the raising of a
-considerable force of mounted troops, for his march of 100 miles
-across the veld eastward from the railway, the secret was disclosed
-to Kelly-Kenny and French on February 1. This plan of a flank march
-had also suggested itself to Buller, who proposed it in a
-memorandum which Lord Roberts found on his arrival in Capetown; but
-as Buller's scheme included the construction of a railway across
-the veld, and limited the advance of the Army to the rate at which
-the line could be pushed forward, it did not fall in with Lord
-Roberts' ideas.</p>
-<p>Meanwhile Cronje was not perturbed by the reports of troops
-coming up the Western line, and was confident that they only
-indicated a renewed but isolated attack on Magersfontein. He had no
-doubt that if necessary he could always fall back upon Kimberley
-and retreat towards the Transvaal; and the demonstrations made by
-Methuen westwards in the direction of Koedoesberg Drift served the
-double purpose of warning a disaffected region and of diverting
-Cronje's attention from the flank on which he was to be attacked
-and which he believed to be secure.</p>
-<p>The two months following the arrival of Lord Roberts in South
-Africa were the only brilliant period of a dreary war which lasted
-nearly three years, and will perhaps <span class="pagenum"><a name=
-"page160" id="page160"></a>{160}</span> save it from being quoted
-in military history as the most sluggish campaign of recent times.
-In each of the two objects of strategy, namely to avoid fighting
-the enemy on ground of his own choosing, and to compel him to fight
-under unfavourable conditions, Lord Roberts was extraordinarily
-successful. There was a light touch, an ingenuity, in his swift and
-silent strategy which contrasted strongly with the heavy and dull
-methods which had hitherto controlled the action. While Buller was
-talking about his tedious railway across the veld, and Milner at
-Capetown was dismalling the situation and discouraging the advance,
-Lord Roberts had in effect entered the capital of the Free State
-and seemed to have completed half his task. The Boers were
-hypnotized and deceived not only by signs from which they drew
-wrong inferences, but also by bogus orders which it was arranged
-should come under their notice and which were simultaneously
-cancelled in cipher: and when too late they awoke from the
-bewilderment, they began to scuttle to and fro like rabbits in a
-warren. There is good reason to believe that if the strategic
-ability of Lord Roberts could have been united in one mind to the
-determination of Lord Kitchener the war would have been over in a
-year.</p>
-<p>On February 8 Lord Roberts arrived at Modder River, where he
-found bad news awaiting him. Buller had failed at Vaalkrantz, and
-the diamond men of Kimberley were threatening to capitulate. By
-February 13 30,000 combatants, some of whom in order to preserve
-the illusion had been kept in the centre until the last moment,
-were in readiness at various points between the Orange and the
-Modder. The immediate problem before Lord Roberts was the relief of
-Kimberley in combination with the cornering of Cronje. In the
-background was the Natal trouble. Buller was again helplessly
-wringing his hands and reaching round to find excuses for his
-misadventures. Lord Roberts wisely left him alone and went on with
-his own work. <span class="pagenum"><a name="page161" id=
-"page161"></a>{161}</span> He saw what Buller refused to see, that
-the Tugela could be crossed at Magersfontein and Ladysmith relieved
-at a drift of the Modder River.</p>
-<a name="fig-riet" id="fig-riet"></a>
-<div class="figcenter" style="width:50%;"><a href=
-"images/image11.png"><img width="100%" src="images/image11.png"
-alt="Sketch Map of the Riet and Modder Drifts" /></a></div>
-<p>On February 11 Lord Roberts set his army in motion; and the
-operations of the next few days may be summarised with sufficient
-accuracy as a cavalry raid northwards, but avoiding Cronje's left
-flank at Brown's Drift, to relieve Kimberley; combined with an
-infantry advance to cut him off. It was not possible to make the
-initial movements in the direction of the eventual advance, as the
-Magersfontein-Brown's Drift quadrant N.E. of Modder River was
-strongly held by the enemy, and disallowed a cavalry advance from
-below the junction of the Riet and the Modder in the direction of
-Kimberley except by a westerly detour which could not be
-accommodated to the general scheme. In order to strike the
-practicable drifts on the two rivers above their confluence, it was
-necessary for the advance to be made along the curve of a parabola
-which issued from Modder River Station in a S.E. direction, and in
-a sixty-mile circuit crossed the rivers and finally approached
-Kimberley, only twenty miles distant from the starting point,
-almost in the opposite direction.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page162" id=
-"page162"></a>{162}</span>
-<p>At midday on February 11 the Cavalry Division under French
-reached Ramdam, a farm east of Graspan and fronting the drifts of
-the Riet, where the Army was being concentrated for the advance.
-Some hours elapsed before Cronje became aware that French had
-trekked away to the S.E., and to his slow and sullen spirit the
-movement did not appear to have much significance. He was persuaded
-that the British never trusted themselves much more than a day's
-march away from a railway. It was only a demonstration, a
-reconnaissance. He did, however, take certain precautions which, if
-they had been devised with a true appreciation of the situation and
-intelligently carried out, might have seriously checked French.</p>
-<p>He assumed that the initial direction of French's march would be
-continued indefinitely towards Koffyfontein, possibly even that it
-was a retirement from the Modder River position caused by bad news
-from the centre, and he sent a commando of observation, under C. de
-Wet, up the right bank of the Riet. The most adroit and skilful
-movement of the war had now begun without Cronje's comprehending
-its object.</p>
-<p>But French did not complete his first day's work very
-auspiciously. His supply column was far behind when he reached
-Ramdam, and owing to a misunderstanding Hannay's Brigade of Mounted
-Infantry from Orange River, which was instructed to join him, did
-not turn up: conflicting orders had resulted as usual,
-<i>ordre</i>, <i>contr'ordre</i>, <i>d&eacute;sordre</i>. French,
-however, felt himself strong enough to continue his march without
-Hannay, who, on his delayed march to Ramdam, engaged a detached
-body of Boers and thereby strengthened the enemy's conviction that
-Koffyfontein was the objective.</p>
-<p>As French approached the river, Waterval Drift, the lower of the
-two drifts across the Riet, was found to be occupied by De Wet, and
-the Division was diverted to De Kiel's Drift, which was reached
-without much difficulty at midday, February 12. On the right bank
-were <span class="pagenum"><a name="page163" id=
-"page163"></a>{163}</span> the commando of the Jacobsdaal garrison
-under Lubbe, and the commando under De Wet and A.P.J. Cronje which
-had been sent to observe the cavalry movement; about 1,000 men in
-all. But De Wet could not get the Koffyfontein idea out of his
-head, and its influence removed many obstructions from the path of
-the advance. He boldly rode across French's front at De Kiel's
-Drift, and made S.E. for Winterhoek, closely followed by A.P.J.
-Cronje; and all French's horses could not find out where they had
-gone. Next day it was given out in Divisional Orders that the
-commandos had gone to the Modder River, and four weeks passed by
-before the Army ceased to suffer from the error.</p>
-<p>There was still "one more river to cross" before the diamond men
-of Kimberley could be relieved; and ere the thirst of the South
-African summer could be slaked on the banks of the Modder, a tract
-of twenty-five miles of veld, in which the absence of any homestead
-having "<i>fontein</i>" for its suffix declared the scarcity of
-water, must be traversed under the sun.</p>
-<p>In the forenoon of February 13 the Cavalry Division started
-northwards from De Kiel's Drift; and at last De Wet, who, unknown
-to French, was watching the trek from its right flank, partially
-relieved himself of the Koffyfontein idea. The effort weakened him,
-and he displayed none of that readiness of resource and promptitude
-of action with which he subsequently worried the British Army for
-the space of two years. He withdrew his own commando towards
-Koffyfontein, and having ordered Lubbe to follow French, reported
-to Cronje at Magersfontein that the cavalry was making for the
-Modder.</p>
-<p>French's objective points were now Rondeval and Klip River
-Drifts on the Modder, but in order to deceive Lubbe, who was
-hanging on to his right flank, and to elbow him away from the
-drifts, French changed direction with two brigades and headed for
-Klip Kraal Drift, some eight miles above Klip Drift, reverting
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page164" id=
-"page164"></a>{164}</span> suddenly to his original line as soon as
-the river came in sight. The drifts were held by small parties of
-the enemy, who offered no resistance, and on the evening of
-February 13 the Division took possession of the kopjes on the north
-bank.</p>
-<p>The occupation of the drifts was soon made known to Cronje, but
-the news revealed little to his dull and uninstructed nature,
-permeated with the idea that a British force and a railway were
-indissoluble entities. Though his communications eastward were now
-seriously threatened, it did not occur to him that there might be
-an alternative to fighting him out of Magersfontein, namely
-manoeuvring him out of it; and he persuaded himself that French's
-movement was a trap to entice him away pending an attack on
-Magersfontein from the south, and he was probably unaware that the
-relief of Kimberley was an urgent matter. He moved his own camp
-from Brown's Drift to a less exposed position at Bosjespan, and
-while retaining his hold on Magersfontein with his main body, sent
-out two commandos to watch French, and these accidentally occupied
-a line through which the cavalry must pass on its way to
-Kimberley.</p>
-<p>The arrival of the VIth Division on the morning of February 15
-set French free to resume his march on Kimberley. The two commandos
-had on the previous day joined hands with Lubbe, who, after he was
-pushed out of French's way, crossed the Modder at Klip Kraal Drift
-and worked round to a position north of Klip Drift. The relieving
-force was now obstructed in the line of its advance by ridges on
-its right and left fronts and by the nek connecting them, all
-occupied by the enemy; while on its left flank was Cronje's new
-camp at Bosjespan, of the existence of which it was unaware. The
-situation seemed awkward, as the only way out of it was the shallow
-valley leading up to the nek, and exposed to a converging fire from
-the ridges on which two guns were posted.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page165" id=
-"page165"></a>{165}</span>
-<p>But French was not long in doubt, and like a bridge player who
-in order to win the game is sometimes compelled to assume the
-position of certain cards, with rare intuition correctly assumed
-that the nek was weakly held. Like a ship going down the ways to
-the water, the Division was launched to the front; cleaving the
-opposing waves and gaining momentum as it advanced, then righting
-itself, rose to the slope of the nek and carried it with resistless
-energy.</p>
-<p>After a short midday halt at Abon's Dam, French raised the siege
-of Kimberley before sunset; the besiegers under Ferreira did not
-wait to be attacked, but withdrew towards Boshof.</p>
-<p>The relief of Kimberley was perhaps the most brilliant feat of
-arms in the campaign. It was well-conceived and, considered by
-itself alone, well carried out, but the merit of it has been
-obscured by the fact that it cost less than half a hundred human
-casualties. When, on the morning of February 15, the VIth Division
-took over the outposts, and the Cavalry Division fell in on the
-banks of the Modder, there was the terrain of a Balaklava charge
-before it.</p>
-<p>It may well be doubted whether the price paid for the relief of
-the diamond men was not too high. Uninstructed public opinion at
-home called for the movement, and forced Lord Roberts' hand, but it
-was never an imperative military necessity. The horse
-casualties,<a id="footnotetag35" name="footnotetag35"></a><a href=
-"#footnote35"><sup>35</sup></a> due to want of water, forced
-marches, and ignorance of horsemastership on the part of all ranks,
-who were inclined to regard cavalry work in the light of a
-steeplechase, were so heavy that when on February 17 French, after
-an attempt on the previous day to pursue a body of retreating Boers
-with his exhausted horses, <span class="pagenum"><a name="page166"
-id="page166"></a>{166}</span> was suddenly called upon to march
-thirty miles to head off Cronje, he could in all his Division mount
-less than the strength of two regiments. Nor was this all, for the
-rush to Kimberley was the indirect cause of the loss of the supply
-column at Waterval Drift on February 15; and thus in a few hours
-the mounted force and the supply column and transport which Lord
-Roberts and his staff had assembled with so much difficulty were,
-the former partially and the latter entirely, sacrificed.</p>
-<p>The VIth, VIIth, and IXth Infantry Divisions, under Kelly-Kenny,
-Tucker, and Colvile respectively, were withdrawn from Modder River
-and the stations south of it, and concentrated at Ramdam on
-February 11 and the two following days. Owing to the steepness of
-its banks the Riet River could only be crossed at Waterval and De
-Kiel's Drifts, and on these the Army converged, and trickled
-through them like the sands in the neck of an hour-glass. Men,
-horses, guns, supply and ammunition wagons were slowly and
-painfully transferred to the right bank, and the VIth Division,
-which followed the cavalry to De Kiel's Drift, though the first
-infantry to get through by more than twenty-four hours, was delayed
-by the block of transport and lost its start in the race to the
-Modder River.</p>
-<p>Meanwhile to Waterval Drift came Kelly-Kenny and Colvile in
-succession, and were soon pushed on to Wegdraai Drift, to which
-Tucker also hastened as soon as he could shake himself clear of De
-Kiel's Drift. The latter was now out of the running, for although
-Kelly-Kenny had already had a nine hours' march from Waterval Drift
-beginning soon after midnight, by 5 in the afternoon of February 14
-the VIth Division was ready to resume its march to support French
-at Klip Drift, some hours before Tucker came in. Kitchener had been
-ordered by Lord Roberts to attach himself to the VIth Division as
-assessor to Kelly-Kenny, and marched out with it.</p>
-<p>When Colvile, whose division was detailed as a reserve,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page167" id=
-"page167"></a>{167}</span> arrived at Waterval Drift, he found the
-passage congested by transport of all kinds; and although after
-half a day's delay he was able to proceed to Wegdraai Drift, a
-large convoy on which the Army depended for the greater part of its
-supplies for the march to Bloemfontein, had to be left behind. A
-small escort remained with it, the wagons were laagered, and the
-oxen outspanned and sent out upon the veld to graze. No danger was
-anticipated.</p>
-<p>De Wet had not been lurking on the banks of the Riet for
-nothing. Hitherto he had not greatly distinguished himself. On the
-outbreak of the war he and his three sons were commandeered as
-private burghers, and when he reached the Natal border he was
-appointed vice-commandant. He served under A.P. Cronje and
-witnessed Carleton's surrender at Nicholson's Nek. In December he
-joined P. Cronje at Magersfontein, and was sent early in February
-to Koedoesberg Drift to check the British demonstrations on the
-Riet below Modder River Station, and later on to observe French. It
-is probable that the military deficiencies of his leaders made him
-sullen. Erasmus at Dundee stood idly in the background while Symons
-and Yule were on the slopes of Talana Hill, and Cronje was deaf to
-his remonstrances against a mere passive defence on the Modder
-River and the presence of women and children in the laager.</p>
-<p>But De Wet with a free hand quickly recovered himself when the
-fortune of war threw him a casual chance after French had
-despatched him in imagination to a destination where he could do no
-harm. The convoy was ordered to follow Colvile to Wegdraai at 5
-p.m. on February 15, and at 8 that morning, while the oxen were
-still grazing on the veld, De Wet, who was hovering near
-Winterhoek, swooped down upon the laager. The slender escort made a
-good resistance and the attack was reported to Lord Roberts at
-Wegdraai, who at first sent back a battalion with a battery and
-some <span class="pagenum"><a name="page168" id=
-"page168"></a>{168}</span> mounted infantry, and when these were
-found insufficient the rest of the 14th Brigade were despatched
-under Tucker to endeavour to extricate the convoy. But when Tucker
-reached the Drift at sunset he found himself unable to bring it
-away. Most of the oxen had disappeared and De Wet had been
-reinforced. Lord Roberts was unwilling to delay his advance, and
-finding that the supplies were not absolutely indispensable to the
-success of his march, at midnight ordered Tucker to abandon the
-convoy and to return to Wegdraai. Next morning De Wet took
-possession of 176 wagon loads of supplies and 500 slaughter
-oxen&mdash;his first exploit in the war.</p>
-<p>On February 16 Lord Roberts moved his Head Quarters to
-Jacobsdaal. It was his intention to advance on Kimberley and to
-make that town the base of his operations in the direction of
-Bloemfontein, when suddenly his plans were disarranged by an
-unexpected event. Cronje, who for two months had held stubbornly to
-Magersfontein, was reported to be trekking to the east. French's
-relief of Kimberley, the presence of an infantry division at Klip
-Drift, and the occupation of Jacobsdaal, were facts which even his
-obstinacy could not disregard. Like a wild creature startled in the
-night by a veld fire and suddenly dazzled by the glare, he rushed
-blindly towards the flames which were soon to consume him. Almost
-any direction but that which he took, the line of the Modder River,
-would have given him a better chance of escape. French's maimed
-cavalry could not have stopped him if he had retreated on either
-side of Kimberley, and even a withdrawal westward down the right
-bank of the Riet would have probably saved him. Methuen at Modder
-River took twelve hours to discover that Magersfontein had been
-abandoned at midnight on February 15.</p>
-<p>On the morning of the 16th Kelly-Kenny sent out from Klip Drift
-a force under C. Knox to cover the advance of the rest of the VIth
-Division on Kimberley. <span class="pagenum"><a name="page169" id=
-"page169"></a>{169}</span> Soon a long column of dust was observed
-in the distance beyond the ridge on the right, and a closer
-examination showed that it was caused by Cronje's wagons. The
-discovery came not altogether as a surprise, for Boers had been
-noticed crossing the front on the previous day, and as what was now
-seen proved to be the rear of a column, the trek must have been
-some hours in progress.</p>
-<p>Kelly-Kenny at once abandoned his march on Kimberley and faced
-eastwards. It was found that the enemy had taken up a rearguard
-position on the southern end of the ridge. The northern end was
-soon seized by mounted infantry, but an attempt in interpose
-between the river and the Boer position failed. The ridge was
-cleared at 9 a.m. by a frontal attack, but not before Cronje's
-convoy had retired without molestation to Klip Kraal, where a
-second rearguard position was taken up on either side of Klip Kraal
-Drift.</p>
-<p>On the assumption that Cronje was endeavouring to effect a
-retreat on Bloemfontein, it was necessary to confine him to the
-right bank of the Modder. He was already in possession of Klip
-Kraal Drift, and although he could hardly hope to pass his wagons
-across it in sight of an active enemy, it was not his only chance.
-Within ten miles of his laager were Brandvallei, Paardeberg, and
-Vendutie Drifts, each of which would give him access to the
-southern bank.</p>
-<p>The task before the pursuing army was therefore to drive in his
-rearguards from their successive positions and prevent him getting
-comfortably away to secure a passage across the river. At nightfall
-on February 16 it seemed likely that he would succeed. His convoy
-in the main laager at Klip Kraal had had twelve hours' rest, and
-his rearguard had maintained itself on the second position; in
-spite of a frontal attack on the right bank, and of a flank attack
-on the left bank made by a battery and a force of mounted infantry
-which had crossed the semicircle formed by a northward bend of the
-river between Klip Drift and Klip Kraal Drift. <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page170" id="page170"></a>{170}</span> The guns
-even succeeded in throwing a few shells into the laager, but ran
-short of ammunition. Kitchener, who remained with Kelly-Kenny as
-military assessor, had early in the day advocated a raid up the
-river in order to head off Cronje at Paardeberg Drift, but the
-exhaustion of the troops prevented the enterprise.</p>
-<p>Next day the chase began in earnest&mdash;to borrow for the
-occasion, as was done so frequently during the war, a metaphor from
-the sporting world&mdash;but only a few of the hounds were on the
-spot, and the rest of the pack were at Kimberley and
-Jacobsdaal.</p>
-<p>When the report of Cronje's retreat from Magersfontein, which
-Lord Roberts received soon after he reached Jacobsdaal, was
-confirmed by a message from Kitchener, he ordered French, who at
-that time was engaged with the enemy some miles north of Kimberley
-and endeavouring to capture the Long Tom whose recent arrival from
-Ladysmith <i>vi&acirc;</i> Pretoria had scared the Kimberley
-civilians into a threat of surrender, to hurry eastward and
-endeavour to place himself between Cronje and Bloemfontein; but
-owing to a break in the field telegraph cable the message was
-delayed. Kelly-Kenny was at the same time instructed to carry on
-the pursuit.</p>
-<p>But the situation had not yet clearly disclosed itself, and Lord
-Roberts did not abandon his intention of sending Colvile's and
-Tucker's Divisions towards Kimberley; and their orders to march on
-the lower drifts of the Modder held good. Cronje's retreat in an
-unexpected direction was hard to explain. Was he going to meet the
-reinforcements which Buller had just reported were on their way
-from Natal? De Wet had just shown that there was a vigorous and
-enterprising body of the enemy ready to raid the railway south of
-Kimberley, and it was possible that he might have been reinforced
-from Colesberg.</p>
-<p>Towards evening, however, a second message came <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page171" id="page171"></a>{171}</span> from
-Kitchener at Klip Drift. He summarised the situation on the Modder,
-which he was unable to control with the troops at his disposal, and
-said that he was asking French to proceed to Koodoos Drift to check
-Cronje from the east. Lord Roberts was not the man to adhere
-stolidly to his own plan when a better one was laid before him. The
-orders to the Divisions were cancelled, and before midnight on
-February 16 Colvile was marching out to join Kelly-Kenny in the
-chase. Tucker, whose Division had hardly recovered from the
-Waterval Drift affair, remained at Jacobsdaal.</p>
-<p>After sunset Cronje broke up his camp at Klip Kraal Drift and
-trekked along the right bank. At midnight he passed half of his
-transport over to the left bank at Paardeberg Drift, himself going
-on to Vendutie Drift, where the remainder, with the women and
-children against whose presence in camp De Wet had vainly
-protested, joined him next morning.</p>
-<p>So far he had done well, and even when his rearguard at
-Paardeberg was fired on by an advanced brigade of mounted infantry
-which had been pushed on by Kitchener, he did not lose confidence;
-although he was surprised that the British, "who could not march,"
-had overtaken him.</p>
-<p>To De Wet and especially to Ferreira, whom he knew to be not far
-off, he looked for help, and even without them he believed that he
-would be able to cross Vendutie Drift.</p>
-<p>Ferreira was indeed not far off, but an obstacle suddenly sprang
-up between him and Cronje, and the aspect of it was so alarming
-that he withdrew in the opposite direction. The obstacle was
-French's attenuated Cavalry Division which, in obedience to
-Kitchener's summons, had left Kimberley before sunrise that
-morning, and after a march of twenty-six miles had reached the spot
-indicated by Kitchener for the heading of Cronje. As the Boer
-wagons were about to cross Vendutie Drift the shells of French's
-Horse Artillery began to fall <span class="pagenum"><a name=
-"page172" id="page172"></a>{172}</span> upon them. The convoy was
-thrown into confusion, the oxen stampeded, Cronje was entangled and
-bewildered, and but for the gallant exertions of some foreign
-officers in the service of the Boers a fatal panic might have
-ensued. The advance guard under De Beer was reinforced from the
-main laager, and a demonstration made against the left flank of the
-cavalry; and although French held on, his position remained
-insecure and even precarious until the arrival of the infantry on
-the following morning. With a handful of tired, hungry, and
-unsupported horsemen he not only frightened Ferreira, whose force
-outnumbered his own, off the field, but also paralysed and prepared
-for destruction the army which had beaten Methuen and had held
-Magersfontein for two months.</p>
-<a name="fig-paardeberg" id="fig-paardeberg"></a>
-<div class="figcenter" style="width:50%;"><a href=
-"images/image12.png"><img width="100%" src="images/image12.png"
-alt="Paardeberg" /></a></div>
-<p>Next day, February 18, at 3 a.m. began the ten days' operations
-to which the name of the Battle of Paardeberg has been somewhat
-inaccurately given. Paardeberg is a prominent hill on the right
-bank of the Modder, four miles W.S.W. of the battle centre,
-Cronje's laager at Vendutie Drift, and lies on the extreme edge of
-the elliptical arena on which the battle was fought. It seems to
-have been chosen as the official word because the hill was the only
-distinctive physical feature shown <span class="pagenum"><a name=
-"page173" id="page173"></a>{173}</span> on the banks of the river
-in the incomplete surveys of the time, and because the alternative
-would have been Stinkfontein, a farm near the field of battle. The
-Battle of Vendutie Drift would have been a more correct term.</p>
-<p>The Modder forms the major axis of the ellipse, which it enters
-near Koodoos Drift and leaves at Paardeberg Drift, and like most
-South African rivers runs in a deep channel between banks
-intersected by the tributary dongas which the rains have scored in
-the soft soil, and which afford almost the only shelter from
-artillery fire. The whole area is commanded by the surrounding
-kopjes and ridges.</p>
-<p>Cronje, though urged to break out of his laager on the night of
-February 17, refused to move. It is probable that he might have
-effected his escape if he had abandoned his transport. An active
-force led by a determined man could have wriggled out under cover
-of the night, and joined one or other of the commandos which were
-known to be hovering. Cronje was in communication with Ferreira; he
-had sent to Bloemfontein for help; and De Wet was known to be on
-his way from Koffyfontein. But instead of making an effort to save
-himself he fatally trusted to relief from outside. He did not
-realize that Vendutie Drift was not a Magersfontein which he could
-hold indefinitely, or that during the last few weeks the British
-Army had been greatly increased. One result of his obstinacy was
-the desertion of several hundred Free Staters, who had not served
-very willingly under the leadership of a Transvaaler. Most of them
-returned to their homes.</p>
-<p>In the absence of the Commander-in-Chief, who was detained at
-Jacobsdaal by illness, Kelly-Kenny was the senior officer present
-with the force on the Modder River; but for some reason which may
-have formed itself in Lord Roberts' mind when they were
-fellow-passengers on the <i>Dunottar Castle</i>, he was not
-entrusted with the management of the battle. Kitchener had
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page174" id=
-"page174"></a>{174}</span> marched several hours with the VIth
-Division on February 14 before Kelly-Kenny was aware of his
-presence; and as Chief of the Staff in direct communication with
-Head Quarters, he had much to say at Klip Drift. At Paardeberg the
-status of Kelly-Kenny became still more anomalous, Kitchener,
-though junior not only to him but also to two other generals
-present, being empowered by Lord Roberts to issue orders in his
-name so that there might be "no delay such as references to and fro
-would entail." The difficulty of the situation was increased by the
-fact that Kitchener was practically without a staff.</p>
-<p>The reason which induced Cronje to remain in his laager, namely
-the expected arrival of help from outside, also determined
-Kitchener to attack it without delay. He confidently expected to
-carry it in less than four hours, but Cronje held out for nine
-days.</p>
-<p>Kitchener's plan might have been foreseen by any officer who had
-been present at manoeuvres: a preliminary bombardment of the
-laager, followed by a holding frontal attack, in combination with
-rolling-up flank attacks. The strength of Cronje's position was
-supposed to be the laager itself, whereas it was rather the river
-banks and tributary dongas which he had occupied.</p>
-<p>The frontal display was assigned to a portion of the VIth
-Division; the Mounted Infantry under Hannay supported by an
-infantry brigade were to work round upstream and fall upon Cronje's
-left flank; while the IXth Division attacked his right flank from
-the west.</p>
-<p>Kitchener, who had come on with Hannay in advance of the VIth
-Division, began to issue his orders before he had seen the
-commanding officers of the troops which were to carry them out.
-Hannay, who was at hand, was despatched to his place in the east
-from which he never returned. Kelly-Kenny's ambiguous and
-humiliating position; Kitchener's impatience and impetuosity; his
-lack of a staff to carry out his plan; his omission <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page175" id="page175"></a>{175}</span> to
-explain it to the divisional and brigade commanders; and his habit
-of "short-circuiting" orders to subordinates while their superior
-officers stood passively in the background, made unity of action
-impossible and February 18 a day of misunderstanding and
-ill-success. The battle was fought by a Board of Directors, who, in
-the unavoidable absence of their Chairman, were dominated by a
-headstrong General Manager, who was doubtful of their capacity to
-carry on the business.</p>
-<p>Kelly-Kenny and Colvile, whose Divisions came in during the
-night, had begun to put their troops in motion before Kitchener's
-plan was made known to them, and throughout the day the difficulty
-of co-ordinating the whole force to it was increased by the
-incorrect transmission or apprehension of oral orders. Kelly-Kenny
-proposed a preliminary investment of Cronje, but Kitchener would
-not consent to any postponement of his attack, for which no
-operation orders were issued. In a few hours, however, the
-soundness of Kelly-Kenny's judgment was shown; the attack became an
-investment, which was prolonged many days by the moral and physical
-exhaustion of the troops, who after forced marches by day and night
-on scanty rations were hustled without method into a costly
-battle.</p>
-<p>By 8 a.m. Kitchener was able to report to Head Quarters that
-Cronje was hemmed in. The cavalry had occupied the ground in rear
-of the laager, and he "thought that it must be a case of complete
-surrender." The troops were now set to the assault, and were
-quickened by an encouraging message from Lord Roberts. But they
-were almost immediately in trouble. Hannay had placed himself into
-position for the flank attack from the east, and his battery had
-already opened fire on the laager, when the guns themselves were
-shelled. A commando with two guns, under Steyn of Bethlehem, had
-arrived from Natal, and unobserved had seized a ridge between
-Stinkfontein and the Modder, which Hannay was about to cross; and
-although the Boer guns <span class="pagenum"><a name="page176" id=
-"page176"></a>{176}</span> were silenced and the commando compelled
-to retire, the diversion seriously disarranged the scheme of
-assault.</p>
-<p>Stephenson's Brigade of the VIth Division, when on its way to
-cross to the right bank at Paardeberg Drift under instructions from
-Kelly-Kenny, had been recalled by Kitchener, whose orders were so
-vaguely expressed, that while the Brigadier believed that he was to
-act in the frontal attack from the south with the other brigade of
-the Division, he was really intended by the Chief of the Staff to
-support Hannay's flank movement. He was now compelled to change
-front to meet Steyn's threat, and Hannay's attack was postponed.
-Stephenson was then ordered to resume his advance, but apparently
-still in ignorance that he was expected to act in co-operation with
-the mounted infantry, he so disposed his troops that he gave little
-support to Hannay, who early in the afternoon reported to Kitchener
-that he was too weak to advance with the flank attack. A peremptory
-message was returned, in which he was ordered "to rush the laager
-at all costs," even without Stephenson's support. Some of the words
-of the order seemed to reflect upon his determination, so he obeyed
-it literally and immediately. At the head of as many men as he
-could bring to him on the spot, he charged towards the laager, and
-when his horse was killed under him he marched on foot to meet his
-death.</p>
-<p>As soon as it was seen that Hannay had thrown himself away,
-Stephenson was ordered to renew the flank attack. With a portion of
-his troops and some mounted infantry, he crossed to the right bank
-at Vanderberg's Drift, and formed to the left. A small body of
-Hannay's force had won a position near the Boer entrenchments, and
-it is probable that Stephenson's assault would have succeeded but
-for a curious accident, which could not have been foreseen, and by
-which he was deprived of part of his firing line when it was most
-needed. The setting sun suddenly appeared from beneath a bank of
-clouds in the west, directly in line with the objective,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page177" id=
-"page177"></a>{177}</span> and the dazzle of the light blotted out
-the laager, at the same time illuminating the target on which the
-Boers were firing. A further advance was impracticable, and the
-troops, which had already fixed bayonets for the assault, were
-withdrawn when within 500 yards of the enemy's position. Thus the
-second attempt to get at the laager from the east failed, but
-Stephenson's action was not entirely without a result, as he was
-able to put his men into entrenchments, where they remained during
-the night.</p>
-<p>Meanwhile, Colvile was pushing upstream from the west. On that
-side the Boers had an advanced position in a big donga, which runs
-into the right bank, about two miles below the laager, and upon
-which a few companies of the Highland Brigade, having waded the
-river, had already made a gallant but unsuccessful attack. Colvile,
-under orders from Kitchener, placed himself astride the river,
-sending the Brigade under Smith-Dorrien across to the north bank,
-while the Highland Brigade acted on the left of the frontal attack;
-and when Gun Hill, which outflanked the donga, was occupied,
-Kitchener ordered an assault on the donga, to be carried out
-simultaneously with Hannay's attack on the left flank. The order,
-however, was not communicated to Smith-Dorrien on Gun Hill, and he
-was not aware of it until he saw some troops of his own Division,
-supported by a few companies sent across by Kitchener from the left
-bank, charging across the open. In a few minutes, the gradual
-retardation of the rush, and then its extinction under a heavy
-fire, showed that the attempt had failed. It is said that
-Smith-Dorrien had been so imperfectly made acquainted with
-Kitchener's plan, that he was under the impression that he had been
-sent to the north bank to prevent the Boers breaking out of the
-laager, and not to attack them upstream.</p>
-<p>The frontal attack was initiated by Kelly-Kenny with the 13th
-Brigade under C. Knox, the 18th Brigade having been detached to
-support Hannay's flank attack. <span class="pagenum"><a name=
-"page178" id="page178"></a>{178}</span> The main body of the Boers
-was north of the river, but strong detachments held the left-bank
-dongas. Colvile was dealing with a demonstration against Paardeberg
-Drift when an oral message from Kitchener reached him, which he
-interpreted as an order to go to Knox's assistance with his
-Division, which was thus withdrawn from the flank and lent to the
-frontal attack. He was doubtfully carrying out what he believed to
-be his instructions when an order reached him to send the 19th
-Brigade, under Smith-Dorrien, across the river. A few companies of
-his Highland Brigade succeeded in establishing themselves on the
-right bank, and Knox drove the enemy out of the left-bank dongas,
-but was forbidden by Kelly-Kenny to cross the river, as the enemy
-was too strongly posted. The frontal attack was spent, but the
-troops remained on their ground until the approach of night
-released them.</p>
-<p>Two miles S.E. of Vendutie Drift, a hill, to which the name of
-Kitchener's Kopje was afterwards given, rises out of the veld. In
-the tactics of the assault on the laager, it was not a position of
-much importance, but in the Paardeberg drama it was a striking
-scene. The detachment of infantry which Kelly-Kenny sent early in
-the day to occupy it had been withdrawn without his knowledge by
-some wandering staff officer, who thought he had found a better use
-for the little garrison, and replaced by a few mounted men. These,
-while watching the progress of the fight, and perhaps regretting
-that they were not taking a more active part in it, were suddenly
-called upon to defend themselves.</p>
-<p>De Wet, with two guns and 600 men, had arrived from Koffyfontein
-at the opportune moment of the crisis of the flank attacks. He soon
-carried the kopje, and when at 4.30 p.m. he opened fire, the shells
-which he pitched into the VIth Division baggage and artillery were
-the first intimation of his intervention received by the Head
-Quarter Staff, absorbed in their attack on the laager; and for the
-second time the troops were called away from <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page179" id="page179"></a>{179}</span> the work
-in hand, to deal with an unexpected attack from the rear, and the
-dwindling hope of carrying Cronje's position before nightfall
-passed away.</p>
-<p>If, on the British side at Paardeberg, the commanders were not
-at their best when acting <i>in partibus</i> beyond the personal
-control of Lord Roberts, on the other hand De Wet's release from
-immediate subordination to Cronje seemed to make him a more
-dangerous foe. His capture of the convoy at Waterval Drift on
-February 15 was followed in three days by a daring raid on a
-British army with a handful of men. It was an impudent and
-haphazard enterprise, which would hardly have been attempted if he
-had been in possession of fuller information, but it was justified
-by its success. De Wet had been reinforced at Koffyfontein, and if
-he had brought all the commandos at his disposal with him to
-Paardeberg Cronje would probably have been relieved. But he had not
-clearly discerned the strategy of Lord Roberts, whose presence at
-Jacobsdaal deceived him, and instead of striking with all his
-strength in one direction, he weakened his force by expeditions
-eastward towards Edenburg and westward towards Belmont.</p>
-<p>His appreciation of the tactical situation at Paardeberg, based
-on the rumours which drifted into Koffyfontein, was imperfect, and
-when he came within sight of the Modder, and saw the British Army
-before him, he must have regretted that he had not entirely
-abandoned the idea that the advance would be made by way of
-Koffyfontein. But the time and the place could not have been better
-arranged. The British Army was preoccupied with Cronje; and
-Kitchener's Kopje in De Wet's hands gave a strong flank protection
-to Steyn, and later on to De Beer, who, when driven out of his
-position north of Koodoos Drift by a resuscitated cavalry brigade
-under Gordon, crossed to the kopjes south of the river. Neither
-Steyn nor De Beer had been effectually checked, and they were
-hovering for a chance to swoop down.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page180" id=
-"page180"></a>{180}</span>
-<p>At nightfall the situation was as follows:&mdash;</p>
-<p>The laager was holding out, and the chief result of the day's
-work was a contraction of the line held by the Boers on the river;
-an attempt by Kelly-Kenny to recapture Kitchener's Kopje had
-failed; fully one quarter of the perimeter commanding Vendutie
-Drift was in the possession of the enemy; the troops were exhausted
-and the casualties exceeded 1,200.<a id="footnotetag36" name=
-"footnotetag36"></a><a href="#footnote36"><sup>36</sup></a></p>
-<p>It does not necessarily follow from the failure of a tactical
-scheme that it was unsuited to the occasion; but the failure of
-February 18 was due to one of three causes: to the defects of the
-scheme, to the mode of its execution, or to the Boer external
-attacks. It was not a scheme which either Kelly-Kenny or Colvile
-would have devised if left to himself, and it is very doubtful
-whether Kitchener had Lord Roberts' direct authority for it. But
-assuming that it offered a better chance of crippling the enemy at
-large than the alternative of an investment, it was so hastily
-devised and so clumsily pursued that it became hourly more
-difficult to carry through, until it was finally subverted by De
-Wet. Many of the commanding officers had as little knowledge of
-Kitchener's purpose as the pawns which are moved by the hands of
-the chess player.</p>
-<p>The conclusion seems to be that but for De Wet's intrusion the
-brute force of the investors might possibly have prevailed. But the
-final cause of the failure was Lord Roberts' error of judgment in
-putting Kitchener into virtual command of the Vendutie Drift force,
-thereby superseding senior officers of greater tactical ability.
-The complications arising out of brevet rank and local rank, grades
-peculiar to the British Army,<a id="footnotetag37" name=
-"footnotetag37"></a><a href="#footnote37"><sup>37</sup></a> were
-already sufficiently disturbing, and yet Kitchener was irregularly
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page181" id=
-"page181"></a>{181}</span> advanced by a few words in a private
-letter from Lord Roberts to Kelly-Kenny.</p>
-<p>In his report on the day's work to Lord Roberts at Jacobsdaal,
-Kitchener could only say that he hoped to do something more
-definite on the morrow. Lord Roberts at once ordered him to be
-reinforced, and being now convalescent set out for Paardeberg,
-where he arrived during the forenoon of February 19.</p>
-<p>It is significant that Lord Roberts did not renew the assault on
-the laager, and confined himself to operations against Kitchener's
-Kopje, thus reverting to the scheme of investment proposed by
-Kelly-Kenny on the previous day. The burghers evacuated the big
-donga during the night.</p>
-<p>Lord Roberts was, from motives of humanity as well as from lack
-of hospital accommodation, reluctant to inflict another loss of 8
-per cent, upon his troops. The inability to deal with a further
-accumulation of wounded was perhaps a justification of his
-decision, but his hesitancy to fight costly battles, which was
-characteristic of many general and field officers of undoubted
-personal courage, is not so easy to excuse. Even on the score of
-humanity, it is better to fight one decisive action in which the
-casualties amount to 20 per cent., than to obtain the same result
-by fighting three actions in each of which the casualties amount to
-8 per cent. The aggregate of human suffering caused to each side by
-the war would have been less if the struggle had been fought out
-more relentlessly, and without so much regard to the expenditure of
-life. There seems to have been a theory that a percentage of
-casualties which exceeded ten would demoralize the troops, although
-it had often been greatly exceeded in the battles of former
-campaigns. In some of the operation orders subsequently issued, the
-reservation, "if this be possible without undue loss,"
-appeared.</p>
-<p>The presence of De Wet on Kitchener's Kopje gave Cronje a moral
-support which was not of much use to <span class="pagenum"><a name=
-"page182" id="page182"></a>{182}</span> him. According to De Wet's
-account, he considered it a point of honour to remain with the
-women, children, and wagons in the laager, which every hour was
-growing more unfit for occupation.</p>
-<p>The ejectment of De Wet, to be followed by an advance on
-Bloemfontein by French's cavalry, was substituted by Lord Roberts
-for the assault on the laager, which was to be left to starve
-itself out. But the removal of De Wet from the kopje, which he had
-stolen from his opponents, was not an easy task, and for three
-nights and two days the Ajax of the Boers defied the lightnings
-which played upon the hill. On the 19th, a body of cavalry was
-brought round from the north, but was found unequal to the task.
-Towards evening an infantry brigade was thrown at the kopje, but
-after it had obtained some success, and had partially entrenched
-itself on the slopes, it was withdrawn by Lord Roberts. No action
-was taken on the following day, but on the 21st a cavalry attack
-forced De Wet out of his hold; but though squeezed like a sponge
-between the fingers, his commando was incompressible, and oozed
-away towards the east; no effective pursuit being possible, owing
-to the condition of the horses. Meanwhile the investment continued,
-but the scarcity of ammunition restrained the activity of the
-bombardment. An offer made by Lord Roberts to take away the piteous
-women and children, praying for peace in their time, was rejected
-by Cronje.</p>
-<p>The departure of De Wet, who picked up De Beer and Steyn on his
-way, enabled the gap in the circle of investment to be filled in,
-and the agony of the laager was drawn out for six days. Nothing but
-a strenuous attack from outside the circle could save it. De Wet
-indeed, who had trekked in the direction of Poplar Grove, and who
-had received reinforcements from Colesberg and Natal, which placed
-5,000 burghers under his orders, made an unsuccessful attempt to
-recover the kopje and retreated hastily, though a gallant remnant
-of eighty-seven burghers under Theunissen held on, and were not
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page183" id=
-"page183"></a>{183}</span> made prisoners until a brigade had been
-launched against them. An envoy was sent by De Wet into the laager
-to urge Cronje to break out. A half-hearted consent was given, but
-at the appointed time the river was in flood and the attempt was
-postponed.</p>
-<p>The exhaustion of the cavalry, and the report of the arrival of
-reinforcements at Poplar Grove, compelled Lord Roberts to abandon
-his plan of sending on French to Bloemfontein; but as he
-confidently looked to an early occupation of the Free State
-capital, he detached Kitchener to Naauwpoort with instructions to
-see to the opening up of the railway from the south, upon which the
-Army would depend for its supplies as soon as it reached
-Bloemfontein. He was, perhaps, glad of an excuse to employ his
-Chief of the Staff elsewhere for a time, for although the
-Divisional Commanders had loyally accepted the situation, he could
-not but feel that they had not been quite fairly treated, and that
-the Kitchener dictatorship had not been a success.</p>
-<p>The end came on February 27. Soon after sunrise on the
-anniversary of Majuba Hill the white flag was raised in the laager.
-During the last five days, Tucker, who with a portion of his
-Division had been ordered up from Jacobsdaal when the news of the
-investment reached Lord Roberts, closed gradually in on the west,
-and Stephenson on the east; and on the 26th the laager was severely
-bombarded by four newly arrived howitzers. The final stroke was
-delivered by two companies of the Royal Canadians, who,
-disregarding a false order to retire, held on, and by daybreak had
-entrenched themselves within 100 yards of the flanking trench of
-the laager; and though this feat was not the direct cause of the
-surrender, which had been decided on the previous evening, it was
-not the less meritorious. Cronje in vain endeavoured to persuade
-the burghers to postpone the surrender over Majuba Day. In a few
-hours 4,000 men, the majority of whom were Transvaalers, were under
-guard as prisoners of war, and Cronje was on his way <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page184" id="page184"></a>{184}</span> to St.
-Helena, there to commune with the Shade of Napoleon.</p>
-<p>It is said that when Kruger heard of the capitulation of
-Vendutie Drift he exclaimed, "The real war will now begin." To the
-British public, the surrender of Cronje, followed in a few hours by
-the relief of Ladysmith, seemed to prove that the real war had now
-ended.</p>
-<p>On the following day Lord Roberts transferred the bulk of the
-Army to a fresh camping ground at Osfontein, and remained there for
-seven days. The halt was rendered necessary by the exhaustion of
-the cavalry and artillery horses, on whom the greater stress of the
-advance had fallen, and whose rations had been docked even more
-than those of their riders; and it gave Lord Roberts an opportunity
-of drawing supplies for the advance from the Kimberley line, from
-which he was about to sever himself. The halt also enabled the Army
-of the Modder to pull itself together for a fresh effort, after a
-fortnight of harassing marches and weary investment work on stinted
-rations.</p>
-<p>What might almost be called a Select Committee of the House of
-Lords met at Kimberley on March 1. Lord Roberts rode over from
-Osfontein to consult Lord Methuen, and they were joined by Lord
-Kitchener, who returned from his brief visit of inspection to
-Naauwpoort and De Aar.</p>
-<p>Mafeking was in greater embarrassment than ever had come upon
-Kimberley, and there was trouble in the spacious area of Cape
-Colony lying west of the Capetown-Kimberley railway. Lord Roberts'
-hopes that a force raised locally in Kimberley might be available
-for the relief of Mafeking were disappointed; and after his return
-to Osfontein with Kitchener, he instructed Methuen to see to it
-with a Yeomanry brigade, which would be sent to him. To check the
-risings in Cape Colony, which for the time being were confined to
-the Prieska district, Kitchener had already sent out flying columns
-from De Aar.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page185" id=
-"page185"></a>{185}</span>
-<p>The tenacity and resolution of De Wet were never more
-conspicuous than during the disheartening days which followed his
-retirement from Kitchener's Kopje. Neither Cronje's surrender, nor
-the news of the relief of Ladysmith and of the British working
-steadily towards the Orange River bridges, nor the despondency of
-his own men, diverted him from his purpose of interposing between
-Lord Roberts and the Free State capital. President Steyn came over
-from Bloemfontein to stimulate the discouraged, and President
-Kruger was brought round from Joubert's Head Quarters in Natal,
-where he had been successful in persuading the burghers dismayed by
-the relief of Ladysmith to hold on to the Biggarsberg positions.
-After a conference with Steyn, he went on to Poplar Grove, arriving
-there in time to hear the opening shots of the battle of March
-7.</p>
-<a name="fig-poplar" id="fig-poplar"></a>
-<div class="figcenter" style="width:50%;"><a href=
-"images/image13.png"><img width="100%" src="images/image13.png"
-alt="Poplar Grove and Driefontein" /></a></div>
-<p>De Wet's force at Poplar Grove was at first sufficient for the
-occupation of a position on the left bank of the Modder only, but
-subsequent reinforcements brought it up to a number which was
-estimated by the British Intelligence not to exceed 14,000 and
-which was probably much less. The position was then prolonged
-across the river, the front being divided into two unequal portions
-by the Drift at Poplar Grove.</p>
-<p>To drive away De Wet, and to entangle him as Cronje <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page186" id="page186"></a>{186}</span> had been
-fatally entangled in the Drifts of the Modder River, and cut off
-his retreat to Bloemfontein, was the tactical scheme of Lord
-Roberts, who had twice as many men, and at least five times as many
-guns, as his opponent.</p>
-<p>In his method of communicating his plan to the officers
-concerned Lord Roberts made an innovation. Instead of issuing
-written Battle Orders he read a memorandum at a council of war, and
-afterwards circulated copies of it. Thus he was able to explain the
-situation and expound his plan in greater detail than is possible
-in the bald and sterilized paragraphs of Orders; but he omitted to
-give in it definite times at which certain movements were to be
-begun, or to be completed, and the oral instructions on these
-points given subsequently were not clearly understood.</p>
-<p>In brief, Lord Roberts' plan for Poplar Grove was as follows.
-When French's cavalry had made a wide circuit of seventeen miles
-south of the Modder, out of reach of De Wet's left flank, and had
-placed itself in rear of the Boer position, the VIth Division was
-to make a flank attack on the Boer left on the Seven Kopjes, and
-endeavour to roll it up towards the river, by way of Table
-Mountain. The enemy's centre was to be threatened by the VIIth
-Division along the line of the Modder, and his right on the north
-bank of the river by the IXth Division. With his great superiority
-in men and guns, Lord Roberts might reasonably expect to capture
-the whole Boer force, although he had no longer a Cronje but a De
-Wet to deal with.</p>
-<p>The day's operations began at 3 a.m., when the cavalry marched
-out of Osfontein; but soon the absence of precise staff
-arrangements gave trouble. The VIth Division, which was ordered to
-follow French, who it was understood would leave camp at 2 a.m.,
-was headed off by the cavalry, and had to be halted until he was
-clear of the infantry front. Neither Kelly-Kenny nor French seems
-to have mastered the scheme of attack. <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page187" id="page187"></a>{187}</span> At
-daylight, when the cavalry should have been well in rear of the
-Boer position, it was in fact not far from the VIth Division, about
-two miles south of the Boer left flank on Seven Kopjes and in full
-view of the enemy.</p>
-<p>As soon as the Boers perceived that an enveloping movement was
-in train, they withdrew towards the river, and French reported that
-he had turned their left flank, and was in pursuit, and that Seven
-Kopjes was open to Kelly-Kenny's advance. The part assigned to him
-in the morning's work was, however, the cutting off of the enemy's
-retreat, and he nullified the tactical scheme by showing himself
-prematurely.</p>
-<p>His next message to Lord Roberts, who was watching the battle
-from Le Gallais Kopje, announced that he was shelling the wagons in
-retreat, but that he could not get at them, as they were protected
-by flanking positions on neighbouring kopjes. It was now evident
-that French instead of cutting off the enemy was only pursuing him
-without much success.</p>
-<p>The VIth Division advanced with great deliberation. Kelly-Kenny
-reported to Head Quarters that Seven Kopjes had been reoccupied,
-and that a detached hill to the east seemed to be strongly held,
-which was not the impression given by French's message less than an
-hour previously. However, Kelly-Kenny occupied Seven Kopjes without
-opposition, and it is said that the infantry on the south bank were
-never in touch with the enemy. On the north bank the IXth Division
-slowly, but without much difficulty, pushed back the Boer right and
-captured a gun on Leeuw Kop, the solitary trophy of the day.</p>
-<p>Finally, the Divisions converged on Poplar Grove, but De Wet had
-shaken himself free without the loss of a single burgher taken
-prisoner, and with almost his full complement of wagons. He retired
-along the Modder towards Abraham's Kraal, keeping French at arm's
-length with his rearguards. He owed his escape to the <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page188" id="page188"></a>{188}</span> hesitancy
-of his opponents and his own mobility. The details of the fight
-show that some of the commanders waited upon one another like Lord
-Chatham and Sir Richard Strachan at Walcheren. Again the British
-cavalry was ineffective for pursuit.</p>
-<p>It was not known at the time that had Lord Roberts' scheme been
-successful in its entirety, a capture would have been made that
-might have brought the war to a sudden close. President Kruger was
-present during the greater part of the battle, and with bitter
-chagrin saw the burghers streaming past him in retreat.</p>
-<p>Whether the battle of Poplar Grove is to be considered a success
-or not depends upon the view which is taken of its actual and
-potential results. Lord Roberts did not capture another Boer army,
-as he fully expected to do, but he expelled it from a good
-position, and put it on the run; and the British Army was one stage
-nearer to Bloemfontein.</p>
-<p>Next day Kitchener was again, in his capacity of military
-foreman, sent away to superintend the carrying out of the
-arrangements he had already made for dealing with the disaffected
-Prieska district. His disengagement from Lord Roberts removed for
-the time a potential cause of failure, namely, the uncertainty, to
-which perhaps the escape of De Wet at Poplar Grove may be due,
-whether a battle was to be fought with the Commander-in-Chiefs
-rapier or with the Chief-of-the-Staff's bludgeon.</p>
-<p>De Wet, undaunted by his defeat and by the defection of a large
-number of his men, who disappeared after Poplar Grove, summoned a
-Krijgsraad, which authorized further resistance. A position
-threatening the left flank of the advance on Bloemfontein was taken
-up on the kopjes near Abraham's Kraal.</p>
-<p>Reinforcements of "Zarps" from the Transvaal, and of contingents
-under Delarey and P. de Wet, came in, and a force of about 5,000
-men was rallied, to make one more rearguard stand against Lord
-Roberts. In <span class="pagenum"><a name="page189" id=
-"page189"></a>{189}</span> the absence of C. de Wet, who had been
-called away to Bloemfontein, Delarey was in command.</p>
-<p>Lord Roberts' scheme for the advance on Bloemfontein was based
-on reports that the Boers would take up a strong position a few
-miles N.W. of the capital. He divided his force into three columns,
-each having a cavalry brigade attached to it, which, marching by
-different routes to a point south of the city, would cut the
-railway and turn the Boer flank. On March 10 the advance began,
-French being in command of the left column, which alone was
-seriously engaged during the march.</p>
-<p>The position taken up by the Boers at Abraham's Kraal at first
-only included a group of kopjes near the river, and another group
-at Damvallei, but eventually it was extended further south to
-Driefontein and Boschrand, in order to command another road to
-Bloemfontein.</p>
-<p>In accordance with Lord Roberts' instructions, and to the great
-disappointment of Delarey, who hoped to commit the left column to a
-frontal attack on the Abraham's Kraal and Damvallei Kopjes, which
-lay on the direct road to Baberspan, where it was due to bivouac
-that night, French avoided them, and changed direction towards
-Driefontein and Boschrand. Delarey, finding that he was not to be
-attacked on his right, reinforced Driefontein Hill, which, as it
-happened, had just been evacuated by De Wet, who had returned from
-Bloemfontein. The occupation of a detached spur of the Boschrand by
-a chance body of mounted infantry from the centre column, and a
-threatening movement of that column's cavalry brigade, had drawn
-him away from Driefontein on to the crest of the Boschrand.
-French's change of direction caused the march of his column to
-converge upon that of the centre column, and he was now crossing
-the front of a sinuous line of ten miles occupied by the enemy, and
-extending from the Boschrand, through Driefontein, Damvallei, and
-the <span class="pagenum"><a name="page190" id=
-"page190"></a>{190}</span> Abraham's Kraal Kopjes to Oertel's Drift
-on the Modder. The right of the line had already diverted French
-from his march on the appointed bivouac, which he now proposed to
-reach by turning the left.</p>
-<p>Suddenly Delarey opened fire from Driefontein on the cavalry,
-and the advance of the infantry had to be delayed while the
-situation was examined. The result of the reconnaissance determined
-Kelly-Kenny, who was in command of the left column's infantry, to
-attack the minor features of Delarey's position. He was unable to
-communicate with French, but the latter, as soon as he saw that
-Kelly-Kenny had achieved his object, ordered a turning movement by
-the cavalry.</p>
-<p>The cavalry of the centre column, which earlier in the day had
-been informed that French was not in need of its assistance,
-co-operated imperfectly. The afternoon was wearing away, and
-Kelly-Kenny, while waiting impatiently for the turning movement to
-take effect, received a message from Lord Roberts, instructing him
-to push on, as it was believed that the enemy's position was not
-held in great strength.</p>
-<p>Kelly-Kenny, for the first time able to fight a battle in his
-own way, now set himself to clear the enemy out of the Driefontein
-ridge. Reinforcements were ordered up to him from the centre
-column, but he won his victory without their aid, and after a
-struggle which lasted till sunset, Delarey was expelled from
-Driefontein. The Boers were still in occupation of the other
-positions on the line, but De Wet, although strongly urged by
-Delarey to hold on, found it advisable to withdraw from them. The
-burghers drifted away in the darkness, after the exhausted cavalry
-had made a formal attempt at pursuit.</p>
-<p>Two of the field guns which had been taken three months before
-at Colenso fought on the Boer side at the Battle of Driefontein,
-which though but a passing incident in the war, has been favoured
-by the German critics with their cordial approval. "Driefontein was
-fought substantially on the principles evolved by the <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page191" id="page191"></a>{191}</span>
-experiences of the campaign of 1870-1871." Kelly-Kenny's wilful and
-successful "use of deep formations, limited front, and of a wasting
-fire to obtain ascendancy before crushing the enemy with a
-simultaneous charge" is considered to uphold the correctness of the
-German theory of attack, which thirty years of new conditions of
-warfare have not modified.<a id="footnotetag38" name=
-"footnotetag38"></a><a href="#footnote38"><sup>38</sup></a></p>
-<p>Next day the advance on Bloemfontein was resumed, and French's
-column was merged in the centre column under Lord Roberts. The
-column under Tucker was marching on the Free State capital by way
-of Petrusburg, twenty miles to the south, as there was a
-possibility that some of the commandos in retreat from beyond the
-Orange might be approaching. De Wet did his best to organize a
-final stand N.W. of the city, but it was soon evident that Lord
-Roberts' movements could not be checked, and President Steyn fled
-to Kroonstad.</p>
-<p>The cavalry was pushed on, and on the afternoon of March 12 the
-railway was cut at Ferreira's Siding, a few miles south of
-Bloemfontein. Some resistance was offered at a ridge commanding the
-approach to the capital, but the defenders withdrew during the
-night. Soon after midnight, a small party of pioneers, under
-Hunter-Weston of the Royal Engineers, started to circle eastwards
-round the city, and having with much difficulty in the darkness
-found the railway on the north side, destroyed a culvert on the
-line and thereby entrapped a considerable amount of rolling
-stock.</p>
-<p>Next morning Lord Roberts came to the line, and at midday the
-municipality and leading citizens of Bloemfontein waited on him at
-Ferreira's Siding, and tendered the submission of the city. It was
-a notable episode in the military history of Great Britain, and
-there was a touch of a vanished mediaevalism in the ceremony.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page192" id=
-"page192"></a>{192}</span>
-<p>The march from Ramdam to Bloemfontein restored the British Army
-in the eyes of the nation. It was no longer a machine which
-constantly broke down whenever stress was laid upon it, but was
-working quietly and on the whole successfully. It had acquired
-confidence in itself, and the infantry especially had done well
-during the month's advance. Notwithstanding long marches, which in
-the end were equally fatiguing whether made by day or by night, on
-restricted rations in a trying climate, the proportion of men who
-fell out was small.</p>
-<p>The cavalry did not greatly distinguish itself. Two brilliant
-exploits, the rush from Klip Drift to Kimberley, and the heading
-off of Cronje at Vendutie Drift, practically exhausted it. Its
-reconnaissance work during the advance was poorly executed, and
-after each fight came the same report, that the horses were unable
-to pursue the retiring burghers. Overloading, indifferent march
-discipline and horsemastership, night marches without previously
-watering and feeding the horses, reduced Lord Roberts' mounted
-troops to but a fraction of their nominal strength; and raised a
-question whether French, whose military capacity was undeniable,
-might not be more usefully employed in infantry operations.</p>
-<p>There is more than a substratum of truth in the remark once made
-by a caustic foreign critic, that an Englishman talks more and
-knows less about horses and their management than any other
-man.</p>
-<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote34" name=
-"footnote34"></a><b>Footnote 34:</b><a href=
-"#footnotetag34">(return)</a>
-<p>In the Egyptian War of 1882 Arabi was similarly misled by Sir
-Garnet Wolseley, who making as if to land his Army near Aboukir
-Bay, suddenly took it into the Suez Canal, and threw it ashore at
-Ismailia.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote35" name=
-"footnote35"></a><b>Footnote 35:</b><a href=
-"#footnotetag35">(return)</a>
-<p>350,000 horses were used up during the campaign, in other words,
-the war strength of one cavalry regiment every other day. The
-removal of a cavalry officer from his command after the battle of
-Graspan, because he could not do with exhausted horses what was
-expected of him by an infantry officer, will perhaps account for a
-considerable portion of the wastage.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote36" name=
-"footnote36"></a><b>Footnote 36:</b><a href=
-"#footnotetag36">(return)</a>
-<p>It is stated on the authority of the United States Military
-attach&eacute; that Kitchener said next day that if he had known
-the power of the Mauser behind entrenchments, he would not have
-attempted to assault the laager.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote37" name=
-"footnote37"></a><b>Footnote 37:</b><a href=
-"#footnotetag37">(return)</a>
-<p>They were originally granted as a counterpoise to the
-irregularities of the system of promotion by purchase.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote38" name=
-"footnote38"></a><b>Footnote 38:</b><a href=
-"#footnotetag38">(return)</a>
-<p>See Colonel du Cane's translation of Vol. II. of the German
-Official Account, p. 52.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page193" id=
-"page193"></a>{193}</span>
-<h2><a name="chap9" id="chap9">CHAPTER IX</a></h2>
-<h3>Alarms and Excursions</h3>
-<p>The occupation of Bloemfontein by the British Army in March,
-1900, ushered in the second or <i>guerilla</i> period of the war.
-Hitherto the struggle had been mainly, though not entirely,
-maintained against considerable bodies of Boers, who though widely
-dispersed acted more or less under a common direction; but after
-the capture of the Free State capital, a system of partisan and
-irregular warfare was adopted by the enemy.</p>
-<p>The change was not suddenly effected. It was an instinctive,
-almost an imperceptible, development rendered necessary by
-circumstances. The reverses on the Modder, the failure at
-Ladysmith, the ill success which attended the attempts to raise the
-fiery cross in the northern districts of Cape Colony, indicated to
-the burghers the cause of the instability of their military
-machine. They discovered, in time, that its centre of gravity was
-too highly pitched and must be brought nearer the earth. For five
-months the war had been carried on under the orders of a federal
-syndicate composed of the two Presidents sitting with casual
-military assessors, scarcely one of whom was a strategist or
-capable of viewing the Boer cause synoptically. Cronje was gone
-into captivity; Joubert was suspected to be half-hearted; and
-Botha, who had begun so well in Natal, was a disappointment.</p>
-<p>The Boers recognized that the British strategy had been
-astonishingly successful, and that they could not hope to compete
-with it. But they believed, not without justification, that in
-minor tactics and the <span class="pagenum"><a name="page194" id=
-"page194"></a>{194}</span> smaller operations of war they were the
-equals of their enemy and in war-craft his superior. The power of a
-slender, well-led, and resolute force was shown at Nicholson's Nek,
-Waterval Drift, and elsewhere, and it began to dawn upon their
-lethargic minds that the individual efforts of handy commandos
-acting to a great extent independently offered them the best chance
-of resisting the invader.<a id="footnotetag39" name=
-"footnotetag39"></a><a href="#footnote39"><sup>39</sup></a> The new
-method was almost immediately put on trial and, with certain
-notable exceptions, continued throughout the war, which mainly by
-its use was prolonged for twenty-six months against an enemy daily
-increasing in numbers. Not that the Boers were not at first greatly
-discouraged by the victories on the Modder, which admitted Lord
-Roberts to Bloemfontein, and by the tranquillity which suddenly
-brooded upon the arena of war. Even the Prieska rebellion, from
-which so much was hoped owing to its proximity to the line of
-communication with Capetown, was dying away under the vigorous
-hands of Kitchener, who had been detached from Head Quarters to
-deal with it.</p>
-<p>Many of the burghers availed themselves of a proclamation issued
-by Lord Roberts on March 15, under which, after taking an oath of
-neutrality, they were allowed to return to their farms, and there
-remain during good behaviour. Others took furlough, with or without
-permission, or fled to Kroonstad. When Joubert remonstrated with De
-Wet for acquiescing in the exodus, the latter replied that he could
-not help it. The burghers were not accustomed to discipline and
-could not be coerced, but they would return with renewed courage by
-and by.</p>
-<p>The demoralization was, however, confined to the burghers who
-had been fighting on the Modder River. The commandos which had been
-opposed to Gatacre, Clements, and Brabant in the Cape Colony
-retired across <span class="pagenum"><a name="page195" id=
-"page195"></a>{195}</span> the Orange in good order under Olivier,
-Lemmer, and E.R. Grobler; and although encumbered by lengthy trains
-of ox-wagons, marched up the right bank of the Caledon along the
-Basuto Border, and established themselves with a strength of 6,000
-burghers on Lord Roberts' right flank near Ladybrand and Clocolan:
-a daring exploit which was justified by its success, as the left
-flank throughout the trek was exposed to a raid from Bloemfontein
-or Edenburg. A mounted force 1,800 strong under French was indeed
-sent eastward to show the flag, detach the waverers, and if
-possible, intercept the retreat; but the information at Head
-Quarters was imperfect and the strength of the commandos was
-greatly underestimated. It was assumed that they had been subject
-to the disintegration which obliterated the Modder River commandos;
-but a small reconnoitring column, detached under Pilcher by French
-from Thabanchu, found itself in presence of a force which
-outnumbered it thirty times, and was recalled.</p>
-<p>The presence of a considerable body of the enemy organized on
-the flank, the necessity of accumulating a large stock of supplies
-and stores, and a serious epidemic of fever among the troops,
-postponed the advance on the Transvaal many weeks beyond the end of
-March, when Lord Roberts had hoped to set out for the north. The
-apparent pacification of the country and the alacrity displayed by
-the burghers in submitting to the generous conditions of the
-proclamation of neutrality, had encouraged him in the belief that
-prompt action before the enemy had time to take breath would
-finally crush the dwindling opposition; but he soon became aware
-that it was but a lull in the storm, of which the mutterings were
-almost immediately renewed.</p>
-<p>Pole-Carew, who shortly after the occupation was sent south with
-a brigade to establish touch with Gatacre and Clements and open up
-the railway, heard of the Boer movement along the Basuto Border and
-at once <span class="pagenum"><a name="page196" id=
-"page196"></a>{196}</span> reported it to Lord Roberts, whom he
-rejoined at Bloemfontein on March 17. Before the end of the month
-the line was cleared and trains were passing to and fro between
-Capetown and the capital of the Free State, which had lately been
-renamed the Orange River Colony. From that time forward the enemy
-succeeded on one occasion only, and then but for a few hours, in
-cutting the Springfontein-Bloemfontein railway; and the hazardous
-advance along the Modder River, which involved the possibility of
-the Army being left in the air at Bloemfontein, was fully
-justified.</p>
-<p>The Boers, who were supposed to be hypnotized, soon began to
-show signs of returning animation. At a Krijgsraad which assembled
-at Kroonstad on March 17, and at which Steyn and Kruger were
-present, plans for the renewal of the struggle were discussed and
-measures for enforcing discipline on the burghers were taken. Steyn
-professed to have information that a Russian advance on India was
-imminent. The idea of resistance <i>en masse</i> was abandoned, and
-a policy of flying columns unencumbered with wagons and acting
-aggressively against the British lines of communication was
-adopted. It was hoped that a timely demonstration would lure the
-enemy out of his hold, and that a little encouragement would revive
-the Prieska rebellion. The determination to continue hostilities in
-which even Joubert, who after the fall of Ladysmith joined the
-commandos operating in the Free State, acquiesced, was a proof of
-the courage and the steady patriotism of the Boer leaders, and the
-events of the next two years justified their resolution. Joubert,
-who had attended the Krijgsraad in feeble health, died a few days
-after its adjournment, and L. Botha was appointed to the thankless
-office of Commandant-General.</p>
-<p>The only direction from which Bloemfontein appeared to be
-vulnerable was the north, which also was the direction in which
-Lord Roberts hoped soon to be leading his troops. At a distance of
-a day's march from the <span class="pagenum"><a name="page197" id=
-"page197"></a>{197}</span> capital, the railway to Pretoria crosses
-the Modder at Glen, and again the river which had recently figured
-so prominently in the campaign came upon the stage of war, and not
-as a last appearance. The railway bridge had been destroyed by the
-Boers, who thus excluded themselves from action on the left bank. A
-considerable force was sent out from Bloemfontein to hold the
-position while the bridge was being rebuilt, and to keep at arm's
-length the enemy skirmishing on the right bank. It was soon found
-necessary to hold a more advanced post at Karee Siding, north of
-Glen, and a force which seems out of proportion to the resistance
-which, according to the ideas then prevalent at Head Quarters,
-might be expected, was assembled at Glen on March 28. The VIIth
-Division under Tucker was brought up from Bloemfontein, and French
-was recalled from Thabanchu to lead the cavalry. With him, in
-command of the mounted infantry, was Le Gallais, a remarkable
-association of two soldiers whose names, though in different
-languages, were identical. Bloemfontein was denuded of cavalry, but
-the combined strength of the two cavalry brigades was much under
-1,000. The force under Tucker and French, which judging from its
-strength Lord Roberts seems to have detailed rather as the advanced
-guard of an immediate march on Pretoria than as the minimum with
-which the opposition could be safely encountered, numbered about
-9,000 men with thirty guns. At Karee Siding were 3,500 burghers
-under T. Smuts, who had come up to carry out the Krijgsraad idea of
-enticing the British out of Bloemfontein.</p>
-<p>Next day a battle of the usual type was fought. The mounted
-troops worked upon the flanks of the enemy, who was posted on a
-line of kopjes on each side of the railway, while the infantry
-attacked frontally with success and drove back the burghers, who
-retired in good order towards Brandfort unmolested by the cavalry,
-which was as before too much exhausted for effective <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page198" id="page198"></a>{198}</span> pursuit.
-Thus, at a cost of less than 200 casualties, Lord Roberts made good
-the first stage on the road to the north.</p>
-<p>Soon after his entry into Bloemfontein Lord Roberts sent out a
-small mounted column under Amphlett to Sannah's Post, where the
-water which supplied the capital was drawn from the Modder River.
-This had been cut off by the enemy, and the Army was dependent upon
-the disused and tainted wells within the city. The Boer commandos,
-which under the command of Olivier had retreated from the Cape
-Colony to Ladybrand and Clocolan, now began to threaten Broadwood,
-who, when French was sent to Glen, succeeded to the command of the
-mounted column. Broadwood was compelled to retire from Thabanchu on
-March 30. Early on the following morning he bivouacked at the
-Waterworks, whither his convoy under Pilcher had already preceded
-him; and simultaneously the IXth Division under Colvile and a
-brigade of Mounted Infantry under Martyr were ordered out from
-Bloemfontein to help him in.</p>
-<p>Meanwhile De Wet at Brandfort was watching his opportunity of
-working at the task assigned to him under the Krijgsraad scheme, of
-attacking the British lines of communication. His anticipation that
-the burghers would return with renewed vigour from the furlough
-which they had granted to themselves proved to be accurate. While
-Smuts was standing up to Tucker and French at Karee Siding, 1,600
-men with five field guns under C. De Wet, whose second in command
-was his brother Piet, were circling to the Waterworks. The initial
-direction of the march was N.E., in order to conceal the real
-objective of the raid even from his own men. His intention was to
-seize Amphlett at the Waterworks, and there lie in wait for
-Broadwood's convoy. Before reaching his destination he handed over
-two-thirds of his force to his brother, who early in the morning
-took up a position on the right bank <span class="pagenum"><a name=
-"page199" id="page199"></a>{199}</span> of the Modder east and
-north of the Waterworks, while he himself went to the Wagon Drift
-on the Korn Spruit, where the bed is deep enough to afford perfect
-concealment to a large body of men in ambush. He occupied it at 4
-a.m. on March 31.</p>
-<p>A farmer, brought in by a patrol from Amphlett's post, reported
-to the officer in command of the connecting post at Boesman's Kop
-that the enemy had been seen; but the officer did not pay much
-attention to the report, though he communicated it to the
-connecting post at Springfield in the direction of Bloemfontein; at
-the same time sending back the patrol to Amphlett at the Waterworks
-with a reinforcement of his own men. The patrol was fired on while
-attempting to return to the Waterworks, and retired to Boesman's
-Kop.</p>
-<a name="fig-sannahs" id="fig-sannahs"></a>
-<div class="figcenter" style="width:50%;"><a href=
-"images/image14.png"><img width="100%" src="images/image14.png"
-alt="Sannah's Post" /></a></div>
-<p>Broadwood, whose column had already been in bivouac near the
-Waterworks for some hours with the convoy which had preceded it,
-was at sunrise shelled by Piet De Wet, of whose presence on the
-right bank of the Modder he had only a few minutes previously been
-made aware, and in the belief that his front was clear, he at once
-determined to take up a position on Boesman's Kop.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page200" id=
-"page200"></a>{200}</span>
-<p>Rarely had two leaders about to meet in battle been more
-strangely deceived by the Fog of War. C. De Wet, although cut off
-from his guns and the main body of his command by an unfordable
-river, was confident in his lurking place in the Korn Spruit that
-he could easily repeat his exploit of February 15 and annex another
-British convoy; yet he suddenly discovered that he had to deal not
-with a mere escort, but with a strong mounted force and two
-batteries of Horse Artillery, and he was equal to the occasion.</p>
-<p>Broadwood, equally confident that the whole force of the enemy
-was on his flank on the right bank of the Modder, marched
-heedlessly into the ambush which De Wet had laid for him in the
-Korn Spruit, on the direct line between two adjacent British posts,
-and which neither of them had discovered, although the usual
-patrols had been sent out. When the patrol from the Waterworks to
-Boesman's Kop did not return in due course on the morning of March
-31, its absence seems to have caused no anxiety to Amphlett.</p>
-<p>Broadwood, groping in the Fog of War, believed that the force on
-his flank was Olivier's, who had driven him out of Thabanchu, and
-who now, as he thought, had overtaken him. The possibility of a
-raid from the north did not occur to him. He pressed on towards
-Boesman's Kop and carelessly approached the sunken and treacherous
-cutting through which the Korn Spruit trickles to the Modder,
-between banks of even height which almost up to the brink make no
-perceptible break in the surface of the veld. His ground scouts and
-advanced guard were Cape carts full of refugees followed by the
-wagons of his convoy. Next in succession came U Battery of Horse
-Artillery with its mounted escort of colonial troops.</p>
-<p>Preceded by the Cape carts, which De Wet, in order to disarm
-suspicion, allowed to cross to the left bank, the column lumbered
-down the slope into the spruit and was quickly sucked into the
-trap. In silence broken <span class="pagenum"><a name="page201" id=
-"page201"></a>{201}</span> only by the rumble of the wheels and the
-Kaffir cries of the drivers, and unseen by the gunners close behind
-the leading wagons were seized by quiet, determined burghers and
-placed under guard. The approach to the drift was soon blocked, and
-in the heart of the entanglement was U Battery. When it reached the
-incline, men sprang up out of the spruit and lined the bank, and
-without firing a shot made prisoners of the gunners, who, jammed by
-the transport, could neither fight nor retire, and were easily
-taken from their teams and guns, and conducted by their captors
-down to the bed of the spruit. Only the Major commanding the
-Battery and the Serjeant-Major got away. Q Battery and its mounted
-escort narrowly escaped being drawn into the ambush, but were
-warned in time and galloped back to the railway station
-buildings.</p>
-<p>Up to that moment not a shot had been fired, but as Q Battery
-wheeled the Boers lining the bank opened upon it, and in the
-scrimmage another gun was lost.</p>
-<p>The derelict and riderless teams of U Battery at the spruit were
-shot down by the Boers to prevent the escape of the guns, but not
-before one gallant team had wrenched its gun out of the enemy's
-grasp and had broken away. The Boers were now in possession of five
-guns of U Battery and of one gun of Q Battery. The spruit was
-shelled with little effect by Q Battery, which unlimbered near the
-station buildings. Only a plunging fire could have harmed the enemy
-hidden in it.</p>
-<p>It is hard to say whether De Wet or Broadwood was in the greater
-danger at 9 a.m. on March 31. The former had, it is true, just
-obtained a dramatic and most encouraging success. He laid a trap
-for a convoy and found himself in action with a force numerically
-equal to his own. He had made many prisoners, and almost without
-striking a blow had captured not only Broadwood's convoy but also
-six of Broadwood's guns. His force, however, was divided. The
-portion of it <span class="pagenum"><a name="page202" id=
-"page202"></a>{202}</span> under his own command could not be
-effectively supported by his brother's command, and was confined in
-a spruit out of which he could not move, and which was commanded in
-rear by higher ground.</p>
-<p>Broadwood had been outwitted by De Wet and very roughly handled.
-With a crippled and maimed force he was lying between the jaws of a
-vice which might at any moment close and crush him. The loss of the
-convoy was, from a tactical point of view, not an unmixed evil, as
-he gained thereby greater freedom of action, but the loss of half
-his guns was for the time being irremediable. The careless and
-haphazard scouting from the Waterworks and Boesman's Kop, in which
-he complacently trusted, had lured him on.<a id="footnotetag40"
-name="footnotetag40"></a><a href="#footnote40"><sup>40</sup></a>
-When it was reported to him that the spruit was in possession of
-the enemy, he could scarcely believe it possible. Whether he or the
-officers in command of the artillery and the mounted escort were
-responsible for the extraordinary omission to send out ground
-scouts in advance of the column is not known, but the guns and
-wagons would not have been lost had this simple and customary
-precaution been taken.</p>
-<p>Broadwood, who had no information that Colvile and Martyr were
-approaching from the west, and that the latter was actually at
-Boesman's Kop, acted in the belief that he would have to deal with
-the situation unaided. He ordered the mounted infantry under
-Alderson to hold P. De Wet's force on the Modder, while the
-cavalry, supported by fire from Q Battery at the station buildings
-and working south and west of the Korn Spruit Drift, endeavoured to
-turn C. De Wet's precarious position. Neither of these operations
-was successful. Alderson could barely hold his own; the turning
-movement, although aided by a few companies of Martyr's force, was
-frustrated by small parties of <span class="pagenum"><a name=
-"page203" id="page203"></a>{203}</span> marksmen whom C. De Wet had
-posted on the ridge in rear; and Q Battery was losing heavily.</p>
-<p>At 10 a.m. Broadwood ordered a general retirement. No attempt
-seems to have been made to communicate with him by heliograph, and
-he was still unaware that Martyr had been on Boesman's Kop for
-three hours, and was actually assisting in the turning movement;
-and that Colvile was hurrying forward to the sound of the firing
-with the IXth Division. As the battle had begun in the Fog of War,
-so also therein did it end.</p>
-<p>With the utmost difficulty Q Battery, which had been fighting in
-the open until only Phipps-Hornby and less than a dozen gunners
-were left to work five guns, was withdrawn. The enemy's fire was so
-heavy that the teams could not be brought up to the guns, four of
-which were run back by hand to the station buildings, which
-afforded some cover. The fifth gun was abandoned, but by the heroic
-efforts of Phipps-Hornby and a handful of gunners and volunteers
-from the mounted infantry escort, four guns were brought away.</p>
-<p>Meanwhile Alderson was fighting a rearguard action against P. De
-Wet, to cover the retirement of the guns, and when this was
-effected, he followed them, closely pursued as far as the Korn
-Spruit by P. De Wet's burghers, who crossed the Modder at the
-Waterworks. Before noon the remains of Broadwood's column were
-formed up near Boesman's Kop. He had lost seven<a id=
-"footnotetag41" name="footnotetag41"></a><a href=
-"#footnote41"><sup>41</sup></a> guns, seventy-three wagons and
-nearly a third of his strength in killed, wounded, and
-prisoners.</p>
-<p>Broadwood's withdrawal gave C. De Wet the opportunity which he
-could hardly have dared hope would ever be offered to him. He was
-reinforced by his brother, and at once drew his spoils out of the
-spruit and easily got away with them to the right bank of the
-Modder, where at noon he met the advanced guard of <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page204" id="page204"></a>{204}</span> Olivier's
-force. Although he was in presence not only of Broadwood's force,
-but also almost in touch with a division of infantry and a brigade
-of mounted infantry his movements were so little impeded that he
-was able to bring two of the captured guns back to the left bank,
-and to bring them into action against a detachment of mounted
-infantry which was holding Waterval Drift.</p>
-<p>Martyr reached Boesman's Kop at 7 a.m., where in the course of
-the morning he was joined by Colvile, whose Division was also on
-its way to Waterval Drift. Broadwood, who was about two miles away,
-was ordered by Colvile to come to him, but he refused to leave his
-command so long as there was any chance of recovering the guns. He
-technically committed a breach of discipline, but Lord Roberts
-subsequently approved of his action. He requested Colvile to
-advance against the spruit, but the message was not delivered; and
-Colvile said that it would not have modified his dispositions. He
-had already refused to listen to the obvious suggestion made by his
-staff that he should go to Broadwood, who after waiting for two
-hours in the expectation that something would be done by the
-infantry division, gave up hope and retired towards
-Springfield.</p>
-<p>Colvile's appreciation of the situation was that it would have
-been useless to pursue De Wet's mounted troops with infantry. He
-therefore carried out the letter of his instructions from Lord
-Roberts, and, seeing that Broadwood's column was apparently safe,
-went on towards Waterval Drift: whither also Martyr had already
-sent the greater portion of the mounted infantry. Thus the brothers
-De Wet gained not only an actual, but also a moral success of the
-greatest importance to their cause, and took away the prizes they
-had so unexpectedly won, under the eyes of a strong British force
-helplessly watching the commandos trailing away across the
-veld.</p>
-<p>Waterval Drift had been indicated to Colvile and <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page205" id="page205"></a>{205}</span> Martyr as
-their objective by Lord Roberts, and they considered that it was
-their duty to make for it. They did not, however, recognize that
-instructions must be read in the light of the information at the
-disposal of the superior officer at the moment of issue, and they
-adhered to them pedantically.<a id="footnotetag42" name=
-"footnotetag42"></a><a href="#footnote42"><sup>42</sup></a> Lord
-Roberts could not have anticipated Broadwood's plight when he
-ordered Colvile and Martyr to Waterval Drift.</p>
-<p>Meanwhile, the news of the disaster had reached Bloemfontein.
-French's attenuated cavalry brigade, still panting with the fatigue
-of the Karee Siding affair, was ordered out, and Colvile was
-instructed to endeavour to make a turning movement, and with
-French's assistance to act on the Boer line of retreat. By sunset
-Colvile, after some opposition, was in possession of the Waterval
-Drift; the enemy having despatched the prisoners, the loot, and the
-captured guns to the north, was still in occupation of the
-Waterworks; Broadwood's mangled column was on its way back to
-Bloemfontein; and French was expected to appear upon the stage at
-sunrise next morning. The approach of the cavalry, which had picked
-up Broadwood at Springfield, was delayed by a report, which proved
-to be unfounded, that a body of the enemy was on the right flank
-marching on Bloemfontein, and French did not come into touch with
-Colvile until nearly midday on April 1. After reconnoitring the
-Waterworks and the Boer positions on the right bank of the Modder,
-Colvile came to the conclusion that he was not strong enough to
-attack them. Next day all the troops were ordered by Lord Roberts
-to fall back upon Bloemfontein.</p>
-<p>Broadwood was not wholly, not even mainly, responsible for the
-Sannah's Post disaster. He was unable <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page206" id="page206"></a>{206}</span> to
-retrace that unlucky first false step when, rashly assuming that
-the ground had been properly reconnoitred and patrolled, he pushed
-into the angle between the Modder and its tributary; and there can
-be no excuse for the negligence which tossed the convoy and the
-guns into the abyss. But he received neither support nor
-information until it was too late. No serious attempt was made to
-let him know that a strong force was on its way from Bloemfontein.
-Martyr failed to report himself, and Colvile was content to be an
-interested spectator of the closing scene of the drama. Each leader
-assumed that the moves of the Kriegspiel had been correctly played
-and that there was nothing more to be done.</p>
-<p>After the occupation of Bloemfontein, the columns operating
-south of the Orange River were drawn into the Free State. Clements
-crossed at Norval's Pont, and Gatacre at Bethulie on March 15;
-Brabant, who commanded the colonial troops of the latter's
-Division, having reached Aliwal North four days previously.
-Clements' force advanced in a peaceful procession through the
-districts west of the railway, meeting with no opposition, and
-receiving what, under the circumstances, was almost a welcome from
-the inhabitants. Early in April he joined Lord Roberts at
-Bloemfontein.</p>
-<p>Not so with Gatacre and Brabant, who were soon seriously
-involved. Lord Roberts' view of the situation, which although
-mistaken was not unwarranted, was that the majority of the Boers
-were inclined to submit, and would do so but for the malign
-influence of a small belligerent party; and in order to encourage
-the waverers to assert themselves, and to give protection to them
-when they took the oath of neutrality and returned to their homes,
-he sent out flying columns in various directions to register names,
-take over arms, and make known the conditions on which surrenders
-would be accepted.</p>
-<p>The story of the Thabanchu column has already been <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page207" id="page207"></a>{207}</span> told.
-Other columns were detached from Gatacre's and Brabant's commands,
-and Smithfield, Wepener, and Dewetsdorp, and smaller towns were
-occupied. Lord Roberts' orders for the occupation of Dewetsdorp
-were conditional on Gatacre's having enough troops for the purpose
-at his disposal. So little was it expected that the columns would
-meet with serious resistance that they were unaccompanied by guns,
-and all Gatacre's artillery was sent to Bloemfontein.</p>
-<p>De Wet, a soldier possessed of more power of initiative than
-many of his opponents, took "upon himself the responsibility of
-varying the instructions" he had received from the Kroonstad
-Krijgsraad. The chance of snapping up isolated garrisons allured
-him from the less brilliant but more practically useful work of
-hacking at the railway upon which Lord Roberts depended for his
-communications, and his wonderful and unexpected success at
-Sannah's Post encouraged him to persevere. He became aware that
-small columns were scouring the country, administering lightly
-taken oaths and giving receipts for arms handed in by burghers who
-protested that they were "sick of the war"; and he determined to
-deal promptly with these ominous signs.</p>
-<p>Between Sannah's Post and Reddersburg he in one day persuaded
-more than a hundred sworn burghers to break their oaths of
-neutrality and join him. Whether the energy and resource which he
-displayed would not have been more profitably expended in a
-vigorous effort to shrivel up the line between Bloemfontein and the
-Orange is a matter for speculation. Kruger watched his proceedings
-with misgiving, and proposed that he should retire northwards, as
-soon as he had cut the railway, or even without doing so.</p>
-<p>Korn Spruit opened Lord Roberts' eyes. He became alarmed for the
-safety of the railway, and ordered Gatacre to evacuate Dewetsdorp
-and to concentrate the weak pacificatory columns wandering
-helplessly <span class="pagenum"><a name="page208" id=
-"page208"></a>{208}</span> over the country. The column of 550 men
-without guns, sent by Gatacre to garrison Dewetsdorp, had not been
-there many hours before it was ordered to retire on Reddersburg,
-and at daybreak on April 2 was again on the march, and soon De Wet
-was in touch with it. On the following morning he was close to it.
-In his own account of the affair he says that there was a sort of a
-race, which was won by the British column, for a ridge near
-Reddersburg, named Mostert's Hoek. He had with him 2,000 men with
-four guns, but an invitation to surrender was promptly declined by
-the defenders, who all that day were beaten on by bullet and by
-shell. After sunset the last drop of water was served out. Next
-morning De Wet rushed the western spur of the ridge, which now
-became untenable, and at 9 a.m. on April 4 the column surrendered
-and was swept into his net.</p>
-<p>Another hour of resistance would probably have saved it. On the
-previous evening Gatacre and Lord Roberts received the news that it
-was in trouble, and a relieving force was hurriedly collected at
-Bethany from Springfontein and Bloemfontein, and sent out under
-Gatacre's command. His scouts heard the last shot fired, and the
-silence which followed seemed to show that all was over. When
-reports of the surrender reached him near Reddersburg, and before
-De Wet, only six miles away, had cleared out of Mostert's Hoek, he
-abandoned the attempt; although some of his advanced mounted troops
-did indeed come into touch with the rearguard of De Wet hurrying
-away with his prisoners.</p>
-<p>Next day he was recalled to Bloemfontein by Lord Roberts, who
-held him responsible for the disaster. He had occupied Dewetsdorp,
-an exposed and isolated position, with an inadequate force,
-although expressly instructed to leave it alone if he had not
-sufficient troops for the purpose. Mostert's Hoek supervening on
-Stormberg ended the career of a most gallant, energetic,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page209" id=
-"page209"></a>{209}</span> and enthusiastic soldier. <i>Bic peccare
-in bello non licet</i>. He was removed from his command and sent
-back to England.</p>
-<p>After leaving Sannah's Post, De Wet seems to have recognized
-that he was not exactly carrying out the Krijgsraad policy, for he
-informed Steyn that he was going to Dewetsdorp to "collect the
-burghers and to obtain dynamite for our operations" against the
-railway between Bloemfontein and Bethany. Next day he heard that
-the British had occupied Dewetsdorp, and soon after that the
-garrison was retiring on Reddersburg, and the attack on the line,
-which perhaps he never seriously intended to make, was indefinitely
-postponed.</p>
-<p>For as soon as he had disposed of the prisoners of Mostert's
-Hoek, he cast his eye round the horizon and descried two other
-isolated garrisons, at Smithfield and Wepener. Against the former
-he sent one of his lieutenants, who, however, found the little town
-evacuated, while he himself made for Wepener, and longing to teach
-a lesson to Brabant's loyal colonials, sat down before it on April
-9 with ten guns and 6,000 men. In the course of the northward
-advance from the Orange it had been occupied by a detachment from
-Brabant's force, which was increased by subsequent reinforcements
-to a strength of nearly 1,900 men under Dalgety, of whom little
-more than 100 were regular troops, with seven guns. The town itself
-was not held, but a circular position outside it with a perimeter
-of seven miles was taken up on the right bank of the Caledon.</p>
-<p>De Wet maintained the siege for sixteen days. The failure of an
-attempt by night on April 10 to storm a post on the southern
-section of the perimeter deterred the Boers, as at Ladysmith after
-the abortive attack on Caesar's Camp two months before, from
-further offensive action; but the position was vigorously bombarded
-from time to time, and an almost unceasing hail of Mauser bullets
-fell upon it. De Wet did his best <span class="pagenum"><a name=
-"page210" id="page210"></a>{210}</span> to add Wepener to the
-scalps of Sannah's Post and Mostert's Hoek; but when two columns
-detailed for the relief by Lord Roberts under the command of
-Brabant and Hart, who had come round from Natal with his brigade,
-reached Wepener from Aliwal North on April 25, they found that the
-siege had been raised, and that De Wet had trekked away to the
-north.</p>
-<p>At Waterval Drift, Kitchener's Kopje, Sannah's Post, and
-Mostert's Hoek, De Wet showed himself to be a daring and successful
-partisan leader. He was instinctively drawn towards helpless or
-unwary detachments. He played his own hand without reference to his
-partner's, and seemed to be incapable of co-operating in a general
-scheme of strategy. Perhaps he had not much confidence in those who
-directed the campaign of defence. He did not act in accordance with
-the instructions he had received from the Krijgsraad; but who could
-find fault with a leader who was ever sending in batches of
-prisoners of war? Many critics say that he was wanting in the true
-military instinct and spirit, and that he lost the greatest
-opportunity in his career when he allowed himself to be attracted
-away from the British lines of communication by the feeble,
-peregrinating columns. He says that his reason, or it may be his
-excuse, for not raiding vigorously towards the south, instead of
-sitting down before Wepener, was the fear lest the Transvaalers
-should think that the Free Staters had abandoned them to their
-fate. If his action is open to criticism when judged by the
-generally accepted principles of warfare, it should be remembered
-that these are framed from experience only, and are subject to
-accommodation. By all the rules of the game, the Boers must have
-been beaten in six months: yet when, after the occupation of
-Bloemfontein, the cause seemed to be hopeless, the De Wet revival
-prolonged the contest for two years and more. It is almost certain
-that, but for De Wet, the war would have been brought to a close in
-1900. One man only, and he was <span class="pagenum"><a name=
-"page211" id="page211"></a>{211}</span> Napoleon, added a greater
-sum to the British National Debt.</p>
-<p>The fortune which proverbially attends the bold never deserted
-him. To the Boer forces at large he was what the pirate adventurers
-and buccaneers of the Elizabethan period, and the privateersmen of
-the eighteenth century, were to the National Navy. He sailed where
-he would under letters of marque from the Presidents. He is the
-most interesting and the most original personage of the South
-African War: and when its history is mellowed by time, and its epic
-is written by some Walter Scott or Homer of the future, De Wet will
-be the central figure, and his exploits will be sung.</p>
-<p>Five years later, having thrown aside his sword, he became a
-controller of ploughshares as Minister of Agriculture in the
-Government of the Orange River Colony, and the father-in-law of a
-British officer who had fought against him.</p>
-<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote39" name=
-"footnote39"></a><b>Footnote 39:</b><a href=
-"#footnotetag39">(return)</a>
-<p>At the Krijgsraad at Kroonstad Delarey maintained that the
-commandos were too large and must be subdivided.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote40" name=
-"footnote40"></a><b>Footnote 40:</b><a href=
-"#footnotetag40">(return)</a>
-<p>The scouting of the British Army in South Africa has been
-compared to a housemaid searching for an escape of gas with a
-lighted candle.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote41" name=
-"footnote41"></a><b>Footnote 41:</b><a href=
-"#footnotetag41">(return)</a>
-<p>A The gun of U Battery, which had broken away at the Drift, was
-recovered.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote42" name=
-"footnote42"></a><b>Footnote 42:</b><a href=
-"#footnotetag42">(return)</a>
-<p>In the official handbook on <i>Combined Training</i> issued
-after the war, it was expressly laid down that "officers, must take
-upon themselves, whenever it may be necessary, the responsibility
-of departing from or varying the orders they may have received."
-This responsibility had been laid by Napoleon upon his officers
-nearly a century before. Seep. 251.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page212" id=
-"page212"></a>{212}</span>
-<h2><a name="chap10" id="chap10">CHAPTER X</a></h2>
-<h3>Baden-Powell and the Siege of Mafeking</h3>
-<p>Mafeking is a dull, unimportant town in the veld with a history
-that attracted the Boers to it.</p>
-<p>They considered that, like Natal and Kimberley, it did not
-rightfully belong to Great Britain. They were a community of
-trekking and centrifugal atoms, especially in the direction of
-territories in the possession of native tribes, and their own
-country, though sparsely inhabited, was not spacious enough for
-them. The bucolic ambition of the Boer, which is to dwell in a
-house from which he cannot see the smoke of his nearest neighbour's
-chimney, can be satisfied in a flat country only when the house
-stands in the midst of a farm many thousand <i>morgen</i> in
-extent.</p>
-<p>For a generation or two before the war, the Transvaalers had
-been encroaching upon Bechuanaland. A Baralong chief named Montsioa
-was dispossessed of Mafeking and could obtain no redress from the
-British Government, which at that time was in an intermediate frame
-of mind, and did not necessarily act on the assumption that in
-every dispute between white man and native the latter was in the
-right.</p>
-<p>Thus encouraged, the Transvaalers annexed Bechuanaland in 1868,
-but three years later it was taken away from them under the Keate
-award, in an arbitration to determine the respective rights of Boer
-and native over the debateable territory.</p>
-<p>After the war of 1881, the Transvaalers supposed that the
-British Government would be unlikely to assert itself, and two
-little impudent republics of <span class="pagenum"><a name=
-"page213" id="page213"></a>{213}</span> adventurers were set up in
-territory which the award had declared to be within the British
-sphere of influence. Montsioa fought for his rights, but the
-British Government lay torpid for some time. Finally it was goaded
-into action by a proclamation issued by Kruger annexing the
-territory to the Transvaal. He soon found it advisable to cancel
-the proclamation, and in 1885 the Republics of Goshen at Mafeking
-and of Stellaland at Vryburg were effaced by an expedition led by
-Sir Charles Warren. Bechuanaland was again annexed by proclamation,
-but on this occasion to the British Empire.</p>
-<p>The resentment of the Transvaalers against Mafeking, which
-originated in the conviction that they had been wrongfully deprived
-of it, was aggravated by the fact that it was the starting place of
-the Jameson Raid.</p>
-<p>On October 13 nearly 7,000 burghers, with six guns, under P.
-Cronje, sat down before it. He expected to have little difficulty
-in recovering it. Appearances were encouraging; the town was open
-and defenceless, and he was probably aware that it was held by a
-weak garrison. Why the British should have occupied such an
-out-of-the-way place as part of their plan of campaign, he could
-not understand, but there it was, inviting attack.</p>
-<p>Of the half-hearted measures taken by the War and Colonial
-Offices in 1899, when a war with the Transvaal seemed to be more
-probable every day, one of the most intelligent was the
-commissioning of R. Baden-Powell, who had formerly served in
-Bechuanaland and had recently commanded the 5th Dragoon Guards, to
-"organize the defence of the Bechuanaland and Rhodesia frontiers."
-It would neither involve a great expenditure of money, nor be
-likely to wound the susceptibilities of the Transvaalers, who might
-be provoked by more vigorous and minatory measures: and thus little
-harm would be done if after all it were found to be an unnecessary
-precaution.</p>
-<p>For these reasons it commended itself to Pall Mall, <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page214" id="page214"></a>{214}</span> but its
-chief merit was that it sent to South Africa a capable, versatile
-and zealous soldier, whose mind did not run in the grooves. Yet if
-Baden-Powell had been sent to Kimberley instead of to Mafeking,
-Kimberley would probably have fallen&mdash;after an outbreak of
-civil war within the lines between him and Rhodes. It would have
-been impossible to insulate the personal electricity with which
-each of them was so highly charged, and short circuiting must have
-occurred.</p>
-<p>The object of the contemplated display upon the Bechuanaland and
-Rhodesia frontiers was twofold. They ran through the indefinite
-border belt which separated black from white territory, and
-activity on them would not only be witnessed by the tribes and
-exert an impressive influence on the native mind, but would also
-draw away the Boers and prevent them concentrating their forces.
-The central position of Mafeking on the Western line, and the
-stores and supplies which had been collected in the town, attracted
-Baden-Powell to it. It was singularly ill-adapted to hold
-defensively against an active enemy.</p>
-<p>In spite of recruiting difficulties raised by the
-Facing-both-Ways Ministry at Capetown, which in a less tolerant and
-philosophic age would at once have been swept away by a storm of
-indignation, he raised two irregular regiments: the Rhodesian
-Regiment, which was sent into Rhodesia under Plumer, and the
-Protectorate Regiment under Hore.</p>
-<p>The Cape Ministry did what it could to prevent the Protectorate
-Regiment going to Mafeking, and the corps was in fact mustered
-outside the Cape Colony, and only entered the town a few days
-before war was declared. As at Kimberley, so also at Mafeking, the
-Schreiner sect set itself placidly to thwart the gentle and
-tentative early efforts of the British Government to deal with the
-situation.</p>
-<p>When P. Cronje appeared before Mafeking, Baden-Powell had a
-force of less than 1,200 men, none of whom <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page215" id="page215"></a>{215}</span> were
-regular soldiers and less than half of whom were efficiently armed,
-with which to sustain the siege of an open town by 7,000 Boers. He
-had also four small field guns of obsolete pattern, to which were
-added later on a home-made howitzer and an ancient man-of-war's
-smoothbore, which had left the foundry during the Napoleonic wars.
-In its youth it had probably fought the French through a porthole,
-and now having in the interval trekked across the South African
-veld into the possession of a native tribe, was discovered in a
-Baralong kraal, restored to active service, and, mounted on a Dutch
-wagon, aided in the defence of a little settlement 400 miles away
-from the sound of the sea.</p>
-<p>In one respect only Baden-Powell had the advantage over Kekewich
-at Kimberley. His burden was not increased by discord within the
-lines. The civilians behaved with exemplary composure and put
-themselves unreservedly into his hands.</p>
-<p>An archaic but effective simplicity characterized the methods of
-the defence. Baden-Powell eked out his slender stock of men and
-instruments with tricks and devices that might have been employed
-at the siege of Troy, but which none the less deceived and
-confounded the slow-witted besiegers, whom he scandalized with
-gibes and taunting messages. When asked to surrender to avoid
-further bloodshed, he replied that the only blood hitherto shed was
-the blood of a chicken in a compound; and on another occasion he
-reproved Cronje for inactivity. Many of the incidents read like
-passages from the Iliad. The besiegers were allured into determined
-attacks upon dummy trenches; deceived by bogus orders shouted for
-their information through a megaphone; alarmed by the sudden
-appearance of cavalry within the lines, for did they not see the
-glint of lances? The lances were weapons that had been forged in
-the railway workshops, and carried round, as it were in a parade
-before the footlights <span class="pagenum"><a name="page216" id=
-"page216"></a>{216}</span> by a body of supers making a gallant
-show upon the stage.</p>
-<p>What should be done in a besieged place with such an
-embarrassing asset as ten tons of dynamite? Buller would have
-handed them over to his second in command for disposal, and then if
-any accident occurred would have disclaimed responsibility for it.
-Gatacre would have taken the chances, but would not have hesitated
-to pitch his tent if necessary beside them. Colvile would have
-searched his orders for instructions. Baden-Powell, not being able
-to rid himself of the explosive by firing it, arranged that it
-should be fired by the enemy. He loaded it on railway trucks, which
-he propelled a few miles out of the town and then abandoned. There
-was no Laocoon to warn the Boers, and they rushed at what they
-thought was an armoured train in trouble. In the skirmish the
-dynamite exploded, and although no one was hurt the enemy was
-terribly scared, and the resisting powers of the garrison virtually
-augmented.</p>
-<p>Baden-Powell thoroughly understood the Boer temperament. Many
-generations' isolation from the progressive European world had
-rendered it peculiarly liable to be ensnared by simple expedients.
-It was not wanting in "slimness," but it was the "slimness" or
-cunning of a primitive race, and was easily gulled by wiles that
-might have been employed against a tribe of Red Indians.
-Baden-Powell alone of all the British leaders was aware of this,
-and he owed much of his success to the knowledge. With but one man
-to defend each ten yards of his perimeter of seven miles he
-hypnotized Cronje, a dull man bewildered by a resourceful. His
-versatility instantly found a way out of each difficulty that beset
-him. Before he sent out a party detailed for a night attack that
-might easily go astray, he bethought himself of the device by which
-a ship is often guided into her haven, and hung up two lamps in the
-town as leading lights across the veld.</p>
-<p>Cronje soon found that Mafeking was not an easy <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page217" id="page217"></a>{217}</span> prey.
-Although in all probability he might at any time have overwhelmed
-it by sheer weight of numbers, he refrained from making the
-attempt. It hit out so vigorously and was believed to be so well
-protected by mines that he requisitioned a big gun from Pretoria,
-which was mounted south of the town and came into action on October
-23. With a weapon throwing a shell more than three times heavier
-than all the shells that could be fired in salvo by the artillery
-of the defence, there was no doubt in his mind that the place must
-fall before the end of the month.</p>
-<p>The arrival of the gun quickened the attack for a time. The
-native location S.W. of the town was made the object of a feint on
-October 25 to be immediately followed by a real attack elsewhere,
-but the Baralongs, who had been armed, resisted so stoutly that the
-operation failed. By the beginning of November the Boers had been
-cleared out of a newly made advanced trench on the east side; and
-Cannon Kopje on the south, the possession of which by them would
-have made a considerable section of the defence works and perhaps
-even the town itself untenable, was held under a converging fire of
-artillery by fifty troopers of the British South African Police
-against a thousand Boers.</p>
-<p>Five weeks of Baden-Powell were enough for Cronje, who on
-November 19 trekked away to the south, leaving Snyman and 3,000
-burghers to continue the siege. His self-esteem had been wounded
-because the walls had not immediately fallen to the sound of the
-big gun, and by Baden-Powell's refusal to take a serious view of
-the situation in the frequent communications that passed between
-them. It may be said that Cronje was "chaffed" away from Mafeking;
-the gibes put him out of conceit with himself, and instead of
-stimulating him into activity only made him more dull-spirited than
-he was by nature. He had none of the instinctive military genius
-which showed itself so notably in most of his colleagues, who,
-having turned their ploughshares into swords at a <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page218" id="page218"></a>{218}</span> moment's
-notice, were generally more than a match for the professional
-soldiers against whom they were pitted. He had the misfortune of
-meeting almost the only British leader then in South Africa capable
-of instinctively assessing him on the spot at his true valuation;
-and like a timid poker-player with a good hand, he allowed himself
-to be bluffed by the flourishes of his opponent. He held good
-cards, but he feebly threw them down. At Magersfontein he played
-his hand with skill, but lost the deciding game at Paardeberg.</p>
-<p>Baden-Powell was too zealous a soldier to conform to the schism
-that the operations of war were akin to athletics or sport.
-Externally his predilections were for the drama. He was a competent
-actor and manager, and he rejoiced in Mafeking as in a stage
-play.</p>
-<p>Many of his devices were as unsubstantial as stage scenery; the
-besiegers were the villains of the piece who would meet with their
-deserts before the curtain fell; there was comic by-play in his
-ways of beguiling the tedium and the lassitude of the siege, in the
-bantering messages he sent out to the besiegers, and now and then
-even in his garrison orders. The little garrison was permeated by
-the exosmose action of his cheery optimism and humour during seven
-weary months of waiting; and while it might seem to some that he
-was treating the serious situation with unbecoming levity, he
-wisely kept the tragedy of it, of which he was fully conscious, in
-the background.</p>
-<p>His methods were so far successful that in a few weeks he had
-driven away two-thirds of the force originally opposed to him, and
-had firmly gripped the place. The enemy's superiority in artillery
-was neutralized by the construction of underground shelters and
-warrens in which the women and children took refuge during the
-daytime, leaving an apparently deserted town to be bombarded. Thus
-Baden-Powell was relieved from the moral pressure which a large
-number of casualties among them would have caused; and the garrison
-suffered but <span class="pagenum"><a name="page219" id=
-"page219"></a>{219}</span> little in the redoubts and trenches.
-Supplies were plentiful and the water supply secure.</p>
-<p>What Cronje had failed to do, Snyman could hardly be expected to
-accomplish with a considerably reduced force, and the attack became
-more faint-hearted. He carried out the Cronje policy of
-comfortable, lethargic squatting, doubting not that the place must
-fall into his hands sooner or later. Friends and relations tripped
-over from Johannesburg to admire and encourage his brave burghers
-at their posts, and some were even allowed as a treat to fire a
-shot at the Khakis.</p>
-<p>No serious operation occurred until the end of the year. On the
-morrow of Christmas Day, Baden-Powell made an unsuccessful attempt
-to carry a fort on Game Tree Hill, which commanded the approach to
-the town from the north. He was unaware of its strength, and the
-casualties amounted to nearly one-fifth of the force engaged, a
-loss which he could ill afford; but early in January he compelled
-the big gun, which could neither face the shells of his little
-battery of 7-pounders nor the rifles of his marksmen, to withdraw
-to a more distant emplacement east of the town. Towards the end of
-the month an encouraging message was received from Lord Roberts at
-Capetown.</p>
-<p>The Boer line of circumvallation was in plan an irregular
-hexagon, of which the north-east face was pushed inwards and a
-re-entrant angle formed at the Brickfields; where a fort was built
-nearer to the town than any other post of the attack, and the
-operations during February and March were mainly a struggle for the
-possession of it. After several weeks of sapping and counter
-sapping, the Boers, though supported by the fire of the big gun in
-its new emplacement, were expelled from the Brickfields on March
-23.</p>
-<p>April was marked by the final withdrawal of the big gun, which,
-after a heavy bombardment on the 11th, was sent away to Pretoria;
-and by the appearance of young Eloff, fresh from the capital, with
-instructions to do <span class="pagenum"><a name="page220" id=
-"page220"></a>{220}</span> what he could to stimulate the attack,
-for once in a way, into real activity. More than a fortnight
-elapsed before he succeeded. Snyman gave him little encouragement,
-but could not oppose a mandate from Kruger, Eloff's
-grandfather.</p>
-<p>The Molopo River, after passing south of the town, runs through
-the only weak place in the defence, the native location, which
-during the first few days of the siege had been attacked without
-result by Cronje. Westward of it the steep banks of the river
-afford a covered way of access to the thickly clustered huts lying
-within the perimeter of the defence, which Eloff saw might be
-turned if he got a footing among them.</p>
-<p>Early in the morning of May 12 a heavy fire was opened upon the
-town from the east, but was soon discontinued; and then an alarm
-came from the S.W. It was Eloff, who, with 300 burghers, had
-wriggled up the river bed through the outposts and had set fire to
-the native huts: a signal for the reinforcements which Snyman had
-promised in writing. It also warned the garrison. The natives were
-too much terrified to offer resistance, and Eloff, leaving the
-greater part of his force to hold the location, advanced upon the
-town. The police building in the open was surrounded and the
-detachment holding it taken prisoners. A pause was now made to
-allow the promised reinforcements to come up.</p>
-<p>Eloff's gallant thrust gave the garrison the opportunity for
-which it had long been hoping. The troops of the western section of
-the defence closed in and were manoeuvred by Baden-Powell through
-the telephone. The door by which Eloff came in was shut, not only
-to a retreat but also to the reinforcements which timidly knocked
-at it; the burghers holding the location were overpowered, and
-Eloff's party was penned up in the police building with its
-prisoners, whose condition was suddenly dramatically reversed.
-Eloff, seeing that Snyman had failed him, surrendered to the men he
-had <span class="pagenum"><a name="page221" id=
-"page221"></a>{221}</span> captured a few hours before, within the
-walls of the prison in which he had confined them.</p>
-<p>The ordeal of Mafeking soon came to an end. On May 15 it was
-reported that the relief column under Mahon, who on that day joined
-Plumer at Massibi on the Molopo twenty miles from Mafeking, was
-approaching. The combined forces, though vigorously opposed by
-Delarey, whom L. Botha had sent when the news of the advance
-reached him, entered the town on May 17 and ended a siege of 213
-days.</p>
-<p>Mafeking, the last and most instructive of the sieges, proved
-that there was hardly any disparity of numbers or preponderance of
-available military resources that could not be neutralized by good
-leadership opposed to bad. Baden-Powell had not only detained a
-considerable Boer force on the edge of the storm, but with a body
-of irregular troops had beaten the men of Magersfontein, Colenso,
-and Spion Kop.</p>
-<p>The relief of Mafeking, however, did not vitally affect the
-general situation. The capture of the town during Lord Robert's
-advance would no doubt have caused annoyance and trouble, but if
-necessary it could have been retaken without much difficulty. Nor
-would its fall have greatly benefited the enemy, who probably would
-have been tempted by the success to hold an unsound position and
-detain in it commandos urgently required elsewhere.</p>
-<p>Kimberley, Mafeking, and Wepener, more than the operations at
-large, demonstrated the anomalous character of the war. Hitherto,
-invaders had been accustomed to besiege the invaded, in South
-Africa the invaded besieged the invaders. Such a reversal of the
-order of things military had rarely before occurred. The sieges of
-the Peninsular War are not an exception, for Wellington was from a
-military, though not from a political point of view, as much an
-invader as the lieutenants of Napoleon.</p>
-<p>Baden-Powell is a suppressed personality whose merit
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page222" id=
-"page222"></a>{222}</span> was not fully recognized. With scarcely
-an exception, no individual leader was more self-reliant, or
-handled imperfect tools with greater skill. For seven months he
-kept the flag flying over the lonely Baralong kraal in the veld.
-His unconventional even theatrical methods were not to the taste of
-his serious superiors, who underestimated his success. His only
-reward was the Companionship of the Bath, which was also bestowed
-upon the militia colonels, most of whom, from no fault or no want
-of zeal on their part, but from lack of opportunity, never met the
-enemy except in some casual paltry skirmish.</p>
-<p>The junction of the two columns advancing to the relief of
-Mafeking&mdash;Plumer's from the north and Mahon's from the
-south&mdash;was effected at the right moment, for it is doubtful
-whether either of them acting alone would have been able to deal
-with Delarey.</p>
-<p>Plumer with the Rhodesian Regiment had been trekking here and
-there and skirmishing with the enemy for seven months. On the eve
-of the war he was sent by Baden-Powell to Tuli, a village in
-Rhodesia not far from the right bank of the Limpopo, which is the
-northern boundary of the Transvaal. His instructions were "to
-defend the border, to attract the enemy away towards the north, and
-then in due time to co-operate with the British force," which it
-was expected would soon be invading the Transvaal from the south,
-and also to overawe the doubtful native tribes between Tuli and
-Mafeking, a distance of 500 miles; and he had under his immediate
-command at Tuli one irregular regiment 500 strong.</p>
-<p>He remained for some weeks seeing to the drifts, which were now
-in his possession and now in that of the enemy. A Boer raid into
-Rhodesia on November 2 forced the outlying detachments back upon
-Tuli, which was seriously threatened by some commandos under F.A.
-Grobler of Marico. The Government of Pretoria, however, growing
-anxious at the presence of British <span class="pagenum"><a name=
-"page223" id="page223"></a>{223}</span> troops elsewhere, vetoed a
-promising enterprise and recalled him. The raid of November 2 was
-answered a few weeks later by Plumer, who, finding the drifts
-unoccupied, reconnoitred thirty miles towards the south. Nearly six
-months elapsed before another British soldier set foot in the
-Transvaal. A subsequent reconnaissance again found no trace of the
-enemy on the left bank of the Limpopo, and showed that it was
-unnecessary for him to remain on the river. He had the advantage of
-being cut off from communication with superior officers ignorant of
-local conditions, and was able to act freely upon his own
-responsibility.</p>
-<p>He soon heard news which clearly indicated the way he should go.
-The railway from Buluwayo to Mafeking was held as far as possible
-towards the south by patrols of police under Nicholson, and the
-Rhodesian Volunteers under Holdsworth were also on the line. In the
-gap between the railhead and Mafeking, a Boer commando, said to
-have been detached from Mafeking by Cronje, was at Sekwani on the
-N.W. border of the Transvaal and within striking distance of the
-Western line. It was face to face with the border tribes and was
-soon in trouble with them. Although they were not allowed to attack
-Sekwani independently, they were permitted to co-operate as
-non-combatants in an attack which Holdsworth was about to make on
-it, but only on the condition that they did not cross the Transvaal
-border. This was a refinement of policy which they could hardly be
-expected to understand, and they precipitated Holdsworth's action
-by attacking the Boer laager, which lay but a mile or two across
-the border, on their own account, and the operation had therefore
-to be abandoned. To avenge this native attack, in which several
-burghers had been killed, reinforcements were brought over by the
-Boers from the Pietersburg line, and Holdsworth's position at
-Mochudi on the Western line, whither he had retired after the
-Sekwani failure, was endangered.</p>
-<p>This was the news which reached Plumer at the end <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page224" id="page224"></a>{224}</span> of the
-year. His original instructions were obsolescent and he readily
-adapted himself to the altered situation. He saw that it was more
-important to clear the railway north of Mafeking than to remain
-where he was on the chance of a Boer invasion of Rhodesia, of which
-his reconnaissances south of the Limpopo saw no sign. The nearest
-station on the Western line was Palapye, and on December 27 he set
-out on his midsummer march of 170 miles to it. Within a fortnight,
-his little force of irregulars, which three months before had been
-sent out into the South African wilderness to perform duties that
-might have engrossed a division, passed away from Tuli beyond the
-Limpopo on to the visible stage of war near Mochudi.</p>
-<p>In the middle of January, 1900, he reached Gaberones. On his
-left flank Sekwani was still occupied by the enemy, though in
-reduced numbers; in front of him the Boers were not only strongly
-posted on the railway at Crocodile Pools, but able to draw upon
-Mafeking for reinforcements, by the help of which they successfully
-resisted an attack on February 11. Plumer's force, though augmented
-by detachments he had picked up on the line, was unequal to the
-task of advancing along it. He therefore decided to diverge from
-the railway and advance by way of Kanya, a native town lying twenty
-miles west of the line.</p>
-<p>On March 6 he reached Lobatsi, where he was forty-five miles
-from Mafeking. He found, however, that it was an awkward place to
-defend and soon quitted it, as Baden-Powell seemed to be in no
-immediate need, and was in fact averse to Plumer's small force
-throwing itself upon the besiegers. With the greater part of his
-command, the rest being sent back to hold the railway at Crocodile
-Pools, he withdrew to the base which he had established at Kanya;
-afterwards advancing to Sefetili, thirty miles from Mafeking, where
-he awaited the approach of Mahon's relieving column from the south.
-Baden-Powell, rejoicing in his siege, was not anxious <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page225" id="page225"></a>{225}</span> that the
-game which he was playing so well should be brought to a premature
-conclusion, and was more afraid for Plumer than for himself.</p>
-<p>Plumer filled in his two months at Kanya and Sefetili by
-occasional raids in the direction of Mafeking and by an expedition
-towards Zeerust. The column in the south, of whose movements many
-false reports reached him from time to time, seemed to be tarrying
-by the way, and it was not until May 12 that he received a message
-from Lord Roberts that it was nearing its destination.</p>
-<p>For some weeks after his entry into Bloemfontein, Lord Roberts
-was unable to arrange for the direct relief of Mafeking by a column
-specially detailed for the purpose. He had originally intended that
-this should be done by Methuen, but subsequently ordered him to
-operate in the Free State on the left flank of the advance on the
-Transvaal. He hoped to apply his favourite method of an automatic
-relief, brought about by external pressure elsewhere. At the end of
-April, however, when it had become an urgent matter, he ordered
-Hunter, who had recently arrived at Kimberley from Natal, to send
-out a mounted force under Mahon, following it himself with the rest
-of the Xth Division.</p>
-<p>He left Kimberley on May 3, and on the following day Mahon set
-out from Barkly West on his 230 miles' march to Mafeking. Mahon
-advanced wide of the railway up the Hart's River, which joins the
-Vaal at Barkly West, his right flank being covered by Hunter, who
-kept close to the Vaal. Mahon met with no serious resistance until
-he had covered 200 miles of his journey, when he found a force
-which had been sent down from Mafeking across his path, and which
-diverted him to Massibi; where he joined Plumer on May 15.</p>
-<p>The advance of the main and less mobile body under Hunter was
-aided by demonstrations made by Methuen from Boshof. With three
-columns claiming their attention the bewildered Boers were unable
-to do more than <span class="pagenum"><a name="page226" id=
-"page226"></a>{226}</span> offer a stout but ineffectual resistance
-to Hunter on the Vaal on May 5. Two days later he occupied Fourteen
-Streams and restored the railway communication across the Vaal,
-having during his halt taken possession of Christiana, a village in
-the Transvaal a few miles up the river. It was now no longer
-necessary for him to hurry after Mahon, and his advance northwards
-was made at leisure. Early in June he occupied Lichtenburg, where
-Mahon rejoined him.</p>
-<p>Mafeking as well as Kimberley were now in the hands of Lord
-Roberts, but the Western line joining them to Capetown was not yet
-secure. The districts of Cape Colony west of De Aar and Hopetown
-were remote and backward, and sparsely inhabited by discontented
-and unprosperous Dutch farmers. Nearly a year before, while the
-Cape Government was placidly blinking under the shadow of Table
-Mountain and only taking action that thwarted the attempts of the
-Imperial Government to prepare for war, and like the unjust steward
-intriguing for reception in Boer houses if the Empire should fail,
-arms had been sent into these districts by the Boers of the
-Republics, and courses of instruction in the use of them were
-actually being held.</p>
-<p>To stir up the discontented and set the veld on fire, a party of
-Transvaalers swooped down from Vryburg before the war was many days
-old. Rebel commandos were raised, and most of the districts lying
-between the Orange and the Molopo were involved, some of them being
-annexed by proclamation to the Republics. For several months the
-trouble was confined to the right bank of the Orange, but during
-February it passed over to the left bank.</p>
-<p>In pursuance of his policy of striking swiftly and strongly at
-the centres of population, and not from neglect, Lord Roberts had
-left the rebellious and disaffected districts more or less to
-themselves, in the belief that indirect action would retrieve the
-situation and that his advance would take the heart out of the
-rebels <span class="pagenum"><a name="page227" id=
-"page227"></a>{227}</span> and deter them from crossing the river;
-and for some months there had been no British troops south of the
-Orange except at De Aar and Hopetown.</p>
-<p>Now, however, the railway, which until his arrival at
-Bloemfontein was his only line of communication, was threatened.
-The Prieska and Herbert districts on the left bank of the Orange,
-and even the remote Gordonia district lying in the angle between
-the Orange and the Molopo, which was too far away to be included in
-the first batch of proclamations, were annexed by the Boers. There
-was much danger of the advancing army not only finding its
-communications broken, but also a formidable rebellion springing up
-behind it.</p>
-<p>The troops on the line were insufficient to deal with the
-situation, and Lord Roberts was obliged to draw upon Clements, who
-was acting in the other disturbed districts of the Cape Colony
-south of the Free State. Lord Kitchener, who chanced to be passing
-through De Aar on his way back from Naauwpoort, where he had been
-sent to look after the central advance, made arrangements for the
-Prieska operations and rejoined Lord Roberts at Kimberley; but his
-presence was soon required again at De Aar. Three columns had
-started westward from the line, but the centre column, which was
-composed of the troops withdrawn from Clement's command, met with
-opposition in the Prieska district, and was compelled to retire on
-March 6. When the news reached Lord Roberts he sent Kitchener to
-take charge of the operations, which from that time was successful.
-The rebellion south of the Orange was suppressed; the leaders
-disappeared; and by the end of the month Kitchener was free to
-return to Head Quarters at Bloemfontein.</p>
-<p>Not many weeks, however, elapsed before there was trouble in
-Griqualand, a considerable portion of which was in the hands of
-rebel descendants of the burghers of the Great Trek, who were
-joined by rebels expelled from the districts south of the Orange
-during the late <span class="pagenum"><a name="page228" id=
-"page228"></a>{228}</span> operations. A column had been sent out
-against them from Kimberley by Methuen in March, but Lord Roberts
-disapproved of the expedition and it was recalled. At the request
-of Sir A. Milner, who from the first had been of the opinion that
-the British hold on South Africa was in greater danger from
-rebellion in the Colony than from the commandos of the two
-Republics, Lord Roberts consented to send a force into Griqualand
-under the command of Warren, who was brought round from Natal, and
-returned to the country through which he had worked in the
-Bechuanaland Expedition of 1885. In the middle of May, Warren set
-out from Belmont. The only regular troops in his column were a few
-Irish mounted infantry. Douglas was easily taken on May 21, and on
-his way to Campbell he was compelled by supply and transport
-difficulties to halt at Faber's Put, where at dawn on May 30 he was
-surprised by the rebels, who, knowing that they had not to face
-regular troops, anticipated an easy victory. They succeeded in
-almost surrounding the camp before the alarm was given, but after a
-brief struggle were driven off.</p>
-<p>Early in June Campbell and Griquatown were occupied; and on the
-24th Kuruman, which had been in the hands of the rebels for nearly
-six months, was recovered. Near Khies, lower down the Orange, the
-force which had been left to watch the banks after the suppression
-of the Prieska rebellion, some of the fugitives from which had
-returned to the river under the leadership of a Jew, attacked and
-carried their laager. This and the Faber's Put affair were the only
-serious fights in the clearing of the Colony north of the
-Orange.</p>
-<p>Thus by the end of June Lord Roberts had secured the railway
-from Mafeking and Kimberley to the south.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page229" id=
-"page229"></a>{229}</span>
-<h2><a name="chap11" id="chap11">CHAPTER XI</a></h2>
-<h3>Bloemfontein to Pretoria</h3>
-<p><a href="#fig-so-transvaal">Map, p. 260.</a></p>
-<p>The agile mind of Lord Roberts rather than the heavy hand of his
-Chief of the Staff is discernible in the method of the advance on
-the Transvaal.</p>
-<p>There were two courses open to the British Army. It might have
-deliberately pulverized and extinguished each atom of opposition
-within reach in the Free State, and have taken no step to the front
-until the rear and the flanks were absolutely and finally clear of
-the enemy; or it might have advanced boldly towards the Transvaal
-with the ordinary precautions for the protection of the lines of
-communication and of the flanks.</p>
-<p>Lord Roberts adopted the latter course. He had tried it with
-success in the Afghan War twenty years before, when he marched even
-more "in the air" from Kabul to Kandahar. The tedious process of
-"steam-rollering" the Free State was not to his taste, nor would
-the expectant British public at home have understood it; and it
-would have been severely criticized by the military experts. It
-would have concentrated before him north of the Vaal all the Boer
-forces which could not be crushed on the spot, and have left the
-resources of the Transvaal for some time untouched: free
-communication with the outer world by way of the neutral port of
-Lorenzo Marques, the treasury of the Johannesburg gold mines upon
-which the enemy could draw, and the railway and mining workshops in
-which munitions of war could be manufactured.</p>
-<p>Lord Roberts therefore determined upon a swift <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page230" id="page230"></a>{230}</span> advance
-from Bloemfontein. He was confident that the occupation of places
-would bring the war to an end without an excessive loss of life;
-and he would probably have been right if he had been engaged in a
-European war. He did not see, however, that the Boers derived
-little or no strength from their towns, which were rather a source
-of weakness; they were men of the veld and the veld was their
-strength.</p>
-<p>De Wet's <i>guerilla</i> advanced Chermside to the command of
-the IIIrd Division, in place of Gatacre sent home. A new Division,
-numbered the VIIIth, under a new commander, Sir Leslie Rundle, a
-general with an Egyptian reputation, was assembled south of
-Bloemfontein in April.</p>
-<p>The siege of Wepener called for activity from Bloemfontein as
-well as from the Orange, and Lord Roberts sent Rundle to
-Dewetsdorp, where his presence would, it was hoped, not only draw
-the Boers away from Wepener, but deny them a retreat to the north.
-Pole-Carew with the XIth Division and French followed Rundle, but
-De Wet abandoned the siege on the approach of Hart and Brabant from
-the south, and his brother P. De Wet scuttled away from Dewetsdorp
-on the approach of Rundle; and the commandos ran the gauntlet
-successfully. Their hereditary trekking instincts told them when to
-move and how to move, and their mobility had not at that period
-been recognized by the British Staff. Wepener was indeed relieved,
-though not from Bloemfontein, but the subsequent divagations of the
-Boers baffled three British divisions which were endeavouring to
-squeeze them northwards and head them off. A strong rearguard was
-left by the Boers at Houtnek, ten miles north of Thabanchu.</p>
-<p>Lord Roberts' position at Bloemfontein, and on the line of
-communication, had never been seriously endangered. The brilliant
-affairs of Sannah's Post and Mostert's Hoek were no doubt annoying
-to the British Army and encouraging to the enemy. At home the
-importance <span class="pagenum"><a name="page231" id=
-"page231"></a>{231}</span> of them was greatly exaggerated. If the
-advance on the Transvaal was delayed by them and the subsequent
-operations arising out of the siege of Wepener, more time was given
-to prepare for it; and the British Army was usefully informed of a
-fact which hitherto had hardly been suspected, namely, that the
-enemy derived much of his power from mobility, resourcefulness, and
-aptitude for <i>guerilla</i>.</p>
-<p>Lord Roberts' plan for the movement on the Transvaal was an
-advance in line, on a front which extended from Ladysmith to
-Kimberley. It soon became an echelon owing to the slow movements of
-Buller in Natal. In the centre at Bloemfontein were the troops
-under the immediate orders of the Commander-in-Chief; on the left
-at Kimberley were Methuen, and Hunter with the Xth Division which
-had been brought round from Ladysmith. Between the centre and the
-right the intervention of Basutoland and the Drakensberg prevented
-the effective co-operation of the Natal Army with Lord Roberts; and
-a portion of the interval was occupied by the enemy.</p>
-<p>The centre columns under Lord Roberts were about 43,000 strong.
-Hunter and Methuen in the west had each under his command about
-10,000 troops, while Buller's force, which was much nearer to the
-Transvaal objective than the centre, and which was still lingering
-on the banks of the Klip River two months after the relief of
-Ladysmith, numbered about 45,000. Ian Hamilton, who had done so
-well in the Elandslaagte and Caesar's Camp affairs, was not allowed
-to waste himself in the Natal lethargy. He was recalled from
-Ladysmith, and after taking part from the Bloemfontein side in the
-Wepener operations, was given command of a column which was sent
-on, a few days before the general movement, in the direction of
-Winburg to protect the right flank of the central advance and to
-fend off from it the hovering Boer commandos which had been pressed
-northwards by the April operations. He started from Thabanchu on
-April 30 and was soon <span class="pagenum"><a name="page232" id=
-"page232"></a>{232}</span> in action with the Boer force a Houtnek
-under P. Botha. The battle lasted until nightfall and was renewed
-next day, when, with the help of reinforcements from French and
-Colvile, Ian Hamilton forced the Boers to retire on Clocolan.</p>
-<p>Meanwhile there was energy on the left. Methuen had been for
-some time in occupation of the Boshof district, where he was in a
-position to threaten Kroonstad as well as the commandos at the Vaal
-bridge at Fourteen Streams between Kimberley and Mafeking. The
-relief of the latter was to be undertaken by a flying column under
-Mahon supported by Hunter's division. On May 3 Lord Roberts left
-Bloemfontein for the north. Kelly-Kenny's Division remained in
-charge of the Free State capital, while Chermside's policed the
-railway and the country in rear. Rundle at Thabanchu was instructed
-to prevent the enemy from regaining a footing in the districts east
-and south of Bloemfontein, and Methuen to push on towards the left
-bank of the Vaal beyond Hoopstad. No definite orders were sent to
-Buller, but for two months there had been a constant interchange of
-suggestions, counter-suggestions, plans, and projects for
-co-ordinate action.</p>
-<p>Lord Roberts' objective was now Pretoria. The country in front
-of him was not difficult and he had a railway behind him. The line
-of communication with the south was fairly safe, and it was
-estimated that not more than 12,000 Boers with twenty-eight guns,
-under Delarey and L. Botha, who had been brought round from Natal
-to take chief command during the crisis, barred the way into the
-Transvaal; not including the loosely associated commandos operating
-on the right flank under the general control of De Wet, the Prince
-Rupert of the Boer War.</p>
-<p>The nearest Boer post was at Brandfort, a few miles north of
-Karee Siding. On the right was the Winburg intervening column,
-14,000 strong, under Ian Hamilton, who dragged in his train a weak
-supporting Division <span class="pagenum"><a name="page233" id=
-"page233"></a>{233}</span> under Colvile, his superior officer in
-an anomalous position obliged to conform to his movements, and
-without authority to direct them. Brandfort was occupied that
-evening by Lord Roberts at the cost of six men killed. Vet River,
-the next obstacle, was secured on May 5, and crossed on the
-following day by the greater part of the main column. Ian Hamilton
-went into bivouac eight miles north of Winburg, which was occupied
-by his henchman Colvile.</p>
-<p>Up to this time, Lord Roberts was acting without the cavalry
-under French, who since the Sannah's Post affair had been working
-in the Thabanchu district, and who joined the main column on May 9.
-Though his horses were not in good condition, his arrival increased
-the power of the centre to strike rapidly at the next obstacles,
-the Zand River and the town of Kroonstad forty miles beyond, which
-was now the seat of the Free State Government. The drifts on a
-section of the river nearly twenty miles in length were seized, the
-most easterly being taken by Ian Hamilton, who had gradually
-converged on the centre column and was now on the right of the
-line. Next day the passage of the river was effected; but Lord
-Roberts' hope of getting round and grappling each flank of the
-enemy, who numbered about 3,000 Transvaalers and 5,000 Free
-Staters, was not realized, and Botha withdrew without serious loss.
-That night the Army went into bivouac astride the railway between
-Zand River and Kroonstad.</p>
-<p>On the left was the cavalry under French, who next morning
-raided northwards; but although he was unable, owing to the
-opposition of a force which came out of Kroonstad, to reach the
-railway north of the town, a small party of pioneers whom he had
-sent on succeeded during the night in blowing up the line at
-America Siding within a few yards of the high-road by which the
-enemy was retreating. This daring exploit, which although it had
-not much effect on the situation was not the less meritorious, was
-carried out by Hunter-Weston, <span class="pagenum"><a name=
-"page234" id="page234"></a>{234}</span> who, just two months
-previously, had similarly cut the line north of Bloemfontein. The
-Boers had taken up a position at Boschrand to defend Kroonstad on
-the south, but French's turning movement scared them, and the
-position as well as the town was abandoned, in spite of efforts
-made by Steyn and Botha to arrest the flight. The seat of
-Government was transferred to Lindley.</p>
-<p>The Zand River affair was an incident in the advance rather than
-a battle. Lord Roberts suffered but 115 casualties. Its effect on
-the enemy was chiefly moral. The Transvaalers, whose country had
-not yet heard the sounds of war, were alarmed, but the Free Staters
-were dismayed. The ties of race and kindred had engulfed them in a
-war which was not for their own cause, and the brunt of which they
-had borne for ten weeks. They thought that they had done all that
-could be expected of them and that the Transvaal must now look
-after itself. From that time there was no organized co-operation
-between the allies.</p>
-<p>On May 12 Lord Roberts entered Kroonstad. In his advance,
-averaging thirteen miles per day, he had outstripped the
-reconstruction of the railway, of which almost every bridge and
-culvert had been blown up by the retreating Boers, and many miles
-of the permanent way had been destroyed. A halt was therefore
-necessary until the railhead could be brought nearer, and to give
-the Army an opportunity of pulling itself together, which was
-especially required by the cavalry. Little more than one-half of
-the 6,000 horses with which French marched out of Bloemfontein on
-May 6 were fit for service at Kroonstad seven days later.</p>
-<p>Ian Hamilton was sent out in chase of the flitting Free State
-Government. He found it not at Lindley, nor at Heilbron, for it had
-trekked away to Frankfort. Between Lindley and Heilbron he was
-attacked in rear by a body of Boers, who emerged from the presumed
-vacuum behind him, but they were beaten off.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page235" id=
-"page235"></a>{235}</span>
-<p>The bulk of the enemy's force which had evacuated Kroonstad, was
-now in the triangle formed by the railway, the Vaal and the
-Rhenoster. On its left flank was Ian Hamilton; and French was
-ordered out to hook the right flank, a repetition of the movement
-which had failed at Zand River. On May 22 Lord Roberts left
-Kroonstad.</p>
-<p>The enemy, however, again evaded the net. Reconnaissances by
-French on May 23 showed that Botha had been frightened by the
-appearance of Ian Hamilton at Heilbron, and had crossed into the
-Transvaal. The discovery necessitated the recasting of Lord
-Roberts' plan, and brought about an interesting and entirely
-successful strategic movement. It was evident from Botha's
-dispositions that he expected Ian Hamilton to march straight to his
-front and endeavour to cross the Vaal above the railway bridge at
-Vereeniging. The difficult drifts and country below it were
-considered to be a sufficient protection, and were not strongly
-held by Botha, who on this occasion was completely out-generalled
-by his opponent.</p>
-<p>Lord Roberts ordered Ian Hamilton to march from the right flank
-to the left, across the front of the main Army, and then in
-conjunction with French to wheel round to Meyerton on the line
-between Johannesburg and Vereeniging. On the evening of May 26 he
-entered the Transvaal at Wonderwater Drift. But Ian Hamilton's
-column had not the honour of being the first troops of the main
-body to enter the Transvaal, for he found the cavalry in front of
-him. French,<a id="footnotetag43" name="footnotetag43"></a><a href=
-"#footnote43"><sup>43</sup></a> who had been sent out from
-Kroonstad on May 20, reached the Vaal at Paris on the 24th, and at
-once threw part of his force into the Transvaal, the rest crossing
-higher up at Old Viljoen's Drift. He thus fittingly celebrated the
-last birthday festival of Queen Victoria, which was <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page236" id="page236"></a>{236}</span> also
-appropriately honoured by a proclamation issued on the same day by
-Lord Roberts, by which the Orange Free State was annexed to the
-dominions of Her Majesty under the designation of the Orange River
-Colony&mdash;a suitable birthday offering from a distinguished
-soldier to his Sovereign.</p>
-<p>The main body of the Army with the Commander-in-Chief at its
-head entered the Transvaal at Viljoen's Drift on May 27, and, like
-the pioneer columns of French and Ian Hamilton, met with no
-opposition. It was of good augury for the speedy subjugation of the
-South African Republic. The expected firm stand of the enemy along
-the right bank of the Vaal, where the great battle of the war was
-to be fought, was not made. Vereeniging and subsequently Meyerton
-were abandoned in spite of all Botha's efforts to keep his
-burghers' faces to the front. He held a strong line enclosing
-Vereeniging and the drifts and extending from near Heidelberg to
-Potchefstroom, but it impotently watched the British troops
-crossing the river. Some opposition was indeed offered to French
-when he was a day's march from the drift by which he had crossed
-into the Transvaal, but the bulk of the commandos fell away to the
-north and took up positions between Johannesburg and Krugersdorp.
-By arrangement between the Governments, none of the Free Staters
-accompanied Botha into the Transvaal; but he was in communication
-with De Wet at Frankfort, and was urging him to act against the
-railway in the Free State. He must have regretted that the strong
-hand and will of the man of Waterval Drift, Kitchener's Kopje,
-Sannah's Post, and Mostert's Hoek, were not with him on the right
-bank of the Vaal to animate the shrinking burghers of the South
-African Republic.</p>
-<p>The immediate purpose of Lord Roberts was now the capture of
-Johannesburg, the relations of some of whose inhabitants towards
-Pretoria had brought on, not only the Jameson raid, but also the
-war. Although <span class="pagenum"><a name="page237" id=
-"page237"></a>{237}</span> it was not defended by permanent
-military works, the burghers had taken up a position before it
-which might be very hard to capture, and there was another and
-greater cause for anxiety. The task before Lord Roberts may be
-likened to an attack on a ship manned by pirates, who threaten to
-fire the magazine as soon as a hand is laid upon the bulwarks. It
-was seriously proposed by certain persons in authority under
-Kruger, that on the appearance of the British Army before the city,
-the mines in which so many millions of British capital were
-invested should be wrecked; and it is probable that the threat
-would have been carried out with official sanction if Botha had not
-set his face resolutely against such a piratical act.</p>
-<p><a href="#fig-magaliesberg">Map, p. 240.</a></p>
-<p>Lord Roberts proposed to effect the capture of Johannesburg by
-surrounding it. While with the main body of his Army he occupied
-Elandsfontein on the east, French and Ian Hamilton, the pioneers of
-the advance from Bloemfontein, would deal with the enemy posted
-south of the city and then establish themselves, the former near
-Klipfontein, north of it, and the latter near Florida, west of it.
-The right and the most vulnerable part of the Boer line was posted
-on Doornkop near the scene of the surrender of Jameson, the
-enthusiast, who, a few years before, had endeavoured with a few
-hundred adventurers and soldiers of fortune to solve the South
-African question which Great Britain was now tackling with a
-quarter of a million of trained soldiers.</p>
-<p>On May 29 Ian Hamilton attacked the Doornkop position and won it
-after some hard infantry fighting; French, reinforced by the loan
-of Hamilton's mounted troops, having thrown a grappling iron round
-it, thereby rendering it untenable. At nightfall the two leaders
-were firmly planted west of the city. The movement deceived the
-enemy, to whom the advance of the main body under Lord Roberts on
-Elandsfontein came as an unwelcome surprise, though Botha had to
-some extent prepared for it. The detachments posted by him at
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page238" id=
-"page238"></a>{238}</span> various places east of the city offered
-no effectual resistance, and Lord Roberts went into bivouac that
-night at Elandsfontein. Johannesburg was entrapped between him on
-the east, and French and Hamilton on the north and west.</p>
-<p>On May 30 the city agreed not unwillingly to surrender, but
-having regard to the presence in it of splinters of the lately
-shattered commandos, to the probability of street fighting, and to
-the risk of injury to the mines, Lord Roberts consented to postpone
-his formal entry until the following day; by which time the
-judicious action of the representatives of the Boer Government had
-averted the impending danger, and the troops took peaceful
-possession of Johannesburg.</p>
-<p>In spite of disquieting news from the Free State, Lord Roberts
-remained firm in his purpose of advancing on Pretoria without
-delay. Not only was it the head quarters of Krugerism, but also the
-place in which the Boer harvest of war&mdash;more than 4,000
-British prisoners, some of whom had been in captivity since the day
-of Talana Hill&mdash;was garnered.</p>
-<p>On June 3 the advance on Pretoria, which it was hoped would be
-the last important movement of the war, was resumed; Wavell, with a
-brigade of Tucker's Division, being left behind as Bank Guard over
-the treasure in the mines. Botha had retired on the capital, but no
-one knew whether he would endeavour to defend it, or whether the
-vaunted forts would imperiously address the invader. In view of
-possible eventualities, however, a siege train, in which were
-included two 9.45" howitzers which had been hastily acquired in
-Austria, was taken up to answer Forts Schanzkop, Klapperkop,
-Wonderboom, and Daspoort if they should speak.</p>
-<p>Throughout the month of May there had been alarms and excursions
-in the capital of the South African Republic. The sound of the
-<i>plon-plon</i> of the British Army was daily growing more
-distinct. The house of Ucalegon was on fire. The Volksraad met on
-May 7, and after <span class="pagenum"><a name="page239" id=
-"page239"></a>{239}</span> a session of three days handed over the
-situation to the wavering executive Government, which had already
-made arrangements for an eastward retirement. Kruger, fearing lest
-his retreat by the Delagoa Bay railway should be cut off, slipped
-away to Machadodorp on May 29; the forts were emptied and
-abandoned, and Botha was bidden to do the best he could with the
-remnants of the Transvaal forces. On June 3 he took up a position
-on a ridge a few miles south of the city and prepared for the
-worst.</p>
-<p>French, on the left front of the advance, was ambushed in a
-defile by a commando which had come up out of the west, but cleared
-himself with slight loss. The forts were dumb. Only the ridges
-between the city and Six-Mile Spruit were found to be held. The
-southern ridge was taken, and when the northern ridge was turned by
-Ian Hamilton, who was recalled from acting at large in support of
-French, the Boers retired. French passed through Zilikat's Nek and
-marched on Pretoria north of the Magaliesberg. On June 5 the
-capital of the South African Republic surrendered to Lord
-Roberts.</p>
-<p>The Boers streamed away towards the east. An attempt made a few
-days before to cut the Delagoa Bay railway failed, not, however,
-through the fault of Hunter-Weston, who led the enterprise. The
-force given to him was insufficient for the purpose, and he was
-unable to repeat the exploits of Bloemfontein and Kroonstad.</p>
-<p>The prisoners of war, whom to the number of 3,000 the Boers had
-not been able to drag away with them in their hurried flight, and
-who were in confinement at Waterval twelve miles north of the city,
-were brilliantly liberated on June 4 by some squadrons of cavalry;
-which not only ran the gauntlet of the Wonderboom defile, but
-passed through the Boer posts at the further Poort and snatched
-away the prize from under the eyes of Delarey, who was covering
-Waterval with 2,000 burghers and some guns.</p>
-<p>On the day of Lord Robert's entry into Pretoria, <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page240" id="page240"></a>{240}</span> Buller
-was still in Natal. They had started simultaneously, and in
-thirty-four days the main body had marched 300 miles, but the
-tardigrade Natal Army was now on Lord Roberts' right rear. It had
-been his hope that Buller would advance step by step with him, and
-having reached the Transvaal, would strike northwards and establish
-himself on the Delagoa Bay railway and deny it to Kruger. At
-Kroonstad, Lord Roberts, seeing that he could not expect assistance
-from Buller, contemplated detaching Ian Hamilton and sending him
-into the Eastern Transvaal, but the fear of unduly weakening the
-main body in view of probable opposition at the Vaal, Johannesburg,
-and Pretoria, caused him to give up the project. As events turned
-out, it would in all probability have been successful.</p>
-<p>Pretoria was in the hands of the British Army, Kruger was in
-flight, the war was over said the experts. Without having fought a
-single action that could be termed a battle, and at a cost of less
-than 500 casualties, of which but sixty-one men were killed, Lord
-Roberts had passed from Bloemfontein and had seized the perverse
-city in which most of the South African troubles of the past
-twenty-five years had been brewed. The Free State, though kicking,
-was apparently helpless. There were, however, not a few observers
-on the spot to whom the easy success and the few casualties were of
-ominous import. A change in the method of the opposition to be
-offered in the future to the invader was indicated. The Boers were
-discovering that they were incapable of waging systematic warfare
-and were on the point of resorting to <i>guerilla</i>, for which
-they, as well as the arena, were by nature particularly well
-adapted.</p>
-<a name="fig-magaliesberg" id="fig-magaliesberg"></a>
-<div class="figcenter" style="width:50%;"><a href=
-"images/image15.png"><img width="100%" src="images/image15.png"
-alt="Sketch Cap of Magaliesberg District" /></a></div>
-<p>On the Boer side there was a transitory interval of weakness.
-Even before Lord Roberts' occupation of Pretoria Kruger wrote
-doubtfully to Steyn; and after it Botha was inclined to negotiate
-with the invader. He was with his commandos at Hatherley, a few
-miles east of Pretoria. A Council of War was held in the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page241" id=
-"page241"></a>{241}</span> office of a Russian Jew, who was a
-distiller of whisky. The leaders complained that they had been
-deserted by Kruger, who had slunk away with the civil government
-and all the money he could lay his hands on, and the general
-opinion was in favour of abandoning the struggle. A meeting between
-Lord Roberts and Botha was even arranged, when suddenly De Wet
-intervened. The news of his successful raids on the line of
-communication in the Free State relaxed the tension of the minds of
-the despondent commandants. Easily disheartened and easily
-reassured, they leapt in an instant from one psychological pole to
-the other. Botha announced that he was ready to meet Lord Roberts,
-not only in conference, but in battle. The negotiations were,
-however, not definitely broken off until after the Battle of
-Diamond Hill.</p>
-<p>Lord Roberts had sent Kitchener with a column to see to the
-trouble in the Free State, and could not put more than about 16,000
-men into the field against Botha, who, with 6,000 men, had taken up
-a strong position astride the Delagoa Bay railway sixteen miles
-east of Pretoria. His centre was at Pienaar's Poort, where the
-railway passes through a defile, and his front, which his former
-experience of Lord Roberts' tactics led him to extend greatly, was
-nearly twenty-five miles in length, and ran along an irregular
-chain of hills, kopjes, and ridges. Facing the Diamond Hill and
-Donkerhoek range, south of the centre, is another range of heights
-through which the two poorts Tyger and Zwavel pass, and which
-circles round the source of Pienaar's River towards the Diamond
-Hill range. North of the centre runs a broken range ending abruptly
-at the Kameelfontein ridge, which overlooks the broad Kameelfontein
-valley leading to the Krokodil Spruit; and across the valley rises
-the Boekenhoutskloof ridge, a detached feature with triangular
-contours, which, being somewhat in advance, commands the approaches
-to Kameelfontein ridge, where the Boer right flank under Delarey
-was posted.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page242" id=
-"page242"></a>{242}</span>
-<p>The left flank was on Mors Kop and curved round indefinitely to
-Kameelzyn Kraal with detached posts in the direction of Tygerpoort.
-The centre north and south of Pienaar's Poort was the strongest
-section of the line, and for this reason and for another it was
-held by comparatively small numbers. Botha was an acute observer
-and had learnt the moves of the British autumn manoeuvre opening, a
-holding attack on the centre not intended to be pushed home in
-order to eke out paucity of numbers operating on a wide front. Lord
-Roberts, in spite of his superiority of strength, could not hope to
-inflict a decisive defeat upon Botha's well-posted commandos, but
-only to remove them out of striking distance of Pretoria, and he
-was successful.</p>
-<p>The earlier movements of the attack on June 11 were in the
-nature of a reconnaissance in force, as it was uncertain how far to
-the north and south the Boer front extended. The usual tactics were
-adopted. French with the 1st and 4th Cavalry Brigades under Porter
-and Dickson was to work round the enemy's right flank and to
-endeavour to circle round it to the railway; a demonstrating attack
-on the centre would be made by Pole-Carew; while Ian Hamilton acted
-against the left flank.</p>
-<p>French approached the Kameelfontein valley and won a footing on
-Boekenhontskloof ridge, which the Boers were only now moving out to
-occupy, with his left. His right soon came under heavy fire from
-Krokodil Spruit Hill on the Kameelfontein ridge, but he succeeded
-in seizing Louwbaken, which he held tenaciously in spite of
-Delarey's attempts to work round it and of the shells of a heavy
-gun posted six miles away near Edendale. Meanwhile his left had
-been struggling for several hours on the Boekenhoutskloof ridge,
-which it eventually cleared, and was then able to support the
-right, which was still clinging desperately to Louwbaken.
-Throughout the afternoon the Boers continued their attacks on
-French, but were unable to shift him. At nightfall he <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page244" id="page244"></a>{244}</span> found
-that instead of turning the enemy's right, he had only plastered
-himself against it. He had already reported the situation to Lord
-Roberts, who authorized him to withdraw if necessary, at the same
-time cautioning him "not to risk too many casualties."</p>
-<a name="fig-diamond" id="fig-diamond"></a>
-<div class="figcenter" style="width:50%;"><a href=
-"images/image16.png"><img width="100%" src="images/image16.png"
-alt="Diamond Hill" /></a></div>
-<p>Pole-Carew, in the centre, was in action with his heavy guns
-only, "demonstrating" according to the rules, pending the
-development of the flank attacks.</p>
-<p>The force on the right under Ian Hamilton was strong in mounted
-troops. He entered the arena through Zwavelpoort, and thrust at the
-bristling but indeterminate left flank of the enemy. The 2nd
-Cavalry Brigade under Broadwood evicted a small body of Boers from
-Tygerpoort, and when the 3rd Brigade under Gordon came up to hold
-the position until the arrival of an infantry regiment, Broadwood
-advanced across the valley in the direction of Mors Kop, and soon
-was not only under shell fire from Diamond Hill, but also under
-rifle fire from some vague detachments of Boers on his right
-rear.</p>
-<p>Nor was this all, for as he proceeded, the enemy was seen
-pouncing down from Diamond Hill on to the Kleinfontein ridge upon
-the line of his advance, and simultaneously he was fired on from
-the right. Two horse artillery guns, which had been sent out, with
-an insufficient escort, to deal with the swoop, were almost
-captured, and were only saved by Lord Airlie at the cost of his own
-life. The attack on the right was soon checked, but the cavalry
-instead of outflanking the enemy was itself outflanked and unable
-to make a further advance.</p>
-<p>Gordon had now come away from Tygerpoort, and, in touch with
-Broadwood, screened the right flank of Ian Hamilton's infantry
-attack; which after the failure to turn the enemy's left flank, had
-necessarily to be a frontal movement against the strongest section
-of his line. Bruce Hamilton, with a brigade of Ian Hamilton's
-command, crossed Pienaar's River near Boschkop and expelled the
-Boer advanced front from the Kleinfontein <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page245" id="page245"></a>{245}</span> ridge.
-Ian Hamilton was now face to face with Diamond Hill, but the
-afternoon was too far spent for further action.</p>
-<p>The general idea for the right attack on the following day was a
-movement by Bruce Hamilton, reinforced by the Brigade of Guards
-from Pole-Carew's command in the centre. Diamond Hill was taken
-without much difficulty early in the afternoon, and the Donkerhoek
-plateau was cleared. A gap was now made in the Boer line, the
-commandos driven off making for the Donkerpoort ridge on the one
-side, or the Rhenosterfontein heights on the other. From three
-positions a double rain of bullets poured upon Bruce Hamilton on
-the plateau, until the heights were reached by De Lisle's mounted
-infantry from Broadwood's brigade. Bruce Hamilton's right flank was
-thus relieved, but between him and the enemy clustering on the
-ridge intervened the impassable ravine of the Donkerpoort. Night
-was approaching and nothing more could be done.</p>
-<p>On the left, French held his own but no more during the day, and
-Pole-Carew in the centre had no opportunity of going into action.
-The capture of the Rhenosterfontein heights occurred at an
-opportune moment and perhaps averted a disaster. At Delarey's
-request Botha was on the point of sending reinforcements to the
-Boer right to enable it to drive away French and fall upon the weak
-British centre, when De Lisle's success vitally changed the
-situation.</p>
-<p>Next morning, June 13, the British Army found that it had won a
-victory without knowing it. The Boers had faded away during the
-night and had abandoned the strongest position which they had ever
-held in the Free State or the Transvaal. French and Ian Hamilton
-went in pursuit with no results. Delarey succeeded in circling
-round towards the Western Transvaal, Botha retired to the east. The
-casualties on the British side were 176; the Boers professed to
-have lost but four burghers killed and twenty wounded.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page246" id=
-"page246"></a>{246}</span>
-<p>Lord Kitchener was away in the Free State, and the battle was
-fought under the usual restrictive conditions, that no operation
-likely to entail serious loss of life was to be undertaken: and the
-enemy found that the ordeal of combat was not very dreadful.</p>
-<p>With the occupation of Pretoria, which was not virtually
-effected until Botha's retreat from Diamond Hill, the ranging phase
-of Lord Roberts' campaign was nearly at an end. At the two capitals
-and at other towns already occupied, he had places of arms, from
-which without wide divagations of large bodies of troops, he could
-hope soon to control and eventually to dominate the Republics.</p>
-<p>To see to the long and lonely furrow which he had ploughed
-across the veld from the Orange to the Magaliesberg, and to prevent
-its being obliterated by the wayward and shifting sand of the
-desert, was the present task before him.</p>
-<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote43" name=
-"footnote43"></a><b>Footnote 43:</b><a href=
-"#footnotetag43">(return)</a>
-<p>Plumer raided across the Limpopo into the Transvaal as far back
-as December, 1899, and Hunter occupied Christiana on May 15.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page247" id=
-"page247"></a>{247}</span>
-<h2><a name="chap12" id="chap12">CHAPTER XII</a></h2>
-<h3>The New Colony</h3>
-<p><a href="#fig-so-transvaal">Map, p. 260.</a></p>
-<p>The Orange River Colony did not receive its incorporation into
-the British Empire with a display of gratitude for the honour
-conferred upon it.</p>
-<p>The urgent message sent by Botha to De Wet on May 27 after the
-British Army had crossed into the Transvaal was hardly necessary to
-incite that free lance into action after his own heart, and he at
-once quitted Frankfort for Lindley.</p>
-<p>When Lord Roberts entered the Transvaal he left behind him a
-considerable force to teach the New Colony its duties. Besides the
-stationary troops at Bloemfontein and on the railway, the VIIIth
-and Colonial Divisions under Rundle and Brabant were at Senekal and
-Ficksburg; Colvile with the IXth Division, who had been taken off
-Ian Hamilton's lead and allowed to run alone, was near Lindley; and
-Methuen had come into Kroonstad from Bothaville, the line of his
-march, which was originally towards the Transvaal, having been
-changed by orders from Lord Roberts.</p>
-<p>Such were the forces against which De Wet was ready to fling
-himself. Early in June he was faced by another opponent. Lord
-Kitchener had come down from the Transvaal with a strong
-column.</p>
-<p>Lord Roberts, on leaving Bloemfontein for the north, instructed
-Rundle to "exercise a vigilant control east of the railway." In
-co-operation with Brabant, he worked up through the fertile
-district along the Basuto <span class="pagenum"><a name="page248"
-id="page248"></a>{248}</span> border, slowly but steadily; his
-immediate object being to prevent the enemy breaking back towards
-the south. No serious opposition was encountered, and by the middle
-of the month the Divisions had advanced to Clocolan and Winburg,
-where Rundle came in touch with the IXth Division.</p>
-<p>Colvile received orders to advance to Lindley and Heilbron. He
-was instructed to reach Heilbron with the Highland Brigade on May
-29, and was informed that a force of Yeomanry under Spragge would
-on May 23 join him at Ventersburg, which he would pass through on
-his march.</p>
-<p>Spragge was unable to be at Ventersburg on the date fixed and
-was ordered on to Kroonstad, where he received telegraphic
-instructions to join Colvile at Lindley on May 26 at the latest. It
-has never been ascertained by whom this fatal message was
-despatched. No British staff officer has ever acknowledged himself
-the sender of it, and it has been suggested that it was sent by a
-Boer sympathizer who was better informed of Colvile's movements
-than the Intelligence Staff.</p>
-<p>Colvile believed that his presence at Heilbron on May 29 was
-imperatively required in connexion with the advance, and, although
-very weak in mounted troops, he pushed on from Ventersburg without
-waiting for Spragge. On May 26 he reached Lindley after some
-resistance outside the town, and next day resumed his march to
-Heilbron, which, though checked on the way, he reached on the
-appointed day.</p>
-<p>Meanwhile, Spragge was doing his best to deliver himself to the
-IXth Division, to which he was waybilled. He moved a few miles out
-of Kroonstad on May 25, and next evening was in bivouac within
-eighteen miles of Lindley. Next day he resumed his march on the
-town, about the same time that Colvile was quitting it for
-Heilbron. The two commanders were in entire ignorance of each
-other's movements.</p>
-<p>At midday, Spragge reconnoitred the town, and <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page249" id="page249"></a>{249}</span> finding
-it occupied, withdrew to a position outside. Although Colvile had
-quitted it but a few hours previously, and although the dust of his
-column could still be seen on the Heilbron road, a commando under
-Michael Prinsloo, which he had driven out, had promptly returned;
-and some burghers who had surrendered to Spragge on May 26, and
-who, having given up their rifles, had been "allowed to return to
-their farms," went to Lindley instead and gave warning of the
-approach of the Yeomanry.</p>
-<p>Spragge counted on being able to draw rations at Lindley when he
-joined Colvile, and marched out of Kroonstad with two days' rations
-only, and these, although eked out by a capture of sheep on the
-way, were almost exhausted. There were three courses open to him:
-to retire to Kroonstad, to follow Colvile, or to remain where he
-was. He chose the last.</p>
-<p>He took up, and did his best to make defensible, a plateau and
-kopje position two miles N.W. of the town. He had 500 men, but no
-guns, and he reported the situation to Colvile, who was eighteen
-miles away when he received the message next morning; and to
-Rundle, who was at Senekal. Colvile answered his appeal for
-assistance with a refusal, but suggested a retirement on Kroonstad;
-but the message did not reach Spragge. Rundle was too far away to
-help Spragge directly, but made a movement towards Bethlehem, which
-he hoped would draw the enemy away from Lindley.</p>
-<p>On May 28 the Boers took up positions which practically
-surrounded Spragge, but he held his own that day and the next; and
-although the enemy was reinforced on the 29th, he was not so
-closely invested that he could not have broken out. Firing was
-heard in the S.E., and Spragge, believing that it was Rundle in
-action, endeavoured without success to communicate with him.</p>
-<p>So long as the investing force was without guns, <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page250" id="page250"></a>{250}</span> Spragge
-was confident of being able to hold on. But on May 30 a further
-reinforcement came in. Martin Prinsloo joined his brother with
-three guns and a strong commando. The Prinsloos, who were acting
-under the orders of De Wet, had originally been detailed to look
-after Colvile, but were drawn away by the attraction of an easier
-prey at Lindley.</p>
-<p>On May 30 a kopje on the west, from which the Boers were sniping
-into the position, was captured by Spragge, but soon fell again
-into the hands of the burghers. It was recovered next morning, but
-pressure elsewhere squeezed it finally out of the grasp of the
-re-captors. The Boers had brought their guns into action. The key
-of Spragge's position was two kopjes on the S.E. of the defence.
-The outer kopje was rushed by the enemy, the detachment occupying
-it being driven back towards the inner kopje. A panic-stricken
-non-commissioned officer in the connecting post between them raised
-the white flag without authority, and, it is said, was immediately
-shot for having done so. The officer in command on the inner kopje
-considered that he was bound by the act and recognized it, and only
-hastened the inevitable end. There was a last wriggle or two, and
-then Spragge, who was surrounded by 2,000 Boers with artillery,
-gave in.</p>
-<p>Nearly 500 yeomen were added to the panel of British prisoners
-of war by the hawk-like swoop of De Wet and the brothers Prinsloo
-almost under the eyes of three Divisions of the British Army. For
-not only were Colvile and Rundle aware of Spragge's predicament,
-but as soon as it was reported to Lord Roberts, Methuen was ordered
-to the rescue.</p>
-<p>Methuen, who only arrived at Kroonstad from the west on May 28,
-was already on the move to help Colvile, from whom a disquieting
-message had been received at Head Quarters. Colvile's safe arrival
-at Heilbron next day rendered assistance unnecessary, and Methuen,
-under instructions from Lord Roberts, turned <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page251" id="page251"></a>{251}</span> towards
-Lindley. He was, however, too late, for as he approached the town
-the news of Spragge's surrender reached him on June 1. He ran into
-the rear of the Boers hurrying away with their prey, and even
-intercepted two guns and some wagons, but was unable to retain
-them.</p>
-<p>The Lindley affair sent Colvile back to England in the wake of
-Gatacre. The responsibility of the surrender was fixed upon him and
-he was deprived of his command. He had no doubt been in a false
-position during the first fortnight of the advance from
-Bloemfontein when he was kept trailing behind a junior officer, and
-this slight perhaps affected his judgment, but he was
-constitutionally incapable of viewing a situation synoptically and
-perspectively. As at Sannah's Post, so again at Lindley the
-halation of a word or two in his orders fogged the image on his
-retina. He doggedly stared at the words <i>Heilbron, May 29</i>, as
-if the whole issue of the campaign depended upon them. There was
-nothing in the context to show that they were more than the details
-of an itinerary which he was expected to follow if circumstances
-permitted. He was urgently in need of the very mounted troops with
-which he made no effort to put himself in touch. <i>Bis peccare in
-bello non licet</i>. Lord Roberts could forgive once, but Colvile
-was superseded for having twice shown a "want of military capacity
-and initiative."<a id="footnotetag44" name=
-"footnotetag44"></a><a href="#footnote44"><sup>44</sup></a></p>
-<p>Yet the disaster was not due to his default alone, although the
-contributory defaults of others were rightly not permitted to
-excuse him. He had good reason to think that a well-mounted force
-would be able to take care of itself, and to believe that proper
-staff arrangements had been made for Spragge's march; but in each
-of these warrantable assumptions he was <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page252" id="page252"></a>{252}</span> wrong.
-Lindley was the first of a series of disasters which seemed to show
-that Lord Roberts had pushed on too hastily.</p>
-<p>Rundle's endeavour to help Spragge by a demonstration in the
-direction of Bethlehem soon came to an end. It is said that a
-telegram in which he announced the movement to Brabant fell into
-the hands of the Boers, who promptly utilized the information. On
-May 29 he was seriously checked at the Biddulphsberg, where they
-had taken up a position. He failed in an attack on what he believed
-was the Boers' flank but which was in reality their front. During
-the engagement he received a telegram from Head Quarters, dated
-three days previously, ordering him to join Brabant in the
-Ficksburg district, and he withdrew from the action, having
-suffered 186 casualties, some of which were caused by a fire which
-broke out in the long grass through which he had advanced, and in
-which helpless wounded men were lying. A brigade of Tucker's
-Division under Clements took his place at Senekal.</p>
-<p>De Wet now set himself in person to execute the task entrusted
-to him by Botha of getting behind the British force in the
-Transvaal and breaking or interrupting the line of communication in
-the Free State. He had not long to wait for opportunities. He left
-Frankfort with 800 men, and on June 2 placed himself in observation
-near Heilbron, where Colvile was awaiting a supply column from the
-railway at Roodeval. The convoy was harassed from the first by
-mischances. Against Colvile's orders it was despatched with but a
-small escort and without guns. When he heard that sufficient
-protection could not be given, he counter-ordered the convoy, but
-the message did not arrive until after it had started.</p>
-<p>On the second day of the march a body of the enemy was found
-blocking the road at Zwavel Kranz between Heilbron and Heilbron
-Road Station. It was De Wet waiting for the convoy.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page253" id=
-"page253"></a>{253}</span>
-<p>The news of its plight reached Heilbron Road Station,<a id=
-"footnotetag45" name="footnotetag45"></a><a href=
-"#footnote45"><sup>45</sup></a> and a relieving column was sent
-out, which came within four miles of Zwavel Kranz. No firing,
-however, was heard, and the officer in command, hastily concluding
-that all was well, returned to the railway without finding the
-convoy, which next morning surrendered, the victim of easy-going
-indifference and neglect.</p>
-<p>So far De Wet had done well, but he was only beginning his work.
-The railway between Bloemfontein and Vereeniging was weakly held by
-regiments of militia threaded like beads on a string in posts along
-the line. At Roodeval supplies and stores in large quantities,
-urgently needed by the Army in the Transvaal, were waiting until
-the bridge over the Rhenoster River, which had been destroyed by
-the Boers retreating before Lord Roberts, could be rebuilt. There
-was scarcely a post that did not beckon to De Wet to come to
-it.</p>
-<p>He was within reach of the railway at three vulnerable points,
-and he divided the force to attack them simultaneously; himself
-taking command of the raid on Roodeval, which was held by casual
-details of departmental troops stiffened by a detachment of
-militia. Thus an important link in the chain was unable to bear a
-comparatively slight tension. No one was recognized as being
-definitely responsible for the railway north of Bloemfontein. The
-charge of it had been given to an officer who, unknown to the
-staff, was at the time in hospital and unable to take over his
-command; detachments were moved promiscuously by orders which came
-now from Pretoria and now from Bloemfontein; and in the chaos De
-Wet wriggled in between Colvile and Methuen.</p>
-<p>On June 7 Heilbron Road Station, Rhenoster River Bridge, and
-Roodeval were captured in succession. At the Bridge the Derbyshire
-Militia fought gallantly for several hours, but were overpowered in
-a hopeless position, and soon afterwards Roodeval and its
-accumulated <span class="pagenum"><a name="page254" id=
-"page254"></a>{254}</span> booty fell into the hands of De
-Wet,<a id="footnotetag46" name="footnotetag46"></a><a href=
-"#footnote46"><sup>46</sup></a> who on that day severed
-Bloemfontein from Pretoria for a week and added nearly 500 men to
-the muster-roll of his prisoners of war.</p>
-<p>It was evident to Lord Roberts that things had taken a serious
-turn, and that his position in the Transvaal was unsound. In
-framing his plans for the advance from Bloemfontein, he had
-naturally expected that the Natal railway would be available as an
-alternative line of communication soon after he entered the
-Transvaal; but the movements of Buller were deliberate, and nearly
-a third of it was still in the enemy's hands. It is probable that
-Lord Roberts would have been less disinclined to the
-"steam-rollering" policy if he could have foreseen that on the day
-he entered Pretoria the Natal Army would be still south of Laing's
-Nek.</p>
-<p>As a preliminary measure pending, the elaboration of a definite
-scheme to put the Free State in order, Kitchener, who was always
-held in readiness with steam up to proceed to districts in
-difficulties and hustle local commandants and their staffs, was
-sent across the Vaal with a column; and Methuen's Division was set
-in motion.</p>
-<p>On the Bloemfontein side, Kelly-Kenny took temporary charge of
-all the troops south of Kroonstad, whither a brigade under C. Knox
-was sent to protect the stores and supplies; and Winburg was
-strengthened. While C. De Wet was engaged upon his own work his
-brother P. De Wet, whom he threatened to shoot if he gave in, was
-discussing terms of surrender with Methuen at Lindley, but as in
-the contemporaneous negotiations between C. Botha and Buller at
-Laing's Nek, and between L. Botha and Lord Roberts in the
-Transvaal, no terms of settlement were arranged; and Methuen
-quitted a pacificatory colloquy with one brother to encounter the
-other in arms, and joined Kitchener at Heilbron Road Station on
-June 10.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page255" id=
-"page255"></a>{255}</span>
-<p>De Wet was elbowed away westwards from the railway, but he soon
-circled back, recrossing it at Lieuw Spruit between Rhenoster River
-Bridge and Heilbron Road Station, where he not only took fifty
-prisoners, but almost captured Kitchener, who chanced to be passing
-through at the time.</p>
-<p>It is interesting to speculate briefly on the effect which such
-a notable capture might have had upon the general situation. The
-Boers themselves would hardly have realized its importance. They
-were unaware of the position held by Kitchener in the British Army,
-and his name was unfamiliar to them. He had been here and there
-like many another commander whom they had met in the field. Still,
-they had never yet captured an unwounded general officer, and they
-would no doubt have made a great effort to prevent his services
-being again available against them.<a id="footnotetag47" name=
-"footnotetag47"></a><a href="#footnote47"><sup>47</sup></a> It is,
-however, unlikely that De Wet would have been able to retain his
-prisoner for more than a few weeks at most. But no one can say what
-De Wet could not do. At home it is probable that a disastrous
-reaction would have followed the news of the railway broken, of
-Lord Roberts insolated in the Transvaal, and of Lord Kitchener of
-Khartoum a prisoner of war and possibly a hostage. It is very
-doubtful whether the nation, entangled by fresh difficulties and
-deafened by pro-Boer yells growing shriller and shriller every
-hour, would have remained firm of purpose. It is hardly too much to
-say that June 12, 1900, was one of the most critical dates in the
-history of the war.</p>
-<p>During the next fortnight, attacks on a convoy for Colvile at
-Heilbron, on the railway a few miles north of Kroonstad, a threat
-on Lindley which almost became a siege, and a raid on Virginia
-Siding by a commando <span class="pagenum"><a name="page256" id=
-"page256"></a>{256}</span> under Roux, which sprang out of the
-Senekal district, maintained the mutiny, and again showed that
-however tightly the Boers might seem to be grasped in the hand,
-some of them were sure to wriggle through the fingers.</p>
-<p>It was soon apparent that the Free State would not be brought
-into subjection by haphazard divagations of brigades and columns;
-and about the middle of June Lord Roberts planned a systematic and
-simple campaign. The towns and strategical points were to be
-strongly held while flying columns shepherded De Wet and his
-commandos and endeavoured to enfold them. Buller, who arrived at
-Standerton on June 23, would bar the way should they attempt to
-retreat into the Transvaal, and a retreat southwards would throw
-them on to Rundle and Brabant. The four flying columns were based
-on the line of garrisons which extended from Heidelberg in the
-Transvaal to Winburg and Senekal in the Free State.</p>
-<p>The command of the Heidelberg column, which was strong in
-mounted troops, was given to Ian Hamilton, but an accident
-compelled him to hand it over to Hunter, who had come up into the
-Transvaal after the relief of Mafeking. The Heilbron column was the
-Highland Brigade of the late IXth Division, which was broken up
-when Colvile returned to England. At Rhenoster River was Methuen to
-prevent a break out towards the west. When the Winburg district was
-cleared by a strong column under Clements, who, a few weeks before,
-had relieved Rundle at Senekal, he would advance on Bethlehem,
-Paget at Lindley co-operating with him. As soon as Hunter, who was
-put in general charge of all the troops engaged, entered the Free
-State, Macdonald was ordered to join him with the Highland Brigade.
-Methuen's force at Rhenoster River was soon found to be
-unnecessary, as the enemy was retreating in the opposite direction,
-and it was sent into the Transvaal.</p>
-<p>At the end of June the columns began to move. Each of them was,
-as it were, the head of a spear prodding <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page257" id="page257"></a>{257}</span> the mob
-of commandos towards the pen which had been assigned to them. With
-them, union was not strength, but weakness: the more they were
-agglomerated the less were they to be feared.</p>
-<a name="fig-brandwater" id="fig-brandwater"></a>
-<div class="figcenter" style="width:50%;"><a href=
-"images/image17.png"><img width="100%" src="images/image17.png"
-alt="Brandwater Basin" /></a></div>
-<p>Clements herded Roux, whose commando was the only body known to
-be at large, towards the kraal, and advanced with Paget to
-Bethlehem, which was occupied on July 7. The Boers opposed with
-delaying actions only, capturing but being unable to retain two of
-Paget's guns, and outside Bethlehem they brought into action and
-lost a field gun which had been taken from Gatacre at Stormberg,
-and which now, after half a year's exile <i>in partibus
-inimicorum</i>, was restored to the British Service. Two days after
-Clement's entry into Bethlehem, he was joined by Hunter, who had
-crossed the Vaal on June 29 and had picked up Macdonald at
-Frankfort.</p>
-<p>The Brandwater Basin, into which the Boers had retreated from
-Bethlehem, taking with them Steyn and the Free State Government,
-which was set up at Fouriesburg, is a semicircle formed by the
-Witteberg and Roodeberg at the head-waters of two tributaries of
-the <span class="pagenum"><a name="page258" id=
-"page258"></a>{258}</span> Caledon, the Little Caledon and the
-Brandwater; the Caledon being the diameter and the mountains the
-circumference of the area. The river section of the perimeter lies
-on the Basuto border, and the mountain section is wild and
-difficult, there being but four wagon roads into it in nearly
-seventy-five miles: at Commando, Slabbert's, Retief's, and
-Naauwpoort Neks. The passes at Witnek, Nelspoort, and the Golden
-Gate are scarcely better than rough bridle-paths.</p>
-<p>The strength of the enemy holding the Basin and the Neks was
-about 7,000. The Boers had indeed established themselves in an
-apparently strong defensive position, but they had not been there
-many days before they began to ask each other what was the good of
-it to them. They had taken it up against the advice of De Wet, who
-saw that it was playing the game of Lord Roberts. They had deprived
-themselves of their mobility and were confined in a house of
-detention, where they could do no mischief except to each other.
-They realized too late that De Wet was right. The commandants were
-at variance and there was indiscipline in the laagers.</p>
-<p>De Wet saw that the Brandwater Basin was no place for him. He
-was beating his wings in a vacuum, and he resolved to get out of it
-as soon as possible. After a Council of War orders to decamp were
-issued. The general idea was that a column under De Wet should
-break out through Slabbert's Nek and make for Kroonstad, and that
-Roux should take out another column and march on Bloemfontein, a
-portion of the force being left behind to guard the passes.</p>
-<p>On the night of July 15 De Wet, accompanied by Steyn, who went
-out to establish yet another seat of government, pulled his column,
-which included 2,600 burghers and 460 vehicles and was nearly three
-miles long, out of the Basin through Slabbert's Nek. He met with no
-opposition, and successfully carried out the first episode of the
-programme.</p>
-<p>Hunter at Bethlehem was standing sentry over the <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page259" id="page259"></a>{259}</span> northward
-passes, but want of supplies and deficiency of ammunition prevented
-him advancing at once on the Basin: and of the range before him he
-had no accurate maps and knew less about its topography than an
-astronomer knows of the Mountains of the Moon. While formulating a
-scheme for blocking the passes, De Wet's sudden outbreak took him
-by surprise, and he was unable to head the Free State leader, who
-passed northwards between Bethlehem and Senekal, pursued by
-Broadwood's cavalry. The hounds were on the scent of the first De
-Wet hunt.</p>
-<p>Rundle, who for two months had been painfully, but not with
-unnecessary deliberation, pushing his force up the right bank of
-the Caledon, was at first ordered by Hunter to watch Slabbert's
-Nek, but on a report that the Boers were about to come out through
-Commando Nek, he was sent back. The movement, though justified on
-the assumption that the report, which came on good authority, was
-correct, was unfortunate, as it left the key of the gate at
-Slabbert's Nek in the enemy's hands, and allowed De Wet to
-escape.</p>
-<p>De Wet had assigned to himself the initial movement of the
-withdrawal, and left the rest of the programme to develop itself
-without him. Roux was put in charge of the Brandwater Basin. De Wet
-was an unpopular leader. His attempts to leaven the commandos with
-a little of the military spirit were resented. He had from the
-first, with only partial success, set his face against the
-incumbrance of wagons which marched with every commando. On the way
-to Sannah's Post he had cashiered a commandant named Vilonel for
-disobeying his orders with regard to transport. His nomination of
-Roux did not give satisfaction. The partisans of other leaders
-protested, and it was determined to settle by election the question
-of the Chief Command. In the meantime, the management was in the
-hands of a triumvirate composed of Roux, Olivier, and Martin
-Prinsloo.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page260" id=
-"page260"></a>{260}</span>
-<p>In the chaos, the commandos which De Wet had arranged should
-break out remained in the trap and simplified Hunter's task. In
-succession, Retief's Nek, Slabbert's Nek, and Commando Nek were
-taken, the latter by Rundle, who on July 28 joined Hunter at
-Fouriesburg. Witnek had been abandoned by the Boers, who now had
-only Naauwpoort Nek and the scarcely practicable Golden Gate open
-to them.</p>
-<p>The Nek was closed by Hunter on July 27, and a position outside
-the Golden Gate, but not the Gate itself, was occupied. The greater
-part of the Boer force was now practically sealed up in the
-Basin.</p>
-<p>A Council of War was held to elect a new chief commandant. Had
-the vote been taken ten days earlier the situation might possibly
-have been saved, but the belated proceedings which displayed the
-weakness of a democratically organized army, and which, in the
-absence of representatives of the commandos not on the spot, were
-of doubtful validity, only added to the existing confusion.
-Prinsloo, however, seems to have been informally chosen.</p>
-<p>His first act was to endeavour to obtain an armistice from
-Hunter, who naturally refused it. A few hours later Prinsloo agreed
-to surrender, and on July 30 the main body of the Boers in the
-Basin laid down their arms at Slapkranz. Roux, the rival candidate
-for the Chief Command, protested against the surrender, not only to
-Prinsloo, but also in person to Hunter, to whom he pleaded, that as
-Prinsloo had not been duly elected, the act was unauthorized and
-therefore was not binding on him. Hunter refused to listen to such
-quibbles. On several occasions during the war the Boers had
-profited by the honourable reluctance of the British commanders to
-repudiate an unauthorized raising of the white flag, lest they
-should be accused of having laid a trap to lure on the enemy.
-Hunter rightly held that Roux's plea for local option was
-inadmissible, and that the surrender must apply to the whole force.
-Roux then yielded.</p>
-<a name="fig-orange" id="fig-orange"></a>
-<div class="figcenter" style="width:50%;"><a href=
-"images/image18.png"><img width="100%" src="images/image18.png"
-alt="Orange Free State" /></a></div>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page261" id=
-"page261"></a>{261}</span>
-<p>A large number of burghers, however, as soon as they heard that
-Prinsloo had agreed to surrender, hurried away under Haasbroek, and
-scraped through the Golden Gate and joined Olivier and Hattingh
-outside the Basin. They were successful in evading the
-capitulation, for Olivier, when informed of it officially under a
-flag of truce, also declined to be bound by Prinsloo's act, and
-Hunter was unable to insist upon it. He trekked away towards
-Harrismith unmolested by the troops watching the Golden Gate, and
-he baffled for four weeks the columns sent in pursuit by Hunter,
-who, however, prevented him joining De Wet. He was taken prisoner
-near Winburg on August 27.</p>
-<p>The tangible result of the Brandwater Basin operations was the
-capture of more than 4,000 Boers and of three guns, two of which
-had been lost at Sannah's Post. The mountains in which the burghers
-had taken refuge became a prison, from which they were taken when
-Hunter came on circuit for the gaol delivery, and on conviction
-they were sent beyond the seas.</p>
-<p>Yet subsequent events showed that Lord Roberts would have made a
-good bargain if he could have exchanged all the burghers and the
-guns, and all the loot of horses, cattle, and sheep, for one man
-who had slipped through Slabbert's Nek on July 15, 1900.</p>
-<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote44" name=
-"footnote44"></a><b>Footnote 44:</b><a href=
-"#footnotetag44">(return)</a>
-<p>Napoleon said that "a military order must not be passively
-obeyed except when it is given by a superior who is on the spot at
-the moment the order is given, knows the state of things, and can
-hear objections and give full explanations to the officer charged
-with executing the order."</p>
-</blockquote>
-<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote45" name=
-"footnote45"></a><b>Footnote 45:</b><a href=
-"#footnotetag45">(return)</a>
-<p>Also called Vredefort Road Station.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote46" name=
-"footnote46"></a><b>Footnote 46:</b><a href=
-"#footnotetag46">(return)</a>
-<p>660,000 rounds of Lee-Metford ammunition were buried by him for
-future use.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote47" name=
-"footnote47"></a><b>Footnote 47:</b><a href=
-"#footnotetag47">(return)</a>
-<p>In the Russian War the Japanese gave orders that a Russian
-admiral, who was a wounded prisoner of war on board a Japanese
-torpedo boat, was to be shot if any attempt was made by the
-Russians to capture it.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page262" id=
-"page262"></a>{262}</span>
-<h2><a name="chap13" id="chap13">CHAPTER XIII</a></h2>
-<h3>Nec Celer nec Audax</h3>
-<p><a href="#fig-natal">Map, p. 50.</a></p>
-<p>Lord Roberts had almost as much difficulty in bringing Buller
-out of Ladysmith as he had had in putting him into it. The relieved
-garrison, wasted and enfeebled by the rigours of the siege, was
-unfit to take the field, but there does not seem to have been any
-good reason why the relieving force, or at least a portion of it,
-should not have been pushed forward boldly without delay. The
-inaction invited the retreating enemy to halt and occupy the
-Biggarsberg Range; only a few days after Buller had informed Lord
-Roberts that he did not expect that any stand would be made south
-of Laing's Nek. Buller did indeed propose on March 3 to advance on
-Northern Natal, as well as to attack the Drakensberg passes leading
-into the Free State; but Lord Roberts thought the scheme premature
-and ordered him to remain on the defensive, to police the country
-adjacent to the Harrismith railway with the greater part of his
-available force, and to send one division round by way of East
-London to join the central advance under Gatacre. Warren's Division
-therefore left Ladysmith on March 6. White, to whom Lord Roberts
-had intended to give a command in the Free State, was compelled by
-ill health to return to England. The order to "remain strictly on
-the defensive" was afterwards not unreasonably quoted by Buller in
-justification of two months of inaction, which, however, Lord
-Roberts ascribed to other causes, as he had agreed to subsequent
-proposals made by Buller for offensive action.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page263" id=
-"page263"></a>{263}</span>
-<p>The Boers on the Biggarsberg at first numbered about 15,000, but
-by the end of March many commandos had been attracted away by Lord
-Roberts' advance to more strenuous fields. Some time passed without
-any definite action having been agreed upon between Lord Roberts
-and Buller. The latter objected to almost every proposal made by
-the former, and sometimes even on reconsideration criticized his
-own proposals. He was allowed to recall the Vth Division, which
-after a brief absence rejoined his command; but even with it he
-protested against an advance on Van Reenen's Pass, which he had
-himself proposed and which he was instructed to make at the
-beginning of April, because Lord Roberts would consent to the
-employment of one division only in it. Lord Roberts did not insist
-on the movement, as Buller now said that it would endanger not only
-his own force, but also Natal; and finding that Buller had far more
-troops than he could usefully employ, ordered him to send the Xth
-Division under Hunter round to Kimberley. Even after its departure
-Buller outnumbered the enemy by more than five to one.</p>
-<p>He was still haunted by the troubles of the Tugela, and was
-unable to nerve himself for the risks that every leader must run.
-The Boers bewildered him. He could plan no scheme without a
-conviction that somehow their "knavish tricks" would frustrate it,
-and his inactivity made him more prone than ever to brood over
-possible mischances. He remained in Ladysmith because it was the
-only course open to him after he had by a process of elimination
-considered and rejected all the alternatives. Each of them had its
-disadvantages and its dangers, therefore it were better to stay
-where he was. During a critical period the Natal Army was of as
-little use to Lord Roberts as were the Spanish contingents to
-Wellington in the Peninsula; and its laggard action retarded the
-progress of the war. Lord Roberts laid his plans for the advance on
-the assumption that it would be in operation on his right flank
-when he <span class="pagenum"><a name="page264" id=
-"page264"></a>{264}</span> reached Pretoria, and if L. Botha had
-found it pressing on him when he was playing at peace-making in
-June, instead of engaged in equally fruitless negotiations with his
-brother 180 miles away at Laing's Nek, it is improbable that he
-would have continued the struggle.</p>
-<p>On May 2 Lord Roberts informed Buller that he was ready to start
-from Bloemfontein, and that he expected the Natal Army to
-co-operate with him by attacking the Boers on the Biggarsberg, and
-then advancing towards the Transvaal. For this movement Buller
-considered that his force, which consisted of three divisions of
-infantry and three brigades of mounted troops, in all about 45,000
-men, was insufficient; but he proceeded to carry it out. The Boers
-were in occupation of the whole line of the Biggarsberg from
-Helpmakaar westwards, and commanded the roads as well as the
-railway running through the range.</p>
-<p>Buller on this occasion determined rightly upon a turning
-movement. All his previous attacks had either been frontal or had
-been made so by the enemy. His plan was to move eastwards with the
-IInd Division under Clery, while the Vth Division under Hildyard,
-who succeeded Warren when the latter was called away to
-Bechuanaland, advanced up the railway against the Boer centre. The
-IVth Division under Lyttelton, composed of the infantry which had
-been in Ladysmith during the siege, was kept in reserve pending the
-development of the turning movement, which began on May 11, and was
-skilfully conducted by Buller and was entirely successful. Places
-and rivers which had not been named in the chronicle of the war
-since October of the previous year now emerged from their
-obscurity. Elandslaagte became the fulcrum of an aggressive
-operation. Sunday's River and the Waschbank River after an interval
-of seven months were again crossed by British troops, not, like
-Yule's force, in hasty retreat, but in confident advance.</p>
-<p>The Boers prepared for, and fully expected, a direct
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page265" id=
-"page265"></a>{265}</span> advance on Beith by way of Van Tender's
-Pass, but Buller made for the extreme flank of the range near
-Helpmakaar, which they held but lightly. It was rendered untenable
-on May 13, and after dark they retired on Beith, setting fire to
-the veld to mask the movement and hinder pursuit. At dawn Dundonald
-pushed on through the flames and smoke with his mounted infantry,
-but was checked by a body of Irish traitors who were acting as
-rearguard to their flying employers, and was unable to come up with
-the burghers. On the following night his patrols reported that
-Dundee was clear, and Buller occupied the town and reached
-Newcastle on May 18. The success of the turning movement was due in
-a great measure to a small force under Bethune, which had been
-lying for some months lower down the Tugela, and which Buller
-called up to threaten Helpmakaar from the south while he advanced
-from the west. It had been originally detached to protect his right
-flank during the advance on Ladysmith, and after long inaction as a
-watching force was restored to the strenuous campaign.</p>
-<p>Of the rest of Buller's troops, one portion only, namely
-Hildyard's Division, was actively engaged in the movement. Its
-menace to the Boer centre near Glencoe, through which passed the
-railway to the north, attracted commandos away from the enemy's
-left flank at Helpmakaar and facilitated the turning movement.
-Lyttelton's Division and two cavalry brigades, which although
-Buller had informed Lord Roberts that he "was short of his proper
-strength" for the advance he had left behind near Ladysmith, took
-no part in it; and the absence of the cavalry allowed the enemy to
-retreat without molestation. The advance of Hildyard's Division was
-retarded, not by opposition, but by the duty which fell upon it of
-repairing the railway along which it advanced, and it did not reach
-Newcastle until May 27. On the 23rd Lytteltonand most of the
-cavalry were ordered up from Ladysmith.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page266" id=
-"page266"></a>{266}</span>
-<p>As soon as Buller reached Newcastle he sent on Dundonald to
-reconnoitre the Laing's Nek position. On the west it was flanked by
-Majuba Hill, on the east by Pougwana, and was found to be strongly
-held. He therefore decided to make no further advance until he had
-concentrated his force at Newcastle. The cutting edge of the
-reconstructed Natal wedge had not as yet sufficient substance
-behind it to warrant its being put into operation. Pending the
-assembly of the Army Buller prodded across the Buffalo at Vryheid
-and Utrecht in order to safeguard his right flank. The expedition
-against the former town was ambushed and compelled to retire; while
-the two strong columns which were sent against Utrecht were hardly
-more successful. The town did indeed profess to surrender, but no
-garrison was left to enforce the submission, and on the withdrawal
-of the troops the Boers hovering in the hills returned like birds
-who have been temporarily scared out of their nests.</p>
-<p>By the end of May, Buller's Army was concentrated in the
-northern corner of Natal. Towering over his left front was the
-Drakensberg Range through which Botha's Pass runs into the Orange
-Free State; on his right front was the Buffalo River with a
-difficult country beyond; and on his front was Majuba of ill-omened
-memory and Laing's Nek, over which the road to Volksrust and the
-Transvaal passed.</p>
-<p>Buller remained at Newcastle for eighteen days, of which three
-were an armistice during negotiations for surrender with C. Botha,
-who was unable to accept the terms offered. On June 5 the advance
-was resumed, Laing's Nek being the immediate objective. At first
-Buller proposed to attack it directly, but soon after reaching
-Newcastle he found that the enemy was unassailably established on
-the position, and that it must be turned either from the east or
-from the west. The former movement would involve a wider detour
-through difficult country to the line of advance which would
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page267" id=
-"page267"></a>{267}</span> be taken up after the Transvaal was
-entered, and the western movement through Botha's Pass was
-therefore selected. Lord Roberts had for some time been in favour
-of it, but he had intended that it should be more than a mere
-turning operation. His advance from Bloemfontein had driven many of
-the commandos into the N.E. corner of the Free State, and he asked
-Buller to cross the Drakensberg and take them in rear by passing
-into the Transvaal by way of Vrede; but Buller could not be
-persuaded to remove himself so far from the railway. He had already
-missed an opportunity of co-operating with the main advance by a
-westward movement from Ladysmith to Van Reenen's Pass along the
-railway to Harrismith, where the presence of a division of the
-Natal Army would have been of the greatest use. The relations
-between Lord Roberts and Buller during the Natal campaign were
-rather those of leaders commanding the armies of allied nations
-than of superior officer and subordinate.</p>
-<p>Thus the westward movement, instead of being a helpful operation
-at large in support of the main advance, was whittled down to the
-turning of Laing's Nek. Between Botha's Pass and Laing's Nek the
-dominant contours roughly assume the outline of a sickle and its
-handle, the Pass being at the end of the handle and the Nek near
-the point of the blade. Within the curve of the blade stands the
-high Inkwelo Mountain facing Majuba Hill, and at the upper end of
-the handle is a mountain of less elevation called Inkweloane. The
-Ingogo River, which rises near the Pass, is flanked on its right
-bank by Van Wyk's Hill, which commands the eastern approach to the
-Pass, and on its left bank by Spitz Kop, a detached hill of the
-main range.</p>
-<p>Inkwelo had been held for some days by a portion of Clery's
-Division. The Boers occupied Spitz Kop and the ridge from
-Inkweloane to the Pass and a short section beyond it, but their
-line was thin. The Vryheid and Utrecht affairs had deceived them
-into the belief <span class="pagenum"><a name="page268" id=
-"page268"></a>{268}</span> that an eastward turning movement was in
-contemplation. On June 6 Van Wyk's Hill was occupied by Hildyard
-and held against the enemy on Spitz Kop, who attempted to dislodge
-him; and by the following morning artillery had been brought up,
-and the Pass and the enemy's position on the adjacent crestline
-were commanded. These on June 8 were carried by an infantry
-movement in echelon with loss of two men killed. Spitz Kop offered
-no resistance. A fusillade broke out on Inkweloane, but Dundonald's
-brigade soon quenched it by a determined ascent up alpine slopes to
-the crestline As at Helpmakaar the enemy set fire to the grass and
-passed away behind a veil of smoke.</p>
-<p>The capture of Botha's Pass was an affair which did credit to
-Buller. It showed that since Colenso he had learnt how to use
-artillery, and his disposition of his guns was admirable. They
-rendered the enemy's position untenable and left little but hard
-climbing to the infantry. It can hardly be termed a battle, it was
-rather an autumn manoeuvre engagement, conducted on Lord Roberts'
-principles. A very important position was won and the enemy driven
-back with scarcely the shedding of a drop of blood on either side.
-Hildyard was in executive charge of the operations.</p>
-<p>Thus, after eight months' fighting, the main body of the Natal
-Army was at last in bivouac in the enemy's country. Buller had
-taken Botha's Pass with three infantry and two cavalry brigades;
-and with these he made for his next objective, the town of
-Volksrust in the Transvaal, a few miles north of Laing's Nek, which
-Clery at Ingogo was watching from the south. Lyttelton was posted
-on the left bank of the Buffalo watching the right flank of the
-advance.</p>
-<p>Buller's operations in the Free State lasted two days only. On
-June 10 he engaged a small body of the retreating enemy and entered
-the Transvaal. In front of him was the Versamelberg, a spur of the
-Drakensberg, over which the road from Vrede to Volksrust passes at
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page269" id=
-"page269"></a>{269}</span> Alleman's Nek, where 2,000 Boers with
-four guns had taken up a very strong position. The road rises to
-the Nek between heights, and the initial movements of the attack
-had to be made across two miles of open veld. The burghers had not
-had the time, or did not think it necessary, to strengthen the
-position artificially, but they were observed throwing up some
-entrenchments when Buller approached.</p>
-<p>His bivouac on June 10 was at the Gansvlei Spruit on the
-Transvaal-Free State border, and next day at dawn he resumed his
-march on Volksrust. No serious opposition was encountered until
-early in the afternoon, when Dundonald, who was operating on the
-right front, came under artillery fire from the Nek. The infantry,
-whose left flank was watched by Brocklehurst with a cavalry
-brigade, was then ordered to advance, the objective of the 2nd
-Brigade under E. Hamilton being the ridge on the left of the Nek,
-and that of the 10th Brigade under Talbot Coke the ridges on the
-right of it, the 11th Brigade under Wynne being kept in
-reserve.</p>
-<p>The advance was made under a heavy and worrying but not very
-effective fire from each section of the ridge. The key of the
-position proved to be a conical hill on the right of the road at
-the entrance to the Nek. The Dorsets of Coke's brigade gallantly
-climbed the slopes, and aided by artillery fire carried it with the
-bayonet. The fight, however, was far from ended. The Boers beyond
-remained until the shells which had been pouring on the conical
-hill followed them to the crestline. Then again the Dorsets threw
-themselves upon the enemy, and by sunset the heights on the right
-of the Nek were in possession of Coke. Almost simultaneously E.
-Hamilton established himself on the left of it. The resistance
-offered to Dundonald on the right flank was more effective; and as
-between him and his immediate opponents the day waned upon an
-uncertain issue. He had driven them out of successive positions
-though not actually off the ridge; but the occupation of the Nek
-made <span class="pagenum"><a name="page270" id=
-"page270"></a>{270}</span> further opposition useless and they
-withdrew during the night.</p>
-<p>The capture of Alleman's Nek rendered Laing's Nek untenable, and
-Clery closing up from Ingogo next day found it abandoned. The enemy
-had evacuated the whole of the Majuba-Laing's Nek-Pougwana
-position, leaving scarcely so much as a wagon behind him, and was
-retreating northwards. The westward turning movement was tactically
-a success but strategically a failure. With three brigades of
-mounted troops under his orders, including some regiments of
-regular cavalry which were lying idle at Ladysmith and elsewhere,
-Buller made no attempt to cut off the retreating Boers. A daring
-raid, such as had been twice made by French on the Modder four
-months before, concurrently with the Botha's Pass operations would
-have had a good chance of crushing C. Botha; and Brockleburst's
-cavalry, which during the attack on the Nek was working somewhat
-widely on the left flank, might well have been sent to bar the way.
-The ponderous movements of Buller were in strange contrast to the
-activity of his ally Lord Roberts. The Natal Army made its way
-through the country like an elephant trampling through a sugar-cane
-plantation.</p>
-<p>On June 13 Buller entered Volksrust and next day established his
-Head Quarters at Laing's Nek. Wakkerstroom, a town which threatened
-his right flank, surrendered <i>pro form&acirc;</i> to Lyttelton on
-June 13, and again to Hildyard four days later; and no doubt would
-have been equally ready to accommodate itself to the wishes of any
-other column sent to it, but after each surrender it reasserted
-itself, and Buller was obliged to leave it in charge of the
-commandos.</p>
-<p>With the occupation of Laing's Nek the Natal campaign, which had
-lasted eight months, came to an end, and Buller, having left a
-strong force under Lyttelton in charge of Natal, passed up the
-railway to Heidelberg; where on July 4 he for the first time came
-into physical <span class="pagenum"><a name="page271" id=
-"page271"></a>{271}</span> touch with the main Army under Lord
-Roberts. By a curious coincidence he here met Hart's Brigade of the
-Xth Division, which had left his command three months previously at
-Ladysmith, and which had in the meantime marched up from
-Kimberley.</p>
-<p><a href="#fig-orange">Map, p. 292.</a></p>
-<p>Lord Roberts' plan for the Natal Army was that it should march
-across the veld to the Delagoa Bay railway and co-operate in his
-movement to clear the Eastern Transvaal. The Brandwater Basin
-surrender relieved the railway in Natal from immediate danger and
-allowed the ample force holding it to be reduced. At the end of
-July Buller was instructed to lead 11,000 of his men across a
-sparsely populated country where no railway was. It was for him a
-novel phase of warfare. Hitherto he had hardly dared trust himself
-out of sight of a culvert. But he was a man from whom the terror of
-the unknown very soon passed away when he had no choice but to face
-it. In Natal he would have stood aghast at a suggestion that he
-should cut away his moorings and be wafted by the winds of war for
-ten days or more across a strange ocean. If hitherto he had been
-<i>nec celer nec audax</i> now he became at least <i>audax</i>.
-Lord Roberts had imbued him with the progressive spirit. He raised
-no difficulties of his own, and he encountered those arising out of
-the situation resolutely and successfully. His army was strung out
-upon the railway from Ladysmith to Heidelberg; his transport was
-still organized regimentally, a system which had hampered Lord
-Roberts' movements and was soon abolished in the main body; and
-oxen, mules, and wagons were scarce. For infantry he chose the IVth
-Division under Lyttelton, and for cavalry the brigades under
-Brocklehurst and Dundonald.</p>
-<p>On August 7 Buller's column quitted the Natal line;<a id=
-"footnotetag48" name="footnotetag48"></a><a href=
-"#footnote48"><sup>48</sup></a> its destination being Belfast on
-the Delagoa Bay line, along which Lord Roberts was now
-advancing.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page272" id=
-"page272"></a>{272}</span>
-<p>Its progress may be compared to the course of a steamer across
-an unquiet ocean. The waves raised by a fresh gale on the starboard
-bow were cleft by the stem, only to reunite behind the churn of the
-propeller. They were powerless to abridge the day's run by many
-miles, but they could still swing forwards to the shore. On one
-occasion the ship was slowed down to a standstill by a fog.</p>
-<p>The waves were the commandos of the district, most of which had
-retired under C. Botha from the Laing's Nek positions. Buller had
-not much difficulty in dealing with them as obstructions to his
-advance, and in succession he occupied Amersfort, Ermelo, and
-Carolina; but they soon returned to their stations. His own
-inclinations would probably have persuaded him to halt and smash
-them, but he was marching against time between two widely separated
-bases. Near Carolina on August 14 he came in touch with French, who
-was acting with Lord Roberts' eastward movement from Pretoria, and
-from that date the operations of the Natal Army were merged in
-those of the main Army, and came under the immediate direction of
-the Commander-in-Chief.</p>
-<p>A scheme proposed by French and sanctioned in substance by Lord
-Roberts, for an immediate cavalry turning movement round the left
-flank of the enemy, who was strongly posted astride the railway
-near Belfast; in conjunction with a central infantry advance to be
-made by Buller and Pole-Carew, whose Division was within reach, was
-discountenanced by Buller, and a simple frontal movement was
-substituted for it. Its practicability was doubtful owing to the
-marshy character of the ground.</p>
-<p>On August 25 Buller, French, and Pole-Carew entered Belfast,
-where they were joined by Lord Roberts.</p>
-<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote48" name=
-"footnote48"></a><b>Footnote 48:</b><a href=
-"#footnotetag48">(return)</a>
-<p>i.e. the section of the railway from Johannesburg to Natal which
-is in the Transvaal.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page273" id=
-"page273"></a>{273}</span>
-<h2><a name="chap14" id="chap14">CHAPTER XIV</a></h2>
-<h3>The Taming of the Transvaal</h3>
-<p>The course of the war north of the Vaal after the battle of
-Diamond Hill up to the date of Lord Roberts' arrival at Belfast
-seven weeks later was tortuous and difficult. The main Army changed
-front as soon as Pretoria was reached and faced to the east in the
-direction of the retreating Transvaal Government. Its line of
-communication became a prolongation of its front; its left flank
-towards the north was open; and on its rear was the unsubdued
-country west of the capital in the direction of Mafeking and
-Vryburg.</p>
-<p>Through this district, which is intersected by ranges running
-generally east and west, and which contains some towns of
-importance, the troops set free by the relief of Mafeking advanced
-in two columns towards Pretoria and Johannesburg. The southern
-column was Hunter's Xth Division, which after easily occupying
-Potchefstroom and Krugersdorp, passed through Johannesburg, and on
-Hunter's being sent into the Free State was broken up at
-Heidelberg. The northern column, under Baden-Powell, occupied
-Rustenburg and met with little opposition during the month of June.
-It was intended by Lord Roberts, if all went well, that this column
-should eventually take up a position on the Pietersburg railway,
-north of Pretoria, which was unprotected in that direction.</p>
-<p>The inactivity of the Boers seemed to show that they had really
-lost heart, and that an awakening such as that <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page274" id="page274"></a>{274}</span> which
-came a few weeks after the entry into Bloemfontein was improbable.
-Earlier in the month of June there had been negotiations for peace,
-not only between subordinate leaders in the Free State and Natal,
-but also between the two Commanders-in-Chief in Pretoria; and
-although they were broken off, the fact that they had occurred made
-the silence more significant and gave hope that the enemy was
-reconsidering his position.</p>
-<p>The illusion was soon dispelled. Whether owing to the natural
-resilience of the Boer character after a brief phase of doubt, or
-to the news of De Wet's successful attacks on the railway in the
-Free State, the smouldering fires broke out anew early in July.
-Delarey, who had checked French at Diamond Hill, came out of the
-east to quicken the west; the baffled burghers of Snyman, released
-from the siege of Mafeking, were trickling vaguely into the
-district; a force under Grobler of Waterberg was reported north of
-Pretoria; an incursion was made across the Vaal from the Free
-State; and commandos appeared south of the Magaliesberg near
-Olifant's Nek and Commando Nek, thus threatening the movements of
-Baden-Powell, who was operating north of the range and who had
-occupied Commando Nek and the adjacent Zilikat's Nek on July 2,
-leaving only a small force at Rustenburg. Five days later the Boers
-failed in an attempt to recapture the town, which was saved by a
-detachment of the Rhodesian Field Force.</p>
-<p>This force, which was under the command of Sir F. Carrington,
-was composed mainly of mounted contingents from the Colonies. It
-had been raised a few months before at the instance of the British
-South Africa Company to hold the northern frontier of the
-Transvaal, which after Plumer's departure for the south was
-unguarded, and to deny Rhodesia to the Boers should they attempt to
-break out northwards. It was from the first under a sort of dual
-control which militated against its efficiency. The Company made
-the <span class="pagenum"><a name="page275" id=
-"page275"></a>{275}</span> arrangements for its enrolment and
-equipment, while the War Office provided the staff. It was in
-difficulties from the first. By a somewhat strained interpretation
-of a treaty between Great Britain and Portugal, and after some
-weeks of diplomatic discussion and in spite of a protest naturally
-made by the Transvaal Government, the Rhodesian Field Force was
-permitted to land on Portuguese territory at Beira in April and to
-move up country. Its advance was further delayed by a break of
-gauge on the railway between Beira and Buluwayo; it was pulled
-hither and thither, and was never able to co-operate effectively
-with the general operations. It was moved in driblets, and some
-details did not reach Buluwayo until September. A portion of it
-came along the Western line, and Rustenburg was saved by the
-Imperial Bushmen. At the end of the year it was disbanded.</p>
-<p><a href="#fig-magaliesberg">Map, p. 240.</a></p>
-<p>On July 11 three blows were struck by the Boers with success.
-The attempt on Rustenburg drew back Baden-Powell, whose place at
-Zilikat's and Commando Neks was taken by a regiment of regular
-cavalry which happened to be passing that way. As it was required
-elsewhere, a body of infantry was sent out from Pretoria to take
-over the Neks, and on the night of July 10 Zilikat's Nek was held
-by three companies and a squadron. Next day, after a struggle which
-lasted throughout the day, it was captured by Delarey, and two guns
-and nearly 200 prisoners of war fell into his hands. The disaster,
-the first of its kind in the Transvaal, was due to two causes. The
-British force actually at the Nek was insufficient to hold it; and
-the main body of the cavalry stood aloof. The latter was no doubt
-in a dubious position. It was under orders, which were brought by
-the infantry relief, to meet Smith-Dorrien nearly twenty-five miles
-away on July 11; and when the enemy was seen occupying a strong
-position on the Nek, it assumed that assistance would be of no
-avail, and beyond a short artillery bombardment nothing was
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page276" id=
-"page276"></a>{276}</span> done. Even the squadron holding Commando
-Nek was ordered to retire at midday. A relieving force was sent out
-from Pretoria, but it arrived too late to avert the disaster.</p>
-<p>The cavalry thus delayed was intended to reinforce a column
-under Smith-Dorrien, who had come up into the Transvaal with Ian
-Hamilton's column, and who was marching from Krugersdorp to take
-off the pressure from the south on Baden-Powell at Rustenburg;
-Olifant's Nek, over which the road to the town passed, being in the
-possession of the Boers. On July 11, when Smith-Dorrien had marched
-about ten miles from his starting point, he met a commando at
-Dwarsvlei, which was so well handled that not only was he compelled
-to retire on Krugersdorp, but also had much difficulty in bringing
-away his guns. The failure was chiefly due to the non-appearance of
-the cavalry, without which he did not feel himself justified in
-standing up to the enemy.</p>
-<p>On the same day another cavalry regiment was in trouble.
-Onderste Poort, a few miles north of Pretoria, was attacked by
-Grobler of Waterberg, and while reinforcements were on their way he
-drove back still nearer to the capital the force which was holding
-the outpost, and forced one troop to surrender.</p>
-<p>The situation was alarming. The districts west and south-west of
-the capital were infested by energetic commandos which had thwarted
-all Baden-Powell's and Smith-Dorrien's efforts to suppress them,
-and Grobler was threatening Pretoria from the north. There were
-indications that the enemy's plan was to transfer the opposition
-from the east to the west; and if so, then Lord Roberts' force,
-whose front after Diamond Hill faced eastwards, would have to
-conform to the movement. A few weeks previously it had been
-weakened by the departure of Hunter's strong column for the Free
-State, and now Lord Roberts was compelled to redress the balance by
-calling up Methuen's Division <span class="pagenum"><a name=
-"page277" id="page277"></a>{277}</span> from Lindley to
-Krugersdorp, where it arrived on July 18. French was ordered to
-operate north of Pretoria with cavalry, and a column under Ian
-Hamilton<a id="footnotetag49" name="footnotetag49"></a><a href=
-"#footnote49"><sup>49</sup></a> was also sent up.</p>
-<p>Methuen marched at once on Rustenburg, and cleared Olifant's Nek
-on July 21. The scheme of shutting up the Boers in it failed, as
-Baden-Powell was unable to close the northern exit, and they
-escaped with slight loss.</p>
-<p>At the beginning of August the situation was, if anything,
-worse. The events which succeeded the occupation of Bloemfontein
-were repeating themselves in the Western Transvaal. Methuen had
-been recalled from the Rustenburg expedition to deal with an
-outbreak on the line from Johannesburg to Klerksdorp, which fell
-into the hands of the enemy; 5,000 Boers were reported to be on or
-near the Magaliesberg; a small British force was besieged in
-Brakfontein, west of Rustenburg, on the road to Mafeking; De Wet
-was at large in the Free State, and it seemed probable that he
-would come up into the Transvaal and add to the trouble.</p>
-<p>At the end of July Ian Hamilton's force was diverted from its
-movement towards the north and ordered westward to relieve and
-bring away Baden-Powell; and Carrington was instructed to
-co-operate from Mafeking. Lord Roberts had decided to abandon
-Rustenburg and Olifant's Nek and the greater part of the
-Magaliesberg. These detached positions detained more troops than he
-could spare<a id="footnotetag50" name="footnotetag50"></a><a href=
-"#footnote50"><sup>50</sup></a> and were difficult to supply. Ian
-Hamilton's trek lasted only a few days. He recaptured Zilikat's
-Nek, and on August 5 brought away Baden-Powell, who left Rustenburg
-most unwillingly and who was ready to sustain another siege in it.
-Lord Roberts, however, would not heed his repeated protests, and
-the <span class="pagenum"><a name="page278" id=
-"page278"></a>{278}</span> only section of the Magaliesberg held
-after the withdrawal from Rustenburg was that lying between
-Pretoria and Zilikat's and Commando Neks. Rustenburg and Olifant's
-Nek had called for the diversion of three columns in succession:
-Smith-Dorrien's, which did not reach them, and then Methuen's and
-Ian Hamilton's; and the abandonment of them was imperative. From
-the west Carrington made an attempt to relieve Brakfontein on
-August 5, but was compelled by the presence of the enemy in
-superior force to return to Mafeking. The relief was effected ten
-days later, not from the west, but by Lord Kitchener with a column
-that had been engaged in the pursuit of De Wet.</p>
-<p>Suddenly all the operations were deranged by the news that De
-Wet had crossed the Vaal at Schoeman's Drift on August 6, and the
-greater part of the British Army in the Transvaal was either
-directly or indirectly turned on to the pursuit of one man; Lord
-Kitchener, as usual when energy and pushing power rather than
-tactical skill were looked for, being placed in general charge of
-the operations. The two most determined and unfaltering men in
-South Africa were now pitted against one another.</p>
-<p>De Wet's escape from the Brandwater Basin on July 15 was soon
-discovered and he was unable to get a good start. Broadwood's and
-Little's mounted brigades were sent after him, now and then taking
-long shots at him or worrying his rearguard. His object was to
-conduct Steyn and the Free State Government officials into the
-Transvaal, where they could co-operate with Kruger. He chose the
-route which appeared to him, and rightly so, to be the line of
-least resistance, namely, towards the Vaal Drifts near
-Potchefstroom; instead of making for the upper reaches of the
-river, on the other side of which Buller was established on the
-Natal railway.</p>
-<p>It was soon found impossible to overtake him, even with mounted
-troops. The only course was to shepherd him into a fold from which
-he could not escape. The <span class="pagenum"><a name="page279"
-id="page279"></a>{279}</span> tracery on the map of his movements
-and of those of his chief scout Theron, intersected by the
-reticulations of the pursuing columns, resembles a spider's web in
-disorder.</p>
-<p><a href="#fig-orange">Map, p. 292.</a></p>
-<p>Finally he was hemmed in on the left bank of the Vaal near
-Reitzburg. On the right bank Methuen, supported by Smith-Dorrien,
-was watching the drifts. He did his best, but his force was
-insufficient for the purpose, and on August 6 De Wet, with it is
-said no less than 400 wagons, entered the Transvaal at Schoeman's
-Drift, the greater part of Methuen's force having been sent to hold
-a drift lower down. Methuen doubled back and fell upon the Boer
-rearguard, which, though driven out of successive positions,
-maintained itself long enough to allow the main body to escape
-unscathed.</p>
-<p>De Wet's subsequent movements greatly puzzled his pursuers. He
-divided his column into two portions which did not always march in
-the same direction, and it was therefore difficult to discern the
-ruling movement of his trek. At one time it appeared that he was
-about to re-cross into the Free State, and the plans for the
-northward pursuit were temporarily suspended; to be resumed when he
-had received an allowance of one day's start. It is probable that
-his original intention had been to return to his own country as
-soon as he had put Steyn and the officials into the Transvaal,
-leaving them with an escort to find their own way to Kruger, and
-that he was prevented by the appearance of a strong column under
-Kitchener on the left bank. As a Free Stater, moreover, he would be
-disinclined to give his services to the Transvaal.</p>
-<p>Kitchener crossed the Vaal on August 8, and hung to De Wet's
-right rear, Methuen hanging on to the left rear; but neither was
-able to do more than clutch vainly at the skirts of the elusive
-column. In front of De Wet, Smith-Dorrien was holding the
-Klerksdorp railway, but again he misled his pursuers, and instead
-of trekking north after he had crossed the Gatsrand, a movement
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page280" id=
-"page280"></a>{280}</span> which Smith-Dorrien anticipated and
-provided for, he changed direction, and on August 11 passed over
-the railway at a section which had been left unoccupied on
-Smith-Dorrien's right flank.</p>
-<p><a href="#fig-magaliesberg">Map, p. 240.</a></p>
-<p>Lord Roberts saw that Methuen's and Kitchener's pursuit would
-probably fail, and that De Wet would reach the Magaliesberg. Ian
-Hamilton was instructed to prevent him crossing it, and on August
-11 he was specifically ordered to occupy Olifant's Nek. Commando
-Nek was held by Baden-Powell. There was a third pass, the Magato
-Nek, a few miles west of Rustenburg, for which De Wet was
-apparently making, and which seemed to be his only possible way of
-escape, as it was confidently assumed that the other passes were
-held by British troops. It was, therefore, only necessary to head
-him from Magato Nek, and this was done by Methuen. But the movement
-threw De Wet towards Olifant's Nek, which to his great astonishment
-was not occupied, and through which he passed with Steyn on August
-14 and shook off his pursuers. Ian Hamilton had not been made to
-understand that the actual closing of Olifant's Nek was an urgent
-matter; and he, in fact, informed Lord Roberts that he did not
-propose to do so except indirectly by a movement which would
-command the approach to it.</p>
-<p>In this, the first of the De Wet hunts, nearly 30,000 British
-troops were directly or indirectly engaged in heading or pursuing
-over an area of 7,000 square miles. Nine columns blindly zigzagged
-and divagated to false scents and imperfect information in chase of
-one man encumbered with a civil government on the run and several
-hundred wagons. Again and again the fowler's net was cast upon the
-migrant, who always wriggled through the meshes. In one month he
-trekked 270 miles from the Brandwater Basin to the north of the
-Magaliesberg, with British troops continuously to his flanks, his
-front, and his rear.</p>
-<p>It would have been regarded as the most notable <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page281" id="page281"></a>{281}</span> personal
-exploit of the war if De Wet had not himself twice repeated it
-under circumstances of even greater difficulty. It must be
-acknowledged that his daring and resolution deserved success. He
-did not attain it by the means of followers eager to serve a
-trusted and beloved leader, for they by no means rose to him. When
-he reached the Vaal he was careful to throw the burghers' wagons
-across the river first of all, knowing that their unwillingness to
-leave the Free State would be overcome by their greater reluctance
-to sever themselves from their oxen and stuff. He owed his success
-mainly to the power of a strong will to make weaker wills work for
-it; and in a less degree to the accuracy of the information which
-Theron, his chief scout, obtained for him.</p>
-<p>It is at least doubtful whether Lord Roberts did not take De Wet
-too seriously. Was the capture of a <i>guerilla</i> leader worth
-the withdrawal of so many British troops from the main operations,
-and would not the sounder strategy have been to ignore him? If he
-had been severely let alone, he would hardly have done more than
-that which he did with the strength of an Army Corps against him,
-and his prestige with his own people would not have been so surely
-set up.</p>
-<p>The escape of De Wet was an incident of war, which, having
-regard to all the circumstances of the campaign, could not be made
-impossible. Columns working independently under directions from
-Head Quarters cannot be made aware of all that each has or has not
-done, and must take many things for granted; and the information of
-the enemy's movements which reaches them from the same source must
-often be received too late for effective action. If Lord Roberts
-had listened to Baden-Powell's protest against the evacuation of
-Rustenburg and Olifant's Nek, De Wet would probably have followed
-Cronje to St. Helena; but that does not prove that the policy of
-withdrawing from remote and exposed positions was unsound. All that
-can be said against it <span class="pagenum"><a name="page282" id=
-"page282"></a>{282}</span> is that it chanced to be carried out a
-few days too soon.</p>
-<p>Steyn and the officials left for Machadodorp. De Wet felt that
-his own country had a claim upon his services, and desired to
-return to it without delay. He divided his force, leaving the
-greater part under Steenekamp north of the Magaliesberg, himself
-going south with a small commando. The division materially aided
-his return, for it was not known for certain at Head Quarters with
-which portion he was marching. While he was in imagination being
-chased north of Pretoria, he was in fact scaling a rough mountain
-path, for all the passes had been closed, near Commando Nek, and
-looking down from the heights upon a British force by which he was
-not discovered. On August 21, after an absence of sixteen days, he
-recrossed the Vaal, and entered the Free State. The net result of
-all the labour, all the efforts, and all the consequent distress
-and exhaustion to which the British troops had willingly subjected
-themselves, was to re-establish De Wet as a greater power for
-mischief than ever.</p>
-<p>The Free Staters under Steenekamp joined Grobler of Waterberg,
-but the combination was hustled to the north out of striking
-distance of Pretoria by Baden-Powell, whose purely military service
-in South Africa ceased soon after. He had been selected to raise
-and to command the South African Constabulary, a semi-military
-body, which it was hoped the approaching end of the war would ere
-long permit to take over some of the duties of the troops.</p>
-<p>For some weeks after the escape of De Wet the various columns
-operating north and west of Pretoria were engaged in patrolling the
-country. They nowhere encountered serious resistance, but Delarey
-was neither taken nor crippled.</p>
-<p><a href="#fig-orange">Map, p. 292.</a></p>
-<p>While these events were occurring in Lord Roberts' rear, he was
-advancing eastwards from Pretoria. The battle of Diamond Hill was
-followed by a brief period of quietude in the east as well as the
-west. The objective <span class="pagenum"><a name="page283" id=
-"page283"></a>{283}</span> of the British Army was the railway from
-Pretoria to Komati Poort, on which the Transvaal Government,
-covered by Botha at Balmoral, was now dwelling at Machadodorp. The
-movements of Lord Roberts were for some time controlled by the
-situation in the Free State and the Western Transvaal, which called
-more pressingly for attention than the eastward advance.</p>
-<p>Early in July a column under Hutton was sent out to feel towards
-Botha's left. As he was opposed and made little progress, Lord
-Roberts a few days later reinforced him with French and a cavalry
-brigade, and on July 11 the combined columns thrust back the Boers
-from their positions at Witpoort, a few miles south of Diamond
-Hill. Botha had arranged with the commandants on the other side of
-Pretoria for concurrent attacks on the British forces in the
-vicinity of the capital, and his own was the only operation that
-was foiled on July 11. French's success, however, could not be
-followed up. He proposed to raid the railway near Balmoral, but
-Lord Roberts had been made anxious for the safety of Pretoria by
-the news of the affairs of Zilikat's Nek and Onderste Poort, and
-recalled him. Hutton was ordered to remain where he was, about
-twenty-five miles south-east of the capital, with a reduced
-force.</p>
-<p>There were indications that an attack not only on Pretoria but
-also on Johannesburg was contemplated by the enemy, in collusion
-with plots for risings against the British which were hatching in
-each city. It was no time yet for an eastward advance. The
-successes north and west of Pretoria stimulated Botha to attack
-what he supposed would strategically now be the most vulnerable
-section of the perimeter of defence, namely, the section facing
-him. If it had not been weakened by the withdrawal of troops to the
-west, troops would probably have been withdrawn from the west to
-meet him, and the task of Delarey thereby lightened. Either
-alternative would forward his policy.</p>
-<p><a href="#fig-magaliesberg">Map, p. 240.</a></p>
-<p>East of Pretoria Pole-Carew with the XIth Division <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page284" id="page284"></a>{284}</span> was in
-touch with Hutton. Botha recalled Grobler of Waterberg from the
-north, and on July 16 threw himself upon Pole-Carew and Hutton,
-near Witpoort. The brunt of the attack fell upon the latter, who,
-though at first pressed back and outflanked on his right, recovered
-himself and forced the enemy to retire. His immediate opponent was
-B. Viljoen, a leader who showed great military capacity in his
-management of the action. Against the XIth Division Botha
-demonstrated only. The chief incident of the affair was the holding
-of an outflanked and commanded kopje position by a few companies of
-the Royal Irish Fusiliers for six hours.</p>
-<p>The scheme for the eastward advance, which Lord Roberts did not
-feel himself justified in initiating until after the affair of July
-16, was that French should rejoin Hutton and take charge of the
-right; with Ian Hamilton, brought down from his northward
-demonstration against Grobler, on the extreme left north of the
-railway, while Pole-Carew advanced with Lord Roberts centrally
-along it.</p>
-<p><a href="#fig-orange">Map, p. 292.</a></p>
-<p>The advance began on July 23. French, with the natural spirit of
-a cavalry officer, chafed at being restricted to the slower
-progress of Pole-Carew's infantry and proposed to push forward
-boldly and cut the railway east of Middelburg, but Lord Roberts was
-reluctant to part with the only cavalry he had, and vetoed the
-movement. Botha was soon frightened out of Balmoral, which had been
-his Head Quarters since the battle of Diamond Hill, and which was
-entered by Lord Roberts on July 25. Two days later French rode into
-Middelburg.</p>
-<p>The eastward advance had now gained possession of eighty miles
-of the Delagoa Bay railway, but the De Wet trouble and the
-disturbed state of the Western Transvaal made the continuation of
-the movement unsafe, and Lord Roberts called a halt. It was also
-advisable to wait until supplies had been collected at Middelburg,
-and until Buller, who was coming up from the south, was in a
-position to co-operate. Lord Roberts <span class="pagenum"><a name=
-"page285" id="page285"></a>{285}</span> returned to Pretoria,
-leaving French in charge. Ian Hamilton, the emergency man, was sent
-to the west to deal with Delarey and De Wet. Towards the end of
-August Pole-Carew advanced to near Belfast, where he hoped soon to
-report himself to Buller.</p>
-<p>Nearly three months had now elapsed since the battle of Diamond
-Hill. The progress of the Transvaal campaign was not very apparent,
-but it was real. Botha had been driven back along the Delagoa Bay
-railway, and neither the outbreaks in the Western Transvaal nor the
-meteoric incursion of De Wet had availed him. Nothing that had
-occurred elsewhere weakened the western advance to an extent that
-gave him an opportunity of effectively withstanding it. Buller was
-approaching, and Lord Roberts was no longer dependent upon one line
-of communication. The fugitive Free State Government had been
-driven into asylum with the fugitive Transvaal Government. No
-commandos were at large which could seriously threaten
-Bloemfontein, Johannesburg, or Pretoria; and the only organized
-body which the enemy could bring into the field was confronted by a
-British Army and had the barrier of the Portuguese frontier behind
-it. There was good hope that in a few weeks the already undermined
-fabric of Boerdom would totter to the ground, and that the worst
-that could happen was that some of the fragments might not fall
-clear of the British troops.</p>
-<p>The arrival of Buller's force from the south gave Lord Roberts,
-who returned from Pretoria on August 25, the reinforcement
-justifying the resumption of the eastward advance. He found the
-troops unfavourably placed for immediate action. Botha was posted
-on each side of the railway near Belfast; the junction of his right
-with his left, which had different fronts, forming an obtuse
-salient angle. The greater part of the British force was south of
-the line and prevented by the nature of the ground from undertaking
-an enveloping movement on the enemy's left. Buller had kept the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page286" id=
-"page286"></a>{286}</span> cavalry to heel, and it was lying
-compressed between him and Pole-Carew, who was entrenched round
-Belfast.</p>
-<p>Lord Roberts' first act was to distribute over a wider front the
-conglomeration of troops, which were hampering each other's
-movements. French with his own cavalry, but without Buller's, was
-sent north of the line to face Botha's right flank and to clear
-Pole-Carew's left flank, while Buller worked up from the south
-towards the line.</p>
-<p>The movement began on August 26, and by the afternoon French,
-having made a wide detour, had established himself north of
-Belfast; thus enabling Pole-Carew to leave the town and extend his
-division in front of the enemy's right. Buller's movement was at
-first directly northwards, on account of the soft ground. His
-march, like that of Pole-Carew on the other flank, was across the
-enemy's front, but neither of them was seriously checked and the
-casualties were few.</p>
-<p>Buller had proposed to move eastward in the direction of
-Dalmanutha as soon as the ground permitted, but a cavalry
-reconnaissance discovered the enemy posted at Bergendal, close to
-the railway. The position was, in fact, the point of the obtuse
-angle formed by the two sections of the Boer front, one of which
-faced S.W. towards Buller, and the other west, towards Pole-Carew;
-and if it could be carried not only would Botha's line be broken,
-but Buller would be in a good position to deal with a retreat from
-either section,</p>
-<p>The battle of Bergendal on August 27 was mainly a struggle
-between less than fourscore Transvaal Police and two battalions and
-forty guns of Buller's Division. The "Zarps" held a rocky ridge at
-the end of a spur, where they were bombarded for three hours, yet
-when the infantry advanced it was met with a vigorous rifle fire,
-which was continued almost without intermission until at last the
-kopje was carried by assault. The defence of the kopje was one of
-the most conspicuous feats of the war on the Boer side, and it is
-noteworthy <span class="pagenum"><a name="page287" id=
-"page287"></a>{287}</span> that it was made by a body of regularly
-disciplined men. Owing partly no doubt to the difficulty of
-reinforcing such an isolated position, no effective support was
-given by Botha to the gallant little band, neither did he trouble
-Buller seriously with artillery fire; and the commandos east and
-north of the Zarps' kopje did little. He does not seem to have
-recognized that Bergendal was not a mere strong post, but the key
-of an unsound position which should at all hazards have been
-safeguarded. This Buller saw at once, and he moved so as to meet
-with the least interference from the enemy, who, having two fronts,
-could not act solidly upon either of them.</p>
-<p>The capture of Bergendal dissolved the Boer position. The
-commandos facing Buller were driven off; and the right, which had
-been opposing French and Pole-Carew so feebly that neither of them
-suffered a single casualty, fell away. Buller went in pursuit, but
-was unable to worry the retreat. Some commandos withdrew eastwards
-along the line, others broke off towards Lydenburg and Barberton.
-The Boer Governments retired from Machadodorp to Nelspruit. Buller
-crossed the railway, and on August 29 Helvetia was taken. Next day
-the British prisoners of war, whom the Boers had brought away in
-the scuttle from Pretoria when Lord Roberts entered the city, were
-released at Noitgedacht by their captors, who were no longer in a
-position to detain them.</p>
-<p>Botha had indeed been forced into retreat, but not cut off, and
-he escaped with all his guns and his losses were comparatively
-slight. His burghers were, as usual after a lost battle,
-demoralized and disheartened for the time being, but not, as was
-thought by the British Army, scared by their reverses into abject
-impotence. From the time of the occupation of Bloemfontein
-<i>guerilla</i> had been gradually taking the place of organized
-warfare, of which Bergendal was the last act, and which the
-burghers saw that they could not hope to wage successfully.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page288" id=
-"page288"></a>{288}</span> The history of the previous seven months
-showed what could be won by <i>guerilla</i>, and what could be lost
-by pretending to be an Army. The fact that they were no longer able
-to act as a coherent military body did not permanently discourage
-them, and the struggle had not yet run more than one-third of its
-weary course.</p>
-<p>It was, however, the general belief not only in Great Britain
-but also in the Army in South Africa, that the Boers had kicked
-their last kick at Bergendal. There might be a final wriggle or
-two; but the end was in sight, and before the first anniversary of
-the declaration of war, peace would again reign in the land. These
-not ill-founded hopes justified Lord Roberts' Proclamation of
-September 1, by which the Transvaal was formally incorporated in
-the British Empire.</p>
-<p>To prevent the enemy escaping to the north or to the south, and
-to impale him upon the stakes of the Portuguese frontier, Lord
-Roberts pushed forward three columns; one under Pole-Carew to
-follow the railway towards Komati Poort, another under French to
-march towards Barberton, and a third under Buller to occupy the
-Lydenburg district; to which Botha had gone after the battle of
-Bergendal, and which if held by him would leave in the possession
-of the Boers the best line of retreat from the railway to the
-northern Transvaal.</p>
-<p>Ian Hamilton, on his return from the west after the escape of De
-Wet, was lent to Buller for a few days. The occupation of Lydenburg
-on September 7, and of Spitz Kop four days later, drove Botha back
-to the line at Nelspruit. Buller's operations were carried out with
-success in a country more difficult than any that had yet been
-entered by the British Army in South Africa. South of the railway,
-French spread the net, casting it from Carolina to Barberton, which
-he entered on September 13, and where he not only captured a
-considerable amount of rolling stock and supplies which the Boers
-had shoved into the little branch line, but also released a final
-remnant of about a hundred British <span class="pagenum"><a name=
-"page289" id="page289"></a>{289}</span> prisoners of war, most of
-whom were officers. He had advanced through a country almost as
-difficult as that in which Buller was engaged, and although the
-commandos opposing him had at first been drawn away to the south by
-the report that he was making for Ermelo, they returned in time to
-offer some resistance east of Carolina; but he entered Barberton
-without the discharge of a rifle. Botha had sounded the Cease
-Fire.</p>
-<p>The Boers had found it necessary to consider the situation
-seriously. They had been driven into a relatively minute area,
-which was morally congested with a pair of Presidents and their
-parasites, remnants of Government offices, superfluous commandants,
-and commandos some of which were eager and some of which were not
-eager to continue the struggle; and physically by the accumulation
-of stores, supplies, guns, ammunition, and rolling stock which had
-been rammed down into the last section of the Delagoa Bay
-railway.</p>
-<p>Kruger was induced to lighten the ship which he had so signally
-failed to keep on her course. He left Nelspruit on September 11 for
-Lorenzo Marques, where he was taken under the protection of the
-Portuguese Government, and where he remained until the eve of the
-first anniversary of the opening scene of the drama, the battle of
-Talana Hill. On October 19 another nation offered him asylum, and
-he sailed for Marseilles in the <i>Guelderland</i>, a cruiser of
-the Dutch Navy; thus symbolically repatriating the French and Dutch
-emigrants who had quitted Europe for South Africa in the
-seventeenth century.</p>
-<p>The positions of Buller on the north of the railway, of French
-at Barberton, and of Pole-Carew ready to advance centrally, made
-immediate action imperative; but Botha was hampered by the presence
-of not a few unwilling and unmounted commandos. These he sent under
-Koetzee to Komati Poort and left to arrange their own destiny; and
-with the rest, which numbered 4,000 burghers, he broke away in two
-directions, himself with <span class="pagenum"><a name="page290"
-id="page290"></a>{290}</span> B. Viljoen leading the northward
-trek, while T. Smuts endeavoured to escape southward into
-Swaziland.</p>
-<p>Thus when Pole-Carew, who had been joined by Ian Hamilton and
-whose advance had been delayed to allow French and Buller to get
-into position on his flanks, reached Komati Poort on September 24,
-he found himself hitting at vacancy with the wreckage of two lost
-republics around him, derelict railway stock, disabled guns,
-abandoned ammunition, and burning stores. Koetzee's men had
-disappeared, most of them into Portuguese territory, which they had
-been partly persuaded and partly compelled to enter by the
-Portuguese authorities, who, although they had regarded the Boer
-cause with a more than benevolent neutrality during the earlier
-stages of the war, now saw that a fight near the frontier would be
-a most embarrassing episode; and, while offering an asylum to the
-fugitives, threatened to allow Lord Roberts to land troops at
-Lorenzo Marques if it were not accepted. On the 28th Pole-Carew was
-engaged not in battle with the Boers, but in celebrating the
-birthday of the King of Portugal, a singular interlude between the
-acts of the war drama.</p>
-<p>Botha in making for the north hoped to establish his remnant and
-cultivate the germs somewhere in the Leydsdorp or Pietersburg
-districts, which were the only portions of the Transvaal not
-occupied by British troops. Lord Roberts' expectations that they
-would be denied to the enemy by the Rhodesian Field Force under
-Carrington were not fulfilled, and he could not spare any of his
-own troops to occupy them.</p>
-<p>Botha, preceded by a few days by Steyn, left the Delagoa Bay
-line on September 17, and succeeded in scraping past Buller without
-serious excoriation, but he was compelled to send the greater part
-of his force under B. Viljoen by a circuitous route through the
-unhealthy lower veld.</p>
-<p>The enemy was now to all appearances chased to the ends of the
-earth, but throughout October and <span class="pagenum"><a name=
-"page291" id="page291"></a>{291}</span> November roving bodies
-worried the railway and detained a considerable British force upon
-it.</p>
-<p>Commandos that could not be accounted for by the British
-Intelligence Staff seemed to spring out of the ground. Trains were
-de-railed, raids and counter-raids north and south were the order
-of the day. Lydenburg was prowled upon. Botha and Viljoen, stirred
-by Steyn, hovered in the north, and Viljoen went south to
-co-ordinate the several activities. On November 19 he effected a
-temporary success at Balmoral, capturing a small post and cutting
-the railway, but it served him little and he soon retired.</p>
-<p>Of the force engaged in the Komati Poort advance, the Guards'
-Brigade, which the hopeful situation would soon, it was thought,
-allow to be sent home, as well as French's cavalry and other
-troops, had been withdrawn; and a column under Paget which was
-operating west of Pretoria had to be called up to expel Viljoen
-from a position which he afterwards took up twenty miles north of
-the railway at Rhenosterkop. The affair was the only serious action
-during October and November.</p>
-<p>French did not advance beyond Barberton. Early in October he was
-ordered to clear the country lying between the Natal and the
-Delagoa Bay railways. At first opposed by Smuts and subsequently
-impeded by bad weather, transport difficulties, and constant
-sniping, his movement resembled a retreat rather than a voluntary
-advance, and it was so regarded by the commandos. When he reached
-Heidelberg on October 26, he had lost half his oxen and a third of
-his wagons.</p>
-<p>After the conclusion of the Komati Poort operations Buller
-returned to England. No general officer serving in South Africa was
-regarded by the non-commissioned officers and men under his command
-with greater affection and admiration. The Natal Army was held
-together in spite of disasters and failures by the personality of
-its leader. He had made not a few mistakes, but they never lost him
-the confidence of his troops, who, when he <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page292" id="page292"></a>{292}</span> left
-their camp at Lydenburg, said farewell to him with an extraordinary
-demonstration of genuine regret.</p>
-<p>At the end of November the command of the British Forces in
-South Africa was taken over by Lord Kitchener from Lord Roberts,
-who sailed for England in the belief that the war was practically
-over. He had completed the task which he had set himself when he
-landed at Capetown ten months before. At that time hardly even a
-scout had quitted British territory; now almost every mile of
-railway and every considerable town of the two republics, except
-Pietersburg, was in the possession of the British Army; the Boer
-Governments had been expelled; Natal was free; organized resistance
-had ceased; the remnants of a baffled and bewildered enemy were
-prowling aimlessly in small bodies. All the precedents indicated a
-speedy termination of the War.</p>
-<p>When Lord Roberts left the shadow of Table Mountain the last
-word in Strategy and Tactics had been spoken, and the war gradually
-became a problem in Mechanics. His strategy was freely criticized
-at first, but it proved to be sound; and the only fault that could
-be found with his tactics was that like a skilful chess player he
-always endeavoured to defeat his opponent with the least possible
-loss on either side.</p>
-<p>The organization of a European Army had been found inefficient
-for dealing with Boer <i>guerilla</i>. The Army Corps fell to
-pieces as soon as it landed in South Africa; and as time went on
-the Divisions, the Brigades, and even many of the regimental units
-were one by one liquidated and re-shuffled into columns.<a id=
-"footnotetag51" name="footnotetag51"></a><a href=
-"#footnote51"><sup>51</sup></a></p>
-<p>Lord Kitchener, who had been General Manager to Lord Roberts,
-was admirably qualified to succeed him, and to deal with a
-situation which seemed to call for the exercise of a strong will
-and of the power of organization rather than for the display of
-purely professional <span class="pagenum"><a name="page293" id=
-"page293"></a>{293}</span> qualities, in which he was somewhat
-deficient. It is doubtful whether he would have commanded a large
-army successfully on the field of battle, but no better man could
-have been chosen to control the vast area over which the British
-Forces were distributed.</p>
-<a name="fig-so-transvaal" id="fig-so-transvaal"></a>
-<div class="figcenter" style="width:50%;"><a href=
-"images/image19.png"><img width="100%" src="images/image19.png"
-alt="Map of Southern Transvaal" /></a></div>
-<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote49" name=
-"footnote49"></a><b>Footnote 49:</b><a href=
-"#footnotetag49">(return)</a>
-<p>Not the column with which he had come up to Pretoria with Lord
-Roberts, and which after his accident had been taken over by
-Hunter, but a newly-constituted column.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote50" name=
-"footnote50"></a><b>Footnote 50:</b><a href=
-"#footnotetag50">(return)</a>
-<p>Lord Roberts said that if he had been free to send Ian Hamilton
-into the Free State instead of to Rustenburg, De Wet must have been
-surrounded.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote51" name=
-"footnote51"></a><b>Footnote 51:</b><a href=
-"#footnotetag51">(return)</a>
-<p>After June, 1901, the classification of the South African Army
-in Divisions and Brigades disappeared from the Army List.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page294" id=
-"page294"></a>{294}</span>
-<h2><a name="chap15" id="chap15">CHAPTER XV</a></h2>
-<h3>The Recurrences of De Wet</h3>
-<p><a href="#fig-orange">Map, p. 292.</a></p>
-<p>In October, 1900, De Wet, with 1,000 men, again crossed into the
-Transvaal at Schoeman's Drift. His movement, which was preceded by
-constant raids on the railway throughout September, was not
-altogether voluntary, but was rather a withdrawal from columns
-pressing on him in the Free State.<a id="footnotetag52" name=
-"footnotetag52"></a><a href="#footnote52"><sup>52</sup></a> Barton,
-who with the Fusilier Brigade had been sent down by Lord Roberts to
-meet him, took up a position at Fredrikstad, where he was
-surrounded by De Wet and Liebenberg on October 24. The situation
-was now so serious that Lord Roberts ordered a brigade under Knox
-to come up to Barton's assistance from the Free State, but it was
-not required, as the arrival of a column from the north broke the
-cordon, and De Wet returned to the Free State.</p>
-<p>The new De Wet hunt was soon in cry. When Knox was set on the
-trail, he was in the Free State and De Wet was in the Transvaal.
-Two days later the positions were reversed, for they had crossed
-the river in opposite directions. The situation now developed
-itself favourably for De Wet's methods. For a purely military
-operation he had never shown much aptitude. He had failed against
-Barton at Fredrikstad, but he was not discouraged by the repulse,
-which he unjustly attributed to want of co-operation on the part of
-Liebenberg. <span class="pagenum"><a name="page295" id=
-"page295"></a>{295}</span> He had put the Vaal between himself and
-Knox, who was on the right bank blindly nosing the drifts. He knew
-from recent experience that his pursuers, with their imperfect
-methods of acquiring information, would hunt by sight and not by
-scent, and he had the mobility of a hare as well as the instinct of
-a fox. He lay <i>perdu</i> for some days near the left bank of the
-Vaal, while a net with spacious meshes was being cast to ensnare
-him. Again he crossed and re-crossed the river in order to bring
-Steyn away from Ventersdorp, whom two months previously he had
-conducted into the Transvaal, and who had in the meantime worked
-round the British Army to Machadodorp and back; and who after
-conferences with Kruger and L. Botha, now returned with him
-unscathed into their own land with schemes for the future.</p>
-<p><a href="#fig-so-transvaal">Map, p. 260.</a></p>
-<p>Pom-pom batteries and mounted infantry, the latest fashions of
-war, were sent after him by Knox. On November 6 he was surprised in
-laager near Bothaville, but escaped with Steyn and the greater
-portion of his command on the first alarm. The gallant Le Gallais
-was killed and the laager itself captured after a stout resistance
-some hours later, and with it all De Wet's field guns, wagons, a
-considerable quantity of ammunition and horse equipment, and more
-than 100 prisoners of war.</p>
-<p>Most men would have succumbed to the disaster, but it only
-spurred De Wet. He had signally failed in his late attempt on the
-Transvaal, and he had just lost almost everything at Bothaville,
-but he resolved to make a raid in the opposite direction on the
-northern districts of Cape Colony. To reach his new objective, he
-must traverse the whole length of the Free State, which, having
-been in the occupation of the British Army for several months,
-should have offered the line of greatest resistance to his
-movement.</p>
-<p>The Brandwater Basin disaster of July 30 had, however, by no
-means crushed Free State Boerdom, which, <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page296" id="page296"></a>{296}</span> after
-having been heavily hurled to the ground, where it lay for a time
-apparently unconscious, began to show signs of returning animation,
-and in a few weeks was again on its legs; thanks to the
-restoratives freely administered by De Wet on his return from his
-first incursion into the Transvaal. Into each district he sent
-irreconcilable men after his own heart to stimulate the wavering
-and animate the discouraged; and barely a month elapsed before the
-burghers were besieging Ladybrand, which, however, they failed to
-take, and were hacking at the railway into the Transvaal. In
-October every village in the S.W. district of the Orange River
-Colony in the possession of a British garrison was attacked, all
-but one of them without success.</p>
-<p>Lord Roberts had already taken measures to curb the new
-activities. His plan was to occupy certain places strongly as bases
-from which mobile columns could constantly move to and fro, eating
-up the intervening country and rendering it incapable of supporting
-the enemy. Its operation was mainly confined to the northern
-districts of the Free State, in which lay the centre of
-disturbance, and the troops engaged could not be readily employed
-outside them. It was so far successful, in that it drove De Wet
-into the Transvaal in October, but it failed to restrain his
-subsequent movements. It probably was the best that could have been
-devised for dealing with local <i>guerilla</i>, but its action
-being centrifugal and not circumferential, it was powerless to deal
-with a meteoric raid of well-mounted men. Although the British
-troops greatly outnumbered the Boers, yet in practice only the
-mounted details, which included no regular cavalry and were
-relatively weak, were directly effective against the enemy, and the
-movements of the divagating columns were sluggish.</p>
-<p>When De Wet left Bothaville on November 6, his arm was,
-metaphorically speaking, in a sling, and he was footsore; but ten
-days later he had brought together <span class="pagenum"><a name=
-"page297" id="page297"></a>{297}</span> in the Doornberg a force of
-1,500 men, with whom he proposed to cut his way into the Cape
-Colony. His movement south may be compared to that of a small swift
-steamer endeavouring to escape from a blockaded seaport. Ahead of
-him and on each beam were the slow-moving vessels of the blockading
-squadron, most of them hull down and with banked fires.</p>
-<p>He made at once for the scene of his April successes, the
-country lying between Bloemfontein and the Basuto border. The chief
-obstacles in his way were a line of posts running eastwards from
-Bloemfontein, and the town of Dewetsdorp, which was held by 500
-British troops. The latter he might have avoided had he chosen to
-do so, but he seems to have been attracted to it because it was the
-home of his childhood, which it was incumbent upon him to redeem
-from bondage.</p>
-<p>The phenomenon of a Boer column marching through the heart of a
-country supposed to be effectively in the possession of the British
-Army was again witnessed. To borrow another metaphor, this time
-from Astronomy, De Wet throughout the greater part of his career
-was a telescopic star, invisible to the naked eye. General Officers
-and column commanders helplessly watched his course through the
-telescopes of the Intelligence Staff, and seemed to have as little
-power of influencing it as an observer at Greenwich has of changing
-the orbit of a planet. The astronomer can at least forecast with
-certainty the path which it will follow in the heavens, but there
-were no observations available from which the course of De Wet
-could be predicted for more than a few hours. He seemed to defy the
-laws of gravitation.</p>
-<p>On November 16, he easily rushed the Bloemfontein-Thabanchu line
-of posts at Springhaan's Nek, and three days later invested
-Dewetsdorp. Meanwhile the alarm had been given. Knox's force, which
-had been sent after him into the Transvaal, was now sent after him
-to Bloemfontein, and mobile columns were detailed. Dewetsdorp was
-doomed from the first unless <span class="pagenum"><a name=
-"page298" id="page298"></a>{298}</span> assistance arrived from
-outside. The position could not be held effectively by a small
-force, One by one the scattered posts fell into the hands of De
-Wet, but the defence was maintained until the 23rd, when the white
-flag was hoisted. On the previous day two relieving columns had
-started from Edenburg, but they were checked near Dewetsdorp on the
-24th by De Wet, who shook himself free of them and was soon on his
-way to the south with 500 prisoners of war; and Knox with a third
-relieving column was marching from Edenburg.</p>
-<p>Thus almost within sight of Sannah's Post and Mostert's Hoek and
-after six months of apparently successful activity by the British
-Army, De Wet snatched away another garrison. After a repulse at
-Fredrikstad, soon followed by a severe mauling at Bothaville, from
-which he broke out as a fugitive, he placidly and confidently
-trekked southwards unopposed for 150 miles, magnetically attracting
-to himself a force sufficient to blot out Dewetsdorp in the
-presence of a bewildered enemy, who, though in overwhelming
-numbers, was feebly strung out in lengths without breadth. The
-British Army had still to learn, not only in the Free State, but
-also elsewhere, the elemental fact in geometry that neither one
-straight line nor two, nor under certain conditions even three, can
-enclose an area.</p>
-<p>It was evident that De Wet was making for the Cape Colony, the
-disaffected northern districts of which were again giving cause for
-anxiety, and which at all hazards he must be prevented from
-entering. Lord Kitchener came down from the Transvaal to direct the
-operations; the Brigade of Guards on its way to Capetown and home,
-was de-trained to hold the line of the Orange; Knox's columns
-hurried forward. De Wet, after a slight encounter with Knox, who
-was marching south, turned adroitly to the west and did not resume
-the original direction of his march until he had put a considerable
-distance between himself and the columns, which were "running heel"
-and pursuing him almost in <span class="pagenum"><a name="page299"
-id="page299"></a>{299}</span> the opposite direction. Near Bethulie
-he was reinforced by Hertzog and other leaders, but by this time he
-had been headed by Knox at Bethulie and was compelled to draw off
-eastwards into the angle between the Orange and the Caledon. He
-left Hertzog with instructions to make his way across the river
-west of Norval's Pont, intending to cross with his own force higher
-up. He was, however, prevented by the forces of nature from
-carrying out the raid which the British military forces would
-probably have been unable to prohibit. Heavy rains had fallen in
-the Basuto Mountains, and the sudden rise of the Caledon and the
-Orange to flood level obliterated most of the drifts and entrapped
-him between them. He made one dash for the Orange at Odendaal, but
-found the drift in the possession of the enemy.</p>
-<p>De Wet now saw that he was not destined to enter the Cape Colony
-on this occasion, and that he would have much difficulty in saving
-himself. On December 6 he determined to retreat by the way he came.
-He did not, however, wholly abandon the scheme of a Cape Colony
-raid, for he detached Kritzinger and Scheepers with instructions to
-hover and watch their opportunity of breaking into it. The
-opportune falling of the Caledon opened to him a postern towards
-the north, and on December 7 he crossed the river and made for
-Helvetia, where again he was entangled. The line of least
-resistance seemed to run westwards towards the railway, and he put
-himself upon it, soon to find that Kitchener's dispositions had
-obstructed it. He doubled back, and trailing Knox after him in a
-night march, shook himself free. Knox, confident that the
-Bloemfontein-Ladybrand line of posts would be an effectual barrier
-to De Wet's retreat, had waited to pull his straggling columns
-together. De Wet, reinforced by a commando under Michael Prinsloo,
-who had been with him in his first Transvaal incursion when Steyn
-was put over the border, rushed at the blockhouse line and again
-cut it at Springhaan's Nek, for although it had <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page300" id="page300"></a>{300}</span> been
-attended to recently, there was an aneurism in it which yielded at
-the critical moment, and on December 14 De Wet passed freely
-through the lesion. He arrived by way of Ficksburg at Tafelberg,
-S.E. of Senekal, on December 25.</p>
-<p>The failure of the raid was almost as disconcerting to the
-British plan of campaign as its success would have been. It showed
-that the troops were unable to prevent a mobile and well-led
-commando from traversing the Free State from end to end; it put new
-spirit into the burghers, and destroyed the hopes of peace which
-the operations of Lord Roberts in the Transvaal had kindled. De Wet
-was still at large, and although he had not accomplished all that
-he intended, he had good reason to be satisfied, and was stimulated
-for fresh efforts. He could boast that he was beaten not by columns
-but by two rivers in spate. His movements were so little obstructed
-that after reaching the Senekal district he was able to pay a
-flying visit to the railway at Roodeval, where he recovered the
-Lee-Metford ammunition which he had buried in June, and with which
-he hoped soon to have an opportunity of charging the rifles
-captured at Dewetsdorp.</p>
-<p>When De Wet, Hertzog, and Kritzinger parted company near the
-Orange early in December, their tracks formed the letter Y
-inverted. De Wet marched along the stem towards the N.E.;
-Kritzinger struck in the direction of the midland districts of the
-Cape Colony; Hertzog made for the west. Martial law was at last
-proclaimed in the Colony, the greater part of which was, in spite
-of innumerable columns slipped at them, traversed by Hertzog and
-Kritzinger. The former, after an adventurous march of over 400
-miles, reached Lambert's Bay on the shore of the Atlantic, and gave
-to most of his men their first sight of the sea; and to all of them
-a unique experience in the war, for they were shelled by a British
-cruiser at anchor in the haven.<a id="footnotetag53" name=
-"footnotetag53"></a><a href="#footnote53"><sup>53</sup></a></p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page301" id=
-"page301"></a>{301}</span>
-<p>While Hertzog was watching the setting of the sun upon an
-Atlantic horizon, Kritzinger was at Willowmore, almost within sight
-of the Indian Ocean, having in spite of all the columns pushed his
-way from Rouxville down into the S.E. districts of the Cape Colony.
-Neither Kritzinger nor Hertzog, however, effected much by their
-raids except to show in the Colony what De Wet had already shown in
-the Transvaal and the Free State, the impotence of even the
-best-laid schemes of pursuit, and they returned towards the centre
-in February. De Wet and Hertzog had between them in the course of a
-few months succeeded in ploughing, through the heart of the country
-occupied by the British Army, a lonely furrow which stretched from
-the northward slopes of the Magaliesberg in the Transvaal through
-the Free State to a haven on the South Atlantic Ocean.</p>
-<p>Meanwhile De Wet was waiting until the moment should come for
-him to take part in the wide-reaching plan of campaign which had
-been devised by the Boer Governments. They saw the uselessness of
-attempting to withstand the British forces in the Republics, and
-they determined to bring the war back into the Cape Colony and
-Natal. The general idea was that L. Botha should march on
-Pietermaritzburg from the Eastern Transvaal, while De Wet followed
-Hertzog and Kritzinger across the Orange, and then, having effected
-a <span class="pagenum"><a name="page302" id=
-"page302"></a>{302}</span> junction with them, should advance on
-Capetown. The scheme was not so extravagant and quixotic as it
-might appear to be, as recent events had shown the difficulty of
-restraining the movements of a Boer leader of dash and enterprise;
-and there was no reason why De Wet should not be as successful in
-eluding pursuit in the future as he had been in the past.</p>
-<p>Again the Doornberg, although within sight of the railway
-between Bloemfontein and Kroonstad, was available as a meeting
-place. Here on November 16, 1900, he had assembled his burghers for
-his first attempt on the Cape Colony; and here on January 25, 1901,
-he brought them together for his second. Steyn was with him, and
-all the available Free State commandants with more than 2,000 men
-mustered on the mountain unmolested. His intentions were not
-unknown to the British Intelligence Staff, and when he quitted the
-rendezvous he had a column under B. Hamilton on his right rear and
-a column under C. Knox on his left front.</p>
-<p>The situation was not novel, and he dealt with it with his
-customary good luck and success. He passed across Knox's front, who
-fortunately for him had been ordered not to act before Hamilton
-came up, and reached the Tabaksberg, between Winburg and Brandfort,
-next day. On the following morning he shook off an attack made by a
-portion of Knox's column, and went for the Bloemfontein Thabanchu
-line of posts, which he had already twice cut. Hamilton, distanced
-in the chase, had been put on the railway and sent to Bloemfontein
-to strengthen the line, but he arrived too late to prevent De Wet
-crossing it on January 30 at Israel's Poort. The sorely-tried pale
-had again failed.<a id="footnotetag54" name=
-"footnotetag54"></a><a href="#footnote54"><sup>54</sup></a></p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page303" id=
-"page303"></a>{303}</span>
-<p>De Wet, having shaken off the columns which had been pursuing
-him from the Doornberg, had now a free course of 100 miles to the
-next obstacle, the Orange. It was evident that the speed of the
-columns must be increased and Knox was put upon the railway for the
-first time and Hamilton for the second and dispatched to Bethulie.
-The energy of a considerable portion of the British Army was
-devoted to an attempt to make the barrier of the Orange
-impassable.</p>
-<p>North of the river was De Wet; south of it Hertzog and
-Kritzinger were waiting for him. There was every reason to fear
-that should he succeed in joining either of them, the smouldering
-embers of rebellion would again break out in the Cape Colony.
-Troops were hurried by train from the Transvaal, from Kimberley,
-and from Capetown. Lyttelton was brought down from the Delagoa Bay
-line to Naauwpoort to take general charge of the operations, and to
-build as rapidly as possible a wall that could not be scaled or
-breached.</p>
-<p>For some reason which is not apparent De Wet, although he had an
-open country in front of him in which not a single British column
-was operating, moved slowly, and thereby gave more time for the
-carrying out of Lyttelton's arrangements. Possibly he may have been
-delayed by trouble with his Free State commandos, some of which a
-few days later refused to cross with him into the Colony. On
-January 31 he passed through Dewetsdorp, gratified no doubt to find
-that since his capture of it in November his enemies had not
-ventured to set foot again in it. At that time he had not made up
-his mind whether to cross the Orange east or west of Norval's Pont.
-If the former, he would soon be able to join Kritzinger, who after
-the Willowmore raid had returned to the Zuurberg, between Stormberg
-and Naauwpoort; if the latter, he would be able to call up Hertzog,
-who had returned from the shores of the Atlantic and was hovering
-in the Carnarvon district west of De Aar.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page304" id=
-"page304"></a>{304}</span>
-<p>De Wet had from time to time to time been in communication with
-Kritzinger and Hertzog during their raids. His advanced patrols
-soon discovered that the section of the Orange lying eastward of
-Norval's Pont was very strongly held. The dispositions of
-Lyttelton's troops seem to have been made on the assumption that De
-Wet would endeavour to join Kritzinger, who was little more than
-one day's march from the left bank, rather than Hertzog, who was
-150 miles away. The river section westward of Norval's Pont was
-therefore held lightly by a line of outposts at the drifts, thrown
-out from the main barrier based on Naauwpoort, nearly forty miles
-south of the river. Of this De Wet was at the time unaware. His
-information was that the eastward section was impassable. The
-westward section might possibly not be so, and he determined to
-make for it.</p>
-<p>He spread a report that he intended to cross the river at
-Odendaalstroom or Aliwal North, and paused to allow it time to
-reach the ears of Knox, who seems to have given some credence to
-it. A column was sent out to reconnoitre in the direction of
-Smithfield. When half-way between that town and Dewetsdorp, De Wet
-suddenly changed direction and made for Phillipolis, detaching a
-portion of his force under Froeneman, who on February 5 captured
-and burnt a train a few miles south of Edenburg and crossed the
-railway. On the following night, De Wet crossed it with the main
-body near Springfontein, while Knox was hunting for him near
-Bethulie.</p>
-<p>It was now evident that De Wet's objective was the Zand Drift on
-the Orange west of Phillipolis. He had had a long start, and the
-nearest troops available for the pursuit of him were the columns of
-Knox and Hamilton at Bethulie. Here the river bends round to the
-south, forming an arc through Norval's Pont towards Zand Drift; and
-the columns therefore crossed to the right bank and marched eighty
-miles along the chord, only to find when they reached the Drift on
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page305" id=
-"page305"></a>{305}</span> February 12 that De Wet had two days
-previously crossed by it into the Cape Colony.</p>
-<p>The operations of the next sixteen days were confined to a
-comparatively small rectangle of about 6,000 square miles lying on
-the left bank of the Orange, which bounded it from Norval's Pont to
-Douglas and thence to near Prieska. The S.E. side and half the S.W.
-side, namely from Norval's Pont to Naauwpoort and thence to De Aar,
-were formed by the railways, the remaining portion of the S.W. side
-being the river Brak, which flows into the Orange a few miles above
-Prieska.</p>
-<p>Owing to a sudden flood, which delayed Knox for two days, he was
-unable to follow De Wet across Zand Drift, but Plumer started from
-Naauwpoort with two columns, and on February 12 came in touch with
-De Wet and compelled him to change his course. Two days later De
-Wet crossed the railway between De Aar and Hopetown, after a
-rearguard action with Plumer, into whose hands fell next morning
-the transport which De Wet had been compelled by bad weather to
-leave behind him.</p>
-<p>De Wet now proposed to fetch a compass towards Prieska, where he
-hoped to effect a junction with Hertzog, but the driving power of
-the raid was slowly exhausting itself. The motive energy was stored
-up in accumulators, and when these were discharged in succession,
-there was no means of re-charging them. Hertzog and Kritzinger, who
-had been relied on for this purpose, were not at hand; more than a
-third of the force with which De Wet had originally left the
-Doornberg had declined to leave the Free State; and the transport
-had been lost.</p>
-<p>Plumer also was exhausted and unable to continue the pursuit,
-but fortunately Knox was close behind him. He doubled back towards
-Hopetown for supplies, leaving Knox to follow the trail. De Wet was
-now driven into the western corner of the rectangle where
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page306" id=
-"page306"></a>{306}</span> the Brak falls into the Orange, and
-where he found himself in a dilemma similar to that which in his
-first raid had cornered him between the Orange and the Caledon. The
-Brak was in spate, and he could not cross it to Prieska. All hope
-of joining Hertzog and of a successful raid into the Cape Colony
-was at an end; there was nothing to be done but make the best of
-his way back to the Free State. He reversed his course and made for
-the confluence of the Orange and the Vaal. His change of direction
-was not known to Knox, who, assuming that De Wet must have crossed
-the Brak, which fell as suddenly as it had risen, threw his columns
-across it and trekked for twenty miles towards the S.W. Hertzog was
-reported to be a day's march higher up the Brak.</p>
-<p>Up to this time the whole of the stress of the pursuit had
-fallen upon Knox and Plumer. As soon as the news of De Wet's entry
-into the Cape Colony reached Lord Kitchener, he hurried down from
-the Transvaal to De Aar to superintend the casting of the nets. His
-first dispositions were made with the object of preventing De Wet
-and Hertzog breaking away into the districts lying west of the
-railway to Capetown, and an ingenious and elaborate scheme of
-columns springing out from the line in succession from the north,
-was arranged. It was not, however, put into action, for Knox and
-Plumer had headed back De Wet, and for the time being had prevented
-a junction between him and Hertzog. It was no longer a case of a
-stern chase, but of the fencing in of a comparatively limited area,
-into which more than a dozen columns were thrown, and which by
-February 24 was reduced to the district bounded on three sides by
-the railways and on the fourth by the Orange.</p>
-<p>When on February 21 Plumer was able to resume the pursuit, Knox
-having discovered his mistake was recrossing the Brak, and De Wet
-on the left bank of the Orange was unsuccessfully searching for
-practicable <span class="pagenum"><a name="page307" id=
-"page307"></a>{307}</span> drifts. He succeeded, however, in
-transferring a few of his men to the right bank in a boat at
-Makow's Drift, but was overtaken by Plumer before he could complete
-the movement, and forced to hurry on towards Hopetown. In the
-course of one week he had marched in the direction of almost every
-point in the compass, and was now heading E.S.E.</p>
-<p>When within fifteen miles of Hopetown he lost two guns, and on
-the same day ran up against a new obstacle, a column under Paris,
-which had come down from Kimberley and which had extended itself
-westward from Hopetown. He succeeded in wriggling through the line
-without detection during the night; while Paris, unaware of what
-had occurred and thinking that De Wet was still in front of him,
-pushed on next morning and came into action, not with De Wet, but
-with Plumer, who was pursuing De Wet in the opposite direction. On
-February 24 De Wet crossed the railway eastwards a few miles south
-of Orange River Station.</p>
-<p>As soon as Hertzog in the Carnarvon district heard of the
-approach of De Wet he trekked up towards the Brak to meet him,
-having first detached a portion of his command under Brand to make
-a circuit through Britstown. Brand was followed by B. Hamilton, who
-had been set on to his trail, but regained touch with his leader on
-February 20, when the news came that De Wet was in difficulties and
-that the raid must be abandoned.</p>
-<p>Hertzog and Brand joined forces across the river and trekked to
-the east, having thrown Plumer off the scent for a day. On February
-25 Hertzog crossed the railway. Three Boer leaders were now groping
-for each other in the Fog of War: De Wet, Hertzog, and Fourie, who
-had been left behind to do what he could to extricate the transport
-which De Wet had been compelled to abandon when he crossed the
-railway westwards on February 16, and who had been lost sight of by
-the British columns. The forces of gravitation are, however,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page308" id=
-"page308"></a>{308}</span> irresistible, and as Hertzog and Brand
-could not be long kept apart, so also De Wet, Hertzog, and Fourie
-soon came together.</p>
-<p>De Wet trekked along the left bank of the Orange for nearly
-sixty miles, but found every drift impassable. On February 26 he
-reached Zand Drift. A fortnight previously a sudden flood had
-checked his pursuers, now another flood was checking his retreat
-from them at the same spot, and he was hemmed in by a swollen river
-and a dozen active columns. Most men would have yielded to the
-situation, but his tenacity of purpose never faltered. Early on the
-morning of February 27 Hertzog, who had picked up Fourie a few
-hours before, joined him.</p>
-<p>After crossing the railway Hertzog made for Petrusville, where
-he heard that De Wet had passed through the town on his way south,
-and followed him. About twenty miles away on Hertzog's right flank
-a column under Hickman was marching on Zand Drift, and had it not
-been suddenly diverted northwards by orders from Lyttelton, it must
-have forestalled him at the Drift, as it was working on interior
-lines. The change of direction was made before Hertzog's presence
-in the vicinity became known to Hickman, who on sighting a Boer
-column on February 26 again changed direction to pursue it. A
-second column was soon descried, and later in the day, about the
-time that De Wet reached the Drift, a considerable Boer force was
-sighted. It was composed of the two columns already seen under
-Hertzog and Brand, reinforced by Fourie, who had emerged from the
-Fog. Hickman's pursuit failed to prevent the three commandants
-joining De Wet at the Drift during the night.</p>
-<p>The <i>disjecta membra</i> of the raid were now assembled, but
-the task of the British columns was, apparently, greatly
-facilitated. Instead of having to chase evasive and elusive
-commandos now in this direction and now in that, the leaders had
-but to pin De Wet down to the <span class="pagenum"><a name=
-"page309" id="page309"></a>{309}</span> left bank of the Orange at
-Zand Drift and to leave him to gaze longingly at the further shore.
-Nothing could now save him but a sudden fall of the swollen river.
-Before De Wet's arrival at Zand Drift Lyttelton had put troops in
-motion, some of them from considerable distances, to enclose the
-area, but of the columns detailed three only had come up. Hickman
-was on the spot, Crabbe from Hopetown was in touch with him, and
-Byng, who had been hurried up from Victoria West, was at hand. None
-of the other columns were in position, owing mainly to delays on
-the railway. Thus the only effective force for the capture of De
-Wet was the three columns with Hickman, who was out of
-communication with Lyttelton.</p>
-<p>The troops had been disposed with the object of driving De Wet
-back into the Free State rather than of capturing him, and they
-were unable to concentrate themselves upon him. Norval's Pont, from
-which the line of the Orange might, perhaps, have been blocked in
-the direction of Zand Drift, was unoccupied. On February 27 Hickman
-pushed De Wet away from the Drift. Two columns were behind the Boer
-leader, but in front of him was a weak and thinly extended force
-under Byng, which De Wet cut through without difficulty, and next
-morning reached Botha's Drift. It was fordable, and after eighteen
-days' absence he re-entered his own country. He had not succeeded
-in raiding very far into the Cape Colony, but he had baffled and
-outwitted the most strenuous military effort of the war.</p>
-<p>Plumer, who had been ordered round from Orange River Station to
-Colesberg, arrived there too late. He was immediately sent on to
-continue the pursuit in the Free State in co-operation with a
-column under Bethune, which marched directly across the veld to
-Fauresmith. Bethune was soon compelled to fall out, but Plumer held
-on for five days more without, however, lessening the distance
-between him and his quarry. On March 11, after a trek of more than
-800 miles, De Wet, <span class="pagenum"><a name="page310" id=
-"page310"></a>{310}</span> having dismissed on his way up most of
-the commandos to their several districts, entered Senekal with
-Steyn, and returned to within a few miles of the Doornberg place of
-assembly which they had quitted forty-four days before.</p>
-<p>The lessons to be derived from the history of the three De Wet
-hunts are mainly of a moral character, and have only an indirect
-bearing upon the principles which guide the conduct of military
-operations in general. No such episodes could ever occur in a
-European War. Yet the Power which holds Hindustan cannot afford to
-forget them. Who can say that in the not distant future, which all
-the signs of the times seem to show will be marked by turbulence
-and disorder in India, a De Wet may not come forth out of the
-thousands of Sikhs, Ghoorkas, Pathans and Rajputs who have learnt
-the Art of War in the Native Army? The arena of the struggle, with
-its long lines of communication, all its chief towns held by
-British troops and its vast plains inhabited by a disaffected
-population, would be strikingly similar to that on which the Boer
-War was fought.</p>
-<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote52" name=
-"footnote52"></a><b>Footnote 52:</b><a href=
-"#footnotetag52">(return)</a>
-<p>De Wet says that he went at the request of Liebenberg, who was
-in charge of the commandos operating between the Vaal and the
-Magaliesberg, and who had previously been engaged in the
-Bechuanaland rebellion.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote53" name=
-"footnote53"></a><b>Footnote 53:</b><a href=
-"#footnotetag53">(return)</a>
-<p>Twenty-three centuries previously, a Greek Army, after a march
-of many weeks, reached the sea. The emotion of the men at the sight
-has been thus described by their leader in a well-known passage
-which Hertzog might well have in substance incorporated in his
-reports to De Wet: "No sooner had the men in front caught sight of
-the sea than a great cry arose, and Xenophon with the rearguard,
-catching the sound of it, conjectured that another set of enemies
-must surely be attacking the front. But as the shout became louder
-and nearer, and those who from time to time came up began racing at
-the top of their speed towards the shouters and the shouting
-continually recommenced with yet greater volume as the numbers
-increased, Xenophon settled in his mind that something
-extraordinary must have happened, and mounted his horse and taking
-with him Lycius and the cavalry, galloped on. And presently they
-could hear the soldiers shouting and passing on the joyful word
-[Greek: Thalatta, Thalatta]"&mdash;<i>Anabasis</i>, IV, 7.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote54" name=
-"footnote54"></a><b>Footnote 54:</b><a href=
-"#footnotetag54">(return)</a>
-<p>De Wet ascribes his success to a feint which he made in the
-direction of Springhaan's Nek, and which he asserts threw the
-columns off the scent; but it is improbable that the feint had
-anything to do with it. At the time of De Wet's crossing at
-Israel's Poort Hamilton had only reached Sannah's Post, nor was
-Knox marching on the Nek.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page311" id=
-"page311"></a>{311}</span>
-<h2><a name="chap16" id="chap16">CHAPTER XVI</a></h2>
-<h3>Lord Kitchener at Work</h3>
-<p>The nation at home, which at the close of 1900 was confidently
-expecting the end of the war at an early date, was not long
-obsessed by its optimism. Efforts not less vigorous than patriotic
-were made not only by Great Britain, but also by the Colonies and
-South African Loyalists, to give Lord Kitchener the troops he
-needed.</p>
-<p>At the end of May, 1901, he had at his disposal a force which,
-including all classes of irregulars, semi-combatants, and
-non-combatants, was not less than 230,000; of whom more than
-one-third were mounted. The rule hitherto observed, that the native
-races were to be employed in servile capacities only, was relaxed,
-and in certain cases natives were allowed to carry arms when acting
-as scouts or patrols.</p>
-<p>It is impossible to ascertain with any degree of accuracy either
-the actual or the potential strength of the enemy at this period.
-It has been estimated that, excluding the burghers actually on
-commando, there were less than 30,000 Boers able to take up arms if
-inclined to do so; but this number must only be regarded as the
-maximum strength of a possible and to a great extent an unreliable
-reserve upon which the commandos in action, at no given moment much
-exceeding 12,000 burghers, could draw to supply the wastage of
-war.</p>
-<p>The war now entered fully into its "blockhouse and <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page312" id="page312"></a>{312}</span> drive"
-phase. The use of these expedients in combination was, it is
-believed, new to military history. The principle of the blockhouse
-had already been tentatively adopted in South Africa without much
-success, notably between Bloemfontein and Thabanchu, where a line
-of posts was established which on three occasions was cut by De
-Wet.<a id="footnotetag55" name="footnotetag55"></a><a href=
-"#footnote55"><sup>55</sup></a> The chief defect of the blockhouse
-is its vulnerability to shell fire; but by this time the Boer
-artillery was a negligible quantity. Its adoption on a large scale
-dates from the time of Lord Kitchener's taking over the command.
-The expedient was, in the first instance, applied to the railways
-as a protection against the raids to which they were subject; and
-after July, 1901, it was extended to the open veld. Subsidiary
-lines of blockhouses, which in general jutted out at right angles
-to the railways and in most cases ran along the cross-veld roads
-changing direction as circumstances required, were built. They
-acted as fences to obstruct or to deflect the movements of the
-enemy and enclosed areas greatly differing in size.</p>
-<p>The longest blockhouse line, which was, however, not completed
-until a few weeks before the end of the war, extended from Victoria
-Road Station to Lambert's Bay on the Atlantic, a distance of 300
-miles. In the vicinity of Johannesburg, and in the Central
-districts of the Orange River Colony west of the railway, cordons
-of posts manned by the South African Constabulary took the place of
-blockhouse lines. These posts, which were established at wider
-intervals apart than the blockhouses, were intended to act as bases
-for minor clearing operations. They offered little or no
-obstruction to a Boer commando on trek. The blockhouse lines were
-resolutely extended by Lord Kitchener in every direction; and by
-the end of the war there was scarcely a district in the spacious
-area of hostilities that was not <span class="pagenum"><a name=
-"page313" id="page313"></a>{313}</span> impaled upon them or
-helplessly clutched in their fatal grasp.</p>
-<p>The "Drive" as a military weapon is as old as the time of
-Darius. The first use of it in South Africa, on a large scale, was
-French's movement through the Eastern Transvaal in February,
-1901.<a id="footnotetag56" name="footnotetag56"></a><a href=
-"#footnote56"><sup>56</sup></a> The "Drive" has been criticized as
-an awkward attempt to perform, with one and the same force, two
-distinct operations of war; namely, the coercion of the
-non-military population and the defeat of the enemy's troops. The
-dual task deprives the force set to it of mobility and power of
-initiative.</p>
-<p>As a detail of abstract and orthodox military criticism the
-objection is sound; but it ignores the special local circumstances
-of the case. In the vast area on which the British Army was
-operating it was not possible to separate the two objectives.
-Moreover, the purely military resources of the enemy were waning;
-and the contest was resolving itself into an effort to put pressure
-on the country at large, rather than to smash the dwindling,
-evasive, and centrifugal commandos in the field. French's "drive,"
-from a military point of view, was not a success; but it at least
-frightened Botha and the Transvaal Government. In May, 1901, there
-was a conference near Ermelo at which it was resolved that
-overtures should be made to Lord Kitchener; and but for Steyn, who
-was communicated with in the Orange River Colony, and who had had
-no experience of the "drive," it is probable that negotiations for
-peace would have ensued. On the other hand, the "drive" has been
-approved as a method of warfare particularly adapted for use by an
-army deficient in mobility and incapable of acquiring accurate
-intelligence of the enemy.</p>
-<hr />
-<p>During the two months preceding Lord Roberts' departure from
-South Africa at the end of November, 1900, no events of great
-military importance occurred <span class="pagenum"><a name=
-"page314" id="page314"></a>{314}</span> in the Transvaal, except De
-Wet's Fredrikstad raid. The opposition had, to all appearance,
-dissolved into impalpable matter. Here and there some Boer atoms
-coalesced and were not pulverized; but for many weeks there was
-little in the general situation to disturb the optimistic belief,
-which was held not only by the people at home but also by the Army
-in the field, that the end was not far off.</p>
-<p>Botha and Steyn reached Pietersburg in September, where they
-were joined by B. Viljoen, who arrived a few weeks later after a
-circuitous journey from Komati Poort through the low veld. An
-important detail of Lord Roberts' plan of campaign had not been
-carried out. He had hoped that the Northern Transvaal would be
-denied to the Boers by Carrington, who failed to carry out his part
-of the programme. Thus Pietersburg was a fairly secure eyrie in
-which plans could be devised and from which a swoop could be made
-either east or west of Pretoria.</p>
-<p>Botha and Steyn soon came to the conclusion that the situation,
-though serious, was by no means hopeless. Certain events of October
-and November were encouraging. They not unnaturally argued that the
-withdrawal of their two chief opponents, Lord Roberts and Sir
-Redvers Buller, indicated infirmity of purpose on the part of the
-British Government. The idea was mistaken, as the recall of these
-leaders, or at least of one of them, was due to the fact that the
-British Government was of opinion that the war was practically
-over. Again, they were relieved of the inconvenient and harassing
-presence of Kruger, the dour, reactionary old farmer, who had
-brought on the war and had now left his country to its fate; who
-had learnt nothing and forgotten nothing since he had set out on
-the Great Trek of 1836; and whose mind ran in a channel so shallow
-that it could almost be heard rippling over the stones. Also, it is
-probable that they had information that the majority of the men of
-the Colonial and Irregular Corps, <span class="pagenum"><a name=
-"page315" id="page315"></a>{315}</span> whose term of service of
-one year would shortly expire, or had already expired, were
-declining to re-enlist&mdash;yet another sign of infirmity of
-purpose. Moreover, the Boer agents in Europe no doubt reported that
-all the regular infantry and its reserves in Great Britain had been
-exhausted.</p>
-<p>In November, 1900, the new plan of campaign was drawn up. L.
-Botha was to invade Natal, after a raid into the Cape Colony by De
-Wet, for whom Kritzinger and Hertzog would prepare the way and lay
-out the d&acirc;k. Steyn hurried southwards with the scheme, and
-was picked up at Ventersdorp by De Wet. Botha went to the high veld
-between the Natal Railway and the Delagoa Bay Railway, leaving B.
-Viljoen north of the latter railway. Beyers was ordered to join
-Delarey, who after the battle of Diamond Hill went into his own
-country near the Magaliesberg and was now lurking in the
-Zwartruggens.</p>
-<p>French, after his unhappy cross-veld march to Heidelberg, was
-placed in charge of the Johannesburg district. His passage had not
-overawed the local commandos, which, like the armed men from the
-teeth of Cadmus, soon sprang up out of the ground; and two attempts
-made by Smith-Dorrien to coerce them failed. Hildyard, after the
-departure of Buller and the dissolution of the Natal Army, was
-placed in charge of an extensive district which included not only
-Natal but also the S.E. corner of the Transvaal. Clery went home in
-October, 1900, and was succeeded in the charge of the Natal Railway
-in the Transvaal by Wynne. Lyttelton, with his Head Quarters at
-Middelburg, was posted on the Delagoa Bay Railway.</p>
-<p>Methuen alone of all the British leaders had an opportunity
-during this period of acting against definite objectives. Early in
-September he quitted Mafeking and zigzagged in the western
-districts. After a minor affair at Lichtenburg he was called south,
-and with the help of Settle, who sallied from Vryburg, relieved
-Schweizer <span class="pagenum"><a name="page316" id=
-"page316"></a>{316}</span> Reneke. His next efforts were not so
-successful. A march to Rustenburg, with a view of intercepting the
-wandering President of the Free State, brought him to his
-destination early in October, only to find that Steyn was gone; and
-subsequently he was unable to tackle Delarey effectively in the
-Zwartruggens, a difficult district lying a day's march west of the
-Magaliesberg. When he reached Zeerust a considerable portion of his
-command was withdrawn under C. Douglas to reinforce French, and the
-end of November found him again at Mafeking, too weak to work
-outside his own district.</p>
-<p>The Magaliesberg was patrolled by Clements and Broadwood, who
-made some captures. Clements also was called on to furnish troops
-for French, who lay at Johannesburg, having under his command
-several mobile columns as well as the garrisons on the Klerksdorp
-railway and elsewhere.</p>
-<p>Paget, who since August had been operating north of Pretoria,
-made an attempt in the direction of Rustenburg to cut off Steyn,
-but was no more successful than Methuen. His next divagation was to
-Eerstefabriken, a few miles east of Pretoria, whence he was ordered
-away to see to B. Viljoen, who was harassing the Delagoa Bay
-Railway, and whom, without assistance from Lyttelton, he shifted
-from a strong position at Rhenoster Kop in an affair which has been
-termed the last orthodox pitched battle of the campaign.</p>
-<hr />
-<p>Such, in brief, was the position in the Transvaal when Lord
-Kitchener, after a flying visit to Bloemfontein for the purpose of
-co-ordinating the activities against De Wet, returned to Pretoria
-on December 11, 1900. It would have offered greater difficulties to
-a man who was a soldier first and an organizer afterwards than it
-did to the successor of Lord Roberts. It may be likened to an
-archipelago in a stormy sea infested by pirates who, though
-powerless to take possession of any of the islands, made
-communication between them always dangerous and sometimes
-impossible.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page317" id=
-"page317"></a>{317}</span>
-<p><a href="#fig-magaliesberg">Map, p. 240.</a></p>
-<p>Lord Kitchener's coming difficulties were heralded less than a
-week after the departure of Lord Roberts by the loss of a large
-convoy which was proceeding to Rustenburg, and for which Delarey,
-who was always to be found where weak detachments came his way, was
-waiting. Ten days later Clements suffered a disaster. He was based
-on Krugersdorp, but his command had been weakened and his transport
-was deficient. He received orders to act in the Hekpoort Valley,
-while Broadwood acted north of the Magaliesberg. When he reached
-Noitgedacht Nek he found Delarey a few miles away. At his urgent
-request a small portion of the troops which had been taken from him
-was restored, with a few wagons; but they left Krugersdorp too late
-to be of service.</p>
-<p>Clements was under the impression that he had only Delarey to
-deal with, and was unaware that Beyers was on his way to carry out
-the orders he had received from Botha. The withdrawal of Paget to
-Eerstefabriken cleared his front, and he marched on to the
-Magaliesberg. His movements were not unnoticed by the Intelligence,
-which, however, failed to notify them to Clements, who on December
-11 was in presence of two Boer leaders, whose united forces were
-twice as strong as his own. Unknown to him they had met at
-Boschfontein near the southern approach to Breedt's Nek; for when a
-commando was reported to be at hand, he did not doubt that it was
-Delarey's force only.</p>
-<p>Noitgedacht was tactically an unsound position which Clements,
-assuming that his right was safe, had taken up in order to maintain
-heliographic communication with Broadwood on the other side of the
-Magaliesberg. The range rises more than a thousand feet above the
-camp selected by Clements and is accessible only by a rough track.
-The ground on either side of the Nek was occupied by pickets posted
-there mainly for signalling purposes. These posts, however, were
-helpless if attacked, as they were not only widely scattered, but
-could not be reinforced <span class="pagenum"><a name="page318" id=
-"page318"></a>{318}</span> from the main body in the valley below.
-Thus they were little or no protection to the camp.</p>
-<p>In the direction from which an attack might be expected
-Clements' camp, which lay at the foot of the Nek, was protected by
-a low ridge jutting out from the main range and ending in a
-detached kopje. This ridge was held by mounted infantry. Another
-detached kopje, called Yeomanry Hill, was occupied towards the
-S.E.</p>
-<p>Delarey's general idea for the day's operation was simple: an
-advance by himself along the low ground upon the camp, coincident
-with an advance by Beyers on the other side of the range. Shortly
-before sunrise on December 13 Delarey endeavoured to rush the
-mounted infantry posts on the ridge, which in anticipation of an
-attack had been strengthened on the previous evening. Their
-vigorous resistance foiled the enterprise and Delarey was driven
-off.</p>
-<p>Soon, however, the sound of firing on the heights showed that
-the Northumberland Fusilier posts on each side of the Nek were in
-action. They had been attacked by Beyers, but fortunately not as
-had been intended by Delarey simultaneously with his own attack
-upon the ridge; otherwise it is probable that it would have been
-successful. After a desperate struggle, in which the Fusiliers lost
-heavily, they were overpowered, and Beyers was in possession of the
-high ground overlooking the camp. An attempt made by Clements to
-recover the Nek failed. Beyers' burghers came plunging down like a
-cascade and broke upon the camp itself.</p>
-<p>Clements anticipated that Delarey would soon return to the
-charge and ordered a retirement, which was effected under cover of
-the artillery and a rearguard of mounted infantry. Shortly before
-noon he formed up on Yeomanry Hill. Delarey renewed his attack, but
-met with such sturdy resistance that his men could not be induced
-to push it home. In the course of the afternoon Clements withdrew
-towards Rietfontein, having lost in killed, wounded and prisoners
-more than two-thirds of his <span class="pagenum"><a name="page319"
-id="page319"></a>{319}</span> 1,500 men. An orderly retreat was
-effected, and the column, which had been surprised by Beyers and
-had seen its camp in the possession of the enemy, brought away, in
-the presence of superior numbers, all its ten guns.</p>
-<a name="fig-noitgadecht" id="fig-noitgadecht"></a>
-<div class="figcenter" style="width:50%;"><a href=
-"images/image20.png"><img width="100%" src="images/image20.png"
-alt="Noitgedacht Nek" /></a></div>
-<p>Broadwood on the other side of the range, to communicate with
-whom Clements had taken up an unsound position at Noitgedacht Nek,
-lost touch with him, and like many a British officer before him in
-South Africa, was groping in the Fog of War. Two days previously he
-had heard that Beyers was approaching, and he knew that Delarey was
-not far off; yet in his ignorance of the situation he allowed
-Beyers to wriggle in between him and Clements and to meet Delarey.
-At the time when Clements was defending himself against the
-combined attack of the two Boer leaders, Broadwood was seven miles
-away, placidly patching a field telegraph cable; <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page320" id="page320"></a>{320}</span> and when
-at noon he discovered that Clements was in action he made no
-attempt to create a diversion.</p>
-<p>It would be inequitable to surcharge the Noitgedacht
-misadventure and other "regrettable incidents" to any individual:
-they should rather be surcharged, not to this or that responsible
-commander, but to irresponsible Human Nature. The British Army was,
-to a great extent, stale and veld-sick. It was informed that the
-war would soon be over, and it had become slack and careless.
-Convoys were sent afield with insufficient escorts to run the
-gauntlet of ever watchful and alert Boer commandants; Intelligence
-news qualified by the reports of untrustworthy native spies was
-transmitted circumferentially from column to column, with the
-result that the leader to whom it was of the most importance was
-sometimes the last to receive it; the scouting and patrol work was
-casual and rash. It is, however, but just to say that when the
-occasion called for it, the fighting qualities of the British
-soldier showed no signs of deterioration.</p>
-<p>The Boers, after their habit, were content with the tactical
-victory at Noitgedacht and refrained from endeavouring to improve
-upon it. French and Clements took the field without delay, and
-although they failed in their plan to pin Delarey and Beyers on to
-the wall of the Magaliesberg, the Boer leaders were compelled to
-separate. Their brilliant and brief co-operation did much to awake
-the British nation out of its torpor. There was no longer any talk
-of reducing the Army of occupation by one-half at the end of the
-year, and still more during the New Year; or of quenching the
-smouldering embers of the war with Baden-Powell's new South African
-Constabulary.</p>
-<p>Late in December the pursuit of Delarey, who had retired from
-Noitgedacht towards the S.W., was resumed. At Ventersdorp he and
-his 700 men, after eluding a ponderous force of nearly 6,000 men
-with 40 guns, doubled back; and soon the same columns
-unsuccessfully encountered <span class="pagenum"><a name="page321"
-id="page321"></a>{321}</span> him at Cyferfontein, where he
-ambushed a mounted detachment and then disappeared.</p>
-<p>Beyers, who went into the west after he was wrenched apart from
-Delarey, soon reappeared upon the stage in the Hekpoort Valley with
-1,200 men. His position was precarious. In front of him was Paget,
-who had been sent round to intercept him; while pressing on his
-heels was a newly-formed mounted force under Babington, 2,000
-strong. He extricated himself cleverly by brushing past Paget and
-advancing boldly in what was apparently the line of greatest
-resistance.</p>
-<p><a href="#fig-magaliesberg">Map, p. 240.</a></p>
-<p>No one but a Boer leader with a supreme contempt for his enemy
-would have thought of placing himself within striking distance of
-Pretoria and Johannesburg. Yet on January 11, 1901, he audaciously
-laagered within a few miles of Johannesburg, unknown to the
-garrison. Next day he crossed the railway at Kaalfontein, half-way
-between the two cities, and disappeared in the Eastern Transvaal.
-That at this stage of the war it was possible for 1,200 men to cut
-the railway, and with scarcely the loss of a man to cross it, with
-guns and a long train of wagons, midway between the two chief
-cities of the Transvaal, showed how much still remained to be
-done.</p>
-<p>The disturbances in the Orange River Colony brought about
-certain changes and redistributions in the Transvaal commands, by
-which leaders were, as in the circuits of Wesleyan ministers,
-removed from spheres familiar to them. Clements went to Pretoria in
-succession to Tucker, who was sent to Bloemfontein; E. Knox, who,
-fifteen months previously, had been in command of the squadrons of
-the 18th Hussars which were not made prisoners of war at Talana,
-took command of the column of Broadwood, who was sent across the
-Vaal; Cunningham succeeded Clements in the Magaliesberg district;
-Hart quitted Klerksdorp for the Orange River Colony; and French
-went away into the west.</p>
-<p>On the Boer side a new name which was destined often
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page322" id=
-"page322"></a>{322}</span> to be on men's lips emerged from the
-crowd in January, 1901. A young lawyer named J.C. Smuts, who had
-received his legal education in England, and whom Delarey entrusted
-with a command, soon showed, and not for the first time, that a
-shrewd, resourceful, energetic and determined civilian was, at
-least in <i>guerilla</i>, more than a match for highly trained
-British officers.</p>
-<p>A movement towards the south by Cunningham, with a view of
-checking Delarey, soon brought Cunningham into trouble. After
-crossing the Magaliesberg he was entangled by the Transvaal leader,
-and had to be extricated by Babington before he could proceed to
-his destination at Krugersdorp.</p>
-<p><a href="#fig-orange">Map, p. 292.</a></p>
-<p>Smuts, the new leader, went to the Gatsrand. His first exploit
-was to snap up a weak and isolated British detachment at
-Modderfontein Nek, and to establish his own commando on the
-position. When Cunningham reached Krugersdorp he received orders to
-tackle Smuts. On February 2, having an overwhelming superiority in
-guns and a considerable advantage in numbers, he attacked Smuts;
-but the apprentice tactician had little difficulty in meeting the
-regulation frontal holding attack combined with a turning movement,
-and Cunningham withdrew.</p>
-<p>In the Western Transvaal there were now three Boer leaders to be
-dealt with: Smuts in the Gatsrand, Delarey in the Zwartruggens, and
-Kemp. The latter had come down from the north with Beyers and had
-been with him when the line was crossed at Kaalfontein. He had
-lately returned to his own district of Krugersdorp. With Botha
-threatening in the east and De Wet raiding in the south, few troops
-could be spared to help the columns on the spot; but two additional
-columns, under the command of Shekleton and Benson, and composed
-mainly of details, were assembled by Lord Kitchener. One of these
-went astray, but the other joined Cunningham and advanced against
-Smuts in the Gatsrand, only to find that he had escaped at first
-towards the south, and <span class="pagenum"><a name="page323" id=
-"page323"></a>{323}</span> had then changed direction and had
-vanished in the N.W.</p>
-<p>Methuen, who towards the end of November, 1900, had gone south
-from Mafeking in order to deal with apprehended trouble in
-Griqualand West, pushed up from the S.W. corner of the Transvaal
-and on February 18, 1901, came upon Delarey, who had escaped from
-Babington and had reinforced a gathering of weak commandos near
-Hartebeestfontein. Although outnumbered by more than 4 to 3,
-Methuen without much difficulty compelled Delarey to withdraw, and
-went on to Klerksdorp. Smuts reappeared and with Delarey made off
-to the N.W., the sanctuary to which each of them had in turn
-repaired. Methuen was sent south to Hoopstad in the Orange River
-Colony. He had hardly started when news came in that an isolated
-garrison seventy miles away in the N.W. was threatened.</p>
-<p>Delarey had a definite objective in view when he disappeared,
-his native town of Lichtenburg. The place was one of many for which
-Methuen, with an attenuated force, was responsible; and now he had
-been called away to a town in trouble in the opposite direction.
-Two columns nearer at hand were called upon to relieve Lichtenburg,
-but in the meantime it had relieved itself; for although Delarey
-succeeded in winning a footing within it, the obstinate resistance
-which he encountered disheartened him, and he withdrew on March 4
-after twenty-four hours' fighting.</p>
-<p>The next three weeks were occupied in the pursuit of Delarey by
-two columns under Shekleton and Babington, at first in directions
-which he had not taken. They started westward from Ventersdorp, not
-conceiving it possible that, after the repulse at Lichtenburg, he
-would have the audacity to throw himself across their left front in
-an attempt to reach Klerksdorp. When the news that he had actually
-done so reached them they changed direction southwards, Delarey
-opening outwards to let them pass through towards Wolmaranstad,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page324" id=
-"page324"></a>{324}</span> whither the Intelligence had in
-imagination waybilled him. The British columns, unaware that he was
-on either side of them, and still under the impression that he was
-on their front towards the south, passed on and halted at
-Hartebeestfontein, when a reconnoitring party sent out northwards
-discovered that he was in rear of the columns.</p>
-<p>The reconnoitring party had much difficulty in saving itself, as
-it was charged by mounted Boers in mass, a tactical movement which
-hitherto had not been tried by the enemy. Babington at once
-reversed the line of his march, and on March 24 came up with
-Delarey at Wildfontein, midway between Ventersdorp and Lichtenburg.
-Delarey was moving heavily and was compelled to jettison his guns
-and his transport. These were picked up by Babington, who, however,
-was not able to continue the pursuit and returned to
-Ventersdorp.</p>
-<p>The loss did not disconcert Delarey. He retired with Kemp to a
-position close to his lair in the Zwartruggens, where, however, he
-did not long remain. At the same time, he sent Smuts to the
-Hartebeestfontein district, out of which he had just been driven.
-The audacity of the act was justified, for Smuts maintained himself
-against Babington during the whole of April.</p>
-<p>Early in May a determined effort was made to clear the district.
-Methuen after he had relieved Hoopstad was recalled to Mafeking,
-and then went to Lichtenburg. The British force on the
-Magaliesberg, commanded first by Clements, then by Cunningham, and
-now by Dixon, was ordered to operate from the north, while a strong
-column under Ingouville-Williams was prepared at Klerksdorp. Thus
-each angle of the disturbed area was held by troops ready to
-converge; and within it were Babington's columns. Delarey was
-believed to be at Hartebeestfontein; but neither he nor any other
-Boers could be found there when the troops entered it on May 6. The
-Boer leaders had, as usual, adopted their <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page325" id="page325"></a>{325}</span> usual
-strategy of spreading false reports, and of dispersing their
-commandos as soon as they were hard pressed. On the British side
-the subsequent operations were conducted without method. The
-columns, having effected little, were recalled to their bases; and
-the middle of May, 1901, saw Delarey, Kemp, and J.C. Smuts still at
-large.</p>
-<hr />
-<p>The first offensive action taken by Botha after he came down
-from Pietersburg in November, 1900, was against Hildyard's posts in
-the angle adjoining Natal. His movements against the garrisons of
-Vryheid and other places in December failed, and he returned to the
-Central Transvaal in order to co-operate with B. Viljoen in
-worrying the Delagoa Bay Railway, on which Lyttelton's<a id=
-"footnotetag57" name="footnotetag57"></a><a href=
-"#footnote57"><sup>57</sup></a> force was strung out. Viljoen had
-already made a daring and successful raid on Helvetia, from which
-he brought away not only prisoners of war but also a heavy gun;
-although the town was by no means isolated, being one of a line of
-posts running from Belfast and Machadodorp to Lydenburg.</p>
-<p>The exploit encouraged Botha to plan a general attack, in
-co-operation with Viljoen, on a section of the railway each side of
-Belfast. It was made on January 7, 1901. The chief effort was
-against Belfast, where Smith-Dorrien was in command of a garrison
-too weak for effective resistance. Viljoen advancing from the north
-met with some preliminary success, but a fog prevented co-operation
-between him and Botha and the attack failed. The attacks on the
-other posts on the railway were repelled without much difficulty.
-The recrudescence of Botha, the intrusion of Beyers from the west,
-the hovering presence of Viljoen north of the Delagoa Bay Railway,
-and the rumour that an invasion <span class="pagenum"><a name=
-"page326" id="page326"></a>{326}</span> of Natal was in
-contemplation to synchronize with raids beyond the Orange by De
-Wet, Kritzinger, and Hertzog, determined Lord Kitchener to try to
-sweep up and reduce the Eastern Transvaal.</p>
-<p>A force of five columns under the command of French was
-assembled a few miles east of the Elandsfontein-Pretoria Railway
-and began its advance on January 28. The general idea was that it
-should gradually extend its front, like the cone of dispersion of a
-shrapnel shell, between the diverging Natal and Delagoa Bay
-Railways, and then sweep eastward towards the Swaziland and
-Zululand borders; upon which Botha's commandos, if not already
-crushed by an enveloping movement on Ermelo, would be finally
-impaled. To assist French when he had traversed about one-half of
-the area, three columns were detailed to march southwards from the
-Delagoa Bay Railway on Ermelo. One of these columns was, however,
-sent away at the last moment under Paget to take part in the
-operations against De Wet in the Cape Colony. The combined strength
-of the seven columns against Botha was about 20,000 men, the
-majority of the combatants being mounted. A break back by Beyers
-and Kemp, who rejoined Delarey, was the opening incident of
-French's advance.</p>
-<p>The first objective of French's movement was the town of Ermelo,
-where Botha was acting as a sort of rearguard to cover the retreat
-of the fugitive burghers, who with their families and their stuff
-were endeavouring to escape from the Khakis. His contemplated
-attack on Natal was, at least for the time being, impracticable;
-and he set himself to the task of inflicting what damage he could
-on the threatening columns. He ascertained that Smith-Dorrien's
-column was approaching Lake Chrissie on February 5, and that the
-other column operating from the Delagoa Bay Railway under W.
-Campbell, was too far away to give it effectual support. The gap
-left by the withdrawal of Paget had not been filled up.</p>
-<p>When Smith-Dorrien reached the Lake, Botha had <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page327" id="page327"></a>{327}</span> already
-started to meet him. Early in the morning of February 6 the British
-Camp was attacked, but although the attempt was furthered by a
-stampede of Smith-Dorrien's horses, Botha failed. He was compelled
-to draw off, but with the greater portion of his burghers wriggled
-round to the rear of the columns.<a id="footnotetag58" name=
-"footnotetag58"></a><a href="#footnote58"><sup>58</sup></a> Thus
-when French reached Ermelo he found that he had nothing to strike
-at. The Boer commandos had passed away. After a short halt he
-changed direction half right, and projected his front on to a
-cross-veld line reaching from the Swaziland border to Amersfort;
-then bringing round his right he formed up his seven columns on
-February 18 along the Swaziland border, with an eastward front of
-nearly forty miles extending southwards from Amsterdam. Dartnell
-was on the right of the line and Smith-Dorrien on the left.</p>
-<p>Most of the fugitive commandos had, however, retired into the
-S.E. corner of the Transvaal; a movement which Hildyard, who was in
-charge of the district as well as of the whole of Natal, was not
-strong enough to check. French was now based on Natal for supplies,
-and arrangements had been made that two large convoys should be
-sent to him by way of Utrecht. Bad roads, bad weather, and
-submerged drifts impeded the progress of the painful trains, the
-first of which did not reach him until March 2, ten days after it
-was due. Meanwhile he subsisted on dwindled rations and on what he
-could pick up on the veld.</p>
-<p>When, owing to a change in the routes by which he was supplied,
-French was able towards the end of March to operate actively, he
-endeavoured to isolate the S.E. corner of the Transvaal by
-disposing his force in two lines. One line ran from Piet Retief to
-Vryheid and acted as the driving force, and the other ran from Piet
-Retief along the Swaziland border and acted as the <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page328" id="page328"></a>{328}</span> stopping
-force. Within the angle enclosed by these lines were commandos
-under Grobler of Vryheid, Emmett, and other leaders; but all of
-them wriggled out with insignificant losses. The line along the
-Swaziland border was rendered immobile by difficulties of supply,
-and the driving line was exhausted. The closing incident of
-French's ten weeks' campaign, the chief harvest of which was the
-capture, surrender, wounding, or killing of 1,300 Boers, the
-seizure of a considerable amount of ammunition, and the taking of
-eleven guns, was the return of Smith-Dorrien to the Delagoa Bay
-Railway in the middle of April.</p>
-<p>Botha's projected invasion of Natal had indeed been frustrated
-and postponed, but he and all the other Boer leaders had escaped,
-unscathed and undismayed. French's ponderous columns had trudged
-painfully across the veld from Springs almost into Zululand, and
-had left things much as they were at the beginning of February.</p>
-<p>During the early months of the year 1901 Viljoen for the most
-part contented himself with frequent attacks on the Delagoa Bay
-Railway, and a vigorous effort to restrain his activity was not
-practicable. In March Lord Kitchener formulated a plan for the
-subjugation of the Northern Transvaal. His plan was to send a
-column with secrecy and dispatch to Pietersburg, which would be
-occupied as a base from which the column would work southwards
-along the line of the Olifant's River, in co-operation with columns
-acting northwards from the Delagoa Bay Railway.</p>
-<p>The force selected to proceed to Pietersburg was Plumer's
-Australian column, which sixteen days after it desisted from the
-chase of De Wet in the Orange River Colony was marching northwards
-out of Pretoria. Plumer entered Pietersburg on April 8 without
-opposition, Beyers, who had been falling back before him from
-Warmbaths, having evacuated the town. Plumer halted for a few days
-in order to secure the railway and <span class="pagenum"><a name=
-"page329" id="page329"></a>{329}</span> to make arrangements for
-carrying out his orders to hold the line of the Olifant's River.
-Before the end of the month he was in possession of all the drifts
-from Commissie Drift downwards, and denied them to Viljoen.</p>
-<p>The country in which Viljoen was acting is hilly and intricate,
-and Lord Kitchener, by borrowing Sir Bindon Blood from the Indian
-Government, an officer of great experience in frontier
-<i>guerilla</i>, paid Viljoen and the Boer commandos the compliment
-of crediting them with the military qualities of the dangerous,
-predatory, and enterprising hill tribes of the underfeatures of the
-Himalayas. To Blood were given six columns which were to work from
-Lydenburg and the Delagoa Bay Railway.</p>
-<p>Viljoen was near Ros Senekal. He had three lines of retreat,
-northward or southward along the Steelpoort River, or down the
-Blood River. Blood's columns were disposed with the object of
-closing these exits. The Transvaal Government, which for some
-months had been sojourning in security at Paardeplatz, fled and
-joined Botha near Ermelo; but Viljoen stood fast.</p>
-<p>The total force under Blood exceeded 10,000 men. Three columns
-under Beatson, Benson, and Pulteney, who had joined from Vryheid
-where he had been serving under French's command, advanced
-northwards from the Delagoa Bay Railway. On their right front they
-were supported by three columns acting from Lydenburg, under Park,
-W. Douglas, and W. Kitchener. Douglas was the only leader destined
-to encounter Viljoen, who on April 10 struck at him near
-Dullstroom, but was handsomely beaten and compelled to return to
-the place from which he came. He was hedged in on all sides; mutiny
-and disaffection were rife among his burghers; and he saw that
-there was nothing to be done but make his escape as best he
-could.</p>
-<p>He was headed off by Benson in an attempt to get away up the
-Steelpoort Valley, where next day 100 Boers gave themselves up to
-Blood. He next tried the <span class="pagenum"><a name="page330"
-id="page330"></a>{330}</span> Blood River, and passing down the
-valley crossed the Olifant on April 22, almost within sight of
-Beatson, who was watching the drifts. A few days later he crossed
-the railway and joined Botha at Ermelo. Early in May the active
-operations north of the Delagoa Bay Railway ceased. As in French's
-campaign, so also in Blood's, the results were chiefly negative. A
-glut of live stock was rounded up, a considerable amount of
-ammunition and all the guns known to be in the district were taken,
-and 1,100 Boers either surrendered or were made prisoners. The
-columns were withdrawn, as troops were in request in the districts
-lately driven by French; and Plumer, who had had no opportunity of
-engaging actively in the movement, was recalled. He was succeeded
-at Pietersburg by Grenfell.</p>
-<p>At the end of May Dixon set out westwards from Naauwpoort in the
-Magaliesberg district on a raiding expedition. He trekked for three
-days and then ran unexpectedly into a Boer column at Vlakfontein.
-He was attacked through a veil of smoke from a grass fire which the
-slim enemy had lit to windward. In spite of this disadvantage he
-held his own and compelled the Boers to retire, but soon, however,
-found it advisable to retire himself and returned to
-Naauwpoort.</p>
-<p>The column which had engaged Dixon was under the command of
-Kemp, whom the Intelligence had after the Hartebeestfontein
-operations despatched in imagination with Delarey to the south,
-where they were reported to be concentrating. Kemp, however, had
-returned to the Zwartruggens. After the Vlakfontein affair he found
-columns approaching him from all sides and dissolved his command.
-Delarey had gone south, and was now in the Orange River Colony.</p>
-<p>The northward retreat of De Wet through the Orange River Colony
-in March, 1901, drew in its trail a host of British columns, which
-plodded sturdily across the veld with scanty results. He
-endeavoured to systematize <span class="pagenum"><a name="page331"
-id="page331"></a>{331}</span> <i>guerilla</i> by parcelling out the
-late Free State into districts under commandants acting locally:
-Lord Kitchener retorted by parcelling it out into a smaller number
-of districts, each district being in charge of a general officer
-armed with columns with which to worry the local commandants. Many
-divagations ensued; few profitable results were attained.</p>
-<p>Of these divagations the most conspicuous was a visit paid by
-Rundle to the Brandwater Basin, wherein the enemy was reported to
-be once more concentrated. There were, in fact, less than 1,000
-burghers within the Basin, but these pressed severely on him when,
-at the end of May, he made his exit through the Golden Gate with
-one prisoner of war.</p>
-<p>Exigencies elsewhere compelled Lord Kitchener to allow the Cape
-Colony, to a great extent, to take care of itself. Some troops were
-sent down, but they were insufficient to control the disaffection
-which was active in the midland districts. Kritzinger remained in
-the Cape Colony; paying, however, a brief visit to the Orange River
-Colony in April.</p>
-<p>Early in June Delarey, De Wet, and Steyn met at Reitz, for the
-purpose of considering a communication lately received from the
-Transvaal Government, suggesting that overtures should be made to
-Lord Kitchener. To this Steyn had already returned an unfavourable
-answer; but he distrusted the wavering and wandering Transvaal
-Government, and he was desirous of obtaining the support of
-Delarey, whom he knew to be the most stalwart and implacable of the
-Transvaal leaders. It was arranged that Steyn, Delarey, and De Wet
-should go north and meet Botha at Ermelo.</p>
-<p>Meanwhile Elliott, who was in charge of one of the districts
-parcelled out by Lord Kitchener in the Orange River Colony, was
-engaged in a drive from Vrede to Kroonstad. On June 6 he sent on a
-weak column under Sladen to capture a Boer convoy near Reitz. It
-was taken without trouble, but the news soon reached <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page332" id="page332"></a>{332}</span> the
-triumvirate in camp not far off and they determined to make an
-effort to recapture it. A small commando was quickly mustered and
-Delarey and De Wet attacked Sladen, who after several hours' hard
-fighting was relieved by another column from Elliott's force. The
-prize was retained, but Delarey and De Wet got away. They waited
-until Elliott had passed by, and then made for the north with
-Steyn, crossing into the Transvaal near Standerton.</p>
-<p>Meanwhile the Transvaal Government which they had gone to meet
-had been again sent on its journeyings. The effects of French's
-drive had soon passed away, and Lord Kitchener found it necessary
-to resume active operations in the Eastern Transvaal, the chief
-object of which was the capture of the Transvaal Government. It was
-hustled out of the Ermelo district and pushed down towards Piet
-Retief, from which it returned to Ermelo in the middle of June. Its
-drooping spirits were revived by an affair at Wilmansrust, where a
-wandering Australian column was overwhelmed by a commando under
-Muller which was lurking in the district. On June 20 Steyn,
-Delarey, and De Wet met the Transvaal Government in a Council of
-War near Standerton.</p>
-<p>The allies at once determined to continue the war. Lord
-Kitchener had permitted a communication to be sent to ex-President
-Kruger asking his advice. Kruger's reply, as might have been
-anticipated, was in favour of continuing the war. In his
-comfortable sanctuary in Holland he had nothing to lose by urging
-those whom he had left behind to carry on the struggle. In view of
-the tentacles with which Great Britain was grasping South Africa
-and of the general situation, the decision of the Council of War
-was a morally courageous act. There was in it, moreover, a special
-as well as a general idea. Particular attention was to be given to
-the cultivation of the numerous germs of mischief in the Cape
-Colony, and this part of the plan was entrusted to the brilliant
-young lawyer, J.C. Smuts, who returned with Delarey to the Western
-Transvaal.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page333" id=
-"page333"></a>{333}</span>
-<p>An almost complete reconstruction of the Free State Government
-was rendered necessary by an episode which occurred soon after
-Steyn's return to his own country. When he and his colleagues
-crossed the Vaal they found Elliott again engaged on a drive. On
-the night of July 10 they were surprised at Reitz by Broadwood, who
-had joined Elliott's command, and all except Steyn were captured.
-De Wet was away, otherwise it is improbable that a man of such
-infinity of resource and strength of will would have allowed his
-friends to be taken tamely in their slumbers.</p>
-<hr />
-<p>The task set to Smuts was, to all appearance, impossible of
-fulfilment. Not only had he to collect a sufficient force in the
-Gatsrand under the eyes of British columns, but he had also to
-conduct it through the whole length of the Orange River Colony, and
-run the gauntlet of Elliott, C. Knox, Rundle, and Bruce Hamilton.
-By the middle of July he had recruited 340 burghers, who travelled
-south in four parties with British columns at their heels and
-mustered near Hoopstad on August 1.</p>
-<p>Here they entered the precincts of the area into which Lord
-Kitchener was endeavouring in one grand drive to sweep the Boer
-remnants of the S.W. Transvaal and the Orange River Colony. Elliott
-was wheeling round from Reitz through Vredefort and Klerksdorp and
-advancing on the line of the Modder River, behind which stood Bruce
-Hamilton.<a id="footnotetag59" name="footnotetag59"></a><a href=
-"#footnote59"><sup>59</sup></a> A considerable amount of transport
-and live stock was taken; also 500 Boers, among whom Smuts and his
-commando were not.</p>
-<p>He had succeeded on August 3 in wriggling by night through
-Elliott's driving line and was now in rear of it. He now divided
-his force into two commandos, one of which, under Van der Venter,
-made for the south by way of Brandfort. With the other he boldly
-trailed behind Elliott and followed him to the
-Bloemfontein-Jacobsdal <span class="pagenum"><a name="page334" id=
-"page334"></a>{334}</span> line of Constabulary posts, through
-which he passed without injury. He then found himself entangled in
-Bruce Hamilton's columns, and although he succeeded in reaching
-Springfontein, he was soon forced to retreat nearly seventy miles
-in the direction of Bloemfontein. Nothing daunted, he made another
-dash for the south, and having evaded two pursuing columns entered
-Zastron on August 27, where he found Van der Venter waiting for
-him. His daring and adventurous ride ranks as one of the most
-notable personal exploits of the war. He had not only cut Elliott's
-line from front to rear, but had afterwards enfranchised himself
-amid the swarm of Bruce Hamilton's columns. The lawyer Smuts was
-the De Wet of the Transvaal.</p>
-<p>Kritzinger after fifteen weeks' activity in the Cape Colony had
-returned to Zastron a few days before Smuts' arrival. His incursion
-into the Colony in May occurred at an opportune moment, for the
-local rebels were being severely worried. He made at first for the
-Zuurberg, but being soon expelled from it and from the adjacent
-mountainous district north of Sterkstroom, circled back to the
-Orange and snapped up Jamestown. He now flung his grenades on all
-sides. One rebel leader reached the Transkei districts; others
-prowled between Graaff Reinet and the Capetown Railway. Kritzinger
-himself captured a small British detachment near Maraisburg.</p>
-<p>As in February when Lyttelton was brought down, so again in July
-the situation in the Cape Colony was sufficiently serious to call
-for outside assistance. French was sent down from the Transvaal;
-Lord Kitchener himself came to Middelburg. The measures concerted
-between them, a series of northward drives by the operation of
-which the rebels would be plastered against the railways, which
-were rapidly blockhoused for the purpose, met with indifferent
-success. The disaffected midland districts were swept, but the
-leaders escaped. Kritzinger crossed the Orange in August, and at
-Zastron <span class="pagenum"><a name="page335" id=
-"page335"></a>{335}</span> awaited the arrival of J.C. Smuts with
-new schemes for mischief.</p>
-<p>The presence of these leaders attracted columns from several
-quarters and they were betimes theoretically surrounded.
-Kritzinger, however, refused to consider himself surrounded and
-even worked freely in co-operation with Brand: nor had J.C. Smuts
-any intention of resigning his commission. He crossed the Orange on
-September 3. A fortnight later, Kritzinger and Brand parted
-company. Kritzinger marched on the Orange, and near a drift of that
-river pounced upon and overwhelmed a weak detail of the force under
-Hart, who was acting as warden of the Cape Colony marches. Brand
-made for the Bloemfontein-Thabanchu line of posts, which was the
-sport of every Boer leader who chose to hack at it, and which
-recently had scarcely impeded the progress of Van der Venter to the
-south for an hour. On September 19, near Sannah's Post, he ambushed
-and destroyed a party of mounted infantry engaged in raiding a
-farm. Two guns and nearly 100 prisoners of war were taken by
-Brand.</p>
-<p>Smuts' arrival in the Cape Colony, like Kritzinger's four months
-before, stimulated a waning cause. Lotter, who had escaped French's
-drives, had just been taken; the other rebel leaders were isolated
-and comparatively innocuous. Fresh hopes were kindled, activities
-were renewed, when it was noised among the rebel bands that Smuts
-the Transvaaler had swooped down like an eagle from the north.</p>
-<p>These hopes were not delusive. Smuts made for the south, pursued
-by some of French's columns. Near Tarkastad on September 17 he
-ambushed and overwhelmed a detachment of regular cavalry and won a
-footing in the midlands, where rebellion again raised its head from
-the ground.</p>
-<p>Smuts noticed and encouraged the promising movement and returned
-to the Zuurberg, out of which, however, he was soon hustled. He
-went away to join a rebel <span class="pagenum"><a name="page336"
-id="page336"></a>{336}</span> leader named Scheepers, who had been
-working freely 200 miles away to the S.W. in the districts
-bordering the sea. Scheepers, however, was taken prisoner near
-Prince Albert Road Station on the Capetown Railway before Smuts
-reached him; but Smuts continued his movement. Smuts had entrusted
-the inflammatory work in the midlands to local leaders before he
-left the district, and now set himself to trespass beyond the
-furthest point reached by Scheepers, and to make a bold entry into
-the extreme S.W. corner of the Cape Colony. Early in November he
-penetrated into the Ceres district, where he was less than 100
-miles in a direct line from Capetown. He had brilliantly performed
-the task set to him by Botha and Steyn at Standerton in June. He
-had been in contact with and had evaded the majority of the units
-of Lord Kitchener's widely disseminated army at one time or another
-during his ride of 1,100 miles, and in fourteen weeks had passed
-from the Gatsrand in the Transvaal to within a few days' march of
-Capetown.</p>
-<p>Meanwhile Lord Kitchener was doing his best to deal with the
-accruing winter discontent. He had a plan of his own; and he was
-also furnished with a plan that had been drawn up by the civilian
-authorities in Downing Street and South Africa, who thought that
-the walls of Jericho would fall to the sound of a Proclamation. In
-August, 1901, a legal document was served on the Boers, much in the
-same way that a writ is served upon a debtor. In it they were
-declared to be helpless and incapable of carrying on the struggle,
-and their leaders were threatened with perpetual banishment. It had
-little effect on the enemy, except to brace him up for further
-efforts; and Lord Kitchener, it is believed, had no faith in
-it.</p>
-<p>Lord Kitchener's plan was the extension across the veld of the
-system of blockhouse lines which at first ran only along the
-railways, and the formation of pens or enclaves into which the
-attenuated roving bands of Boers were to be herded and dealt with
-severally and <span class="pagenum"><a name="page337" id=
-"page337"></a>{337}</span> severely. The work of extension was
-taken in hand in July, 1901. The Boers in the veld watched it with
-the detachment and unconcern of a wild bird on the branches looking
-down upon the fowler laying his snares in the field below.</p>
-<p>Another drive by Elliott during August and September, this time
-through the eastern districts of the Orange River Colony, affected
-little. Kritzinger remained in his corner between the Orange and
-the Caledon and could not be extracted from it; De Wet was still at
-large. In the Transvaal the leaders were marking time. Viljoen
-after the Standerton conference withdrew beyond the Delagoa Bay
-Railway, but was soon driven out of the mountains. He lost heart,
-handed over his command to Muller, and went down to the low veld
-adjoining the Pietersburg Railway.</p>
-<p>In the Western Transvaal Delarey and Kemp were alert. Kemp in
-the Zwartruggens foiled an attempt to cast a net around him, and in
-conjunction with Delarey attacked Methuen on the Marico River
-without success on September 5. A pale of blockhouses denied them
-access to the "protected area."<a id="footnotetag60" name=
-"footnotetag60"></a><a href="#footnote60"><sup>60</sup></a> Muller
-effected a trifling success in the middle north. Beyers in the
-Pietersburg district was unable to prevent Grenfell reaching a
-point but sixty miles from the Limpopo and there making prisoners
-of a local commando.</p>
-<p>No organized attempt was made to disturb Botha in the Ermelo
-district. A column under Benson did indeed set out from the Delagoa
-Bay Railway in August, but it was recalled by the alarm of a Boer
-raid on the line at Bronkhorst Spruit. Benson subsequently did
-useful raiding work in the Carolina district, but was not strong
-enough to tackle Botha.</p>
-<hr />
-<p>Botha had never abandoned the scheme of an invasion <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page338" id="page338"></a>{338}</span> of Natal
-which was drawn up at the end of 1900. His first attempt to carry
-it out was frustrated by French, but it was uppermost in his mind
-during the winter of 1901. Early in September he left the Ermelo
-district, in which Lord Kitchener had never been able to operate
-effectively, and made for Piet Retief with 1,000 men. Columns,
-faint yet pursuing, started from each railway, and ignorant of his
-movements trudged wearily across the veld to the S.E. Botha, after
-passing through the defile between the Swaziland border and the
-Slangapiesberg, turned to the south, his ultimate objective being
-Dundee. In the corner abutting on Zululand were commandos under
-Emmett and Grobler of Vryheid.</p>
-<p>Lyttelton on his return from leave took over the Natal command
-from Hildyard. He disposed his columns as best he could, having
-regard to the contradictory reports which reached him of Botha's
-movements and intentions. The first encounter occurred on September
-17 at Blood River Poort. A mounted column under Gough and Stewart
-had been sent out from Dundee across the Buffalo to bring away a
-convoy from Vryheid. Gough soon came into touch with a body of the
-enemy. It was, he thought, only a local commando, and when he saw
-it off-saddle he left Stewart in support and went out to surprise
-it. The nature of the ground prevented a complete surprise, but he
-partially effected it, only to be surprised himself by the sudden
-charge of Botha's main body, which was supposed to be a day's march
-distant. After a brief combat, in which Stewart was unable to
-intervene, Gough lost the whole of his command of nearly 300 men in
-killed, wounded, and prisoners, as well as three guns. Stewart
-escaped to the Buffalo.</p>
-<p>The crick-crack of Botha's Mausers at Blood River Poort echoed
-throughout South Africa. Troops from all quarters were hurried to
-the spot; search parties discovered some columns under W. Kitchener
-which had lost themselves on the high veld; and so rarified was the
-military atmosphere, that not only columns but <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page339" id="page339"></a>{339}</span> even
-general officers were scarce. Bruce Hamilton and Clements were
-brought in.</p>
-<p>Botha seems to have regarded his success as unreal. He hesitated
-to follow it up, and soon the Buffalo in flood effectually barred
-the way to Dundee. He now proposed to enter Natal through Zululand,
-below the junction of the Tugela and the Buffalo. On the point of
-the angle which, at that time, the Transvaal thrust into Zululand
-were two British posts, Forts Prospect and Itala. Botha was
-beginning to be doubtful about the eventual success of his Natal
-raid, but thought that as he was on the spot he might as well be
-doing something. He therefore ordered these posts to be taken,
-entrusting to his brother C. Botha the attack on Itala, and to
-Emmett and Grobler the attack on Prospect. The failure of each
-attack with considerable loss on September 26 made Botha reconsider
-his position. There was no more thought of another campaign on the
-Tugela, and he determined to retire.</p>
-<p>Lyttelton's dispositions continued for some days to be directed
-against the Natal raid upon which Botha was supposed to be still
-engaged, and the discovery that he had abandoned it was not made
-until October 1. His capture did not seem to be a very difficult
-task, as his only way of escape was the Piet Retief defile by which
-he had entered the district three weeks before.</p>
-<p>There was, however, an intermediate barrier, the irregular
-Pondwana range lying eastward of Vryheid, where he might be
-arrested. Lyttelton's plan was that Clements and B. Hamilton should
-press towards this barrier from the S.W., while W. Kitchener acted
-as a stop on the north side of it. The range is pierced by several
-neks, at one of which, lying between the main heights and the
-Inyati spur, Botha was checked by Kitchener on October 2. He then
-made a cast eastward to another nek and by abandoning his transport
-succeeded three nights later in getting round Kitchener's left. He
-easily kept Kitchener off in a rearguard action <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page340" id="page340"></a>{340}</span> and made
-for Piet Retief. Neither Clements nor B. Hamilton was ever in the
-running, and Kitchener was hampered by the necessity of watching
-several neks along a front of twenty miles.</p>
-<p>There was, however, one more barrier for Botha to cross or to
-turn, the Slangapiesberg between Wakkerstroom and Piet Retief; but
-it scarcely delayed him for an hour. Except one column, which was
-covering the building of a blockhouse line and which he evaded
-without difficulty, there was nothing to oppose him. When a column
-under Plumer came upon the scene he had passed away on October 11
-through Piet Retief towards Ermelo. His movements had bewildered
-his opponents, who intent on frustrating a raid on Natal, had
-omitted to bar and bolt the door by which he had entered. His
-capture would, in all probability, have ended the war.</p>
-<p>When Botha left for the south he instructed B. Viljoen to carry
-on for him; but when he joined the itinerant Transvaal Government
-at Amsterdam he was disappointed to find that little or nothing had
-been done in his absence, thanks chiefly to the mobile energy of
-Benson, who hovered like a hawk over the terrorized laagers.
-Moreover, the pale of Constabulary posts which formed the eastward
-section of the great ring fence enclosing the "protected area" had
-been advanced. It now ran from Greylingstad to Wilge River Station
-on the Delagoa Bay Railway, and encroached upon the area in which
-Botha could act with reasonable hope of success.</p>
-<p>The return of Botha, however, infused some spirit into the
-hustled commandos of the high veld, and he gladly accepted a
-suggestion that Benson should be attacked. The Ermelo and Carolina
-men who had accompanied him to Natal returned to find that their
-districts had been roughly handled by Benson and were eager for
-reprisals. On October 25 Botha narrowly escaped capture by two
-columns which had been sent after him from Standerton.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page341" id=
-"page341"></a>{341}</span>
-<p>Benson left Middelburg, the base to which he returned from time
-to time, on October 20, with a column 1,600 strong, to renew his
-operations on the high veld. When he reached the Bethal district he
-noticed ominous signs of the revived spirit. He was hampered with a
-considerable transport, his supplies were dwindling, and he did not
-think himself justified in risking an encounter. He therefore
-decided to return to the Delagoa Bay Railway. H. Grobler of Bethal,
-who had suggested to Botha the attack on Benson, was in the
-vicinity with 700 burghers, and Botha himself was again in the
-field.</p>
-<p>Benson began to retire before sunrise on October 30. Bad weather
-and Grobler pressing in rear worried the forenoon march, and ere
-the midday halt had been called Botha came up with 500 men after a
-forced march. While the convoy was being parked at Bakenlaagte, the
-pressure on the rearguard increased, and it was forced back to a
-ridge about two miles S.E. of the park. Benson came up and ordered
-a second retirement of the rearguard to a position, to which the
-name of Gun Hill has been given, nearer the park, and posted two
-field guns on the hill.</p>
-<p>Botha soon occupied the ridge, and then charged Gun Hill with
-his main body under Grobler, at the same time sending parties to
-attack the flanking posts. Two detachments of British infantry
-stranded between the ridge and the hill were overwhelmed by the
-charge. Most of the mounted sections got away to the hill, hotly
-pursued by the Boers, who leaving their horses at the foot, at once
-began to climb the slope. They clutched each shoulder of the hill,
-swarmed up the front, and soon silenced the guns. An attempt to
-bring up the teams from the reverse slope failed.</p>
-<p>In less than half an hour Grobler had won Gun Hill with a loss
-of 100 men. Benson was mortally wounded. The flanking posts were
-too much engaged in defending themselves to be able to assist the
-defenders of Gun Hill. An attempt to intervene made by a few
-companies on <span class="pagenum"><a name="page342" id=
-"page342"></a>{342}</span> the march to the camp where the convoy
-was parked was unsuccessful. The Boers, as usual, were satisfied
-with a casual tactical success, and made no effort to follow it up
-strategically. They were soon driven off Gun Hill by shell fire
-from the camp, but after nightfall returned to bring away the guns.
-In the British casualties were 120 prisoners of war. Wools-Sampson,
-who succeeded Benson in command, maintained himself for two days,
-and was then relieved by columns from the south. He returned to the
-Delagoa Bay Railway.</p>
-<hr />
-<p>The exigences of the military situation called for the
-withdrawal of most of the troops operating against Kemp and Delarey
-in the Western Transvaal; and by the middle of September, 1901,
-these leaders had practically but one column to evade, namely the
-force formerly commanded by Dixon and now by Kekewich. He left
-Naauwpoort on September 13, and after some preliminary work on the
-Magaliesberg passed through Magato Nek, and with a force of less
-than 1,000 men advanced into the Zwartruggens, a wild, difficult,
-and confusing district admirably adapted to Boer
-<i>guerilla</i>.</p>
-<p>On September 29 Kekewich took up a position at Moedvil near the
-right bank of the Selous River. He was compelled to place all his
-westward outposts, except one double picket, on the right bank, as
-the veld on the left bank was bushy and rose gradually from the
-river and would have absorbed more men than he could spare for
-outpost duty.</p>
-<p>Delarey was accurately informed of Kekewich's movements, and it
-is said had actually reconnoitred the camp unobserved a few hours
-after Kekewich's arrival. He quickly formulated his plan of attack,
-in which he seems to have followed, on a smaller scale, the
-familiar tactics of the British leaders whom he had met in battle,
-notably at Diamond Hill, but with a certain innovation of his
-own.</p>
-<p>He divided his force into four columns, two of which
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page343" id=
-"page343"></a>{343}</span> were told off to grapple Kekewich's
-flanks and command his line of retreat, and two to make a frontal
-but not merely holding attack on his centre. Early in the morning
-of September 30 Delarey put his columns in motion. He started with
-certain points in his favour. All Kekewich's outposts save one were
-on the right bank and in the vicinity of the camp, and in fact
-Delarey took him by surprise. The movements of the Boer columns
-were, however, not well co-ordinated. The flanking columns were not
-in position when the centre columns, which do not seem to have been
-challenged by the post on the left bank, reached the river and
-concealed themselves in the deep bed. This might not have marred
-the success of Delarey's plan if the columns in the river-bed had
-not been discovered by a patrol which gave the alarm and brought
-them prematurely into action.</p>
-<p>The situation now resolved itself into an attempt to storm the
-position. The centre columns sprang out of the river while it was
-still dark, mounted the steep bank and opened fire up the slope on
-to the camp on the skyline above. A stampede of the horses ensued,
-but a resolute front was quickly formed and the attack was checked.
-An alarm that the enemy was threatening the rear of the camp was
-proved to be unfounded by a scratch gathering of details which was
-hastily mustered; it then wheeled round, and picking up
-reinforcements on the way charged the Boer left at the river. The
-charge was irresistible, and the sun had hardly risen when
-Delarey's whole line fell away.</p>
-<p>No limit can be assigned to the British soldier's power of
-resistance when he finds himself in a tight place, but it would
-probably have gone hard with him if Delarey's tactical scheme had
-been accurately carried out, and if the flanking columns, one of
-which was under the command of Kemp, had been further in advance
-when the centre columns were discovered. A panic among the horses
-which threw the camp into confusion, supervening on an unexpected
-attack while the dawn had scarcely <span class="pagenum"><a name=
-"page344" id="page344"></a>{344}</span> shown above the
-Magaliesberg, was soon followed by a cry that the position had been
-turned. Yet at that critical moment of the dark hours, when animal
-courage is supposed to be at its lowest ebb, Kekewich's men never
-wavered, and although they were only called upon to deal with a
-blundered manoeuvre, yet it exacted from them a toll in casualties
-of nearly one fourth of their strength. Kekewich was wounded, and
-the loss of horses and transport pinned him to the ground until he
-was relieved by a column from the south, which had marched to the
-sound of the battle.</p>
-<p>A few days later Kekewich went to Rustenburg, out of which he
-again sallied forth on October 13 into the Zwartruggens in search
-of Delarey. Methuen had already left Mafeking on the same errand.
-On October 24 Delarey fell in with one of Methuen's columns on its
-way to Zeerust. The column, which was impeded by wagons slowly
-progressing along a bad road in a defile, was pounced upon
-unexpectedly and hewn in twain; but if, as usual, the scouting was
-poor the defence was excellent. After a struggle which lasted two
-hours Delarey was driven off, the severed portions of the column
-were re-united, and not one of the seven guns was lost.</p>
-<hr />
-<p>By the end of 1901 all the precedents of European warfare had
-been discredited. Tactics and strategy, as practised by the
-experts, had done their best, and were now in bankruptcy. The war
-had drifted into its final mechanical phase: the coercion of brute
-force by brute force of higher potential. It was now mainly a
-question of putting as many men as possible on horseback to ride
-down the enemy. Field guns not being needed, the Royal Artillery
-was formed into a corps of Mounted Rifles.</p>
-<p>Ian Hamilton, who had gone home with Lord Roberts, returned to
-South Africa a year later as Chief of the Staff to Lord
-Kitchener.</p>
-<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote55" name=
-"footnote55"></a><b>Footnote 55:</b><a href=
-"#footnotetag55">(return)</a>
-<p>These posts, however, were small entrenched forts at
-considerable distances apart for the protection of the road to
-Basutoland, rather than blockhouses.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote56" name=
-"footnote56"></a><b>Footnote 56:</b><a href=
-"#footnotetag56">(return)</a>
-<p>See <a href="#page326">p. 326</a>.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote57" name=
-"footnote57"></a><b>Footnote 57:</b><a href=
-"#footnotetag57">(return)</a>
-<p>Lyttelton went to the Cape Colony in February, 1901, to direct
-the operations against De Wet, and was subsequently sent into the
-Orange River Colony. After a few months' leave he returned to South
-Africa in September and took over Hildyard's command in Natal.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote58" name=
-"footnote58"></a><b>Footnote 58:</b><a href=
-"#footnotetag58">(return)</a>
-<p>He was next heard of at the abortive peace conference held at
-Middelburg, where he met Lord Kitchener at the end of February.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote59" name=
-"footnote59"></a><b>Footnote 59:</b><a href=
-"#footnotetag59">(return)</a>
-<p>Bruce Hamilton succeeded Lyttelton in the Orange River Colony
-when the latter went home on leave.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote60" name=
-"footnote60"></a><b>Footnote 60:</b><a href=
-"#footnotetag60">(return)</a>
-<p>The "protected area" was a district round Pretoria and
-Johannesburg which was enclosed by a ring of blockhouses and
-Constabulary posts in August, 1901.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page345" id=
-"page345"></a>{345}</span>
-<h2><a name="chap17" id="chap17">CHAPTER XVII</a></h2>
-<h3>The Mechanical Phase</h3>
-<h3><a name="chap17-1" id="chap17-1">I. ORANGE RIVER
-COLONY</a></h3>
-<p>The year 1901 was drawing to its close, and the three chief Boer
-leaders were still at large. Delarey was lurking in the difficult
-kloofs of the Western Transvaal; Botha was on watch in the high
-veld of the Eastern Transvaal, just outside the "protected area";
-and De Wet was awaiting his opportunity in the N.E. of the Orange
-River Colony.</p>
-<p>De Wet, who had been lying low for some months, was roused by a
-certain communication from Botha as well as by action taken against
-him by Lord Kitchener. A carefully devised and accurately carried
-out centripetal drive of fourteen columns converging, like meridian
-lines on the Pole, on a certain point ten miles N.E. of Reitz, was
-abortive. When the columns reached it on November 12 they found
-that the enemy had wriggled through the intervals, leaving scarcely
-a burgher at the place of meeting; and while they were blankly
-staring at each other, De Wet at Blijdschap, only twenty miles
-away, was in conference with Steyn and discussing with him a
-suggestion made by Botha that peace negotiations with Lord
-Kitchener should be opened.</p>
-<p>To this an answer similar to that which had been given to Botha
-in May was returned. De Wet and Steyn scouted the idea of
-reconciliation with the enemy. A Council of War was summoned and a
-concentration of <span class="pagenum"><a name="page346" id=
-"page346"></a>{346}</span> burghers ordered. By the end of November
-De Wet had collected at Blijdschap a force of 1,000 men undetected
-by Elliott's columns, which, having taken part in the centripetal
-failure, were again on the move after a brief rest at Harrismith.
-Elliott, while on the march to Kroonstad, actually brushed past De
-Wet.</p>
-<p>A column under Rimington then came upon the scene. He had heard
-of the Council of War from a captured Boer, who probably with
-intent refrained from reporting the concentration. Thus when
-Rimington expected that the easy task before him was the capture of
-De Wet and Steyn and the units of a Council of War, he suddenly
-found himself opposed by a considerable force, a detachment of
-which passed by him and attacked his train in rear. After an
-encounter in which a gallant young cavalry subaltern,<a id=
-"footnotetag61" name="footnotetag61"></a><a href=
-"#footnote61"><sup>61</sup></a> who but a few weeks before had
-joined the Inniskilling Dragoons from the Militia, laid down his
-life for his country, Rimington extricated his convoy, but
-refrained from attacking De Wet's main body, which was reported to
-be strong.</p>
-<p>Each side thereupon withdrew, Rimington to Heilbron and De Wet
-to Lindley, from which he found it advisable to retire on coming
-into contact with a column forming part of another Elliott drive,
-the second of the series, suggested by Rimington on his return to
-Heilbron. De Wet then trekked towards Bethlehem, halting at Kaffir
-Kop, where, nine days later, he foiled a third Elliott drive by
-promptly dispersing his burghers, who soon reassembled on a range
-of hills beyond Bethlehem.</p>
-<p>Elliott's units then returned to their respective bases to
-refit. A column under Dartnell at Bethlehem, which had recently
-been reinforced from Rundle's command by a strong detachment under
-Barrington Campbell, was on the point of returning to Harrismith,
-when it was informed that De Wet's re-united commandos were lying
-in wait at a spruit about twenty miles out on the <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page347" id="page347"></a>{347}</span> road to
-Harrismith. Dartnell marched on and maintained himself without much
-difficulty when he arrived at the spruit. Campbell came up, and De
-Wet's commandos withdrew without orders; but no attempt was made to
-convert their retirement into a rout. Dartnell continued his march
-to Harrismith.</p>
-<p>After the affair at the spruit De Wet again dispersed his
-burghers, with orders to hold themselves in readiness to muster at
-short notice. He had not long to wait before he saw another
-opportunity of employing them.</p>
-<p>A small force, less than 1,000 strong, was covering, half-way
-between Harrismith and Bethlehem, the construction of the main
-blockhouse line to Kroonstad, under the personal superintendence of
-Rundle. The force was broken up into three detachments, which were
-too far apart to render each other effective support in case of a
-sudden attack.</p>
-<p>The strongest detachment, consisting, however, entirely of
-Yeomanry, was posted on Groen Kop, three miles distant from
-Rundle's Head Quarters. The position is fairly strong, and
-resembles a wedge lying on the veld, with a gentle ascent from the
-east to a plateau to which the normal level rises steeply on three
-sides. A mile or two to the S.E. it is commanded by a higher
-eminence, from which a party of Boers had already been expelled. It
-was not, however, occupied, and De Wet promptly made use of it as
-an observation post, for which it was admirably adapted, as it
-looks down into the British position on Groen Kop. Moreover, the
-customary movements for protection, such as the relief of outposts,
-were carried out with such extraordinary laxity and neglect that De
-Wet was soon able to acquaint himself with almost every detail of
-the defence. Even the emplacements of a field gun and a pom-pom
-were disclosed by shots casually fired for range-finding
-purposes.</p>
-<p>On Christmas Eve De Wet saw that he had before <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page348" id="page348"></a>{348}</span> him a
-prey that would fall into his hands as easily as Sannah's Post or
-Waterval Drift, and he resolved to clutch it at once. His burghers,
-though dispersed, were within call, and a force of over 1,000 was
-quickly assembled. With unerring instinct he selected the steep
-N.W. corner of the Groen Kop wedge as the point of attack,
-reasoning that the defenders would think themselves adequately
-protected in that direction by the nature of the ground. On
-Christmas morning, soon after midnight, over 1,000 Boers were in
-position under the broad end of the wedge. They were not
-discovered, as no patrols had been sent to watch the ground
-beneath, and the sentries on the crest gave no sign.</p>
-<p>The pioneers of the storming party attained the crest at 2 a.m.;
-and not until then was the alarm given to the dormant camp. The
-position, after a struggle which lasted but an hour and a quarter,
-was captured by De Wet, who, ere the midsummer sun had risen, was
-hurrying away with British prisoners of war, guns and wagons, which
-neglect of the ordinary precautions by a body of unprofessional
-troops had delivered into his hands.</p>
-<p>At Rundle's Head Quarters, only three miles away, the sound of
-the firing had attracted attention, and a weak body of Mounted
-Infantry, the only mounted force at his disposal, was sent out to
-see what was the matter. It was unable to intervene with effect,
-and returned to report the situation.</p>
-<p>The remaining detachment of Rundle's force, consisting of two
-companies of slow-moving Infantry only, was still further from his
-Head Quarters; but thirteen miles away in the direction of
-Harrismith lay a force of Colonial Horse. When a telegram from
-Rundle to summon them to the rescue miscarried, his staff-officer
-galloped away in the dawn and put them on the trail of De Wet; but
-he had had a long start and escaped into the hills near Bethlehem.
-Here he remained for a few hours, and then went towards Reitz.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page349" id=
-"page349"></a>{349}</span>
-<p>During a temporary absence for the purpose of conferring with
-Steyn he left his commandos in charge of Michael Prinsloo, who on
-December 28 was engaged in a rearguard action with Elliott, who was
-conducting yet another drive and whom he easily evaded.</p>
-<p>On the last day of the year De Wet disbanded his commandos a few
-miles from the spot on which he had assembled them at the end of
-November. In the interval he had evaded all the Elliott drives; he
-had captured a strong British post; he had marched without damage
-along the sides of a triangle on which lay the towns of Reitz,
-Lindley, and Bethlehem, each of which was from time to time in the
-possession of his enemy; and had never been more than thirty miles
-distant from the central point of the triangle. The captured guns
-were sent away beyond the Wilge River under Mears.</p>
-<p>No blame can be imputed to Rundle for the unsatisfactory issue
-of the operations. He had little reason to suspect that any
-considerable force of the enemy was in his vicinity. He was engaged
-in mechanical work, the laying out of a blockhouse line. It was the
-immediate task before him, and to the best of his ability he used
-the untrustworthy and meagre instruments at hand. It would,
-however, have been more in accordance with military principles if
-he had employed his mounted troops in duties more suited to their
-arm, instead of holding with them the infantry position of Groen
-Kop.</p>
-<p>Only a few days before, a similar misadventure had attended the
-construction of the Heilbron-Vrede blockhouse line. Rimington and
-Damant had hardly returned to Heilbron after Elliott's third drive
-when they were ordered out beyond Frankfort, to the assistance of
-the blockhouse builders, who were being worried by a commando under
-Wessels, which De Wet had sent out after the Council of War. Near
-the Wilge River they acted on a front too extended; and a portion
-of Damant's force was deceived by the slim tricks of a party
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page350" id=
-"page350"></a>{350}</span> of Boers working in cavalry formations
-and many of them dressed in khaki uniforms. In order to keep up the
-illusion they fired at detached parties of their own side, and in
-the end Damant was overwhelmed on a hill, with a loss of nearly 90
-per cent. of casualties, before the rest of his command came up and
-drove away the assailants. Rimington was too far away either to
-prevent or to retrieve the disaster.</p>
-<p>When the "drives" were renewed in the northeastern districts of
-the Orange River Colony at the end of January, 1902, the experience
-of the last few months had shown that they must be conducted on new
-methods. Hitherto the typical "drive" had been a net or nets cast
-too often hastily and at random, the meshes of which were large,
-irregular, and easily cut. The new "drive" was a bar of steel
-pushed steadily forward by simultaneous action throughout its
-length, and with its ends resting on the two completed blockhouse
-lines running eastward from Heilbron and Kroonstad.</p>
-<p><a href="#fig-so-transvaal">Map, p. 260.</a></p>
-<p>The Drive, Mark II, was inaugurated on February 3. De Wet, who
-on January 10 had had a hurried interview with Steyn near Reitz,
-was lying at Elandskop between Heilbron and Reitz, and again
-concentrating his scattered burghers and planning an escape with
-them to the south across the Kroonstad-Bethlehem blockhouse line.
-Mears, on his way to rejoin De Wet, ran into a column under Byng,
-to whom he lost the guns captured by De Wet at Groen Kop.</p>
-<p>On February 5 a force of 9,000 men under Elliott, Rawlinson,
-Byng, and Rimington formed up on a line stretching from Frankfort
-to Kaffir Kop. The composition of this force showed the altered
-conditions of warfare. It included very few field guns, but no less
-than 2,200 horse and field gunners acting as Mounted Riflemen.</p>
-<p>Next day the first impulse was given to the Bar, the blockhouse
-lines north and south, as well as the <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page351" id="page351"></a>{351}</span> railway,
-having been strengthened. The whereabouts of De Wet were
-approximately known.</p>
-<p>The first drive of the new pattern lasted three days, the
-columns reaching the railway on February 8. It was so far effective
-that none of the enemy broke back through the advancing line, which
-was vigorously maintained in continuity of pickets by night and of
-scouts by day; but De Wet was not on the roll of nearly 300 Boer
-casualties. Although hampered with live stock from which his
-followers refused to be parted, and in spite of two hovering
-columns which were acting in support of the southern blockhouse
-line, he not only broke through it owing to its want of vigilance,
-but even succeeded in dragging the cattle across it after him. He
-then retired as usual to the Doornberg. Other parties of Boers
-broke through the northern blockhouse line; and thus the first of
-the new drives ended with poor results. As soon as the trouble was
-over De Wet with his followers again crossed the southern
-blockhouse line and quietly returned to Elandskop, where he
-dispersed them.</p>
-<p>A second drive to sweep those districts which had not been
-touched by the first drive was soon put in hand. It was to be
-performed in two movements by two sets of columns. A force under
-the Driver-in-Chief Elliott starting eastwards from Kroonstad and
-the Doornberg would advance in line, resting its right first on
-Lindley and then on Harrismith, in the vicinity of which it was
-proposed that it should meet the other set of columns, under
-Rawlinson, Byng, and Rimington. These, starting on an extended
-front which ran from near Johannesburg to within a few miles of
-Heilbron with their centre astride the Vaal and their right
-touching the Natal Railway, would advance S.E. to near Vrede; then
-wheeling to the right march southwards with their left on the
-Drakensberg; finally, in conjunction with Elliott, pushing the
-fugitives on to the eastern section of the Harrismith blockhouse
-line. The operation <span class="pagenum"><a name="page352" id=
-"page352"></a>{352}</span> may be likened to the sweep of two
-brooms, one acting with a semicircular and the other with a forward
-movement.</p>
-<p>It was begun by Elliott, who started on February 13, and after
-an abortive attempt to snap up De Wet reached Wilge River on
-February 22 and awaited the arrival of the other columns; his left
-being near Tafelkop.</p>
-<p>Rawlinson and Byng meanwhile were advancing. On February 19 they
-wheeled to the right and with their centre near Vrede were now
-wholly within the Orange River Colony. The two forces were now
-disposed at right angles to each other, one of the lines containing
-the angle being the Wilge River, which Elliott was unable to hold
-in sufficient strength as his front was widely extended. In the
-vicinity of Harrismith the southern blockhouse line was reinforced
-by Brook, who succeeded Rundle in the command of the district.</p>
-<p>The northern blockhouse line was unable to stem the tide of
-fugitives flying before Rawlinson and Byng, whose columns were now
-strung out on a much wider front than that on which they had begun
-their march. The advance of Elliott had also driven various Boer
-details into the right angle, in which were now conglomerated not
-only combatants, but women, children, stock, and transport.
-Included among the fugitives from Elliott were De Wet and Steyn,
-who had again come together. With Elliott at their heels, their
-only chance of escape was to break through the attenuated line of
-Rawlinson's columns. De Wet's good fortune did not fail him, and
-with Steyn and a few hundred burghers he severed it at Langverwacht
-at midnight on February 23 and was again at large. The remnant of
-the commandos was left behind within the pale with their women,
-children, cattle, and stuff; and these, augmented by the Harrismith
-commando, were the prisoners of Elliott and Rawlinson when the
-drive, in which 30,000 British troops were directly or indirectly
-engaged, completed its task.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page353" id=
-"page353"></a>{353}</span>
-<p>Yet another drive, the third of the new series, ensued. It had,
-of course, for its objective the capture of De Wet, as well as the
-"tidying up" of the district, in which certain commandos, which had
-not been netted in former drives, still lurked. It was composed,
-like the second drive, of two sets of converging columns and
-traversed the terrain of the first drive.</p>
-<p>It happened that the point of convergence lay near the spot, not
-far from Reitz, where De Wet and Steyn were in hiding. The
-propinquity of the columns drove them out of their retreat, and
-taking a circuitous route past Heilbron and thence along the left
-bank of the Vaal they crossed the river near Commando Drift, and on
-March 17 joined Delarey near Wolmaranstad in the Transvaal. Little
-was done after the junction of the two sets of columns, and they
-returned to the railway on March 11, with a stray commando in front
-of them, which easily rushed the blockhouse line near Heilbron. A
-portion of the troops was hastily withdrawn to deal with the crisis
-in the Transvaal.</p>
-<p>Hardly had the dust raised by the trampling of the third drive
-settled down upon the veld when the fourth drive was in progress,
-and 14,000 men on a front which stretched from one blockhouse line
-to the other were plodding eastward to the Drakensberg. It was held
-up for a time by two rivers in spate, the Wilge and the
-Liebenberg's, and when released it trudged on to the mountain
-range, where on April 5 its components were dissolved, having
-disposed of less than 100 of the enemy.</p>
-<p>Yet one more drive, the fifth and last of the series, was called
-for. Early in May Bruce Hamilton swooped down from the Eastern
-Transvaal upon the harassed land, and in co-operation with Elliott
-worried it for the space of ten days. Many small parties of Boers
-broke through&mdash;the last wriggle in the Orange River
-Colony.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page354" id=
-"page354"></a>{354}</span>
-<h3><a name="chap17-2" id="chap17-2">II. EASTERN TRANSVAAL</a></h3>
-<p><a href="#fig-orange">Map, p. 292.</a></p>
-<p>The episode of Bakenlaagte called for vigorous measures to be
-taken against Botha and the men of the high veld in the Eastern
-Transvaal; and in November, 1901, a second and revised edition of
-French's programme at the beginning of the year was issued.</p>
-<p>The new campaign was placed in charge of Bruce Hamilton, and the
-general idea, at least in its earlier movement, was the same as
-that furnished to French, namely the outward sweep of columns
-having for its object the rounding-up, pursuit towards the
-Swaziland border, and capture of the various <i>guerilla</i>
-commandos, which with the Transvaal Government in their midst
-haunted the Ermelo and Bethal districts.</p>
-<p>Bruce Hamilton, with 15,000 men in twelve columns, either under
-his immediate command or co-operating with him, started on November
-16, his immediate objective being the same as French's ten months
-before, namely, Botha on the high veld. He advanced the
-Constabulary posts fifteen miles, so that the line now ran between
-Brugspruit and Waterval; and proceeded to carry out a movement on
-Ermelo, in which he was supported on either flank by columns acting
-from the Natal and Delagoa Bay Railways. Botha, however, had had
-warning of his approach, and having conducted the Transvaal
-Government out of the area of immediate danger and dispatched it to
-its old seat at Paardeplatz, returned to deal with Bruce Hamilton,
-who, on reaching Ermelo on December 3, found, as French had found
-in February, that he had nothing to strike at. The Transvaal
-Government had vanished, and Botha and his chief lieutenant, P.
-Viljoen, instead of being on the run towards Swaziland, had broken
-back and were now behind him.</p>
-<p>In order to deal with them, a pause in the operations became
-necessary. A series of night raids was instituted. In the first of
-these Botha, who was lying twenty miles <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page355" id="page355"></a>{355}</span> west of
-Ermelo, was nearly taken. He succeeded in escaping towards the
-S.E., but was headed by a column under Pulteney operating from
-Wakkerstroom and was forced towards the upper waters of the Vaal.
-The raid upon P. Viljoen in the Bethal district was so far
-successful that in it 200 of his burghers were made prisoners, and
-one of the guns taken at Bakenlaagte was recovered: while he
-himself not only escaped, but succeeded in putting 300 of his
-followers under J. Prinsloo across the recently established
-Brugspruit-Waterval line of Constabulary posts and in planting them
-in the "protected area" as seeds of future mischief.</p>
-<p>Bruce Hamilton now resumed the general operation eastwards with
-fair success. Botha at Beginderlyn was faced by the columns
-supporting the right flank of the advance, and had the
-Ermelo-Standerton blockhouse line behind him. One of his
-lieutenants named Britz went out and ambushed a night raid sent out
-from the line on December 19 at Holland, making nearly 100
-prisoners; and a few days later he squeezed through an enveloping
-movement in which he lost somewhat heavily, but he eventually
-succeeded in rejoining Botha.</p>
-<p>It was now necessary to drive on to Bruce Hamilton a compact
-little force of over 800 burghers, which on New Year's Day, 1902,
-Botha had under his command; and this task devolved upon Plumer and
-the other column commanders operating from the S.E. corner of the
-Transvaal. Botha was engaged at Bankkop, between Ermelo and
-Amsterdam, by a strong scouting party acting in advance of the main
-columns, which he was on the point of overwhelming when it was
-reinforced. He escaped without difficulty, taking with him eighty
-prisoners. The plan of throwing him into Bruce Hamilton's arms had
-failed.</p>
-<p>Bruce Hamilton returned to Ermelo, and late in January again
-swept the country, with scanty results. His operations had been
-successful to the extent that they finally denied the high veld to
-Botha, who in February <span class="pagenum"><a name="page356" id=
-"page356"></a>{356}</span> withdrew to the Vryheid district, and
-secreted himself among the mountains. Bruce Hamilton was sent after
-him and hunted him for a month. His next appearance was neither as
-a prisoner of war nor as an opponent in battle, but as the
-representative of his country on the way to attend the Peace
-Conference which assembled at Pretoria on April 12.</p>
-<p>P. Viljoen, as soon as Bruce Hamilton was out of the way,
-discussed the situation with his followers. It was decided that he
-should take action in what was apparently the direction of greatest
-risk. With 400 men he burst through the line of Constabulary posts,
-and on January 24 joined J. Prinsloo in the Wilge River Valley,
-within the so-called "protected area." Prinsloo, even before
-Viljoen's arrival, had maintained himself without difficulty; and
-for some weeks after February 24, when an unsuccessful effort was
-made at Klippan to crush them, they were practically left to roam
-as they willed, no British troops being available to deal with them
-effectively.</p>
-<p>In the N.E. Transvaal B. Viljoen and Muller had been quiescent
-throughout the summer. The former lay usually at Pilgrim's Rest;
-the latter haunted the hilly country west and S.W. of Lydenburg;
-neither leader being able to get much work out of passive and
-spiritless followers. When Schalk Burger, the Acting President of
-the Transvaal, and the rest of the Government were driven across
-the Delagoa Bay Railway by Bruce Hamilton in December, Park, who
-was in command of the solitary British force north of the line,
-aided by a column from Belfast, made an unsuccessful attempt to
-capture the wandering Government.</p>
-<p>B. Viljoen was anxious for its safety and persuaded it to take
-refuge with him at Pilgrim's Rest. It started on the journey with
-him; but fortunately its courage failed it, and Viljoen was left to
-return alone and to be taken prisoner near Lydenburg on January 25.
-Troops were slipped at it but were evaded; and it withdrew to the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page357" id=
-"page357"></a>{357}</span> west across the Olifant's River. It
-maintained itself until March 12, when by leave of Lord Kitchener
-it passed through Balmoral into conference with Steyn and the
-remnants of the Orange Free State Government at Kroonstad and
-thence to Klerksdorp.</p>
-<p>In the "protected area" P. Viljoen had perforce to be left
-unmolested until the end of March, when the conclusion of the third
-drive in the Orange River Colony set some troops free for work
-elsewhere. His commandos, about 800 strong, were discovered in
-laager twenty miles east of Springs by a cavalry column under
-Lawley during a night raid on April 1. After a temporary panic they
-not only rallied, but drove away the attacking force and pursued it
-until restrained by the intervention of another portion of Lawley's
-command which had remained in camp. The incident called for
-strenuous measures. During the last three weeks of April the whole
-district was driven by Bruce Hamilton; at first from north to south
-starting from the vicinity of Carolina, then by a counter march
-from south to north through the "protected area," the latter
-movement being repeated in the reverse direction. P. Viljoen was
-not found in the wilderness, while his colleague Alberts escaped
-with 500 burghers into the Orange River Colony, whither he was
-followed by Bruce Hamilton.</p>
-<h3><a name="chap17-3" id="chap17-3">III. WESTERN
-TRANSVAAL</a></h3>
-<p><a href="#fig-orange">Map, p. 292.</a></p>
-<p>Meanwhile in the Western Transvaal Delarey had remained
-undisturbed save by the building of blockhouse lines. The situation
-elsewhere had not suffered active measures to be taken in the
-district controlled by him, which extended from the corner between
-the Vaal and the Western Railway almost to the Magaliesberg, and
-for which on the British side Methuen and Kekewich were the
-commanders chiefly responsible. During the earlier summer months
-some small incidents <span class="pagenum"><a name="page358" id=
-"page358"></a>{358}</span> occurred which were usually favourable
-to the British cause.</p>
-<p>In February, however, the tide of fortune turned. Delarey came
-down from the north, apparently to watch his chance of intervening
-on behalf of De Wet in the Orange River Colony, and heard from
-Liebenberg that a convoy was on its way from Wolmaranstad to
-Klerksdorp. On February 25 the convoy, which was escorted by 700
-men and two guns, was near Yzer Spruit within a day's march of its
-destination, when it was ambushed in the dawn and captured by
-Delarey, Kemp, and Liebenberg, who thus easily obtained what they
-were most in need of, namely transport animals, guns, and
-ammunition to the amount of half a million rounds.<a id=
-"footnotetag62" name="footnotetag62"></a><a href=
-"#footnote62"><sup>62</sup></a> The capture was effected within
-hearing not only of Klerksdorp, but also of a small column on the
-march from Klerksdorp to Hartebeestfontein. Kekewich, who was near
-Klerksdorp, then left for Wolmaranstad and sent a column under
-Grenfell in pursuit of Delarey; but the column failed to find
-Delarey.</p>
-<p>Methuen at Vryburg promptly set himself to work, with such tools
-as he could lay his hands on, to avenge the disaster. He put
-together a column of which about one-third was regular infantry
-with four field guns, and the remainder samples of almost every
-irregular corps that had been raised during the previous twelve
-months; and he set out at the head of it to intercept Delarey, who
-was reported to be making for the Marico River. He ordered Kekewich
-to co-operate with him from Klerksdorp.</p>
-<p>Grenfell's column was accordingly ordered to meet Methuen at
-Roirantjesfontein seventeen miles south of Lichtenburg. He arrived
-there on March 7; Methuen, who was delayed by the difficulty of
-finding water, having reached Tweebosch on the previous day.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page359" id=
-"page359"></a>{359}</span>
-<p>It was now incumbent on Delarey, who was marching up from the
-south with 1,100 burghers, to attack either Methuen or Grenfell
-before they could join hands. He chose the former's heterogeneous
-host as the easier prey, and fell first upon his rearguard soon
-after he left Tweebosch at dawn on March 7, and then upon his right
-flank. The mounted troops, which were promptly disposed as a
-screen, failed ignominiously, the greater part of them leaving the
-field in disorder. The regular infantry stood fast with the guns,
-but were soon overwhelmed. Grenfell was unable to intervene, but he
-strengthened Lichtenburg in case Delarey should come that way.
-Delarey, however, went to the south to meet De Wet and Steyn, whom
-he cheered with the news of the capture of four British field guns
-and of 600 prisoners of war, among whom was Methuen, severely
-wounded. Steyn remained with Delarey; De Wet returned to the Orange
-River Colony.</p>
-<p>Yzer Spruit and Tweebosch introduced the Drive into the Western
-Transvaal. Troops from all quarters reinforced Kekewich at
-Klerksdorp, and soon a force 14,000 strong was assembled there and
-elsewhere. The difficulty of the task before it was enhanced by the
-absence of a network of blockhouse lines, which had only been laid
-out along the Schoon Spruit and thence to Lichtenburg and Mafeking,
-and also along the Vaal.</p>
-<p>The troops had to begin operations from a faulty strategical
-base, as they were aligned along or near the Schoon Spruit
-blockhouse line, and between the Boers and that line. To drive
-Delarey on to it, they must rapidly place themselves west of him;
-and this could be done only by a night march of mounted men darting
-through his commandos and then pressing him on to the Schoon Spruit
-in the opposite direction.</p>
-<p>The operation, which was of spirited and ingenious conception,
-was carried out on March 23. In proportion to the effort&mdash;the
-force engaged in it numbered 11,000 mounted men&mdash;the results
-were paltry. A few <span class="pagenum"><a name="page360" id=
-"page360"></a>{360}</span> score prisoners and three guns were
-taken. As in the earlier drives in the Orange River Colony, the
-meshes of the net were spacious and fragile. Delarey, Kemp, and
-Steyn escaped; and even Liebenberg, when about to suffer the
-<i>peine forte et dure</i> upon the Schoon Spruit blockhouse line,
-found a discontinuity through which he wriggled at midnight.
-Delarey mustered his burghers to the number of over 2,000 on the
-Hart's River.</p>
-<p>To deal with the embarrassing situation the British columns were
-again marched to the west, with instructions to form a line of
-three entrenched camps distant one or two days' march from the
-Schoon Spruit.</p>
-<p>The centre column under the command of W. Kitchener having
-reached its destination, made a reconnaissance in force still
-further to the west on March 31. Cookson, who was in charge of the
-expedition, at the end of a march of thirty-five miles, during
-which he had pushed back small parties of the enemy, halted at
-Boschbult, where two farms lay on the banks of the Brak River.</p>
-<p>Cookson soon found himself in presence of 2,500 Boers with four
-field guns, his own strength being 1,800 with the same number of
-guns. The position was a bad one as the ground rose on each side of
-the river; the bush offered cover to the attack, and the only cover
-available to the defence was the almost dry bed of the river. He
-threw out screens and proceeded to entrench and form a laager;
-while the screens faced in the open the fire of the enemy under
-cover in the bush on the high ground. Liebenberg made one attempt
-from the south to charge the main position, but was driven back by
-the southern screen which had been brought into the river bank; and
-after a second unsuccessful attempt, this time from the east,
-withdrew to the high ground on the north.</p>
-<p>When the work at the laager at the farms, which was impeded by
-artillery fire from the S.W., was sufficiently advanced, the
-northern screen was withdrawn. Some <span class="pagenum"><a name=
-"page361" id="page361"></a>{361}</span> confusion ensued, as the
-Boers in the bush immediately fell upon it, but their attempt to
-get at the main position on the river, though supported by
-artillery, failed. It never attained the crisis of an assault; and
-late in the afternoon it was called off by Delarey, who arrived
-from his Head Quarters near Hart's River.</p>
-<p>Meanwhile the sound of the action had reached the ears of W.
-Kitchener, who twenty miles away was laying out his entrenched
-camp. He hurried to the rescue, but the cessation of the firing and
-the reports of stragglers led him to the conclusion that Cookson
-had been annihilated. He reported to that effect to his brother,
-Lord Kitchener, and returned to camp. Next day he again went out,
-and found to his satisfaction that Cookson was still a military
-asset.</p>
-<p>Kekewich, meanwhile, was searching for Delarey elsewhere. He had
-bespoken at Head Quarters W. Kitchener's co-operation in the quest
-and was relying on it; but a column commander on trek <i>in
-partibus Boerum</i> is hard to find, and no instructions reached
-Kitchener.</p>
-<p>The need of a General Manager on the spot to co-ordinate the
-activities of the syndicate of column commanders who had so
-signally failed to bring Delarey to book was now manifest; and Ian
-Hamilton, who had greatly distinguished himself in two of the early
-combats of the war, was now chosen to bring it to an end. On April
-8 he joined Kekewich at Middelbult.</p>
-<p>Ian Hamilton quickly formulated a plan of using the three
-columns, 11,000 strong, of Kekewich, W. Kitchener and Rawlinson,
-who had lately been in pursuit of De Wet in the Orange River
-Colony, as a scythe to sweep over the country with a swing at first
-grazing Hart's River, then the Vaal, and finally coming to rest at
-Klerksdorp. Only four days were allotted to the movement, which
-began on April 10 and called for a daily march of more than forty
-miles. Delarey had been summoned to take part in the negotiations
-for peace, and Kemp <span class="pagenum"><a name="page362" id=
-"page362"></a>{362}</span> was in charge of the Boer commandos,
-which numbered about 2,600 burghers.</p>
-<p>It happened that Kekewich, whose force was detailed as the right
-of the advance, bore too much to the left on the first day's march,
-and found himself in rear of Rawlinson. Kemp was observing the
-movement, and assumed that he had located the British right,
-whereas Kekewich had partly regained his position by moving towards
-Roodeval, where Kemp was hovering for a chance to fall on the rear
-or the flank of Ian Hamilton's columns.</p>
-<p>Kekewich reached Roodeval early on April 11, and at once pressed
-forward to Hart's River. His advanced guard almost immediately
-discovered a large body of mounted men on the left front, who,
-until they opened fire, were by some strange misconception taken to
-be a portion of Rawlinson's column. They were in fact more than a
-thousand Boers under Potgieter, who as soon as he had disposed of
-the advanced guard, made for the main body, which was not yet
-formed up, and by which Potgieter's men were again mistaken for a
-portion of Rawlinson's column. The error was discovered, but not
-too late. The Boer attack, which for sheer reckless bravery could
-hardly be surpassed, and which has been compared to the Dervish
-charge at Omdurman, was made in the open against a considerable
-force, was repelled; and Potgieter fell dead at the head of his
-commandos. Rawlinson hurried up to the sound of the firing and
-drove away the enemy, who retired, but not in disorder, to the
-south. A remnant, however, broke back and even sniped the main
-body. In less than three hours after the first shot had been fired
-by Potgieter, Kekewich and Rawlinson started in pursuit. Kemp,
-however, saved himself, and escaped with what was, under the
-circumstances, the inconsiderable loss of the two field guns which
-Delarey had taken from Methuen at Tweebosch.</p>
-<p>The two Hamiltons rang down the curtain of the War <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page363" id="page363"></a>{363}</span> Tragedy.
-While Bruce Hamilton was driving for the last time through the
-Orange River Colony, Ian Hamilton with Kekewich, W. Kitchener, and
-Rawlinson, assisted by a column from the Vaal under Rochfort, began
-a westward drive in the Transvaal, with 17,000 men. Kemp followed
-the usual practice of Boer commandants when hard pressed by the
-enemy, and scattered his commandos; thus when Ian Hamilton's 17,000
-crossed the border and reached the Western Railway on May 11, they
-found less than 400 Boers, among whom Kemp was not, impaled upon
-the barrier of blockhouses and armoured trains.</p>
-<h3><a name="chap17-4" id="chap17-4">IV. CAPE COLONY</a></h3>
-<p>During the early part of the summer of 1901-2 the Cape Colony
-was, comparatively speaking, quiet, though dormantly rebellious.
-Little positive progress was made, either by French or by the
-inflammatory elements opposed to him, of which the leader was J.C.
-Smuts. These were for the most part acting in a spacious and
-inaccessible area, which included the districts of Kenhart,
-Carnarvon, Sutherland, Fraserburg, and Calvinia. A blockhouse line,
-which when completed would stretch from Victoria West to Lambert's
-Bay, was in course of construction through these districts.</p>
-<p>In December Kritzinger headed a raid from the Orange River
-Colony; but although he was soon captured near Hanover, the greater
-portion of his followers escaped to the south and infested the
-districts of Cradock and Somerset East. Stephenson was put in
-immediate charge of the operations against Smuts, who had
-established himself on the Zak River between Kenhart and Calvinia,
-and who in January moved eastward. It was a false move, because it
-brought him into the Fraserburg district, and made him more
-accessible to the columns opposed to him. It was made apparently
-with the intention of breaking across the railway in the vicinity
-of Beaufort West.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page364" id=
-"page364"></a>{364}</span>
-<p>The operations against Smuts, the flank bases of which, Beaufort
-West and Lambert's Bay, were over 300 miles apart, attained only
-negative success. A large convoy drawn by donkeys fell into the
-hands of the rebels between Beaufort West and Fraserburg, and a
-smaller convoy in the Sutherland district.</p>
-<p>French now took in hand the Drive, the last weapon left in the
-British Armoury, which his colleagues in the Transvaal and the
-Orange River Colony had been wielding for some months. It was
-brandished northwards from Beaufort West on February 17; but it
-only dispersed without destroying the rebels, most of whom had
-retired to the north and N.W. Not a few scraped round the right
-flank of the drive, crossed the railway, and plunged into the
-Graaff Reinet and Aberdeen districts, where they were joined by a
-band under Fouch&eacute;, which had been lurking and conniving far
-away to the N.E. between Dortrecht and Aliwal North.</p>
-<p>Smuts withdrew to the N.W. and laid siege to Ookiep, which was
-relieved on May 3 by an expedition sent from Capetown through Port
-Nolloth; Smuts having in the meantime retired in order to attend
-the Peace Conference. He had done his best to carry out the
-instructions given to him by the Boer Council of War held in June,
-1901, to foment a general insurrection in the Cape Colony, but he
-had failed.</p>
-<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote61" name=
-"footnote61"></a><b>Footnote 61:</b><a href=
-"#footnotetag61">(return)</a>
-<p>L.M.O. <i>Requiescat in pace</i>.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<blockquote class="footnote"><a id="footnote62" name=
-"footnote62"></a><b>Footnote 62:</b><a href=
-"#footnotetag62">(return)</a>
-<p>It is not easy to understand why an empty convoy on the march,
-not from, but to a base of supplies, should have taken over 700
-rounds per man.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page365" id=
-"page365"></a>{365}</span>
-<h2><a name="chap18" id="chap18">CHAPTER XVIII</a></h2>
-<h3>The End</h3>
-<p>Nearly two years had passed by since the negotiations for peace
-between Lord Roberts and L. Botha and between Sir Redvers Buller
-and C. Botha had fallen through shortly before the battle of
-Diamond Hill. In February, 1901, another conference for peace was
-held at Middelburg in the Transvaal between Lord Kitchener and L.
-Botha, who after parleying for a fortnight, abruptly broke off the
-negotiations. If, as seems probable, he was led to adopt that
-course by the news of the escape of De Wet from the Cape Colony, a
-historical parallel may be found in the sudden dissolution of the
-Congress of Vienna, when the courier brought the news of Napoleon's
-escape from Elba.</p>
-<p>In January, 1902, an offer made by the Government of the
-Netherlands to mediate between the combatants was declined by the
-British Government. The incident of the offer was, however,
-communicated to the Transvaal Government, which was then lying
-north of Balmoral, and which asked for and received permission to
-discuss proposals for peace with the Free State Government at
-Kroonstad. Schalk Burger, the Acting President of the Transvaal,
-arrived at Kroonstad on March 22. Steyn, who was with Delarey, was
-sent for; De Wet was searched for, and for the first time found;
-and the allied Governments, the chief members of which were, on the
-one side, Schalk Burger and Delarey, and on the other De Wet and
-Steyn, met in conference on April 9 at <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page366" id="page366"></a>{366}</span>
-Klerksdorp, which was, at Steyn's suggestion, chosen as a more
-convenient place of meeting than Kroonstad.</p>
-<p>It was soon decided to open negotiations with Lord Kitchener, at
-whose invitation the Governments proceeded to Pretoria, where they
-met him and Lord Milner. The Boer proposals, which postulated the
-continued independent existence of the two shattered Republics,
-were rejected; it seemed that the war must be fought to a still
-bitterer end. Finally, it was agreed that the negotiations should
-be adjourned for a month, in order to allow the feelings of the
-burghers at large to be ascertained, and reported at a Convention
-to be held at Vereeniging on May 15. In the meantime the military
-operations were to be continued, subject to the permission to be
-given to the Boer leaders to go freely among and consult their
-people.</p>
-<p>When the Convention assembled it was found that while the
-Transvaal was generally in favour of submission, the Orange River
-Colony was still implacable. A compromise was effected between
-them, and the heads of a treaty, of which the chief clause ensured
-a qualified independence to the late Republics, under the guise of
-British Protectorates, were drawn up by J.C. Smuts, who had come
-from Ookiep to resume his former profession and to act as legal
-adviser to his colleagues. It was submitted to Lord Kitchener at
-Pretoria, who, as the delegates might have foreseen, refused to
-consider it and handed to their counsel Smuts a document, in which
-the Boer leaders were required, on their own behalf as well as on
-their followers' behalf, to acknowledge themselves as British
-subjects.</p>
-<p>The negotiations at Pretoria were conducted by a deputation from
-the Vereeniging Convention: Delarey, Botha, Smuts, De Wet, and
-Hertzog. These did their best, and even obtained some verbal
-changes of phraseology which made Lord Kitchener's terms less
-unpalatable. The question of British nationality was waived for the
-moment to allow of the other stipulations of the <span class=
-"pagenum"><a name="page367" id="page367"></a>{367}</span> document
-being discussed; and the general subject was referred to a minor
-convention consisting of Lord Milner and his legal adviser on one
-side, and of Smuts and Hertzog on the other.</p>
-<p>A proposal for a final settlement was drawn up, which, with
-certain alterations insisted on by the Colonial Office, was
-presented by Lord Kitchener as his ultimatum, to be accepted within
-three days by the Vereeniging Convention. Botha and his colleagues
-returned to Vereeniging and laid it before the delegates. Steyn
-refused to entertain it and immediately resigned his titular office
-of President of the Orange Free State; De Wet, implacable almost to
-the last, protested against its terms. The hopelessness of the Boer
-cause in South Africa was, however, manifest. Even De Wet yielded,
-and voted with the majority in favour of accepting the British
-terms of peace.</p>
-<p>On May 31, 1902, the Treaty of Vereeniging brought to an end the
-War of 960 days.</p>
-<p>FINIS</p>
-<h2><a name="commanders" id="commanders">COMMANDERS OF DIVISIONS
-AND BRIGADES, OCTOBER 1899-JUNE 1901</a></h2>
-<p>CAVALRY.</p>
-<p>DIVISION&mdash;French.</p>
-<p>BRIGADES.</p>
-<div class="poem">
-<div class="stanza">
-<p>1 Babington, Porter, Gordon</p>
-<p>1 (Natal) Burn-Murdoch</p>
-<p>2 Broadwood</p>
-<p>2 (Natal) Brocklehurst</p>
-<p>3 Gordon, Little</p>
-<p>3 (Mounted Brigade, Natal) Dundonald</p>
-<p>4 Dickson</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<p>MOUNTED INFANTRY BRIGADES&mdash;&mdash;Alderson, Le Gallais,
-Martyr, Ridley, Hutton</p>
-<p>INFANTRY.<br />
-<br />
-DIVISIONS.</p>
-<p>I Methuen<br />
-II Clery, Lyttelton, Clery<br />
-III Gatacre, Chermside<br />
-IV White (troops in Ladysmith), Lyttelton<br />
-V Warren, Hildyard<br />
-VI Kelly-Kenny<br />
-VII Tucker<br />
-VIII Rundle<br />
-IX Colvile<br />
-X Hunter<br />
-XI Pole-Carew<br />
-Colonial: Brabant<br />
-<br />
-BRIGADES.<br />
-<br />
-1 (Guards) Cplvile, Pole-Carew, Inigo Jones<br />
-2 Hildyard, E. Hamilton<br />
-3 (Highland) Wauchope, MacDonald<br />
-4 Lyttelton, Norcott, Cooper<br />
-5 (Irish) Hart<br />
-6 (Fusilier) Barton<br />
-7 I. Hamilton, W. Kitchener<br />
-8 Howard<br />
-9 Featherstonehaugh, Pole-Carew, C. Douglas<br />
-10 Talbot Coke<br />
-11 (Lancashire) Woodgate, Wynne, W. Kitchener, Wynne<br />
-12 Clements<br />
-13 C. Knox<br />
-14 Chermside, Maxwell<br />
-15 Wavell<br />
-16 B. Campbell<br />
-17 Boyes<br />
-18 Stephenson<br />
-19 Smith Dorrien<br />
-20 Paget<br />
-21 B. Hamilton<br />
-22 Allen<br />
-23 W. Knox</p>
-<h2><a name="index" id="index">INDEX OF PERSONS AND PLACES</a></h2>
-<p>(It has not been thought necessary to include in the Index names
-of towns or of physical features which constantly occur in, or are
-not material to the narrative; and incidental or unimportant
-references and allusions have also been generally omitted.)</p>
-<p>Abon's Dam, <a href="#page56">56</a>, <a href=
-"#page165">165</a><br />
-Abraham's Kraal, <a href="#page187">187-190</a><br />
-Acton Holmes, <a href="#page99">99</a>, <a href=
-"#page100">100</a><br />
-Airlie, Lieutenant-Colonel the Earl of, <a href=
-"#page244">244</a><br />
-Alberts, <a href="#page357">357</a><br />
-Alderson, Brigadier-General E.A.H., <a href="#page202">202</a>,
-<a href="#page203">203</a><br />
-America Siding, <a href="#page233">233</a><br />
-Amersfort, <a href="#page272">272</a><br />
-Amphlett, Major C.G., <a href="#page198">198-200</a></p>
-<p>Babington, Major-General J.M., <a href=
-"#page321">321-324</a><br />
-Baden-Powell, Major-General R.S.S., <a href="#page4">4</a>,
-<a href="#page34">34</a>, <a href="#page213">213-222</a>, <a href=
-"#page224">224</a>, <a href="#page273">273-277</a>, <a href=
-"#page280">280-282</a>, <a href="#page320">320</a><br />
-Bakenlaagte, <a href="#page341">341</a><br />
-Balmoral, <a href="#page283">283</a>, <a href="#page284">284</a>,
-<a href="#page291">291</a><br />
-Bankkop, <a href="#page355">355</a><br />
-Barberton, <a href="#page289">289</a><br />
-Barton, Major-General G. <a href="#page53">53</a>, <a href=
-"#page69">69</a>, <a href="#page73">73</a>, <a href=
-"#page76">76</a>, <a href="#page132">132-135</a>, <a href=
-"#page294">294</a><br />
-Bastion Hill, <a href="#page100">100</a>, <a href=
-"#page101">101</a><br />
-Battles, Sieges and Engagements, chief&mdash;<br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;Alleman's Nek, <a href="#page269">269</a>, <a href=
-"#page270">270</a><br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;Belmont, <a href="#page55">55</a><br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;Bergendal, <a href="#page286">286-288</a><br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;Botha's Pass, <a href="#page268">268</a><br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;Caesar's Camp, <a href="#page141">141</a>, <a href=
-"#page143">143</a>, <a href="#page145">145-149</a><br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;Colenso, <a href="#page69">69-78</a><br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;Dewetsdorp, <a href="#page297">297</a>, <a href=
-"#page298">298</a><br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;Diamond Hill, <a href="#page241">241-245</a><br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;Doornkop (Transvaal), <a href="#page237">237</a><br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;Driefontein, <a href="#page189">189-191</a><br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;Elandslaagte, <a href="#page42">42-44</a><br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;Graspan, <a href="#page56">56</a><br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;Kimberley, <a href="#page87">87-92</a><br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;Ladysmith, <a href="#page140">140-155</a><br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;Lindley, <a href="#page247">247-252</a><br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;Lombard's Kop, <a href="#page49">49-50</a><br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;Mafeking, <a href="#page212">212-221</a><br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;Magersfontein, <a href="#page58">58-63</a><br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;Modder River, <a href="#page56">56-57</a><br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;Paardeberg, <a href="#page172">172-183</a><br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;Pieter's Hill, <a href="#page133">133-135</a><br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;Poplar Grove, <a href="#page185">185-188</a><br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;Rhenoster Kop, <a href="#page316">316</a><br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;Rietfontein, <a href="#page45">45</a><br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;Sannah's Post, <a href="#page198">198-206</a><br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;Six Mile Spruit, <a href="#page239">239</a><br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;Spion Kop, <a href="#page102">102-115</a><br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;Stormberg, <a href="#page65">65-69</a><br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;Talana, <a href="#page39">39-41</a><br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;Vaalkrantz, <a href="#page116">116-120</a><br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;Wepener, <a href="#page209">209</a>, <a href=
-"#page210">210</a><br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;Zand River, <a href="#page233">233</a><br />
-Beatson, Brigadier-General S.B., <a href="#page329">329</a><br />
-Belfast, <a href="#page272">272</a>, <a href="#page285">285</a>,
-<a href="#page286">286</a>, <a href="#page325">325</a><br />
-Bell's Kopje and Spruit, <a href="#page144">144</a><br />
-Benson, Colonel G.E., <a href="#page322">322</a>, <a href=
-"#page329">329</a>, <a href="#page337">337</a>, <a href=
-"#page340">340-342</a><br />
-Bethlehem, <a href="#page249">249</a>, <a href="#page252">252</a>,
-<a href="#page256">256-258</a><br />
-Bethune, Colonel E.C., <a href="#page265">265</a>, <a href=
-"#page309">309</a><br />
-Beyers, General C., <a href="#page315">315</a>, <a href=
-"#page317">317-322</a>, <a href="#page325">325</a>, <a href=
-"#page326">326</a>, <a href="#page328">328</a>, <a href=
-"#page337">337</a><br />
-Biddulphsberg, <a href="#page252">252</a><br />
-Blijdschap, <a href="#page345">345</a>, <a href=
-"#page346">346</a><br />
-Bloemfontein, surrender of, <a href="#page191">191</a><br />
-Blood, Lieutenant&mdash;General Sir B., <a href="#page329">329</a>,
-<a href="#page330">330</a><br />
-Blood River Poort, <a href="#page338">338</a><br />
-Boekenhoutskloof Ridge, <a href="#page241">241</a>, <a href=
-"#page242">242</a><br />
-Boesman's Kop, <a href="#page199">199-204</a><br />
-Boschbult, <a href="#page360">360</a><br />
-Boschrand (Driefontein), <a href="#page189">189</a><br />
-Boschrand (Kroonstad), <a href="#page234">234</a><br />
-Bosjespan, <a href="#page164">164</a><br />
-Botha, General C., <a href="#page254">254</a>, <a href=
-"#page264">264</a>, <a href="#page266">266</a>, <a href=
-"#page270">270</a>, <a href="#page272">272</a>, <a href=
-"#page339">339</a>, <a href="#page365">365</a><br />
-Botha, General L., <a href="#page52">52-54</a>, <a href=
-"#page70">70</a>, <a href="#page75">75</a>, <a href=
-"#page78">78</a>, <a href="#page100">100</a>, <a href=
-"#page112">112</a>, <a href="#page117">117-119</a>, <a href=
-"#page126">126</a>, <a href="#page128">128</a>, <a href=
-"#page132">132</a>, <a href="#page193">193</a>, <a href=
-"#page196">196</a>, <a href="#page232">232-242</a>, <a href=
-"#page245">245-247</a>, <a href="#page254">254</a>, <a href=
-"#page264">264</a>, <a href="#page283">283-291</a>, <a href=
-"#page314">314</a>, <a href="#page315">315</a>, <a href=
-"#page322">322</a>, <a href="#page325">325-327</a>, <a href=
-"#page337">337-341</a>, <a href="#page345">345</a>, <a href=
-"#page354">354</a>, <a href="#page355">355</a>, <a href=
-"#page365">365-367</a><br />
-Botha, P., <a href="#page232">232</a><br />
-Bothaville, <a href="#page295">295</a>, <a href="#page296">296</a>,
-<a href="#page298">298</a><br />
-Brabant, Brigadier&mdash;General Sir E.Y., <a href=
-"#page194">194</a>, <a href="#page206">206</a>, <a href=
-"#page207">207</a>, <a href="#page209">209</a>, <a href=
-"#page210">210</a>, <a href="#page230">230</a>, <a href=
-"#page247">247</a>, <a href="#page252">252</a>, <a href=
-"#page256">256</a><br />
-Brakfontein (Natal), <a href="#page97">97</a>, <a href=
-"#page106">106</a>, <a href="#page116">116-119</a><br />
-Brakfontein (Transvaal), <a href="#page277">277</a>, <a href=
-"#page278">278</a><br />
-Brak River (Cape Colony), <a href="#page305">305-307</a><br />
-Brak River (Transvaal), <a href="#page360">360</a><br />
-Brand, <a href="#page307">307</a>, <a href="#page308">308</a>,
-<a href="#page335">335</a><br />
-Brandfort, <a href="#page197">197</a>, <a href="#page198">198</a>,
-<a href="#page232">232</a>, <a href="#page233">233</a><br />
-Brandwater Basin, <a href="#page257">257-261</a>, <a href=
-"#page271">271</a>, <a href="#page278">278</a>, <a href=
-"#page280">280</a>, <a href="#page295">295</a>, <a href=
-"#page331">331</a><br />
-Britz, <a href="#page355">355</a><br />
-Broadwood, Brigadier-General R.G., <a href="#page198">198-205</a>,
-<a href="#page244">244</a>, <a href="#page245">245</a>, <a href=
-"#page259">259</a>, <a href="#page278">278</a>, <a href=
-"#page316">316</a>, <a href="#page317">317</a>, <a href=
-"#page319">319</a>, <a href="#page321">321</a>, <a href=
-"#page333">333</a><br />
-Brocklehurst, Major-General J.F., <a href=
-"#page269">269-271</a><br />
-Brook, Major-General E.S., <a href="#page352">352</a><br />
-Buller, General Sir Redvers, <a href="#page51">51</a>, <a href=
-"#page53">53-55</a>, <a href="#page69">69-79</a>, <a href=
-"#page86">86</a>, <a href="#page89">89</a>, <a href=
-"#page90">90</a>, <a href="#page96">96-103</a>, <a href=
-"#page107">107</a>, <a href="#page112">112-127</a>, <a href=
-"#page131">131-133</a>, <a href="#page136">136</a>, <a href=
-"#page140">140</a>, <a href="#page152">152-155</a>, <a href=
-"#page231">231</a>, <a href="#page240">240</a>, <a href=
-"#page254">254</a>, <a href="#page256">256</a>, <a href=
-"#page262">262-272</a>, <a href="#page284">284-291</a>, <a href=
-"#page365">365</a><br />
-Bulwana, <a href="#page122">122</a>, <a href="#page123">123</a>,
-<a href="#page125">125</a>, <a href="#page135">135</a>, <a href=
-"#page136">136</a>, <a href="#page142">142</a>, <a href=
-"#page145">145</a>, <a href="#page147">147</a>, <a href=
-"#page148">148</a><br />
-Burger, Schalk, Acting President of the Transvaal, <a href=
-"#page100">100</a>, <a href="#page103">103</a>, <a href=
-"#page105">105</a>, <a href="#page112">112</a>, <a href=
-"#page117">117</a>, <a href="#page142">142</a>, <a href=
-"#page356">356</a>, <a href="#page365">365</a><br />
-Burn-Murdoch, Brigadier-General J.F., <a href="#page135">135</a>,
-<a href="#page136">136</a><br />
-Byng, Colonel the Hon. J.H.G., <a href="#page350">350-352</a></p>
-<p>Campbell, Colonel W.P., <a href="#page326">326</a><br />
-Campbell, Major-General B., <a href="#page346">346</a>, <a href=
-"#page347">347</a><br />
-Carleton, Lieutenant-Colonel F.R.C., <a href=
-"#page47">47-49</a><br />
-Carolina, <a href="#page272">272</a><br />
-Carrington, Lieutenant-General Sir F., <a href="#page274">274</a>,
-<a href="#page277">277</a>, <a href="#page278">278</a>, <a href=
-"#page290">290</a>, <a href="#page314">314</a><br />
-Chermside, Lieutenant-General Sir H., <a href="#page230">230</a>,
-<a href="#page232">232</a><br />
-Chieveley, <a href="#page53">53</a>, <a href="#page76">76</a>,
-<a href="#page97">97</a>, <a href="#page121">121</a><br />
-Chrissie, Lake, <a href="#page326">326</a><br />
-Christiana, <a href="#page226">226</a>, <a href=
-"#page235">235</a><br />
-Cingolo, <a href="#page123">123</a>, <a href=
-"#page124">124</a><br />
-Clements, Major-General R.A.P., <a href="#page81">81</a>, <a href=
-"#page194">194</a>, <a href="#page195">195</a>, <a href=
-"#page206">206</a>, <a href="#page227">227</a>, <a href=
-"#page252">252</a>, <a href="#page256">256</a>, <a href=
-"#page257">257</a>, <a href="#page316">316-321</a>, <a href=
-"#page324">324</a>, <a href="#page339">339</a>, <a href=
-"#page340">340</a><br />
-Clery, Lieutenant-General Sir C.F., <a href="#page72">72</a>,
-<a href="#page77">77</a>, <a href="#page101">101</a>, <a href=
-"#page103">103</a>, <a href="#page107">107</a>, <a href=
-"#page113">113</a>, <a href="#page124">124</a>, <a href=
-"#page143">143</a>, <a href="#page264">264</a>, <a href=
-"#page267">267</a>, <a href="#page268">268</a>, <a href=
-"#page270">270</a>, <a href="#page315">315</a><br />
-Clump Hill, <a href="#page132">132</a><br />
-Coke, Major-General J. Talbot, <a href="#page102">102</a>, <a href=
-"#page103">103</a>, <a href="#page106">106-111</a>, <a href=
-"#page113">113</a>, <a href="#page114">114</a>, <a href=
-"#page127">127</a>, <a href="#page128">128</a>, <a href=
-"#page269">269</a><br />
-Colenso Kopjes, <a href="#page127">127-129</a><br />
-Colesberg, <a href="#page64">64</a>, <a href="#page80">80</a>,
-<a href="#page81">81</a>, <a href="#page145">145</a>, <a href=
-"#page157">157</a>, <a href="#page309">309</a><br />
-Colvile, Lieutenant-General Sir H.E., <a href="#page62">62</a>,
-<a href="#page63">63</a>, <a href="#page166">166</a>, <a href=
-"#page167">167</a>, <a href="#page170">170</a>, <a href=
-"#page171">171</a>, <a href="#page175">175</a>, <a href=
-"#page177">177</a>, <a href="#page178">178</a>, <a href=
-"#page180">180</a>, <a href="#page198">198</a>, <a href=
-"#page202">202-206</a>, <a href="#page216">216</a>, <a href=
-"#page232">232</a>, <a href="#page233">233</a>, <a href=
-"#page247">247-253</a>, <a href="#page255">255</a>, <a href=
-"#page256">256</a><br />
-Conical Hill, <a href="#page102">102</a>, <a href=
-"#page105">105</a><br />
-Cookson, Colonel G.A., <a href="#page360">360</a>, <a href=
-"#page361">361</a><br />
-Council of War, <i>see</i> <a href=
-"#index-krijgsraad">Krijgsraad</a><br />
-Crabbe, Lieutenant-Colonel Eyre, <a href="#page309">309</a><br />
-Crofton, Colonel M., <a href="#page106">106</a>, <a href=
-"#page108">108</a>, <a href="#page109">109</a>, <a href=
-"#page113">113</a><br />
-Cronje, General A.P., <a href="#page46">46</a>, <a href=
-"#page140">140</a>, <a href="#page167">167</a><br />
-Cronje, General A.P.J., <a href="#page163">163</a><br />
-Cronje, General P., <a href="#page56">56-58</a>, <a href=
-"#page61">61</a>, <a href="#page63">63</a>, <a href=
-"#page81">81</a>, <a href="#page126">126</a>, <a href=
-"#page131">131</a>, <a href="#page133">133</a>, <a href=
-"#page141">141</a>, <a href="#page145">145</a>, <a href=
-"#page158">158-164</a>, <a href="#page166">166-175</a>, <a href=
-"#page179">179</a>, <a href="#page181">181-185</a>, <a href=
-"#page192">192</a>, <a href="#page193">193</a>, <a href=
-"#page213">213-217</a>, <a href="#page219">219</a>, <a href=
-"#page220">220</a>, <a href="#page223">223</a>, <a href=
-"#page281">281</a><br />
-Cunningham, Brigadier-General G.G., <a href="#page321">321</a>,
-<a href="#page322">322</a>, <a href="#page324">324</a><br />
-Cyferfontein, <a href="#page321">321</a></p>
-<p>Dalgety, Colonel E.H., <a href="#page209">209</a><br />
-Damant, Lieutenant-Colonel J.H., <a href="#page349">349</a>,
-<a href="#page350">350</a><br />
-Damvallei, <a href="#page189">189</a><br />
-Dartnell, Brigadier-General Sir J., <a href="#page327">327</a>,
-<a href="#page346">346</a>, <a href="#page347">347</a><br />
-De Beer, <a href="#page172">172</a>, <a href="#page179">179</a>,
-<a href="#page182">182</a><br />
-Delarey, General, <a href="#page55">55-58</a>, <a href=
-"#page61">61</a>, <a href="#page81">81</a>, <a href=
-"#page189">189</a>, <a href="#page190">190</a>, <a href=
-"#page194">194</a>, <a href="#page221">221</a>, <a href=
-"#page232">232</a>, <a href="#page239">239</a>, <a href=
-"#page241">241</a>, <a href="#page242">242</a>, <a href=
-"#page245">245</a>, <a href="#page274">274</a>, <a href=
-"#page275">275</a>, <a href="#page282">282</a>, <a href=
-"#page283">283</a>, <a href="#page315">315-326</a>, <a href=
-"#page330">330</a>, <a href="#page332">332</a>, <a href=
-"#page337">337</a>, <a href="#page342">342-345</a>, <a href=
-"#page353">353</a>, <a href="#page357">357-362</a>, <a href=
-"#page365">365</a>, <a href="#page366">366</a><br />
-De Lisle, Colonel H. de B., <a href="#page245">245</a><br />
-De Wet, General C., <a href="#page47">47</a>, <a href=
-"#page151">151</a>, <a href="#page152">152</a>, <a href=
-"#page162">162</a>, <a href="#page163">163</a>, <a href=
-"#page167">167</a>, <a href="#page168">168</a>, <a href=
-"#page170">170</a>, <a href="#page171">171</a>, <a href=
-"#page173">173</a>, <a href="#page178">178-182</a>, <a href=
-"#page185">185-191</a>, <a href="#page198">198</a>, <a href=
-"#page200">200-204</a>, <a href="#page207">207-211</a>, <a href=
-"#page232">232</a>, <a href="#page241">241</a>, <a href=
-"#page247">247</a>, <a href="#page252">252-256</a>, <a href=
-"#page258">258</a>, <a href="#page259">259</a>, <a href=
-"#page274">274</a>, <a href="#page278">278-282</a>, <a href=
-"#page294">294-310</a>, <a href="#page322">322</a>, <a href=
-"#page330">330</a>, <a href="#page332">332</a>, <a href=
-"#page337">337</a>, <a href="#page345">345-353</a>, <a href=
-"#page358">358</a>, <a href="#page359">359</a>, <a href=
-"#page365">365-367</a><br />
-De Wet, General P., <a href="#page188">188</a>, <a href=
-"#page198">198</a>, <a href="#page199">199</a>, <a href=
-"#page202">202-204</a>, <a href="#page230">230</a>, <a href=
-"#page254">254</a><br />
-Dickson, Major-General J.B., <a href="#page242">242</a><br />
-Dixon, Brigadier-General H.G., <a href="#page324">324</a>, <a href=
-"#page330">330</a>, <a href="#page342">342</a><br />
-Donkerhoek Range, <a href="#page241">241</a>, <a href=
-"#page245">245</a><br />
-Donkerpoort, <a href="#page245">245</a><br />
-Doornberg, <a href="#page297">297</a>, <a href="#page302">302</a>,
-<a href="#page303">303</a>, <a href="#page305">305</a>, <a href=
-"#page310">310</a>, <a href="#page351">351</a><br />
-Doornkop Natal, <a href="#page97">97</a>, <a href=
-"#page119">119</a><br />
-Doornkop Spruit, <a href="#page74">74</a><br />
-Douglas, Lieutenant-Colonel W., <a href="#page329">329</a><br />
-Douglas, Major-General C.W., <a href="#page316">316</a><br />
-Drifts&mdash;<br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;Bosman's, <a href="#page57">57</a><br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;Botha's, <a href="#page309">309</a><br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;Brandvallei, <a href="#page169">169</a><br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;Bridle, <a href="#page74">74</a><br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;Brown's, <a href="#page56">56</a>, <a href=
-"#page61">61</a>, <a href="#page161">161</a>, <a href=
-"#page164">164</a><br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;Commando, <a href="#page353">353</a><br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;Commissie, <a href="#page329">329</a><br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;De Kiel's, <a href="#page162">162</a>, <a href=
-"#page163">163</a>, <a href="#page166">166</a><br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;East, <a href="#page74">74</a><br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;Jager's, <a href="#page39">39</a><br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;Klip, <a href="#page163">163</a>, <a href=
-"#page164">164</a>, <a href="#page166">166</a>, <a href=
-"#page168">168</a>, <a href="#page169">169</a>, <a href=
-"#page171">171</a>, <a href="#page174">174</a>, <a href=
-"#page192">192</a><br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;Klip Kraal, <a href="#page163">163</a>, <a href=
-"#page164">164</a>, <a href="#page169">169</a>, <a href=
-"#page171">171</a><br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;Koedoesberg, <a href="#page159">159</a>, <a href=
-"#page167">167</a><br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;Koodoos, <a href="#page171">171</a>, <a href=
-"#page173">173</a>, <a href="#page179">179</a><br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;Makow's, <a href="#page307">307</a><br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;Munger's, <a href="#page117">117</a>, <a href=
-"#page118">118</a><br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;Oertel's, <a href="#page190">190</a><br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;Old Viljoen's, <a href="#page235">235</a><br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;Paardeberg, <a href="#page169">169-171</a>, <a href=
-"#page173">173</a>, <a href="#page176">176</a>, <a href=
-"#page178">178</a><br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;Potgieter's, <a href="#page54">54</a>, <a href=
-"#page55">55</a>, <a href="#page96">96</a>, <a href=
-"#page97">97</a>, <a href="#page99">99</a>, <a href=
-"#page103">103</a>, <a href="#page106">106</a>, <a href=
-"#page108">108</a>, <a href="#page116">116</a>, <a href=
-"#page121">121</a>, <a href="#page146">146</a>, <a href=
-"#page151">151</a><br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;Rondeval, <a href="#page163">163</a><br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;Schoeman's, <a href="#page278">278</a>, <a href=
-"#page279">279</a>, <a href="#page294">294</a><br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;Trickhardt's, <a href="#page97">97</a>, <a href=
-"#page99">99-102</a><br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;Vanderberg's, <a href="#page176">176</a><br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;Vendutie, <a href="#page169">169</a>, <a href=
-"#page171">171-173</a>, <a href="#page178">178</a>, <a href=
-"#page180">180</a>, <a href="#page184">184</a>, <a href=
-"#page192">192</a><br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;Viljoen's, <a href="#page236">236</a><br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;Waterval (near Koffyfontein), <a href="#page91">91</a>,
-<a href="#page132">132</a>, <a href="#page162">162</a>, <a href=
-"#page166">166</a>, <a href="#page167">167</a>, <a href=
-"#page171">171</a>, <a href="#page179">179</a><br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;Waterval (near Sannah's Post), <a href=
-"#page204">204</a>, <a href="#page205">205</a><br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;Wegdraai, <a href="#page166">166</a>, <a href=
-"#page167">167</a><br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;West, <a href="#page74">74</a><br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;Wonderwater, <a href="#page235">235</a><br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;Zand, <a href="#page304">304</a>, <a href=
-"#page305">305</a>, <a href="#page308">308</a>, <a href=
-"#page309">309</a><br />
-Du Cane, Lieutenant-Colonel H.J., <a href="#page191">191</a><br />
-Dullstroom, <a href="#page329">329</a><br />
-Dundee, <a href="#page37">37</a>, <a href="#page39">39</a><br />
-Dundonald, Major-General the Earl of, <a href="#page76">76</a>,
-<a href="#page99">99-101</a>, <a href="#page109">109</a>, <a href=
-"#page123">123-125</a>, <a href="#page135">135</a>, <a href=
-"#page153">153</a>, <a href="#page154">154</a>, <a href=
-"#page265">265</a>, <a href="#page266">266</a>, <a href=
-"#page268">268</a>, <a href="#page269">269</a>, <a href=
-"#page271">271</a><br />
-Du Plooy, <a href="#page64">64</a><br />
-Dwarsvlei, <a href="#page276">276</a></p>
-<p>Elandsfontein, <a href="#page237">237</a><br />
-Elandskop, <a href="#page350">350</a>, <a href=
-"#page351">351</a><br />
-Elliott, Major-General E. Locke, <a href="#page331">331-334</a>,
-<a href="#page337">337</a>, <a href="#page346">346</a>, <a href=
-"#page349">349-353</a><br />
-Eloff, <a href="#page219">219</a>, <a href="#page220">220</a><br />
-Emmett, <a href="#page328">328</a>, <a href="#page338">338</a>,
-<a href="#page339">339</a><br />
-Ermelo, <a href="#page272">272</a>, <a href="#page326">326</a>,
-<a href="#page327">327</a>, <a href="#page330">330</a>, <a href=
-"#page332">332</a>, <a href="#page354">354</a><br />
-Erasmus, <a href="#page40">40-42</a><br />
-Estcourt, <a href="#page52">52</a>, <a href="#page53">53</a>,
-<a href="#page79">79</a></p>
-<p>Faber's Put, <a href="#page228">228</a><br />
-Fairview, <a href="#page100">100</a>, <a href=
-"#page102">102</a><br />
-Ferreira, <a href="#page165">165</a>, <a href="#page172">172</a>,
-<a href="#page173">173</a><br />
-Florida, <a href="#page237">237</a><br />
-Forestier-Walker, Lieutenant-General Sir F., <a href=
-"#page63">63</a><br />
-Fort Itala, <a href="#page339">339</a><br />
-Fort Prospect, <a href="#page339">339</a><br />
-Fort Wyllie, <a href="#page73">73</a>, <a href="#page76">76</a>,
-<a href="#page77">77</a><br />
-Fouch&eacute;, <a href="#page364">364</a><br />
-Fourie, <a href="#page100">100</a>, <a href="#page307">307</a>,
-<a href="#page308">308</a><br />
-Frankfort, <a href="#page234">234</a><br />
-Fredrikstad, <a href="#page294">294</a>, <a href=
-"#page298">298</a><br />
-French, Lieutenant-General Sir J.D., <a href="#page48">48-50</a>,
-<a href="#page52">52</a>, <a href="#page64">64</a>, <a href=
-"#page65">65</a>, <a href="#page80">80</a>, <a href=
-"#page91">91</a>, <a href="#page141">141</a>, <a href=
-"#page157">157-159</a>, <a href="#page162">162-168</a>, <a href=
-"#page171">171</a>, <a href="#page172">172</a>, <a href=
-"#page182">182</a>, <a href="#page183">183</a>, <a href=
-"#page186">186</a>, <a href="#page187">187</a>, <a href=
-"#page189">189-192</a>, <a href="#page195">195</a>, <a href=
-"#page197">197</a>, <a href="#page198">198</a>, <a href=
-"#page205">205</a>, <a href="#page230">230</a>, <a href=
-"#page232">232-239</a>, <a href="#page242">242</a>, <a href=
-"#page245">245</a>, <a href="#page272">272</a>, <a href=
-"#page277">277</a>, <a href="#page283">283-291</a>, <a href=
-"#page313">313</a>, <a href="#page315">315</a>, <a href=
-"#page320">320</a>, <a href="#page321">321</a>, <a href=
-"#page326">326-328</a>, <a href="#page334">334</a>, <a href=
-"#page364">364</a><br />
-Frere, <a href="#page53">53</a>, <a href="#page76">76</a>, <a href=
-"#page96">96</a><br />
-Froeneman, <a href="#page304">304</a><br />
-Fuzzy Hill, <a href="#page132">132</a></p>
-<p>Gansvlei Spruit, <a href="#page269">269</a><br />
-Gatacre, Lieutenant-General Sir W., <a href="#page52">52</a>,
-<a href="#page55">55</a>, <a href="#page64">64-68</a>, <a href=
-"#page80">80</a>, <a href="#page81">81</a>, <a href=
-"#page157">157</a>, <a href="#page194">194</a>, <a href=
-"#page195">195</a>, <a href="#page206">206-208</a>, <a href=
-"#page216">216</a>, <a href="#page230">230</a>, <a href=
-"#page251">251</a>, <a href="#page257">257</a>, <a href=
-"#page262">262</a><br />
-Gatsrand, <a href="#page279">279</a>, <a href="#page322">322</a>,
-<a href="#page333">333</a>, <a href="#page336">336</a><br />
-Glencoe, <a href="#page42">42</a>, <a href="#page44">44</a>,
-<a href="#page136">136</a><br />
-Gordon, Brigadier-General J.R.P., <a href="#page179">179</a>,
-<a href="#page244">244</a><br />
-Gough, Major H. de la P., <a href="#page338">338</a><br />
-Green Hill (near Colenso), <a href="#page123">123-125</a><br />
-Green Hill (near Spion Kop), <a href="#page100">100</a>, <a href=
-"#page105">105</a><br />
-Green Hill (near Vaalkrantz), <a href="#page116">116</a>, <a href=
-"#page119">119</a>, <a href="#page120">120</a><br />
-Grenfell, Lieutenant-Colonel H.M., <a href="#page330">330</a>,
-<a href="#page337">337</a>, <a href="#page358">358</a>, <a href=
-"#page359">359</a><br />
-Grimwood, Colonel G.G., <a href="#page48">48</a>, <a href=
-"#page49">49</a><br />
-Grobelaar Slopes, <a href="#page128">128</a>, <a href=
-"#page129">129</a><br />
-Grobler, E.R., <a href="#page68">68</a>, <a href="#page69">69</a>,
-<a href="#page195">195</a><br />
-Grobler, F.A. (Marico), <a href="#page222">222</a><br />
-Grobler, H. (Bethal), <a href="#page341">341</a><br />
-Grobler of Vryheid, <a href="#page328">328</a>, <a href=
-"#page338">338</a>, <a href="#page339">339</a><br />
-Grobler of Waterberg, <a href="#page274">274</a>, <a href=
-"#page276">276</a>, <a href="#page282">282</a>, <a href=
-"#page284">284</a><br />
-Groen Kop, <a href="#page347">347-350</a><br />
-Gun Hill (Bakenlaagte), <a href="#page341">341</a><br />
-Gun Hill (near Ladysmith), <a href="#page143">143</a><br />
-Gun Hill (near Paardeberg), <a href="#page177">177</a></p>
-<p>Haasbroek, <a href="#page261">261</a><br />
-Hamilton, Lieutenant-General Sir Ian, <a href="#page43">43</a>,
-<a href="#page44">44</a>, <a href="#page49">49</a>, <a href=
-"#page147">147</a>, <a href="#page149">149</a>, <a href=
-"#page231">231-240</a>, <a href="#page242">242-245</a>, <a href=
-"#page247">247</a>, <a href="#page256">256</a>, <a href=
-"#page276">276-278</a>, <a href="#page280">280</a>, <a href=
-"#page284">284</a>, <a href="#page285">285</a>, <a href=
-"#page288">288</a>, <a href="#page290">290</a>, <a href=
-"#page344">344</a>, <a href="#page361">361-363</a><br />
-Hamilton, Major-General Bruce, <a href="#page244">244</a>, <a href=
-"#page245">245</a>, <a href="#page302">302-304</a>, <a href=
-"#page307">307</a>, <a href="#page333">333</a>, <a href=
-"#page334">334</a>, <a href="#page339">339</a>, <a href=
-"#page353">353-357</a>, <a href="#page363">363</a><br />
-Hamilton, Brigadier-General E., <a href="#page269">269</a><br />
-Hannay, Colonel O.E., <a href="#page162">162</a>, <a href=
-"#page174">174-177</a><br />
-Hartebeestfontein, <a href="#page323">323</a>, <a href=
-"#page324">324</a>, <a href="#page330">330</a>, <a href=
-"#page358">358</a><br />
-Hart, Major-General A.F. <a href="#page71">71-75</a>, <a href=
-"#page78">78</a>, <a href="#page99">99</a>, <a href=
-"#page101">101</a>, <a href="#page120">120</a>, <a href=
-"#page129">129-132</a>, <a href="#page135">135</a>, <a href=
-"#page210">210</a>, <a href="#page230">230</a>, <a href=
-"#page321">321</a>, <a href="#page335">335</a><br />
-Hart's Hill, <a href="#page129">129</a>, <a href=
-"#page130">130</a>, <a href="#page132">132-135</a><br />
-Hart's Loop, <a href="#page127">127</a><br />
-Hattingh, <a href="#page261">261</a><br />
-Heilbron Road Station, <a href="#page253">253</a><br />
-Hekpoort Valley, <a href="#page317">317</a>, <a href=
-"#page321">321</a><br />
-Helvetia (Transvaal), <a href="#page287">287</a>, <a href=
-"#page325">325</a><br />
-Hertzog, General, <a href="#page299">299-301</a>, <a href=
-"#page303">303-308</a>, <a href="#page315">315</a>, <a href=
-"#page326">326</a>, <a href="#page366">366</a>, <a href=
-"#page367">367</a><br />
-Hickman, Colonel T.E., <a href="#page308">308</a>, <a href=
-"#page309">309</a><br />
-Highlands, <a href="#page53">53</a><br />
-Hildyard, Lieutenant-General Sir H., <a href="#page52">52</a>,
-<a href="#page53">53</a>, <a href="#page71">71-73</a>, <a href=
-"#page75">75</a>, <a href="#page76">76</a>, <a href=
-"#page120">120</a>, <a href="#page264">264</a>, <a href=
-"#page265">265</a>, <a href="#page268">268</a>, <a href=
-"#page270">270</a>, <a href="#page315">315</a>, <a href=
-"#page325">325</a>, <a href="#page327">327</a>, <a href=
-"#page338">338</a><br />
-Hill, Colonel A.W., <a href="#page109">109-111</a><br />
-Hlangwhane, <a href="#page69">69-71</a>, <a href="#page76">76</a>,
-<a href="#page96">96</a>, <a href="#page120">120</a>, <a href=
-"#page122">122</a>, <a href="#page123">123</a>, <a href=
-"#page125">125-127</a>, <a href="#page131">131-133</a><br />
-Holdsworth, Lieutenant-Colonel G.L., <a href=
-"#page223">223</a><br />
-Holland, <a href="#page355">355</a><br />
-Hoopstad, <a href="#page323">323</a>, <a href=
-"#page324">324</a><br />
-Hore, Lieutenant-Colonel C.O., <a href="#page214">214</a><br />
-Horseshoe Hill, <a href="#page125">125</a>, <a href=
-"#page129">129</a>, <a href="#page131">131</a><br />
-Houtnek, <a href="#page230">230</a>, <a href=
-"#page232">232</a><br />
-Hughes-Hallett, Colonel J.W., <a href="#page62">62</a>, <a href=
-"#page63">63</a><br />
-Hunter, Lieutenant-General Sir A., <a href="#page225">225</a>,
-<a href="#page226">226</a>, <a href="#page231">231</a>, <a href=
-"#page232">232</a>, <a href="#page256">256-261</a><br />
-Hunter-Weston, Lieutenant-Colonel A.G., <a href="#page191">191</a>,
-<a href="#page234">234</a>, <a href="#page239">239</a><br />
-Hussar Hill, <a href="#page123">123</a>, <a href=
-"#page124">124</a><br />
-Hutton, Major-General Sir E., <a href="#page283">283</a>, <a href=
-"#page284">284</a></p>
-<p>Impati, <a href="#page40">40-42</a><br />
-Ingouville-Williams, Lieutenant-Colonel E.C., <a href=
-"#page324">324</a><br />
-Inkwelo, <a href="#page267">267</a><br />
-Inkweloane, <a href="#page267">267</a>, <a href=
-"#page268">268</a></p>
-<p>Jacobsdaal, <a href="#page56">56-58</a>, <a href=
-"#page163">163</a>, <a href="#page168">168</a>, <a href=
-"#page170">170</a>, <a href="#page171">171</a>, <a href=
-"#page173">173</a>, <a href="#page179">179</a>, <a href=
-"#page181">181</a>, <a href="#page183">183</a><br />
-Johannesburg, Surrender of, <a href="#page239">239</a><br />
-Joubert, General P., <a href="#page38">38</a>, <a href=
-"#page49">49</a>, <a href="#page53">53</a>, <a href=
-"#page54">54</a>, <a href="#page69">69</a>, <a href=
-"#page105">105</a>, <a href="#page117">117</a>, <a href=
-"#page118">118</a>, <a href="#page135">135</a>, <a href=
-"#page140">140</a>, <a href="#page142">142</a>, <a href=
-"#page143">143</a>, <a href="#page145">145</a>, <a href=
-"#page185">185</a>, <a href="#page193">193</a>, <a href=
-"#page194">194</a>, <a href="#page196">196</a></p>
-<p>Kaalfontein, <a href="#page321">321</a>, <a href=
-"#page322">322</a><br />
-Kaffir Kop, <a href="#page346">346</a>, <a href=
-"#page350">350</a><br />
-Kainguba Hill (Nicholson's Nek), <a href="#page47">47</a>, <a href=
-"#page49">49</a><br />
-Kameelfontein Ridge and Valley, <a href="#page241">241</a>,
-<a href="#page242">242</a><br />
-Kanya, <a href="#page224">224</a><br />
-Karee Siding, <a href="#page197">197</a>, <a href=
-"#page198">198</a>, <a href="#page205">205</a>, <a href=
-"#page232">232</a><br />
-Kekewich, Colonel R.G., <a href="#page86">86</a>, <a href=
-"#page87">87</a>, <a href="#page89">89-91</a>, <a href=
-"#page215">215</a>, <a href="#page342">342-344</a>, <a href=
-"#page357">357-359</a>, <a href="#page361">361-363</a><br />
-Kelly-Kenny, Lieutenant-General T., <a href="#page81">81</a>,
-<a href="#page158">158</a>, <a href="#page159">159</a>, <a href=
-"#page166">166</a>, <a href="#page168">168-171</a>, <a href=
-"#page173">173-178</a>, <a href="#page180">180</a>, <a href=
-"#page181">181</a>, <a href="#page186">186</a>, <a href=
-"#page187">187</a>, <a href="#page190">190</a>, <a href=
-"#page232">232</a>, <a href="#page254">254</a><br />
-Kemp, <a href="#page322">322</a>, <a href="#page324">324-326</a>,
-<a href="#page330">330</a>, <a href="#page337">337</a>, <a href=
-"#page342">342</a>, <a href="#page343">343</a>, <a href=
-"#page358">358</a>, <a href="#page360">360-363</a><br />
-Kissieberg, <a href="#page66">66-69</a><br />
-Kitchener, General Lord, <a href="#page156">156</a>, <a href=
-"#page160">160</a>, <a href="#page166">166</a>, <a href=
-"#page170">170</a>, <a href="#page171">171</a>, <a href=
-"#page173">173-178</a>, <a href="#page180">180</a>, <a href=
-"#page181">181</a>, <a href="#page183">183</a>, <a href=
-"#page184">184</a>, <a href="#page188">188</a>, <a href=
-"#page194">194</a>, <a href="#page227">227</a>, <a href=
-"#page229">229</a>, <a href="#page241">241</a>, <a href=
-"#page246">246</a>, <a href="#page247">247</a>, <a href=
-"#page254">254</a>, <a href="#page255">255</a>, <a href=
-"#page278">278-280</a>, <a href="#page292">292</a>, <a href=
-"#page298">298</a>, <a href="#page299">299</a>, <a href=
-"#page306">306</a>, <a href="#page312">312</a>, <a href=
-"#page316">316</a>, <a href="#page326">326</a>, <a href=
-"#page328">328</a>, <a href="#page331">331-334</a>, <a href=
-"#page336">336</a>, <a href="#page345">345</a>, <a href=
-"#page365">365-367</a><br />
-Kitchener, Major-General W., <a href="#page132">132-134</a>,
-<a href="#page329">329</a>, <a href="#page338">338</a>, <a href=
-"#page339">339</a>, <a href="#page360">360</a>, <a href=
-"#page361">361</a>, <a href="#page363">363</a><br />
-Kitchener's Kopje, <a href="#page178">178-182</a>, <a href=
-"#page185">185</a><br />
-Kleinfontein Ridge, <a href="#page244">244</a><br />
-Klipfontein, <a href="#page237">237</a><br />
-Klippan, <a href="#page356">356</a><br />
-Klip River, <a href="#page123">123</a>, <a href="#page125">125</a>,
-<a href="#page150">150</a><br />
-Knox, Colonel E.C., <a href="#page321">321</a><br />
-Knox, Major-General C., <a href="#page168">168</a>, <a href=
-"#page177">177</a>, <a href="#page254">254</a>, <a href=
-"#page294">294</a>, <a href="#page295">295</a>, <a href=
-"#page297">297-299</a>, <a href="#page302">302-306</a>, <a href=
-"#page333">333</a><br />
-Knox, Major-General W., <a href="#page49">49</a><br />
-Kock, <a href="#page42">42</a><br />
-Koetzee, <a href="#page289">289</a>, <a href=
-"#page290">290</a><br />
-Koffyfontein, <a href="#page162">162</a>, <a href=
-"#page179">179</a><br />
-Korn Spruit, <a href="#page199">199</a>, <a href=
-"#page200">200</a>, <a href="#page202">202</a>, <a href=
-"#page203">203</a>, <a href="#page207">207</a><br />
-<a name="index-krijgsraad" id="index-krijgsraad">Krijgsraad</a>,
-<a href="#page143">143</a>, <a href="#page188">188</a>, <a href=
-"#page194">194</a>, <a href="#page196">196-198</a>, <a href=
-"#page207">207</a>, <a href="#page209">209</a>, <a href=
-"#page210">210</a>, <a href="#page240">240</a>, <a href=
-"#page258">258</a>, <a href="#page260">260</a>, <a href=
-"#page332">332</a>, <a href="#page345">345</a>, <a href=
-"#page346">346</a>, <a href="#page349">349</a>, <a href=
-"#page364">364</a><br />
-Kritzinger, <a href="#page299">299-301</a>, <a href=
-"#page303">303-305</a>, <a href="#page315">315</a>, <a href=
-"#page326">326</a>, <a href="#page331">331</a>, <a href=
-"#page334">334</a>, <a href="#page335">335</a>, <a href=
-"#page337">337</a>, <a href="#page363">363</a><br />
-Krokodil Spruit and Hill, <a href="#page241">241</a>, <a href=
-"#page242">242</a><br />
-Kroonstad, <a href="#page191">191</a>, <a href="#page234">234</a>,
-<a href="#page247">247-250</a>, <a href="#page258">258</a>,
-<a href="#page357">357</a>, <a href="#page365">365</a><br />
-Kruger, President Paul, <a href="#page11">11</a>, <a href=
-"#page69">69</a>, <a href="#page95">95</a>, <a href=
-"#page105">105</a>, <a href="#page118">118</a>, <a href=
-"#page126">126</a>, <a href="#page128">128</a>, <a href=
-"#page136">136</a>, <a href="#page184">184</a>, <a href=
-"#page185">185</a>, <a href="#page188">188</a>, <a href=
-"#page196">196</a>, <a href="#page207">207</a>, <a href=
-"#page213">213</a>, <a href="#page220">220</a>, <a href=
-"#page239">239-241</a>, <a href="#page289">289</a>, <a href=
-"#page295">295</a>, <a href="#page314">314</a>, <a href=
-"#page332">332</a></p>
-<p>Lancer's Hill, <a href="#page155">155</a><br />
-Langewacht Spruit, <a href="#page125">125</a>, <a href=
-"#page130">130</a>, <a href="#page132">132</a><br />
-Langvervacht, <a href="#page352">352</a><br />
-Lawley, Lieutenant-Colonel the Hon. R., <a href=
-"#page357">357</a><br />
-Le Gallais Kopje, <a href="#page187">187</a><br />
-Le Gallais, Lieutenant-Colonel P.W., <a href="#page197">197</a>,
-<a href="#page295">295</a><br />
-Lemmer, <a href="#page195">195</a><br />
-Lennox Hill, <a href="#page39">39</a>, <a href=
-"#page40">40</a><br />
-Lichtenburg, <a href="#page226">226</a>, <a href=
-"#page315">315</a>, <a href="#page323">323</a><br />
-Liebenberg, <a href="#page294">294</a>, <a href="#page358">358</a>,
-<a href="#page361">361</a><br />
-Liebenberg's River, <a href="#page353">353</a><br />
-Lieuw Kop, <a href="#page187">187</a><br />
-Lieuw Spruit, <a href="#page255">255</a><br />
-Limit Hill, <a href="#page144">144</a><br />
-Little Knoll, <a href="#page105">105</a>, <a href=
-"#page106">106</a><br />
-Little, Colonel M.O., <a href="#page278">278</a><br />
-Long, Colonel C.J., <a href="#page73">73</a>, <a href=
-"#page75">75</a>, <a href="#page77">77</a><br />
-Long Hill, <a href="#page46">46</a>, <a href="#page48">48</a>,
-<a href="#page49">49</a><br />
-Lotter, <a href="#page335">335</a><br />
-Louwbaken, <a href="#page242">242</a><br />
-Lubbe, <a href="#page163">163</a>, <a href="#page164">164</a><br />
-Lydenburg, <a href="#page288">288</a><br />
-Lyttelton, Lieutenant-General the Hon. N.G., <a href=
-"#page99">99</a>, <a href="#page106">106</a>, <a href=
-"#page108">108</a>, <a href="#page109">109</a>, <a href=
-"#page119">119</a>, <a href="#page120">120</a>, <a href=
-"#page124">124</a>, <a href="#page135">135</a>, <a href=
-"#page264">264</a>, <a href="#page265">265</a>, <a href=
-"#page268">268</a>, <a href="#page270">270</a>, <a href=
-"#page271">271</a>, <a href="#page303">303</a>, <a href=
-"#page308">308</a>, <a href="#page309">309</a>, <a href=
-"#page315">315</a>, <a href="#page316">316</a>, <a href=
-"#page325">325</a>, <a href="#page333">333</a>, <a href=
-"#page334">334</a>, <a href="#page338">338</a>, <a href=
-"#page339">339</a></p>
-<p>MacDonald, Major-General Sir H.A., <a href="#page256">256</a>,
-<a href="#page257">257</a><br />
-Machadodorp, <a href="#page239">239</a>, <a href=
-"#page282">282</a>, <a href="#page283">283</a>, <a href=
-"#page287">287</a>, <a href="#page295">295</a><br />
-Mahon, Brigadier-General B.T., <a href="#page221">221</a>, <a href=
-"#page222">222</a>, <a href="#page224">224-226</a>, <a href=
-"#page232">232</a><br />
-Maiden's Castle, <a href="#page145">145</a>, <a href=
-"#page146">146</a><br />
-Majuba Hill, <a href="#page36">36</a>, <a href="#page266">266</a>,
-<a href="#page267">267</a><br />
-Martyr, Lieutenant-Colonel C., <a href="#page198">198</a>, <a href=
-"#page202">202-206</a><br />
-Mears, <a href="#page349">349</a>, <a href="#page350">350</a><br />
-Metcalfe, Colonel C.T.E., <a href="#page144">144</a><br />
-Methuen, Lieutenant-General Lord, <a href="#page52">52</a>,
-<a href="#page55">55-59</a>, <a href="#page62">62</a>, <a href=
-"#page63">63</a>, <a href="#page79">79</a>, <a href=
-"#page80">80</a>, <a href="#page89">89-92</a>, <a href=
-"#page123">123</a>, <a href="#page157">157</a>, <a href=
-"#page159">159</a>, <a href="#page168">168</a>, <a href=
-"#page172">172</a>, <a href="#page184">184</a>, <a href=
-"#page225">225</a>, <a href="#page228">228</a>, <a href=
-"#page231">231</a>, <a href="#page232">232</a>, <a href=
-"#page247">247</a>, <a href="#page250">250</a>, <a href=
-"#page253">253</a>, <a href="#page254">254</a>, <a href=
-"#page256">256</a>, <a href="#page276">276-280</a>, <a href=
-"#page315">315</a>, <a href="#page323">323</a>, <a href=
-"#page324">324</a>, <a href="#page337">337</a>, <a href=
-"#page344">344</a>, <a href="#page357">357-359</a>, <a href=
-"#page362">362</a><br />
-Meyer, L., <a href="#page39">39</a>, <a href="#page40">40</a><br />
-Meyerton, <a href="#page235">235</a>, <a href=
-"#page236">236</a><br />
-Middle Hill, <a href="#page147">147</a><br />
-Milner, Lord, <a href="#page51">51</a>, <a href="#page86">86</a>,
-<a href="#page160">160</a>, <a href="#page228">228</a>, <a href=
-"#page367">367</a><br />
-Moedvil, <a href="#page342">342</a><br />
-Monte Cristo, <a href="#page123">123-126</a><br />
-Mors Kop, <a href="#page242">242</a>, <a href=
-"#page244">244</a><br />
-Mostert's Hoek, <a href="#page208">208</a><br />
-Mount Alice, <a href="#page97">97</a>, <a href="#page102">102</a>,
-<a href="#page106">106</a>, <a href="#page107">107</a><br />
-Muller, <a href="#page332">332</a>, <a href="#page337">337</a>,
-<a href="#page356">356</a></p>
-<p>Naval Gun Hill, <a href="#page75">75</a><br />
-Naval Hill, <a href="#page123">123</a>, <a href="#page129">129</a>,
-<a href="#page131">131</a>, <a href="#page132">132</a><br />
-Neks<br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;Breedt's, <a href="#page317">317</a><br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;Cingolo, <a href="#page125">125</a><br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;Commando (Orange River Colony), <a href=
-"#page258">258-260</a><br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;Commando (Transvaal), <a href="#page274">274-276</a>,
-<a href="#page278">278</a>, <a href="#page280">280</a>, <a href=
-"#page282">282</a><br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;Laing's, <a href="#page36">36</a>, <a href=
-"#page38">38</a>, <a href="#page254">254</a>, <a href=
-"#page262">262</a>, <a href="#page264">264</a>, <a href=
-"#page266">266-268</a>, <a href="#page270">270</a>, <a href=
-"#page272">272</a><br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;Magato, <a href="#page280">280</a>, <a href=
-"#page342">342</a><br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;Modderfontein, <a href="#page322">322</a><br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;Naauwpoort, <a href="#page258">258</a>, <a href=
-"#page260">260</a><br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;Nicholson's, <a href="#page46">46-49</a>, <a href=
-"#page167">167</a><br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;Noitgedacht, <a href="#page317">317-320</a><br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;Olifant's, <a href="#page274">274</a>, <a href=
-"#page276">276-278</a>, <a href="#page280">280</a>, <a href=
-"#page281">281</a><br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;Retiefs, <a href="#page258">258</a>, <a href=
-"#page260">260</a><br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;Slabbert's, <a href="#page258">258-261</a><br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;Springhaan's, <a href="#page297">297</a>, <a href=
-"#page299">299</a>, <a href="#page302">302</a><br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;Zilikat's <a href="#page11">11</a>, <a href=
-"#page239">239</a>, <a href="#page274">274</a>, <a href=
-"#page275">275</a>, <a href="#page277">277</a>, <a href=
-"#page278">278</a>, <a href="#page283">283</a><br />
-Nelspruit, <a href="#page287">287</a>, <a href=
-"#page289">289</a><br />
-Nicholson, Colonel J.S., <a href="#page223">223</a><br />
-Noitgedacht (Delagoa Bay Railway), <a href="#page287">287</a><br />
-Norcott, Colonel C.H.B., <a href="#page132">132</a>, <a href=
-"#page133">133</a></p>
-<p>Observation Hill, <a href="#page142">142</a><br />
-Olivier, General J.H., <a href="#page64">64</a>, <a href=
-"#page66">66</a>, <a href="#page68">68</a>, <a href=
-"#page195">195</a>, <a href="#page198">198</a>, <a href=
-"#page200">200</a>, <a href="#page259">259</a>, <a href=
-"#page261">261</a><br />
-Onderbroek, <a href="#page125">125</a>, <a href=
-"#page127">127</a><br />
-Onderste Poort, <a href="#page276">276</a>, <a href=
-"#page283">283</a><br />
-Ookiep, <a href="#page364">364</a>, <a href=
-"#page366">366</a><br />
-Orange Free State, Annexation of, <a href="#page236">236</a><br />
-Osfontein, <a href="#page184">184</a>, <a href=
-"#page186">186</a></p>
-<p>Paget, Major-General A.H., <a href="#page256">256</a>, <a href=
-"#page257">257</a>, <a href="#page291">291</a>, <a href=
-"#page316">316</a>, <a href="#page317">317</a>, <a href=
-"#page321">321</a>, <a href="#page326">326</a><br />
-Paris, Major A., <a href="#page307">307</a><br />
-Park, Colonel C.W., <a href="#page329">329</a>, <a href=
-"#page356">356</a><br />
-Penn-Symons, Major-General Sir W., <a href="#page37">37</a>,
-<a href="#page39">39</a>, <a href="#page41">41</a>, <a href=
-"#page45">45</a><br />
-Pepworth Hill, <a href="#page46">46</a>, <a href="#page48">48</a>,
-<a href="#page49">49</a>, <a href="#page142">142</a><br />
-Phipps Hornby, Lieutenant-Colonel E.J., <a href=
-"#page203">203</a><br />
-Pienaar's Poort and River, <a href="#page241">241</a>, <a href=
-"#page242">242</a>, <a href="#page244">244</a><br />
-Pietersburg, <a href="#page292">292</a>, <a href=
-"#page314">314</a>, <a href="#page328">328</a><br />
-Pilcher, Lieutenant-Colonel T.D., <a href="#page195">195</a>,
-<a href="#page198">198</a><br />
-Pilgrim's Rest, <a href="#page356">356</a><br />
-Platrand, <a href="#page143">143</a>, <a href="#page145">145</a>,
-<a href="#page147">147</a>, <a href="#page150">150</a><br />
-Plumer, Brigadier-General H.C.O., <a href="#page214">214</a>,
-<a href="#page221">221-225</a>, <a href="#page274">274</a>,
-<a href="#page305">305-307</a>, <a href="#page309">309</a>,
-<a href="#page328">328</a>, <a href="#page330">330</a>, <a href=
-"#page340">340</a>, <a href="#page355">355</a><br />
-Pole-Carew, Lieutenant-General Sir R., <a href="#page62">62</a>,
-<a href="#page195">195</a>, <a href="#page230">230</a>, <a href=
-"#page242">242</a>, <a href="#page244">244</a>, <a href=
-"#page245">245</a>, <a href="#page272">272</a>, <a href=
-"#page283">283-290</a><br />
-Porter, Colonel N.C., <a href="#page242">242</a><br />
-Potgieter, F., <a href="#page362">362</a><br />
-Potgieter, H., <a href="#page16">16</a><br />
-Pretoria, surrender of, <a href="#page239">239</a><br />
-Prieska, <a href="#page184">184</a>, <a href="#page194">194</a>,
-<a href="#page196">196</a>, <a href="#page227">227</a>, <a href=
-"#page305">305</a>, <a href="#page306">306</a><br />
-Prinsloo, Jacob, <a href="#page55">55</a>, <a href=
-"#page355">355</a>, <a href="#page356">356</a><br />
-Prinsloo, Martin, <a href="#page38">38</a>, <a href=
-"#page118">118</a>, <a href="#page119">119</a>, <a href=
-"#page250">250</a>, <a href="#page259">259-261</a><br />
-Prinsloo, Michael, <a href="#page249">249</a>, <a href=
-"#page250">250</a>, <a href="#page299">299</a>, <a href=
-"#page349">349</a><br />
-"Protected Area," <a href="#page337">337</a>, <a href=
-"#page340">340</a>, <a href="#page345">345</a>, <a href=
-"#page355">355</a>, <a href="#page357">357</a><br />
-Pulteney, Colonel W.P., <a href="#page329">329</a>, <a href=
-"#page355">355</a></p>
-<p>Railway Hill, <a href="#page131">131</a>, <a href=
-"#page133">133</a>, <a href="#page134">134</a><br />
-Ramdam, <a href="#page162">162</a>, <a href=
-"#page166">166</a><br />
-Rangeworthy Heights, <a href="#page100">100-102</a>, <a href=
-"#page107">107</a><br />
-Rawlinson, Colonel Sir H., <a href="#page350">350-352</a>, <a href=
-"#page361">361-363</a><br />
-Reddersburg, <a href="#page207">207-209</a><br />
-Reitz, <a href="#page333">333</a><br />
-Rhenosterfontein Heights, <a href="#page245">245</a><br />
-Rhenoster River Bridge, <a href="#page253">253</a><br />
-Rhodes, Right Hon. Cecil, <a href="#page83">83-95</a>, <a href=
-"#page214">214</a><br />
-Rifleman's Ridge, <a href="#page143">143</a>, <a href=
-"#page147">147</a><br />
-Rimington, Colonel M.F., <a href="#page346">346</a>, <a href=
-"#page349">349</a>, <a href="#page351">351</a><br />
-Roberts, Field-Marshal Lord, <a href="#page79">79</a>, <a href=
-"#page114">114</a>, <a href="#page120">120</a>, <a href=
-"#page132">132</a>, <a href="#page153">153</a>, <a href=
-"#page154">154</a>, <a href="#page156">156</a>, <a href=
-"#page158">158</a>, <a href="#page160">160</a>, <a href=
-"#page161">161</a>, <a href="#page167">167</a>, <a href=
-"#page168">168</a>, <a href="#page170">170</a>, <a href=
-"#page171">171</a>, <a href="#page173">173</a>, <a href=
-"#page179">179</a>, <a href="#page181">181</a>, <a href=
-"#page183">183</a>, <a href="#page184">184</a>, <a href=
-"#page186">186</a>, <a href="#page189">189</a>, <a href=
-"#page191">191</a>, <a href="#page194">194</a>, <a href=
-"#page195">195</a>, <a href="#page219">219</a>, <a href=
-"#page226">226</a>, <a href="#page228">228</a>, <a href=
-"#page229">229</a>, <a href="#page231">231</a>, <a href=
-"#page232">232</a>, <a href="#page234">234</a>, <a href=
-"#page236">236</a>, <a href="#page239">239</a>, <a href=
-"#page241">241</a>, <a href="#page246">246</a>, <a href=
-"#page254">254</a>, <a href="#page256">256</a>, <a href=
-"#page262">262</a>, <a href="#page264">264</a>, <a href=
-"#page271">271-273</a>, <a href="#page280">280-282</a>, <a href=
-"#page284">284</a>, <a href="#page286">286</a>, <a href=
-"#page288">288</a>, <a href="#page292">292</a>, <a href=
-"#page296">296</a>, <a href="#page313">313</a>, <a href=
-"#page314">314</a>, <a href="#page365">365</a><br />
-Rochfort, Colonel A.N., <a href="#page363">363</a><br />
-Roirantjesfontein, <a href="#page358">358</a><br />
-Roodeval (Orange River Colony), <a href="#page252">252</a>,
-<a href="#page253">253</a>, <a href="#page300">300</a><br />
-Roodeval (Transvaal), <a href="#page362">362</a><br />
-Rooi Kop, <a href="#page66">66</a><br />
-Rosmead (on Riet River), <a href="#page57">57</a><br />
-Roux, General P.H., <a href="#page256">256-260</a><br />
-Rundle, Lieutenant-General Sir Leslie, <a href="#page230">230</a>,
-<a href="#page232">232</a>, <a href="#page247">247-250</a>,
-<a href="#page252">252</a>, <a href="#page256">256</a>, <a href=
-"#page259">259</a>, <a href="#page260">260</a>, <a href=
-"#page331">331</a>, <a href="#page333">333</a>, <a href=
-"#page347">347-349</a>, <a href="#page352">352</a><br />
-Rustenburg, <a href="#page273">273-278</a>, <a href=
-"#page281">281</a>, <a href="#page316">316</a>, <a href=
-"#page317">317</a>, <a href="#page344">344</a></p>
-<p>Scheepers, <a href="#page299">299</a>, <a href=
-"#page336">336</a><br />
-Schiel, <a href="#page43">43</a><br />
-Schoeman, <a href="#page64">64</a>, <a href="#page80">80</a>,
-<a href="#page81">81</a><br />
-Schoon Spruit, <a href="#page359">359</a><br />
-Schweizer Reneke, <a href="#page315">315</a><br />
-Sefetili, <a href="#page224">224</a><br />
-Settle, Major-General Sir H., <a href="#page315">315</a><br />
-Seven Kopjes, <a href="#page186">186</a>, <a href=
-"#page187">187</a><br />
-Shekleton, Lieutenant-Colonel H.P., <a href="#page322">322</a>,
-<a href="#page323">323</a><br />
-Sladen, Lieutenant-Colonel J.F.R., <a href="#page331">331</a>,
-<a href="#page332">332</a><br />
-Slapkranz, <a href="#page260">260</a><br />
-Smith-Dorrien, Major-General H.L., <a href="#page177">177</a>,
-<a href="#page178">178</a>, <a href="#page275">275</a>, <a href=
-"#page276">276</a>, <a href="#page278">278-280</a>, <a href=
-"#page315">315</a>, <a href="#page325">325-328</a><br />
-Smuts, General J.C., <a href="#page322">322</a>, <a href=
-"#page324">324</a>, <a href="#page325">325</a>, <a href=
-"#page332">332-336</a>, <a href="#page363">363</a>, <a href=
-"#page364">364</a>, <a href="#page366">366</a><br />
-Smuts, General T., <a href="#page197">197</a>, <a href=
-"#page198">198</a>, <a href="#page290">290</a>, <a href=
-"#page291">291</a><br />
-Snyman, General, <a href="#page217">217</a>, <a href=
-"#page219">219</a>, <a href="#page220">220</a><br />
-Spitz Kop (Natal), <a href="#page267">267</a>, <a href=
-"#page268">268</a><br />
-Spitz Kop (Transvaal), <a href="#page288">288</a><br />
-Spragge, Lieutenant-Colonel B.E., <a href=
-"#page248">248-252</a><br />
-Spytfontein, <a href="#page56">56-58</a><br />
-Steenekamp (of Heilbron), <a href="#page282">282</a><br />
-Steenkamp, L.P., <a href="#page68">68</a><br />
-Stephenson, Major-General T.E., <a href="#page176">176</a>,
-<a href="#page177">177</a>, <a href="#page183">183</a>, <a href=
-"#page363">363</a><br />
-Stewart, Lieutenant-Colonel H.K., <a href="#page338">338</a><br />
-Steyn, Commandant, of Bethlehem, <a href="#page175">175</a>,
-<a href="#page176">176</a>, <a href="#page179">179</a>, <a href=
-"#page182">182</a><br />
-Steyn, M. President, Orange Free State, <a href="#page52">52</a>,
-<a href="#page118">118</a>, <a href="#page185">185</a>, <a href=
-"#page191">191</a>, <a href="#page196">196</a>, <a href=
-"#page257">257</a>, <a href="#page258">258</a>, <a href=
-"#page278">278-280</a>, <a href="#page282">282</a>, <a href=
-"#page290">290</a>, <a href="#page291">291</a>, <a href=
-"#page295">295</a>, <a href="#page302">302</a>, <a href=
-"#page310">310</a>, <a href="#page313">313-316</a>, <a href=
-"#page331">331-333</a>, <a href="#page345">345</a>, <a href=
-"#page346">346</a>, <a href="#page350">350</a>, <a href=
-"#page352">352</a>, <a href="#page353">353</a>, <a href=
-"#page357">357</a>, <a href="#page359">359</a>, <a href=
-"#page360">360</a>, <a href="#page365">365-367</a><br />
-Stinkfontein, <a href="#page173">173</a>, <a href=
-"#page175">175</a><br />
-Surprise Hill, <a href="#page144">144</a></p>
-<p>Table Mountain (on Modder), <a href="#page186">186</a><br />
-Theron, <a href="#page279">279</a>, <a href=
-"#page281">281</a><br />
-Theunissen, <a href="#page182">182</a><br />
-Thorneycroft, Colonel A.W., <a href="#page104">104</a>, <a href=
-"#page107">107-115</a><br />
-Thornhill's Kopje, <a href="#page144">144</a><br />
-Three Tree Hill, <a href="#page100">100</a>, <a href=
-"#page101">101</a>, <a href="#page106">106</a><br />
-Transvaal, Annexation of, <a href="#page288">288</a><br />
-Tucker, Lieutenant-General Sir C., <a href="#page166">166</a>,
-<a href="#page168">168</a>, <a href="#page171">171</a>, <a href=
-"#page191">191</a>, <a href="#page197">197</a>, <a href=
-"#page198">198</a>, <a href="#page321">321</a><br />
-Tweebosch, <a href="#page358">358</a>, <a href=
-"#page359">359</a><br />
-Twin Peaks, <a href="#page100">100</a>, <a href="#page105">105</a>,
-<a href="#page106">106</a>, <a href="#page109">109-112</a>,
-<a href="#page119">119</a><br />
-Tygerpoort, <a href="#page241">241</a>, <a href="#page242">242</a>,
-<a href="#page244">244</a></p>
-<p>Utrecht, <a href="#page266">266</a>, <a href=
-"#page327">327</a></p>
-<p>Van der Venter, <a href="#page333">333-335</a><br />
-Van Reenen's Pass, <a href="#page263">263</a>, <a href=
-"#page267">267</a><br />
-Van Tender's Pass, <a href="#page45">45</a>, <a href=
-"#page265">265</a><br />
-Van Wyk's Hill, <a href="#page267">267</a>, <a href=
-"#page268">268</a><br />
-Van Zyl's Farm, <a href="#page67">67</a><br />
-Venter's Spruit, <a href="#page100">100</a><br />
-Vereeniging, <a href="#page235">235</a>, <a href=
-"#page236">236</a>, <a href="#page366">366</a>, <a href=
-"#page367">367</a><br />
-Viljoen, General B., <a href="#page6">6</a>, <a href=
-"#page117">117</a>, <a href="#page118">118</a>, <a href=
-"#page284">284</a>, <a href="#page290">290</a>, <a href=
-"#page291">291</a>, <a href="#page315">315</a>, <a href=
-"#page316">316</a>, <a href="#page325">325</a>, <a href=
-"#page328">328</a>, <a href="#page329">329</a>, <a href=
-"#page340">340</a>, <a href="#page356">356</a><br />
-Viljoen, P., <a href="#page354">354-357</a><br />
-Virginia Siding, <a href="#page255">255</a><br />
-Vlakfontein, <a href="#page330">330</a><br />
-Volksrust, <a href="#page266">266</a>, <a href=
-"#page268">268-270</a><br />
-Vryheid, <a href="#page266">266</a>, <a href="#page325">325</a></p>
-<p>Wagon Hill and Point, <a href="#page142">142-151</a><br />
-Wakkerstroom, <a href="#page270">270</a><br />
-Warren, Lieutenant-General Sir C., <a href="#page79">79</a>,
-<a href="#page80">80</a>, <a href="#page93">93</a>, <a href=
-"#page96">96</a>, <a href="#page97">97</a>, <a href=
-"#page99">99-103</a>, <a href="#page105">105-115</a>, <a href=
-"#page120">120</a>, <a href="#page128">128</a>, <a href=
-"#page129">129</a>, <a href="#page132">132</a>, <a href=
-"#page213">213</a>, <a href="#page228">228</a>, <a href=
-"#page264">264</a><br />
-Waterval (near Pretoria), <a href="#page239">239</a><br />
-Waterworks, <a href="#page198">198-200</a>, <a href=
-"#page202">202</a>, <a href="#page203">203</a>, <a href=
-"#page205">205</a><br />
-Wauchope, Major-General A.G., <a href="#page59">59-62</a><br />
-Wavell, Major-General A.G., <a href="#page238">238</a><br />
-Wessels, <a href="#page349">349</a><br />
-White, Lieutenant-General Sir George, <a href="#page37">37</a>,
-<a href="#page38">38</a>, <a href="#page42">42</a>, <a href=
-"#page43">43</a>, <a href="#page45">45</a>, <a href=
-"#page46">46</a>, <a href="#page49">49</a>, <a href=
-"#page51">51</a>, <a href="#page72">72</a>, <a href=
-"#page79">79</a>, <a href="#page96">96</a>, <a href=
-"#page100">100</a>, <a href="#page102">102</a>, <a href=
-"#page116">116</a>, <a href="#page122">122</a>, <a href=
-"#page125">125</a>, <a href="#page126">126</a>, <a href=
-"#page128">128</a>, <a href="#page132">132</a>, <a href=
-"#page137">137</a>, <a href="#page140">140-143</a>, <a href=
-"#page147">147-151</a>, <a href="#page153">153-155</a>, <a href=
-"#page263">263</a><br />
-Wildfontein, <a href="#page324">324</a><br />
-Willow Grange, <a href="#page53">53</a><br />
-Willowmore, <a href="#page301">301</a><br />
-Wilge River (Orange River Colony), <a href="#page349">349</a>,
-<a href="#page352">352</a>, <a href="#page353">353</a><br />
-Wilge River (Transvaal), <a href="#page356">356</a></p>
-<hr class="full" />
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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@@ -1,12699 +0,0 @@
-Project Gutenberg's A Handbook of the Boer War, by Gale and Polden, Limited
-
-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: A Handbook of the Boer War
-
-Author: Gale and Polden, Limited
-
-Release Date: April 24, 2005 [EBook #15699]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ASCII
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A HANDBOOK OF THE BOER WAR ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Jonathan Ingram, David King, and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team
-
-
-
-
-
-A HANDBOOK OF THE BOER WAR
-
-With General Map of South Africa
-and 18 Sketch Maps
-and Plans
-
-
-GALE AND POLDEN LIMITED
-
-LONDON AND ALDERSHOT
-
-1910
-
-BUTLER & TANNER
-
-THE SELWOOD PRINTING WORKS
-
-FROME AND LONDON
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
-CHAPTER PAGE
-
-I PROLEGOMENA 1
-
- I The Roundheads of South Africa 1
-
- II Patriotism, Duty and Discipline 19
-
- III War considered as a Branch of Sport 26
-
-II THE NATAL WEDGE 36
-
-III DEUS EX MACHINA NO. I 51
-
-IV KIMBERLEY AND THE SIEGE OF RHODES 82
-
-V A TRAGEDY OF ERRORS 96
-
-VI MORE TUGELA TROUBLES 116
-
-VII LADYSMITH AT BAY 138
-
-VIII DEUS EX MACHINA NO. 2 156
-
-IX ALARMS AND EXCURSIONS 193
-
-X BADEN-POWELL AND THE SIEGE OF MAFEKING 212
-
-XI BLOEMFONTEIN TO PRETORIA 229
-
-XII THE NEW COLONY 247
-
-XIII NEC CELER NEC AUDAX 262
-
-XIV THE TAMING OF THE TRANSVAAL 273
-
-XV THE RECURRENCES OF DE WET 294
-
-XVI LORD KITCHENER AT WORK 311
-
-XVII THE MECHANICAL PHASE 345
-
- I Orange River Colony 345
-
- II Eastern Transvaal 354
-
- III Western Transvaal 357
-
- IV Cape Colony 363
-
-XVIII THE END 365
-
-COMMANDERS OF DIVISIONS AND BRIGADES 368
-
-INDEX OF PERSONS AND PLACES 369
-
-
-
-SKETCH MAPS AND PLANS[1]
-
- PAGE
-
-Northern Natal 50
-
-Modder River and Magersfontein 59
-
-Stormberg 65
-
-Colenso 70
-
-Spion Kop and Vaalkrantz 98
-
-Spion Kop 104
-
-Final Advance on Ladysmith 128
-
-Siege of Ladysmith 139
-
-Riet and Modder Drifts 161
-
-Paardeberg 172
-
-Poplar Grove and Driefontein 185
-
-Sannah's Post 199
-
-Magaliesberg District 240
-
-Diamond Hill 243
-
-Brandwater Basin 257
-
-Orange Free State 260
-
-Southern Transvaal 292
-
-Noitgedacht Nek 319
-
-General Map of South Africa--at the beginning.
-
-[Footnote 1: The thanks of the Author are due to the Army Council for
-permission to copy the maps and plans in the Official History of the
-War, and to L.S. Amery, Esq., for permission to copy the plans in the
-fifth volume of the _Times_ History of the War.]
-
-
-
-
-PREFATORY NOTE
-
-
-The author has endeavoured in this Handbook to compile, for the use of
-students and others, a general account of the various phases of the Boer
-War of 1899-1902, in which he served for twenty-six months.
-
-With some exceptions, every statement of fact relating to the military
-operations may be verified in one or more of the following
-publications--
-
- The "Times" History of the War;
-
- The War Office Official History of the War;
-
- The Minutes of Evidence taken before the Royal Commission of
- Inquiry into the War.
-
-To the two Histories, which have been but recently completed, the Author
-is much indebted. Other authorities have, however, been consulted.
-
-The Sketch Maps and Plans of certain areas and battlefields are only
-intended to give, by means of a few hachures, contours, and form-lines,
-a general impression of topographical features.
-
-The Author has from time to time in the course of the narrative
-indicated what he believes to have been the chief causes of the
-prolongation of the War:--
-
- The inefficacy of modern Tactics as a means of dealing with
- partisan warfare;
-
- The moral reinforcement derived from a confident belief in the
- justice of a cause, by which the enemy was continually
- encouraged to persevere;
-
- The reluctance of the British leaders to fight costly battles;
-
- The constitutional inability of the British Officer to take War
- seriously;
-
- The waste of British horses due to inexpert Horsemastership.
-
-May, 1910.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-Prolegomena
-
-I. THE ROUNDHEADS OF SOUTH AFRICA
-
-
-History often reproduces without reference to nationality some
-particular human type or class which becomes active and predominant for
-a time, and fades away when its task is finished. It is, however, not
-utterly lost, for the germ of it lies dormant yet ready to re-appear
-when the exigencies of the moment recall it. The reserve forces of human
-nature are inexhaustible and inextinguishable.
-
-It is probable that few of the Boers had ever heard of Oliver Cromwell,
-or that his life and times had ever been studied in the South African
-Republics, and had influenced the Boer action; yet the affinity of the
-South African burghers of the XIXth century with the Puritans and the
-Roundheads of the XVIIth is striking. It was not so much a parallelism
-of aims and hopes, for the struggle in England was political and not
-national as in South Africa, as of temperament, character, and method.
-There was hardly an individuity in the Boers of the War which might not
-have been found in the followers of Cromwell. Like these they were
-fanatically but sincerely religious, and their unabashed and fearless
-adherence to their beliefs and their open observance of the outward
-forms of religion exposed them to the same cruel and baseless charge of
-hypocrisy. Just as the aristocratic followers of Charles I had jeered at
-the Roundheads, so did every thoughtless officer and newspaper
-correspondent jeer at the psalm-singing and the prayer meetings in the
-laagers. The Boers had the courage of their religious opinions, and were
-not ashamed to proclaim them in the face of man. The Bible was the only
-book they knew, and they guided themselves according to their lights by
-its precepts. In opposing the English they believed that they were
-resisting the enemies of the Almighty. Like the Puritans they honestly
-thought that certain passages in the Holy Scriptures applied to them as
-the Chosen People, and that they were assured of Divine Protection; and
-if they erred in their exegesis their delusion at least deserves
-respect. Yet all the while the Old Testament was the volume they chiefly
-studied, and if they quoted the New Testament they sometimes modified
-the context to their own advantage.
-
-Each Puritan movement has derived its strength not so much from its
-abstract merit as from the intense personal conviction felt by each unit
-engaged in it, that the righteousness of the cause was unassailable. The
-Puritan never wavered in philosophic doubt. No misgivings disturbed his
-soul, and he pursued his object with all the strength of his body.
-
-The Puritan stir in the reign of Charles I was a revival, almost a
-continuation, of the half political, half religious activity which in
-the previous century had effected the Reformation. The Boer movement in
-South Africa, which sprang up after a germination lasting three
-generations, was brought about by a recrudescence of the spirit which
-made the Boers of the Netherlands rise against Alva and the Spanish
-domination in the XVIth century.
-
-In the XVIIth century the Boers of the Netherlands, made a voluntary
-settlement in South Africa, and there under the Southern Cross they were
-joined by French Puritans, who had fought under Condé and who left their
-country after the revocation of the Edict of Nantes, and also by some
-persecuted sectaries from Piedmont. The two stocks, although one was of
-Teutonic and the other of Celtic origin, easily came together, and under
-the pressure of common interests and common dangers were consolidated
-and vulcanized: and if in the previous generation the English Pilgrim
-Fathers of the _Mayflower_ had directed their course to the south
-instead of to the west, and had cast anchor off the shore of that
-distant region of Good Hope, it is probable that a mighty nation would
-have been founded in South Africa.
-
-Cromwell as the military leader of the Commonwealth Boers is, at least
-in England where the military art has not been scientifically studied,
-one of the suppressed characters of history. His political achievements,
-as is perhaps natural in a community which courts the voter and despises
-the soldier, have put out of sight the means by which he mainly won
-them; namely his genius as a cavalry and partisan commander. An
-ungainly, narrow-minded, bigoted, bucolic squireen of Huntingdon,
-lacking in every quality which we are accustomed to associate with a
-cavalry officer, inaugurated an era in the history of Mounted Troops.
-His methods are studied on the Continent, and the German Staff has
-recently discovered that he was the first leader to use cavalry as a
-screen to hide the movements of the main body. Yet there is no evidence
-that he ever studied the military art, and he did not become a soldier
-until he had reached his fourth decade. In the Royalist Army opposed to
-him were soldiers by profession and experience; officers and men who had
-been under Gustavus Adolphus in the Thirty Years' War; for in the XVIIth
-century the services of aliens were in request on the Continent, and at
-one time no less than eighty-seven senior officers of British
-nationality were serving in the Swedish Army, then the most renowned in
-Europe. Yet Cromwell with his "Eastern Association," his Ironsides, his
-yeomen and raw levies, beat the Royalist Army, officered from the same
-class which is still believed to possess the monopoly of the aptitude
-for leading men in war, by exercising the homely qualities of energy,
-self-control, endurance, and practical common sense applied instantly to
-the occasion of the moment.
-
-The lessons to be learnt from Cromwell's campaigns have been thus
-epitomized by General Baden-Powell:--"There is one thing that ought not
-to escape the attention of students, namely the success that attended
-Cromwell's method of rallying his troops whenever they got dispersed.
-When things looked bad, as they did on one or two occasions, when some
-of his cavalry were defeated and the rest scattered, he never lost heart
-and his men never lost heart; they knew they had to rally again and
-attack somewhere else. Very often the enemy were deceived by that,
-thinking that the Roundheads were scattered and broken up, and took no
-further notice of him until they suddenly found him attacking from quite
-a new direction. That was the secret of his success on many occasions,
-and one that has its lesson to-day, just as it had in those days--that
-when all seems pretty bad and you are scattered and broken, keep up a
-good heart and get together again and have another go." With scarcely
-the change of a word these remarks will account for the prolongation of
-the war for two years after the occupation of the Boer capitals.
-
-The Boer leaders, like their great prototype Cromwell, owed much of
-their success to their novel and skilful use of mounted troops. The
-European conception of the functions of mounted troops had been
-stereotyped for some time; Cavalry screens an advancing army, prevents
-the enemy observing its dispositions, acts as its eyes and ears; and so
-forth. It is true that Great Britain had already for at least a
-generation employed Mounted Infantry in colonial wars; but the
-innovation had never been approved of on the Continent, where it was
-regarded as a cheap and inefficient British substitute for Cavalry.
-
-Yet the famous postscript "unmounted men preferred,"[2] which was
-affixed to the acceptance of the help proffered by the Australian
-Colonies, shows that at first the power of mounted troops acting not as
-the eyes and ears of an army, but as a mobile and supple "mailed fist,"
-was not understood. In ten weeks, however, the tune changed, and it was
-"preference given to mounted contingents."
-
-When the grand operations were over, the enemy's chief towns occupied,
-and the lines of communication fairly secure, the necessity for mounted
-troops became still more apparent. The Boers saw that it was useless for
-them to campaign at large. They took to _guerilla_, and restricted
-themselves generally to independent horse raids against which foot
-troops were powerless. Gradually the proportion of horses to men in the
-British columns rose, until practically all the combatants were mounted,
-and at last the Cromwellian principle that the best military weapon is a
-man on a horse was fully accepted.
-
-The military qualities of the Boers, like those of Cromwell's men, were
-useful but not showy. They came by instinct and not by acquisition, and
-they cannot be sufficiently accounted for as the outcome of experience
-in the pursuit of game on the veld. They were neutralized partially by
-characteristics the reverse of military. The Boers were not remarkable
-for personal courage. If there had been in the Boer Army a decoration
-corresponding to the Victoria Cross it would have been rarely won or at
-least rarely earned. There is scarcely an instance of an individual feat
-of arms or act of devotion performed by a Burgher. On the few occasions
-when the Boers were charged by cavalry they became paralysed with
-terror. They were incapable of submitting themselves to discipline, and
-difficult to command in large numbers. They could not be made to
-understand that prompt action, which possibly might not be the best
-under the circumstances, was preferable to wasting time in discussing a
-better with the field cornets. They were subject to panics and, for the
-time, easily disheartened: and their sense of duty was not conspicuous.
-The principles of strategy were unknown to them, their tactics were
-crude, and with the exception of a very few who had fought in 1881, they
-were without experience of the realities of war.[3]
-
-If in the month of September, 1899, an impartial military critic in a
-foreign Ministry of War had been directed to draw up an appreciation of
-the situation and to forecast the course of the impending struggle, he
-would probably have expressed himself somewhat as follows:--
-
-"An Army of 100,000 men is the utmost that Great Britain will be able to
-place in the field in South Africa, for the Indian and Colonial drafts
-must be provided for, and the Militia and other Auxiliary Forces, which
-are not of much account, are tethered to the country; but it will be
-sufficient for the purpose. Although the military system of Great
-Britain is hopelessly behind the times, she has always done wonders with
-her boomerangs, bows and arrows, and flint instruments. That Army will
-be fairly well furnished with modern weapons and equipment, and the
-excellent personality of the soldier will compensate to a great extent
-for incapacity in the Staff and superior officers. With this Army she
-will have to meet a brave but undisciplined opponent whose numbers
-cannot be estimated. Even if the Free Staters are included it is
-improbable that more than 100,000 men can be put into the field. These
-have had no military training, their leaders will be unprofessional
-officers who will be unable to make good use of the munitions of War
-which the two Republics have been strangely allowed to import through
-British ports and to accumulate in large quantities. If the burghers of
-the Orange Free State throw in their lot with the Transvaalers, which is
-improbable as they have no quarrel with Great Britain, the numbers
-opposed to her will certainly be augmented, but the task before her will
-be greatly simplified. Instead of having to send one portion of her Army
-by way of Natal to effect a junction in the Transvaal, with the other
-portion working northwards through Kimberley and Mafeking, a campaign
-which would involve two long and vulnerable lines of communication, she
-will be able to strike at once through the heart of the Free State and
-will advance without much difficulty to Johannesburg and Pretoria. The
-hardest part of her task will be the passage of the Vaal, where a great
-battle will be fought, and the capture of Pretoria, which is reported to
-be well fortified. With Bloemfontein, Johannesburg, Pretoria and the
-railways in the possession of Great Britain, the opposition will
-collapse in a very few weeks, for no nation has ever been able to carry
-on a struggle when its chief towns and means of communication are in the
-enemy's possession."
-
-This hypothetical appreciation probably represents the general opinion
-current both at home and abroad during the period immediately preceding
-the outbreak of the War; but it proved to be mistaken from the first.
-The Free Staters joined the Transvaalers and the allied forces assumed
-the offensive over a wide area without delay. Kimberley and Mafeking
-were threatened on the west, and on the east the Boers poured into
-Natal, upon which they had for sixty years looked with the aggrieved and
-greedy eyes of a dog from whom a bone, to which he believes he is
-entitled, has been recovered.
-
-To Natal, in 1824, had come a handful of British pioneers. From Chaka,
-the King of the Zulus, they obtained a grant of land upon the coast, and
-after eleven years they endeavoured without success to induce the
-British Government to recognize the settlement, which in course of time
-became the City of Durban, as a Colony to which, in honour of the
-Princess heiress presumptive to the Throne of Great Britain, they
-proposed to give the name Victoria; and they were thus the first to
-associate her with the Empire, which, in spite of reluctant politicians
-who did their best to restrict it, was destined to expand marvellously
-during her reign.
-
-The Natal settlement was frowned on by the Imperial Government, who even
-confiscated a little ship which the pioneers had toilfully fitted out
-and which was bringing envoys from the King of the Zulus to the King of
-England, on the plea that it was unregistered and that it came from a
-foreign port. In 1828 Chaka, who was not unfavourably disposed towards
-the Durban pioneers, was murdered by his brother Dingaan, who succeeded
-him as King of the Zulus. It is said that his last words to Dingaan
-were, "You think that you will rule the land when I am gone, but I see
-the white men coming, and they will be your masters."
-
-His words were prophetically true, but there were two races of white men
-hovering over Natal; and the Great King of the Zulus, a tribe held in
-little account before his time, but which had under his leadership
-absorbed or exterminated almost every other tribe from Pondoland to
-Delagoa Bay, was no longer with them to choose between the rivals to his
-own ends and advantage; and Dingaan inherited the cruelty without the
-ability or the statecraft of his brother, the Napoleon of South Africa.
-
-Of all the races of Europe the Low Germans of Holland seemed the least
-likely to contract the migratory habit. The Hollander of the present
-day, popularly but incorrectly called a Dutchman, is home-staying and
-home-loving. The compact, well-cared-for, well-ordered homestead,
-village, and town communities of the Netherlands are inconsistent with a
-roving disposition, and yet the Hollanders of South Africa furnished the
-most conspicuous example of Nomadism in modern times.
-
-It may have been that the ordeal of Alva and the subsequent disturbance
-of the Thirty Years' War had constitutionally unsettled the Hollanders
-to such a degree that their descendants, emancipated from European
-ideas, became prone to restlessness, for in a generation or two they
-began to trek; or perhaps the magic of the spacious veld, with its clear
-sky and the mountains and flat-topped kopjes sharply defined on the
-horizon, irresistibly lured them on. In the land they had quitted the
-air was dense with moisture; scarcely a hill was to be seen; they were
-hemmed in by sluggish rivers and by the sea, which leaned heavily
-against the dykes and threw its spray angrily down on to the reclaimed
-pastures which had been stolen from it.
-
-The original Dutch settlement at the Cape was made by a Company of
-Amsterdam merchants for the refreshment and refitting of their ships
-engaged in trade with the East. The Company was a harsh and extortionate
-master, who paid little attention to the needs and the welfare of the
-settlement, which was regarded merely as a place of call. The
-discontented colonists began to leave the seacoast and trekked inwards,
-where the heavy hands of the cordially detested representatives of the
-Company could not reach them. Its rule came to an end in 1795, when, at
-the request of Holland, Great Britain took over the Colony in order to
-prevent it falling into the hands of France. It was restored at the
-Peace of Amiens, but in a few years again came into the possession of
-Great Britain.
-
-The Colonies of the Empire were at that time administered by a Branch of
-the War Office which regarded the Cape settlement much in the same light
-as it had been regarded by the Dutch Company, as a necessary but
-troublesome depôt on the way to the East; and had the Overland Route and
-the Suez Canal been available a generation earlier it would probably
-have been abandoned.
-
-The Boers hoped that their new masters, who at least were not an
-association of Amsterdam merchants absorbed in their ledgers, would
-treat them with more sympathy and consideration. But the only serious
-colonial problem with which British politicians had up to that time been
-called upon to deal was in North America, and they had disastrously
-failed in their attempt to solve it. They were without experience in the
-management of white plantations, they shirked the future and looked only
-to the "ignorant present," and their policy in South Africa was based
-upon two principles: that on no account must the boundaries of the
-Empire be enlarged and new responsibilities incurred, and that in all
-quarrels between white man and black man the presumption was that the
-white man was in the wrong.
-
-The Great Trek of 1836-7 was brought about by the emancipation of the
-slaves and by the refusal or inability of the Government to protect the
-farmers against the raids of the "Kaffir"[4] tribes on the border. There
-is no doubt that enslaved Hottentots, Bushmen, and even Malays who had
-been with the knowledge of the authorities imported from Madagascar and
-Malacca, were often ill-treated by individual slave-owners; but the
-Boers resented the charge of wholesale cruelty which was made against
-them, and the favour and patronage bestowed upon native tribes.
-Moreover, although the slave-owners were entitled to compensation for
-the loss of their helots, the fund was administered in London, with the
-result that a considerable proportion of the already inadequate sum was
-retained in the hands of agents.
-
-The object of the Great Trek was deliverance from the harsh and hostile
-jurisdiction of the British Government, and the setting up of a new and
-independent Boer community in Natal, which was reported to be a promised
-land flowing with milk and honey. The Boers proposed to shake themselves
-free from the Egyptian and to occupy Canaan.
-
-The _voortrekkers_, among whom was the boy Paul Kruger, slowly passed
-away towards the north and crossed the Orange River. Moshesh, the chief
-of the Basutos, watched curiously from his mountains the trains of
-wagons strung out on the veld, but refrained from molesting the
-emigrants. Not so Moselekatse,[5] a chief who had formerly broken away
-from Chaka and had set himself up beyond the Vaal, and who subsequently
-founded the Matabele Kingdom in which he was succeeded by his son
-Lobengula. He swooped down upon the advanced parties, who defended
-themselves with success and afterwards chastised him in his own country,
-in which, hidden from his eyes, lay the gold-bearing reefs of
-Johannesburg.
-
-Meanwhile the British Government had forged a useless and clumsy weapon
-for the coercion of its "erring and misguided" subjects. It was held by
-the lawyers that the trekkers could not at will and by the simple
-process of migration throw off their allegiance to the Crown of England,
-and a declaratory Act was passed under which all British subjects south
-of Latitude 25, whether within or without the colony, could be arrested
-and punished.
-
-The Boer scouts discovered passes over the Drakensberg which gave them a
-readier access than they had expected into Natal. It had not recovered
-from the devastations of Chaka and was thinly inhabited. Settlements
-were made near the banks of the Tugela, while Piet Retief, after a brief
-visit to Durban, went on to negotiate with Dingaan at the royal kraal of
-Umgungundhlovu in Zululand. He was received with some cordiality, but
-accused of participating in a recent cattle raid. Retief, to show his
-good faith, offered to catch the robber, a chief named Sikunyela, whose
-kraal was a hundred miles away. He found Sikunyela, who greatly admired
-the glistening rings of a pair of handcuffs shown him by the slim
-Dutchman, and who was even persuaded that they would be a becoming
-ornament to a native chief. He tried them on, but a more intimate
-acquaintance with the use of handcuffs induced him to surrender the
-cattle he had stolen from Dingaan, the King of the Zulus.
-
-Again Retief with a hundred followers waited upon Dingaan at
-Umgungundhlovu, and after military displays on each side received from
-him a grant of the same land which Chaka had already given to the
-British pioneers of Durban. Next day the Boers were received in farewell
-audience by Dingaan, by whose orders they were treacherously surrounded
-and led out to the place of execution, a hill of mimosas outside the
-royal kraal, where they were put to death.
-
-There remained the defenceless plantations on the Tugela. Before the
-news of the massacre could reach them, and while they were hourly
-expecting the return of Retief, Dingaan's impis swooped down upon them
-from Zululand. At the cost of the lives of 600 men, women, and children,
-the tribes were driven back, and the little town of Weenen, the "place
-of weeping," remains to mark the spot.
-
-Soon other parties of emigrants came in from beyond the Drakensberg, and
-in 1838 an expedition under Potgieter failed to punish Dingaan for his
-treachery. Nor did an attempt to help the emigrants made by the British
-settlers at Durban meet with success. A small force of Natal natives
-under an Englishman named Biggar was greatly out-numbered at the mouth
-of the Tugela and perished almost to a man. Dingaan retaliated by
-sending an impi to Durban, which he held for a few days; the settlers
-taking refuge on board a ship in the Bay.
-
-The Boers were disheartened and many of them trekked back to the veld
-beyond the Drakensberg passes, which is now the Orange River Colony.
-Their position in face of Dingaan seemed hopeless; but in November,
-1838, there came out of the Cape Colony one Pretorius. He had heard of
-their distress, and he organized a force of 500 men, with whom, on
-December 16, he successfully encountered Dingaan's army and slew 3,000
-of his warriors at the Blood River, an affluent of the Buffalo. Dingaan
-fled and the column marched on to Umgungundhlovu, where Retief's
-mouldering body was found on the hill of mimosas, and on it the deed of
-grant of land at Durban. Pretorius was ambushed by Zulus disguised as
-cattle, crawling on all fours and wearing ox hides; but he escaped with
-slight loss, and returned to the Tugela. "Dingaan's Day," December 16,
-is kept by the Boers as a festival of thanksgiving and rejoicing.
-
-Soon a new complication beset the harassed emigrants. In December, 1838,
-the British Government, anxious to stop the wars between the Boers and
-the natives and to exclude the former from the sea, sent one hundred
-soldiers to Durban and issued a proclamation in which the Boers were
-declared to be British subjects who had unlawfully occupied Natal, and
-who were morally responsible for all the blood that had been shed. They
-protested against the imputation and against the military occupation of
-Durban, but took no active steps to resent the affront.
-
-When twelve months had passed without hostilities between Boer and
-native, the British Government withdrew its hundred warriors from Durban
-and tacitly handed over Natal to the emigrant Boers. Hardly had the
-little transport _Vectis_ catted her anchor when the Republic of Natalia
-was proclaimed and its flag run up on the staff of the forsaken British
-Camp on Durban Bay.
-
-But the dog-in-the-manger policy of neither incorporating Natal in the
-British Empire nor frankly allowing the Boers to occupy it could not be
-indefinitely maintained. Each present difficulty wriggled out of made
-the future more embarrassing. Soon, as might have been anticipated, the
-Boers were again in trouble with the natives. Panda, the father of
-Cetchwayo, whose impis forty years after washed their spears in the
-blood of 800 British soldiers at Isandhlwana, broke away from his
-brother Dingaan, taking with him into Natal many thousand Zulus who were
-awaiting an opportunity of shaking themselves free from the tyranny and
-cruelty of Dingaan. Panda made overtures to the Boers and was gladly
-received as an ally, and with his help Dingaan was finally crushed and
-driven into Swaziland, where, in the hands of a hostile tribe, he
-perished miserably by torture.
-
-The emigrants were now favourably situated in Natal. They had
-established an equitable if not a legal claim to it; Dingaan was out of
-the way; and the British Government seemed indisposed to inter-meddle.
-But the fatal and grotesque alliance with Panda, which culminated in his
-installation as King of the Zulus by Pretorius in 1840, and which was
-entirely inconsistent with the attitude hitherto assumed towards the
-natives, was the undoing of the trekkers of 1836.
-
-Panda's men as native auxiliaries eager to avenge themselves on the
-common enemy Dingaan were all very well in their way. Most of them,
-however, belonged to Natal and joined him in the hope of recovering the
-tribal lands from which they had been evicted by Chaka and to which they
-had a better right than the trekkers.
-
-The Boers now began to reap the harvest of the Panda alliance. They
-regarded the new arrivals as intruders, refused to acknowledge their
-claims, and finally in August, 1841, decreed their expulsion from Natal.
-The location chosen for their settlement was a district in Pondoland in
-the possession of a chief under British protection, who already had had
-occasion to lodge at Capetown a complaint against the Boers.
-
-The British Government now found it necessary to intervene again in
-Natal. A military occupation was announced by proclamation in December,
-1841, and 240 men, under the command of an infantry captain named Smith,
-were sent up to Durban to give effect to it.
-
-When Smith, after a difficult march along the coast, reached his
-destination on May 4, 1842, he pitched his camp on the flat which forms
-the base of one of the promontories enclosing the Bay. He at once
-lowered the Republican flag flying over the block-house at the Point,
-and soon found that 1,500 Boers were occupying Congella on the shore of
-the Bay. An attempt to surprise them by night failed disastrously;
-Smith's force was reduced to half its strength, and the block-house was
-captured by Pretorius.
-
-Smith was now besieged in his camp, and the nearest help that could come
-to him was at Grahamstown, five hundred miles away. Thither a gallant
-civilian named King, who was one of the pioneers, rode in ten days; and
-on June 25, when the little garrison was in extremity, it was relieved
-by sea. Pretorius withdrew into the interior, and the Volksraad at
-Pietermaritzburg, the capital of the Republic of Natalia, voted the
-submission of the Boers. Pending a final settlement it was allowed to
-remain in authority over the settlers, but the district around Durban
-Bay was at once taken over as British territory. In May, 1843, a year
-after the landing of Smith, the Republic of Natalia passed away and
-Natal was proclaimed a British Colony.
-
-The final settlement did not come for some time. The Volksraad was
-abolished, but the claims of the Boers to the lands upon which they had
-squatted were liberally considered. They were, however, dissatisfied
-because the rights of Panda's men were also regarded, and many trekked
-away across the Drakensberg. Those who remained protested that their
-lives and property were insecure in the presence of the natives, and
-Pretorius was deputed to go and lay their grievances before the British
-Governor at the Cape.
-
-The ill success of his mission provoked him to reprisals, and he
-proceeded to stir up trouble in the Orange River Sovereignty, which had
-recently been formally proclaimed British Territory. If not actively
-loyal it was peaceably disposed until the arrival of Pretorius, who soon
-drove out the British Resident and the little garrison of Bloemfontein
-and set them on the run as far as Colesberg in the Cape Colony. He was
-defeated at Boomplatz in August, 1848, by Sir Harry Smith, a veteran of
-the Peninsular War, and British authority was for a time reestablished
-over the Sovereignty. The Colonial Office soon however tired of the new
-possession and gladly scuttled out in 1854 in order to avoid the task of
-reaping the harvest of a clumsy and grotesque policy, which it had
-formulated a few years before, of hemming in the _voortrekkers_, who had
-settled north of the Orange River, with a barrier of native states set
-up for the purpose on the east and west; and which now threatened to
-involve it in a quarrel which naturally arose between Moshesh, the
-Basuto chief, and the emigrants whom he had been appointed to restrain.
-
-Pretorius retired across the Vaal where he joined Potgieter, who, after
-the failure of his attack on Dingaan in 1838, had gone into
-Moselekatse's country and had driven him beyond the Limpopo. A Republic
-was set up beyond the Vaal which the British Government recognized as
-independent in the Zand River Convention of 1852.
-
-Such is in brief the story of the Boers' claim to Natal. They considered
-it to be their lawful heritage out of which they had been jockeyed, and
-in October, 1899, they seemed to have a chance of recovering it. They
-boasted that they would not only win back Pietermaritzburg, which was
-named after two leaders of the Great Trek, Pieter Retief and Gert
-Maritz, but that they would establish themselves on the shores of the
-Indian Ocean. It was not the vainglorious gasconade of a swashbuckler.
-Four months after October 11, 1899, when the Boer ultimatum expired, the
-British Army was still engaged in endeavouring to drive out the Boers
-from British territory, and hardly a rifle had been discharged in the
-enemy's country.
-
-Napoleon was in the habit of impressing upon his officers the necessity
-of studying past campaigns, both modern and ancient; but those who
-anticipated confidently that the Boer War would soon be brought to a
-successful close by the British Army were led into their error by the
-history of past campaigns. There was, however, one campaign, the War of
-Independence in North America, which the discerning might have
-recognized as an analogous struggle; but it was overlooked, and the
-history of the great European conflicts was established as the leading
-authority. The occupation of the populous places and the control of the
-means of access to them, which seemed to present few difficulties, meant
-the end of the war and the subsequent negotiations as to the amount of
-the indemnity or other penalty to be paid by the defeated.
-
-But not only were the necessary preliminary successes deferred far
-beyond the expected time of their accomplishment--Bloemfontein was not
-occupied until five months, nor Pretoria until eight months had rolled
-by since that October dawn when the Boers crossed the frontier into
-Natal--but the prospect of the end of the War soon began to recede into
-the perspective of infinity: and even now, after an interval of some
-years since the peace of Vereeniging, when, like the proportions of some
-huge edifice which can be truly comprehended only by the observer who
-views it from a distance, the various incidents and phases of the War
-begin to assume their relative importance, the difficulty of discovering
-some guiding principle which shall reconcile the Great Boer War with
-other wars is as great as ever.
-
-Sometimes a cause can be found _a posteriori_ by groping in the dim and
-deceptive light cast by an effect: or a process of exhaustion and
-elimination may be set up in which the qualities common to each side are
-cancelled and the result attributed to the credit balance which will
-appear under one of the accounts. We saw for some months a gallant and
-well equipped if somewhat amorphous British Army impotently
-endeavouring, though in superior numbers, to make headway against an
-aggregation of Boer commandos, and checked at various points on an arc
-drawn wholly in British territory and extending in a circuit of over 500
-miles from Ladysmith in Northern Natal through Stormberg and Colesberg
-to Kimberley and Mafeking; and at each extremity of the arc was a
-besieged city. Was the military art as taught in Europe founded upon
-error, or had the British Army been negligently instructed in it?
-
-Yet no European troops had had so much recent experience of active
-service. We had lately fought in the Soudan, in East and West Africa, in
-Burmah and on the North-West frontier of India; there was in fact hardly
-a year in the preceding decade in which the portals of the temple of a
-British Janus would have been closed. Moreover, our fighting had not
-been against trained soldiers, but against enemies who like the Boers
-were undisciplined, collectively if not individually brave men
-patriotically defending their own country. We therefore entered the
-arena with experience which no other European Army possessed.
-
-
-
-II. PATRIOTISM, DUTY, AND DISCIPLINE.
-
-
-Many hard things have been said of Patriotism.[6] Dr. Johnson's
-definition is well known, and more recently it has been styled the
-sublimest form of Selfishness. These, however, are not definitions but
-rather criticisms of certain phases of Patriotism, which is closely
-allied to Family Affection and, like that sentiment, originates in the
-helplessness and the egotism of the Individual.
-
-The weak infant clings to his mother for sustenance, comfort and
-protection, and the tender care which is bestowed upon him while his
-body and his mind are developing fosters the notion of the subjective
-importance of the human unit. Human nature is so constituted that the
-Individual is disposed to over-estimate his own consequence and to
-regard his own surroundings as superior to the surroundings of all other
-persons, and therefore more worthy of recognition, encouragement, and
-admiration. As the Child grows in years this sentiment is gradually and
-unconsciously modified, but it is never wholly eradicated. The inward
-emotion aroused in his heart by parental solicitude becomes partially
-altruistic and outward and is transmuted into Gratitude and Love.
-
-The Child emerges into Youth and thence into Manhood, and the area of
-his immediate environment is enlarged. He needs further succour and
-assistance, and the Family Community to which he belongs and which
-nurtured and watched over his early years can no longer supply his
-requirements. He is in want of new fellowships and must strengthen
-himself by joining various bodies and associations. With these he
-incorporates himself more or less and his friendly attitude towards them
-for his own good is a development of the primitive Family Affection. In
-the case of a class, a social, or professional community the sentiment
-is termed _Esprit de Corps_;[7] in view of recognized civil institutions
-by which he perceives that he benefits, it is Loyalty; while with
-respect to the Fatherland it is Patriotism, which denotes the adherence
-of the helpless individual Ego to the Supreme Community. Patriotism,
-like Family Affection, is a growth and culture of the idea of Self. It
-is the expression of the Individual's thanks for the support,
-countenance, protection, and other moral and material advantages claimed
-by him from the Supreme Community, to which in return he readily attorns
-with respect and admiration. He is, however, patriotic because with
-unconscious egotism he regards his Country as part of himself rather
-than himself as part of his Country. Even the act of a man who
-sacrifices his life for the good of his country may not be wholly
-unselfish, for some natures are so constituted that they can discount
-the future and be gratified by the prospective award of posthumous
-honour. There can, however, be no doubt that Patriotism, though possibly
-of not very noble origin, is a sentiment beneficial both to the
-community and the individual, and is therefore worthy of encouragement.
-Happily, those cold heights of philosophy on which every man is loved as
-a brother and every nationality held in equal honour and esteem are
-unattainable by human nature; for without the stimulus of Patriotism
-National Life would be impracticable.[8] It's chief defect is that like
-most of the emotions it is sometimes hasty and unreasoning.
-
-Such, it is believed, is briefly the history of Patriotism, and the
-theory is supported by the fact that the British soldier is not
-patriotic by nature. It is not his fault. The class from which he is
-usually drawn has unhappily less reason for respecting and admiring the
-Supreme Community than any other class, for it participates fully in the
-distresses and meagerly in the successes and good fortune of the Nation,
-from which, though not actually unpatriotic, it stands sullenly aloof.
-It can hardly be denied that the power and prosperity of Great Britain
-have favourably affected the position of the upper and middle classes to
-a greater degree than they have ameliorated the condition of the lower
-classes, and it is therefore not surprising that the latter seem to take
-little or no pride in their nationality, and sometimes even act
-perversely in opposition to its interests.
-
-The private soldier has never been taught to think about his country.
-The education which he may have received at the Board School is not
-calculated to arouse in him a feeling of national pride which is
-non-existent in his home life. The display of the National Flag, which
-flutters over so many distant lands, is discouraged in the primary
-schools of Great Britain as tending to "flag-worship." In the United
-States, on the other hand, the Stars and Stripes are hoisted in every
-school yard. No systematic effort is made to interest the children of
-the operative classes in Greater Britain. India and the Colonies are
-facts in geography troublesome to learn and easy to forget. The history
-of the British Empire is sterilized before it is imparted to them. They
-are not taught to realize that the happiness and prosperity of a large
-proportion of the inhabitants of the world are dependent upon the moods
-of the population of a small group of islands in the Atlantic Ocean, and
-that in the ballot-boxes of Great Britain are cast the fortunes of many
-millions of their fellow-creatures.
-
-Foreigners have remarked that the minstrelsy of Great Britain is
-singularly devoid of patriotic songs. The British soldier has no
-"Star-Spangled Banner" or "Wacht am Rhein" to sing on the line of march
-or in the bivouac, but only the last comic or sentimental ditty which he
-may have heard at the Garrison Music Hall before embarking on active
-service. The National Anthem is not a patriotic song but a prayer for
-Divine Protection for the Sovereign, to which have been appended some
-inappropriate stanzas now rarely heard; while "Rule, Britannia!" might
-have been composed for the gasconading swashbuckler of an extravaganza.
-
-It would therefore be surprising if the recruit joined the Army with a
-highly pitched conception of the work he has undertaken. Destitution; or
-trouble about a woman, or with his own people, or with the police; or
-the mysterious magnetism of an adventurous life rather than the desire
-to serve his country, has induced him to enlist. An existing or
-prospective War always keeps the recruiting sergeant busy, but the
-object of a War is a matter of indifference to the recruit. Most of our
-wars have been waged for political reasons which he cannot understand.
-Apart from the difficulties of language and of unaccustomed
-environments, he would as readily serve in any other Army in which the
-pay was as liberal and the restraint of discipline not more irksome. How
-is it, then, that lacking the stimulus of Patriotism through no fault of
-his own and being, in fact, a mercenary, he becomes an excellent
-soldier; perhaps, next to the Turk, the best in Europe?
-
-The answer seems to be that he soon acquires a high sense of Duty. Duty
-may be defined as the necessity to do something for one's own or for the
-general good which is not naturally pleasurable or agreeable or
-instinctively desired. In the trite proverb it is contrasted with and
-takes precedence of Pleasure. As a motive for action it stands on a
-higher plane than Patriotism.
-
-The alchemic process by which the indifferent, unemotional, and
-sometimes unintelligent recruit is transmuted into the precious metal of
-the soldier who wins battles seems to be somewhat as follows: Of his own
-volition he has taken on a certain job and his dogged pride or obstinacy
-will not allow him to be beaten by it, however little enthusiasm it may
-arouse in him and however distasteful it may be to him at first. He
-offers no "ca' canny" service, but plods on and does his best in his own
-way. The lack of the enthusiastic temperament does not seriously retard
-the progress of his military education, and without much ado he becomes
-a stolid dependable unit of the Army. He is not carried away by success
-nor unduly depressed by failure. His instincts tell him that they are
-the accidents of Duty.
-
-It has been noticed that the word Glory and its derivatives[9] rarely
-appear in the accounts of the action of the British Army on service,
-except in a War Correspondent's letter or telegram. No reference is made
-in reports, orders or despatches to the so-called "glorious" incidents
-of a soldier's life in time of war. He is commended for his endurance,
-his tenacity and his matter-of-fact acceptance of the vicissitudes of
-war as "part of the day's work." The truest Glory is the conscientious
-performance of Duty.
-
-If through the incompetence or neglect of his leaders he is called upon
-to sacrifice himself, he sacrifices himself without a murmur. If he is
-compelled to keep himself alive on scanty rations of horseflesh and to
-wet his parched lips with the trickle of a dwindled and tainted spruit,
-he believes that his officers have done their best for him. He is
-ordered to fall in upon the deck of a burning troopship and to stand at
-attention while Death inspects the ranks. He is besieged in a hill fort
-on the Indian frontier by a horde of fanatics eager to kill or to
-mutilate him. He lies wounded on the field of battle from which, after
-an indecisive engagement, each combatant has retired; and there,
-scorched by the mid-day sun and starved by the cold of the night, and
-perhaps also in danger of being burnt alive by a veld fire, he waits
-without water for the armistice which shall bring up the ambulances. He
-returns to his own land where he soon finds that he is not of much
-account. After a great war there may be a period of evanescent
-patronage; or a deed of Dargai, Rorke's Drift, or Balaklava may have
-temporarily thrilled the audience into Music Hall enthusiasm; but he is
-not greatly impressed, and stoically reflects that like the battle, the
-starvation, and the Field Hospital it is "all in the day's work" and
-will soon pass away.
-
-There has probably never been a struggle in which the private soldier
-more fully earned the gratitude of his country than in the South African
-War. The most unfriendly critics in the foreign staff offices have paid
-tribute to the excellence of the British soldier: sometimes, however,
-sneering at him as a mercenary, whom, by a curious perversion of the
-probabilities, they profess to think unlikely to be as efficient as
-their own conscripts who are forced into military service; but they
-never hold him responsible for the ill-success of the war. Throughout
-their criticisms there lurks a feeling of pained astonishment that the
-British "mercenary" proves himself to be as good or even a better
-soldier than the continental conscript, coupled with a comfortable
-conviction that Discipline is not well maintained in the British Army.
-
-The final cause of Discipline is the efficient use of arms on the field
-of battle. Discipline is the result of an irksome educational process by
-which a man is taught to submit his wishes, his instincts, and, to a
-great extent, his personal liberty to the control of one who may be his
-inferior morally, mentally, and physically. It has also been cynically
-defined as the art of making a man more afraid of his own officers than
-of the enemy. Its function seems to be the formation of certain military
-qualities which Patriotism and the Sense of Duty are by themselves
-believed incapable of creating. It has always been considered an
-essential part of a soldier's training; but this view, though probably
-correct, is not confirmed by the South African War, in which an
-undisciplined force held its own for some years against greatly superior
-numbers of disciplined men.
-
-The ideal Army, patriotic, full of the sense of Duty, and perfect in
-discipline, would be invincible; but such an Army has never yet been
-seen. A deficiency of one or two of these qualities may be made up for
-by a fuller measure of the others. The history of each war will seem to
-indicate for a time the proportions in which the qualities should be
-blended, which is the essential, and whether any one of them can be
-omitted; but the inferences thus drawn from one war will probably be
-found misleading in the next war.
-
-The inference to be drawn from the South African War seems to be that
-the value of those military qualities which are created by Discipline
-and training has been over-rated, and that a passionate bigoted belief
-in the justice of a cause is a more potent factor in the making of a
-soldier. Even if every allowance be made for the strategical advantages
-possessed by the Boers, of fighting in their own land on interior lines
-in a sparsely populated country peculiarly adopted for _guerilla_, it is
-difficult to account for their success if the tests by which the
-efficiency of a European army is measured are applied to them. It may be
-that war has hitherto been regarded too exclusively as a statical and
-dynamical problem and that the moral element has been overlooked. It
-certainly was overlooked in South Africa; for the war which Lord Roberts
-in October, 1900, believed was practically at an end had in fact then
-run little more than one-third of its course.
-
-
-
-III. WAR CONSIDERED AS A BRANCH OF SPORT
-
-
-The astonishment, distress, chagrin and bewilderment caused by want of
-success, "regrettable incidents," and disasters, sometimes found
-consolation during the South African War in the foolish remark--The
-Germans would have done no better. What the German Army, which had not
-been actively employed for twenty-eight years, might have accomplished
-under the same conditions is a matter for sterile speculation which has
-little bearing on the case. But the German Army certainly had not been
-accustomed to look upon War as a branch of Sport or Athletics.
-
-Owing in all probability to the happy fact in History that England has
-not been invaded and over-run by a foreign army since the time of
-William the Conqueror--an episode which had in the end an excellent
-influence on the national life--she has never taken the military art
-seriously. She alone, thanks to the protection of Providence, has never
-been compelled to fight on her own fields for her existence as a nation;
-she alone knows nothing even by tradition handed down from distant
-generations of the appearance of an alien soldier on her shores.[10]
-Some of her wars, as for example the successful struggle by which the
-Napoleonic domination was broken up, have been fought for the purpose of
-safe-guarding her independence, but they were not popular with the
-people at large, whose short sight did not permit them to see that a
-defensive war may have to be fought beyond the seas; and they had little
-or no effect in evoking a patriotic military spirit. Napoleon's gibe
-that the English were a nation of shopkeepers was not unasked for, and
-is still seasonable.
-
-On the other hand there are hundreds of thousands of persons on the
-Continent of Europe who have seen, or who are the near descendants of
-those who have seen, their fatherland ravaged; their homes destroyed;
-their relations, friends, and neighbours slaughtered in the defence; the
-tree of the national life maimed; and the full cup of the horrors of war
-drained to its dregs.
-
-To them the prospect of an invasion is not a remote contingency to be
-considered and provided for at leisure after academical discussion, but
-a real and instant danger from which only universal service, to which
-fortunately for themselves they submit without much demur, as it could
-not be enforced upon a reluctant community, can preserve them.
-
-The possibility of invasion is the dominant anxiety of the land-frontier
-nations.[11] Across the frontier they can see the conscripts drilling
-who almost at a moment's notice may be marching in to attack them. Their
-armies are not sent on interesting little expeditions to restrain a
-too-militant tribe of hill-men or to patrol the distant marches of a
-magnificent Empire, but must stand at attention generation after
-generation, year after year, maintaining the featureless routine of
-military life. None of the Romance of War that falls to the lot of the
-British soldier--the service among strange Easterns in Asia, the
-building up of a new imperial province in South Africa, the constant
-change of scene along the posts which form a girdle round the world from
-Hongkong to Jamaica--falls also to the lot of the continental conscript,
-for whom there is only the dull waiting for the critical moment.
-
-The land-frontier nations alone are aware of the reality of the Terror
-of War; it is a Thing overshadowing and, apart from every other thing in
-their world, which must not, cannot be expelled from their thoughts. The
-objects that meet the eye on all sides speak of War; the railway
-vehicles marked with the number of men and horses conveyable, the noble
-war memorials, the officers constantly in uniform, the crowds of
-soldiers in the streets, the military bearing and precision of even the
-civilian servants of the State; while upon the ears falls the sound,
-which is in most cases a lingering echo of the roar of war, of alien
-tongues spoken within the frontier, or of the tongue of the Fatherland
-spoken in exile without it.
-
-On the other hand, Peace is believed to be permanently settled upon the
-shore of the silver streak which encloses the British Isles. The war
-monuments are scanty and not a few of them are grotesque; the soldier
-and his work are thrust into the background, and his uniform is so often
-a hindrance to him that on certain occasions he is permitted to appear
-in plain clothes, that is to disguise himself as a civilian; and this
-concession is officially termed a "privilege." The red tunic of the
-soldier, like the red rays of the spectrum which cannot be brought into
-focus with the other colours, fails to make a sharp impression upon the
-British retina, but projects an ill-defined image seen through a medium
-of doubt and indifference.
-
-The nation looks upon the Army much as the individual looks upon the
-Policeman, as a necessary institution, but one rather to be avoided and
-kept in its place when its services are not actually in requisition.
-Little interest is taken in its difficulties, its merits, and its
-opportunities. It is regarded not as an indispensable protection, but
-rather as an expensive result of possessions in all parts of the world,
-and when the peace of these is in danger of being broken, the cry too
-often belated goes up: Send for the Soldiers. Probably nothing less than
-an actual landing of foreign troops or the scare of it so tremendous as
-to drive the nation into the opposite and equally dangerous extreme of
-consternation and panic will be necessary to shake its belief, that the
-white cliffs of Albion are immune to an invasion in force.
-
-The nightmare of Militarism by which so many worthy persons are
-fanatically obsessed obscures the dangers against which Militarism is an
-insurance. Now Militarism is not in itself a desirable thing, and the
-developments and accidents of it upon the Continent of Europe are often
-not only irksome and absurd but also irreconcilable with the existence
-of a healthy feeling of self-respect in the non-military sections of the
-community, who are taught to regard themselves as an inferior caste; but
-with all its shortcomings it promotes the moral as well as the physical
-strength of a nation. It calls up some of the nobler qualities of human
-nature; self-control, self-reliance, endurance, and altruism or the
-devotion of Self to the good of the community; and not the least of its
-merits is that it corrects and restrains the dreary materialism of the
-Labour and Socialist movements.
-
-The shy and distant bearing of the British nation and its persistent
-refusal to regard the Army as part of itself, in conjunction with the
-growing national passion for Sport and Athletics, fostered the idea that
-War itself must be a branch of them. From time immemorial the military
-had been eyed with suspicion by the country, which professed to believe
-that its liberties were in greater danger from its own soldiers than
-from the soldiers of a foreign power, and which for a long time withheld
-from its rulers the right of having a standing army. Gradually and with
-great reluctance it was convinced of the necessity of a permanent force,
-not so much for home defence as for the performance of the police duties
-of an Empire. As the Empire grew year by year, these duties became more
-onerous and responsible, but the Army itself was not taken seriously. It
-was confessedly too weak to engage in a European campaign, and the Navy
-was considered to be sufficient to protect the country against invasion.
-
-The duties of the Army abroad were generally interesting and exciting
-but they did not call for the exercise of the military art with great
-precision, as the opponents which it was called upon to face were rarely
-experts, and there was a comfortable belief that the bravery and
-endurance of the British soldier would outweigh deficiencies in other
-military qualities.[12]
-
-The War-as-a-Sport idea was also encouraged by the opinion still stoutly
-held by many persons that a good sportsman is necessarily a good
-soldier, and that the qualities which ensure success in Athletics or
-Sport make also for success in War: but this is true of certain of them
-only. In so far as Athletics and Sport tend to manliness, self-reliance,
-good comradeship, endurance of bodily hardship, and contempt of danger,
-they are no doubt an excellent preparatory school for War. But there is
-one quality without the possession of which no man is held to be a good
-sportsman, and that is the acceptance of defeat or non-success with
-equanimity and good-humour as "part of the game." Without this quality
-Athletics and Sport would, in fact, become impossible.
-
-In the soldier, however, this temperament is a dangerous gift. It led to
-reverses, captures, loss of convoys and other "regrettable incidents"
-being regarded with stoical composure as "part of the game"; and the
-victims were condoled with on their "shocking bad luck." It would have
-been difficult to discern from the bearing and demeanour of the typical
-officer whether he was at the moment a prisoner of war in the Model
-School at Pretoria, or had just taken part in the magnificent cavalry
-charge by which Kimberley was relieved. The former plight did not
-greatly depress him, nor did the latter phase of military life greatly
-elate him. It is probable that the War would have been brought to a
-successful close at a much earlier date if throughout the British Army
-and especially among the officers hearty disgust and indignation at the
-failures of the first few months had taken the place of a light-hearted
-accommodation to circumstances. The companions of Ulysses may
-
- With a frolic welcome take
- The thunder and the sunshine,
-
-but it is not War.
-
-The British officer played at war in South Africa much in the same way
-that he hunted or played cricket or polo at home. He enjoyed the sport
-and the game, did his best for his own side, and rejoiced if he was
-successful, but was not greatly disturbed when he lost. A dictum
-attributed to the Duke of Wellington says that the Battle of Waterloo
-was won upon the Playing Fields at Eton. It would not be so very far
-from the truth to say that the guns at Sannah's Post were captured on
-the polo-ground at Hurlingham; that Magersfontein was lost at Lord's;
-that Spionkop was evacuated at Sandown; and that the war lingered on for
-thirty-two months in the Quorn and Pytchley coverts.
-
-The sporting view of War was recognized and confirmed in Army Orders and
-official reports, in which the words "bag," "drive," "stop," and some
-other sporting terms not infrequently appeared. No one would reasonably
-object to the judicious and illuminating use of metaphor, but there are
-metaphors which impair the dignity of a cause and degrade it in the eyes
-of those whose duty is to maintain that cause. When the advance of a
-British Division at a critical period in the operations is frivolously
-termed a "drive," and when the men extended at ten paces' interval over
-a wide front are called "beaters," it is natural that the leaders should
-look upon their work as analogous to the duties of a gamekeeper; and
-when an artillery officer is instructed to "pitch his shells well up,"
-he is encouraged to regard failure as no worse than the loss of a
-cricket-match.
-
-It was at least to be expected that in the use, care, and management of
-horses upon which the success of a campaign, in which mounted men formed
-an unusually large proportion of the troops engaged, so much depended,
-the sporting instincts of the British officer would have made him
-particularly efficient; yet the evidence given by General officers
-before the Royal Commission showed that it was otherwise. They are
-practically unanimous in the opinion that all branches of the mounted
-troops were inefficient, except the artillery, whose work so far as
-horses are concerned is akin to that of the skilful but unsporting farm
-teamster or wagoner.
-
-A nation greatly addicted to Sport, Games, and Athletics is a nation
-lacking in that earnestness of moral purpose which should be its chief
-strength for War. Amusements are regarded not as "recreation" or means
-of refreshing and re-invigorating the mind and body for the duties of
-life by a temporary change of occupation, but as the main objective of
-existence.
-
-A retrospect into history will show that the most efficient armies were
-those in which the sporting instinct was non-existent. The armies which
-in modern times have most satisfactorily performed the duties for which
-armies are raised were those of Gustavus Adolphus, Napoleon, Moltke, and
-Oyama. Each of these was the most perfect military instrument of its
-day, and their exploits have never been surpassed. Yet neither the
-Swedes, the French, the Germans, nor the Japanese were addicted to
-Athletics or Sport. Their manly instincts were exercised, to the great
-advantage of their countries, in skill at arms and in the Military
-Art.[13]
-
-The cult of Sport and Athletics sets up false ideals and lowers the
-intellectual standard. Thousands of loafers, idlers, and work skirkers
-live upon the anticipations or recollections of out-door sports when not
-actually present at them, and are ready to spend their last shilling at
-the turnstile of the ground on which a handful of football gladiators
-are at play: and are more exasperated by the defeat of the team which
-they patronise in a Cup Tie match than they would be by the loss of a
-battle by the British Army. There is this to be said for the working
-classes, that in youth, if not longer, they in general endure a hard and
-strenuous life, and at least in their school years they cannot indulge a
-passion for amusement; whereas the class from which the officers of the
-British Army are drawn is encouraged on the other hand to indulge it
-from childhood. Owing to the prominence given in the Public Schools and
-Universities to games and athletics and to the esteem in which
-proficiency in these is held, youths of the upper middle and upper
-classes are dumped upon the world not humbly but arrogantly ignorant of
-almost everything necessary to qualify them to take their proper place
-in the community. They have subsisted in a rarefied intellectual
-atmosphere, and to fit themselves for any profession for which they may
-have an inclination they have to be forced or "crammed" in a saturated
-atmosphere by which they are congested. The result is that "young
-officers now join the service with a very fair idea of cricket and
-football, bridge, and even motor-driving; but with no education in
-patriotism; no real acquaintance with the history or geography of their
-own or other countries; unable to write English concisely, or even
-grammatically;[14] unaccustomed to read general information for
-themselves other than under the headings of the _Daily Mail_; unable to
-talk a foreign language; and with no knowledge of the sciences which are
-of military use."[15] To this may be added the fact that these young
-dullards, the supply of whom is dwindling, are, on joining the service,
-encouraged and accepted rather with reference to their sporting and
-social qualities than to their military capacity.
-
-England, as a sporting, athletic, and game-loving nation, has of late
-years suffered many rebuffs. By the United States she has been taught
-the scientific method of riding racehorses, and also of sailing yachts;
-she has been defeated in polo by a Transatlantic team; her selected
-representative horsemen are unsuccessful in the International Military
-Tournaments; she cannot defeat Australia on the cricket field; a Belgian
-crew holds its own at Henley. If these rebuffs tend to abate the mania
-for watching the performances of a handsome but not particularly
-intelligent quadruped, and for studying the various methods of imparting
-motion to a Ball and to show the vanity of the passion for sports and
-games when indulged to excess, they will have served their purpose. The
-nation, disgusted at its want of success in its favourite pursuits, may
-perhaps turn its manhood to the noblest pursuit of all, the defence of
-the Fatherland; and then it will not be the betting and football news
-that has to be blacked out of the daily papers in the free libraries,
-but the bi-weekly military gazettes, the reports from the military
-stations and the Special Correspondents' letters from Salisbury Plain
-during the manoeuvres.
-
-Notes:
-
-[Footnote 2: In justice to the War Office it should be stated that this
-was inserted at the instance of Sir Redvers Buller, who believed that he
-would be able to raise in South Africa a sufficient force of mounted
-troops.]
-
-[Footnote 3: B. Viljoen in his "Reminiscences of the Anglo-Boer War"
-frequently complains of the insubordination, the malingering, and the
-cowardice of his followers, and of the incompetence of his superior
-officers.]
-
-[Footnote 4: "Kaffir" is an Arabic word meaning one who does not believe
-in the religion of Mahomet. It was introduced into South Africa by the
-Portuguese and subsequently applied to the tribes living on the N.E. of
-the Cape Colony.]
-
-[Footnote 5: Zilikat's Nek in the Magaliesberg is named after him.]
-
-[Footnote 6: In its crudest and least admirable form Patriotism may be
-expressed in the terms of an equation--
-
- One Englishman=Two Aliens.]
-
-[Footnote 7: _Esprit de Corps_ in the British Army is the predilection
-of the individual for the unit in which he is serving. It creates a
-healthy rivalry which, on the whole, makes for efficiency; but its
-effects are sometimes unfortunate. A distinguished regiment was accused
-of misbehaviour in one of the battles of the advance on Bloemfontein.
-The charge was unfounded, but some of its hasty partisans, with the idea
-of removing the reproach as far as possible from Self and forgetful that
-the honour of the British Army is not contained in water-tight
-compartments, endeavoured to transfer the imputation to another regiment
-in the same brigade.]
-
-[Footnote 8: The citizens of a Republic are usually more patriotic than
-the subjects of a Monarchy. This may be accounted for by the fact that a
-Republic is usually a new nation or a nation that has made a fresh start
-and has not had time to get tired of itself.]
-
-[Footnote 9: Lord Roberts once used the word "glorious."]
-
-[Footnote 10: Except the French raid at Fishguard in 1797.]
-
-[Footnote 11: The Franco-German War cost France £600,000,000 exclusive
-of the loss from suspension of business and commerce.]
-
-[Footnote 12: The attaché of a Great Power noticed in the South African
-War an aversion to the tedious duties of outposts and reconnaissance,
-and he remarks that "it is often openly stated by British officers that
-it is better to get now and then into a really tight place by the
-neglect of these duties than to have to endure the constant irksomeness
-which they entail."]
-
-[Footnote 13: Apart from the question of the relative importance of the
-two services, it can hardly be denied that the British Naval Officer is
-an asset more valuable to his country than his brother in the Army. The
-social side of his character may be more rugged and less acceptable, but
-as a rule he has had neither the time nor the inclination to fritter
-away his manhood in sporting pursuits which do not make for proficiency
-in his profession, and he therefore excels in it; in spite of trying
-conditions which do not exist in any other calling, for with some
-rhetorical exaggeration it may be said that in the lower ranks he is an
-abject slave, in the higher an irresponsible despot.]
-
-[Footnote 14: To the various courses, ranging from Balloons to
-Economics, which are open to British Officers, might be added a course
-in English Grammar and Composition, for the instruction of staff
-officers and others who may have to formulate battle orders and despatch
-important telegrams on active service. The art of composing a clear,
-terse, and unambiguous order or telegraphic message is not studied in
-the Army. Not a few telegrams of vital importance in the South African
-War were composed by impressionist staff officers who lightly assumed
-that what was present in their own minds must necessarily also be
-present in the mind of the recipient. The author particularly remembers
-a certain telegram from a staff officer of a column, in which it was
-impossible to discover from the context whether the word "they" in the
-concluding paragraph referred to British Columns or to Boer Commandos
-previously mentioned.]
-
-[Footnote 15: Major-General Baden-Powell, in _Cavalry Journal_, April.]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-The Natal Wedge
-
-[Sidenote: Map p. 50]
-
-
-The northern section of Natal before the war[16] roughly assumed the
-shape of a wedge driven in between the Transvaal and the Orange Free
-State. The Drakensberg Range on the one side and the Buffalo River on
-the other formed the cleaving surfaces, Majuba and Laing's Nek were the
-cutting edge, and the base was the Tugela River.
-
-In mechanics a wedge is an instrument which can be usefully employed
-only under favourable circumstances. It has many disadvantages. It is
-easily jammed. The driving power at the base must be considerable; much
-of the force is absorbed by the friction on the surfaces; the progress
-made is very slow; and if the surfaces encounter a more tenacious
-material they will be perforated. A wedge is intended chiefly for
-cleavage and disruption when less clumsy methods are not at hand.
-
-The defects of a wedge as a mechanical power at once became apparent to
-the British force which occupied Natal when war became inevitable. The
-cutting edge was inaccessible and liable to injury which could not be
-easily repaired; much trouble was anticipated from the presence of Boer
-commandos in contact with the surfaces; the base did not appear to be
-sufficiently well designed to receive the impact of the propelling
-force; and there were grave doubts as to the soundness of the material
-of which an important section of the wedge, namely Ladysmith, was
-constructed.
-
-It was therefore proposed by the military authorities that the Natal
-wedge should not be used as an instrument in the war. To this the civil
-government at Pietermaritzburg strongly objected on account of the evil
-moral effect which the abandonment of a considerable proportion of the
-Colony to the enemy would exercise upon the general situation in South
-Africa, and of the loss of prestige which the evacuation would entail in
-the minds of the natives, who numbered three-quarters of a million.
-Under pressure from the Colonial Office, and against its own judgment,
-the Army of Natal set itself to work upon the Wedge.
-
-The mistake soon became manifest, although the artisans did their best.
-The Wedge was not an effective instrument; its cutting edge was never in
-operation; and in a very few weeks it was hewn into a mangled, cumbrous
-and irregular mass, which could neither be advanced nor withdrawn and
-which for nearly five months led a precarious and unhappy existence. Its
-distress necessitated the recasting of the plan of the South African
-campaign and a pernicious "moral effect" was not avoided. One British
-Army besieged in an open town surrounded by heights, while another was
-lying impotent upon the banks of the Tugela, eighteen miles distant, was
-the result of a few weeks' work with the Natal Wedge, which had been
-forced by the civilian strategists into the reluctant hands of the
-troops.[17]
-
-When Sir George White arrived in Natal on October 7 he found Sir W. Tenn
-Symons carrying out the wedge policy of the Colonial Government. Part of
-the latter's force was at Ladysmith and part was protecting the
-collieries in the Dundee district. It was his intention to advance
-northwards to Newcastle as soon as he was reinforced by the contingent
-on its way from India, the full strength of which had not arrived at
-Durban. The position at Dundee was strategically defective, as it was
-exposed to a raid from the Transvaal border only twelve miles distant,
-and it was actually further from the Orange Free State than Ladysmith.
-Its defects as a tactical position were still more obvious as it was
-commanded by hills.
-
-Such, in a few words, was the situation with which White was called upon
-to deal. He had two courses before turn; he could accommodate himself to
-it or he could endeavour to modify it. He attempted the latter, and
-failing he recurred to the former. He saw at once the insecurity of
-Symons' detached force, but being unable to convince the Natal
-Government of the necessity of withdrawing it he reluctantly allowed it
-to remain.
-
-Soon the Boer plan of campaign, which aimed at the isolation of the
-British Troops in the wedge, began to unroll itself. Fourteen thousand
-Transvaalers under Joubert, who had first tested the cutting edge by
-sending a coal truck through the tunnel at Laing's Nek and who suspected
-an ambush when he found it clear, were moving south on Newcastle, while
-six thousand Free Staters under Martin Prinsloo were pouring through the
-Drakensberg passes west of Ladysmith. The Natal Government now began to
-feel uneasy about the safety of the colonial capital and even of Durban;
-and informed White that undue importance had been attached to the
-occupation of Dundee and that its retention was no longer desirable.
-Thus in little more than a week White's original objection was
-reconsidered and upheld. But again he allowed his better judgment to be
-over-borne. Symons, whom he instructed to withdraw southwards unless he
-felt his position to be absolutely secure, was at his own urgent request
-allowed to remain. Next day, October 19, Elandslaagte, on the railway
-between Ladysmith and Dundee, was occupied by a Boer commando, and it
-was reported that 4,000 burghers were ready to cross the Buffalo River
-at Jager's Drift during the night.
-
-Symons' camp was pitched about a mile west of Dundee which lay between
-it and Talana and Lennox Hills, which commanded the town from the east.
-Some hours before sunrise on October 20 a British picket on Talana was
-attacked. The incident was reported to Head Quarters, where it was not
-deemed to be of much importance and the routine duties of the morning
-were not interrupted. The artillery horses had been taken down as usual
-to water, and some companies had even fallen in for skirmishing drill,
-when the curtain of the morning mist upon the higher ground was raised
-to the first scene in the Natal drama. The eastward hills, looming up
-darkly into the brightening sky, were seen to be occupied in force by
-the enemy under L. Meyer, and soon his shells were falling among the
-tents.
-
-The troops in camp, though taken by surprise, pulled themselves together
-with admirable promptitude. The Boer guns were soon silenced, the
-figures of men silhouetted along the sky line vanished, and the infantry
-was ordered out to clear the hill. It was a formidable and dangerous
-task, but it was facilitated by some of the features of the ground.
-There was a dry river bed in which the troops could be formed up for
-attack, and, half a mile beyond, a farmhouse and a plantation afforded
-some cover; while a donga on the left at right angles to the river bed
-apparently offered a covered way up the hill to the crest. In the
-plantation occurred the first calamity of the war. Symons, who had come
-up impatiently from the lower ground to hurry up the assault, which he
-thought was being unnecessarily delayed, was mortally wounded. Three
-days later he paid with his life for his adherence to a forward policy
-in tactics as well as in strategy; and the command devolved upon Yule.
-
-The donga on the left was found to be useless, as it led nowhere; and
-the advance was made directly from the plantation towards a wall running
-along the foot of the hill. Here a long halt was made in order to
-reorganize the attack, and when the word was given the men pressed
-forward and threw-themselves upon the rough front of the acclivity after
-a rush across an open slope. The crest was attained and carried without
-much difficulty; for all but a few stalwarts had quitted it when they
-saw the British bayonets pricking upwards towards their hold.
-
-It seemed now that the victory was won, but an unfortunate mistake
-postponed it. The two field batteries on the plain, which had ceased
-fire before the final infantry rush, changed position and came under a
-heavy fire from the Boers who were still in possession of a section of
-the Talana ridge. The light was bad and the guns re-opened upon the
-crest line in the belief that the whole of it was still occupied by the
-enemy. The practice was excellent, and in a brief space both sides were
-driven off the hill by the shrapnel. A subsequent attempt to take it was
-successful. The result of the battle, which lasted from sunrise until 2
-p.m., might have been reversed but for the inaction of the main Boer
-force posted on Lennox Hill under L. Meyer, and of another force on
-Impati under Erasmus, who, though he could hear the noise of battle
-pealing through the mist which lay upon the hill, abstained from
-intervening.
-
-The whole Boer force was now in full retreat along the line by which it
-had advanced so silently the night before, and Yule ordered the two
-field batteries up to the nek between Talana and Lennox to pound the
-retreating burghers as they slowly trekked towards the Buffalo River;
-but again an unfortunate misapprehension intervened. The officer in
-command, being under the impression that an armistice asked for by Meyer
-two hours before had been granted, refrained from opening fire and the
-Boers escaped untouched. A serious misadventure marred the success of
-the day. The 18th Hussars, who at the commencement of the action
-received orders to hold themselves in readiness to advance when occasion
-offers, soon appeared to the restless general to be losing their
-opportunity, and were hustled into activity. They charged in various
-directions and even made some prisoners; but one squadron lost its way
-and was captured in an attempt to ride round Impati by a detachment of
-Erasmus' force at a farm where it had taken refuge.
-
-The fight for Talana Hill encouraged each belligerent. In England it was
-received as an indication of the early and successful termination of the
-struggle. The Boers regarded it as a reconnaissance in force from which
-they had returned with slight loss, and they could boast that they had
-reaped the first fruits of the harvest of war; a squadron of British
-cavalry which, with the commanding officer of the regiment, was at once
-dispatched into captivity at Pretoria, where its arrival was accepted as
-a proof of a great Boer victory in Natal.
-
-Talana Hill regarded as an isolated event in the Natal campaign was a
-distinctly successful encounter, the credit of which is due entirely to
-the infantry engaged in it. Twice the artillery blundered, and the
-cavalry was inoperative. The extent of the loss suffered by the Natal
-Field Force in the death of Symons must always be a matter for
-speculation. But it is at least probable that if he had survived to take
-part in the subsequent operations, his ardent, impetuous, Prince Rupert
-like temperament would have beneficially impregnated with greater
-audacity the stolid and ponderous tactics and strategy of the Natal
-campaign.
-
-The unreality of the Talana Hill victory soon became apparent. The
-threat of Erasmus sitting on Impati still impended, and Yule moved his
-camp next day to a site which he believed to be out of range. But in the
-meantime Erasmus awoke from his trance and, on the afternoon of October
-21, opened fire with a six-inch gun,[18] and again Yule was compelled to
-shift his camp. He had already asked for reinforcements, but White was
-unable to spare them, and recommended him to fall back upon Ladysmith.
-Next day Yule was encouraged by the news of a British success at
-Elandslaagte; and with the object of intercepting the Boers who were
-reported to be retreating on Newcastle, he endeavoured to seize Glencoe,
-but Erasmus on Impati forbade the movement.
-
-Shortly before midnight on October 19, Kock, a Free Stater who commanded
-a force chiefly composed of foreign auxiliaries and who was working
-southwards from Newcastle, sent on an advanced party to swoop down upon
-the railway between Ladysmith and Glencoe, and Elandslaagte station was
-seized. Early next morning Kock came in with his main body. White at
-first made no serious attempt to clear the line beyond sending out a
-reconnoitring force which he soon recalled, as he was reluctant to
-employ troops away from the immediate neighbourhood of Ladysmith, which
-had been already threatened on the N.W. by Free State commandos.
-
-The news however of Yule's success at Talana changed the situation and
-seemed to justify a more forward policy; and early in the morning of
-October 21 French was sent out to re-occupy Elandslaagte and repair the
-line. Although he succeeded in driving the enemy out of the railway
-station and in holding it for a very brief period, he found himself
-outclassed in artillery and too weak to stand up to the Boers, and
-withdrew a few miles southward; at the same time asking White to
-reinforce him. It was reported that Kock expected shortly to be
-reinforced.
-
-The main Boer position was on the northern limb of a horseshoe
-arrangement of kopjes which develops close to the railway station and
-swings round southwards and westwards, at an elevation generally about
-300 feet above the normal level of the ground. Two posts were also held
-north of the railway. The southern limb of the horseshoe was lightly
-held, and against it French, without waiting for the arrival of all his
-reinforcements, moved with his mounted troops, and easily cleared it.
-Here he was joined by the Manchester Regiment, one of the battalions of
-the brigade of infantry sent out by White under the command of Ian
-Hamilton, and established himself on the left flank of the Boer position
-on the two kopjes on the northern limb of the horseshoe.
-
-The other two battalions, the Devonshire Regiment and the Gordon
-Highlanders, simultaneously came into position, the former for a frontal
-attack, and the latter as a reserve acting in the interval between the
-Manchesters and the Devons; while the artillery advanced between the two
-limbs and shelled the enemy's position on the kopjes. The artillery
-preparation enjoined by the regulations had, however, to be curtailed
-owing to the approach of night, but not before the two Boer guns on the
-southern kopje were silenced; and then the main attack was delivered.
-
-The Boers on the kopjes were reinforced by a body of German auxiliaries
-under Schiel, who had been driven out of a position north of the railway
-by the cavalry acting on the left and who circled round to the main
-position, but the reinforcement did not avail them. Hardly pressed on
-their left, they were unable to withstand the frontal charge of the
-Devons led by Hamilton in person. The guns were captured and the
-position occupied at sunset. By this time most of the Boers were in
-retreat and their tracks were made devious by the cavalry, which so long
-as light remained harried them hither and thither.
-
-Suddenly a white flag was seen fluttering near the laager between the
-kopjes. There is no reason to believe that it was treacherously raised,
-but it compelled Hamilton to order the Cease Fire. Yet at once half a
-hundred Boers started up and rushed as a forlorn hope upon the crest: a
-remnant of stalwarts, who even succeeded in firing a round or two from
-the guns which had just been taken from them. There was a moment or two
-of doubt and bewilderment, but Hamilton with the help of a few junior
-officers rallied the waverers, and earned the Victoria Cross, which on
-account of his high military rank was withheld from him; the guns were
-recovered, the laager rushed, and the tactical victory was complete.
-
-Elandslaagte was as unreal a victory as Talana. The troops had not
-rested many hours in their bivouacs on the ridge before they received
-orders to return without delay to Ladysmith, which was still threatened
-from the west by the Free State commandos; and by noon on October 22 not
-only had Elandslaagte been hurriedly evacuated, but stores, ammunition
-and even some prisoners had been left behind in the scuttle. Next day it
-passed without effort into the possession of a small body of Free
-Staters, who were astonished to find it abandoned.
-
-Meanwhile Yule after the failure of his movement on Glencoe found his
-position insecure and reluctantly resolved to retire on Ladysmith,
-although it entailed leaving not only his supplies and ammunition but
-also his wounded behind him. The victory of Talana had indeed been won
-but the victors were exhausted by it and unfit to stand up to Erasmus on
-Impati. It became necessary for Yule to disappear immediately and
-stealthily.
-
-On October 23 soon after midnight the maimed and harassed force slipped
-quietly away and trudged wearily to the south. When the mist rolling
-aside next morning disclosed the evacuation the Transvaalers on Impati
-occupied the town almost simultaneously with the reoccupation of
-Elandslaagte by their allies the Free Staters; and thus the battlefields
-of two British victories were redeemed by the defeated. It is no
-reproach to Yule that military necessity compelled him to leave behind
-the wounded of Talana Hill. The death of Symons on October 23 was a
-pathetic episode of the Natal Campaign. He passed away of his mortal
-wound while the Boers were looting the camp in which he was lying and
-wondering, in the rare intervals of conscious thought, why the troops
-whom he had led so gallantly had been taken from him; and for half a
-year his grave lay lonely in the enemy's country before another British
-soldier could stand beside it.
-
-The retreat of Yule's force was effected without more trouble than that
-which was caused by the nature of the country and the alternations of
-the climate. Van Tonder's Pass--a difficult defile which would have been
-impassable under opposition--was crossed, and a sudden spate on the
-Waschbank river only temporarily checked the retirement. A column was
-sent out from Ladysmith by White to check the Free Staters who had
-re-occupied Elandslaagte and to prevent them falling on Yule, and on
-October 24 they were engaged with success at Rietfontein. The sound of
-the artillery in this action was audible to Yule on the Waschbank, but
-he was unable to account for it.
-
-On the afternoon of October 25 Yule was within one day's march of
-Ladysmith. He proposed to halt for the night; but suddenly a patrol from
-a column sent out by White to help him in appeared, and he received
-orders to press forward to Ladysmith.
-
-The exhausted men resumed their march, and the misery of that night's
-journey was probably never exceeded during any subsequent movement in
-the war. Sodden, hungry, weary, disheartened; men and transport animals
-inextricably intermingled; the column plodded onwards in the rain and
-the night. A halt at daylight next morning brought in some of the
-stragglers and gave a little rest to those who were still in the ranks;
-and by mid-day the men of Talana Hill had trudged into Ladysmith.
-
-The urgency of the immediate resumption of the march had arisen from
-White's anxiety for the safety of Yule's force. Rietfontein had indeed,
-like Talana and Elandslaagte, been a tactically successful engagement
-and had similarly been followed by a retreat; but Yule was exposed to an
-attack by Erasmus, to whom he had given the slip at Dundee during the
-night of October 22 and who was known to be endeavouring to overtake
-him. Erasmus was believed to be acting from the direction of
-Elandslaagte; but fortunately for Yule his movements were not
-judiciously directed and his information was imperfect.
-
-[Sidenote: Map, p. 139.]
-
-All the detached members of the Natal Wedge had now been driven in and
-the reconnaissances sent out by White on October 27 and the following
-days showed that the Boers had lost no time in pressing on to Ladysmith.
-The Transvaalers were apparently in force N.E. of the town on a section
-of the arc in which Lombard's Kop, Long Hill, and Pepworth Hill were the
-chief physical features; the Free Staters were approaching from the N.W.
-and a small force of them under A.P. Cronje was already in touch with
-the Transvaalers; their main body, however, seemed to be making for the
-Tugela in order to isolate Ladysmith from the south. On October 29 White
-assumed the offensive with the greater part of his command, and
-endeavoured to cut through the still unconsolidated investing line and
-to thwart the co-operation of the allies.
-
-The general idea was that an infantry brigade, supported on its right
-flank by cavalry acting towards Lombard's Kop, should attack the enemy,
-who was presumed to be in force on Long Hill and Pepworth Hill. On the
-left flank of the attack a column would endeavour to pass through the
-Boer line, and having seized Nicholson's Nek due north of Ladysmith
-would either close it against the retreating enemy or hold it as a post
-through which a mounted force could debouch in pursuit on to the more
-practicable ground beyond.
-
-Some difficulty in drawing and loading up ammunition delayed the start
-of the column, which under the command of Carleton was to secure the
-left flank of the operations; and fearing that daylight on October 30
-would find his vulnerable force still on the march he determined soon
-after midnight to halt short of Nicholson's Nek, from which he was then
-two miles distant. He had succeeded in passing through the enemy's
-picket line, and was perhaps not justified in discontinuing his advance,
-although his instructions were to take Nicholson's Nek only "if
-possible." But an error of judgment made by a commanding officer on a
-dark night in a strange country acting under instructions which left him
-a free hand must not be judged severely, and had it not been for a
-disaster which could not be foreseen, he would probably have been
-commended for his prudence.
-
-Kainguba Hill, which rises on the left of the road to Nicholson's Nek,
-seemed to offer a suitable stage on the journey and towards it the
-column was diverted. While the men were climbing the steep and stony
-hillside a panic suddenly seized the transport mules. It may have been a
-spontaneous emotion, or it may have originated in an alarm raised by the
-Boers who were holding the crest. The animals stampeded down the slope,
-and carrying with them not only the reserve ammunition but also the
-signalling equipment, the water carts, and the component parts of the
-mountain artillery, charged through the rear of the column. The timely
-exertions of the officers checked the general scare that was imminent;
-and with the exception of a few score of infantry men and gunners the
-column reached the summit before daybreak, having lost almost everything
-needed for a successful occupation of it.
-
-Misfortune continued relentlessly to pursue the column. A position was
-taken up on the hill on the supposition that it could only be attacked
-from the south, but at daylight C. de Wet, who here came upon the stage
-which afterwards he often filled so effectively, threatened it from the
-north with a Free State commando. A gesture made by an officer in order
-to attract attention was interpreted as a signal to retire; another
-officer thinking that his company was left alone on the summit, though
-it was in fact within seventy yards of an occupied sangar, raised the
-white flag; and almost at the same moment a bugle sounded the Cease
-Fire. Neither the white flag nor the bugle call was authorized by
-Carleton; but a glance at the situation showed him that they could not
-be repudiated and after a gallant struggle to maintain an indefensible
-position he surrendered. Nearly a thousand men were led away into
-captivity.
-
-The main infantry attack was made by a force of five battalions with six
-field batteries under the command of Grimwood. He marched out of
-Ladysmith soon after midnight, but had not covered half the distance to
-the point of attack when an unfortunate incident deprived him of all his
-artillery and of two of his battalions. The guns marching in the centre
-of the column and acting under orders which were not communicated to
-Grimwood, diverged to the right and were followed by the two battalions
-in rear; and the absence of nearly half the force was not discovered by
-him until daybreak, and after he had taken up the position assigned
-south of Long Hill. Daybreak also revealed the fact that Long Hill which
-was assumed to be the Boer left was not occupied, and that Long Tom from
-Impati had been emplaced on Pepworth Hill. The cavalry brigade under
-French upon whom Grimwood relied to protect his right flank was two
-miles away in his rear; and finding himself attacked on that flank
-instead of from the front he was compelled to swing round and almost
-reverse his front. Thus far the general scheme of attack had signally
-failed. Carleton on the left had not reached Nicholson's Nek and was in
-trouble; Grimwood with nearly half of his command gone astray, and
-having discovered that the enemy's left was not on Long Hill but on
-Lombard's Kop, had to improvise a scheme of his own; while French
-instead of conforming to Grimwood was compelling Grimwood to conform to
-him. At 8 a.m. Grimwood was suffering severely from artillery fire, and
-French whose cavalry now prolonged Grimwood's line southwards was with
-difficulty holding his own. The enemy, whom the general idea destined to
-be outflanked and rolled up towards the north and pursued by mounted
-troops issuing from Nicholson's Nek, was instead attacking vigorously
-from Lombard's Kop on the east and seemed likely to outflank White; the
-infantry reserves under Ian Hamilton were almost expended; and the
-British artillery was unable to silence the Boer guns.
-
-All through the forenoon Ladysmith and the little garrison left behind
-for its defence was the target of Long Tom on Pepworth Hill. The
-fugitives from Kainguba brought in disheartening reports and the Boers
-seemed to be threatening from the north. W. Knox, a Horse Artillery
-officer who had been left in command, anticipated an attack which he had
-little chance of meeting successfully with the scanty force at his
-disposal and sent an urgent message to White, who at noon ordered the
-battle to be broken off and the troops to retire to Ladysmith.
-
-The retreat was effected in confusion. Grimwood's force was the first to
-be withdrawn and was saved from disaster by the gallant stand made by
-two field batteries as it crossed the level ground. The cavalry
-scampered home in Grimwood's track. A dramatic episode brought the
-battle of Lombard's Kop to a close. Just as the baffled troops were
-entering Ladysmith a battery of naval guns, which had arrived from
-Durban that morning and had gone immediately into action, succeeded in
-silencing Long Tom and some other guns on Pepworth Hill, nearly four
-miles distant. In the evening Joubert sent in a flag of truce to White
-to announce Carleton's surrender.
-
-The Natal Wedge disappeared in the smoke of the battle of Lombard's Kop
-and was never again heard of as an instrument in the Natal campaign. The
-Boers filled the gaps in the investing line without difficulty, and on
-November 2 the Siege of Ladysmith began. The last man to leave the town
-was French, who went forth to win honour on distant fields.
-
-Notes:
-
-[Footnote 16: In 1902 the Vryheid and Utrecht districts of the Transvaal
-were annexed to Natal and the wedge disappeared.]
-
-[Footnote 17: They were indeed authorized as early as October 18 to
-throw it aside but by that time they were committed to its use.]
-
-[Footnote 18: "Long Tom," which was afterwards sent to Ladysmith and
-subsequently to bombard Rhodes in Kimberley.]
-
-[Illustration: Sketch map of Northern Natal.]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-Deus Ex Machina No. I
-
-
-The arrival of Sir Redvers Buller at Cape Town on October 31, 1899, the
-morrow of the battle of Lombard's Kop, encouraged the despondent at home
-and in Cape Colony.[19] Twenty years previously he had distinguished
-himself in the command of a Boer contingent which served with the
-British Army during the Zulu campaign; and it was doubtless from the
-experience then gained that he formed the opinion that the war which he
-was now called upon to direct, could be brought to a successful
-conclusion only "by the actual conquest of every man in the field: a
-task doubly difficult owing to the extreme mobility of the enemy."
-
-In his first telegram to Lord Lansdowne he described the situation as
-one of "extreme gravity."
-
-White, with five-sixths of the British Troops in South Africa, was shut
-up in Ladysmith; a month at least must elapse before the Expeditionary
-Force, which the British Government had on September 22 decided to send
-out, would be able to take the field; Mafeking was besieged; the diamond
-men of Kimberley, like a passionate child interned in a dark room, were
-screaming for release; Sir Alfred Milner was pleading that the defence
-of the Cape Peninsula, an area of a few thousand square miles as far
-removed from the front as Marseilles is from Berlin, must be first
-attended to; President Steyn had overcome his scruples and was sending
-Free State commandos across the Orange River into the Cape Colony at
-Bethulie and Norval's Pont; the disaffected colonials were restive; and
-the fall of Ladysmith, which seemed probable, would lay Natal open from
-the Tugela to the Indian Ocean.
-
-It was a dismal outlook; but Buller, after a few days' review of the
-situation, was able to report that in his opinion the opposition would
-probably collapse when Kimberley and Ladysmith were relieved. His
-optimism at Capetown was destined soon to be superseded by pessimism on
-the Tugela. He compared himself to a man who, having a busy day before
-him, has overslept himself. The original plan of campaign, a march on
-Pretoria through the Free State, had necessarily to be postponed; and
-the important railway junctions at Naauwpoort and Stormberg were too
-weakly held and too liable to investment by the Free State commandos
-which had crossed the Orange to justify their retention, and the little
-garrisons were withdrawn. To Gatacre and French, who had just escaped
-from Ladysmith, was assigned the duty of holding the centre, while Lord
-Methuen advanced to the relief of Kimberley.
-
-It was, however, the situation in Natal which gave the most anxiety to
-Buller. The Free State commandos which had been seen passing Ladysmith
-shortly before the investment were now at Colenso, having driven back to
-Estcourt the small British force which was all that was left to stem the
-tide of an invasion. The Free Staters, fortunately, were not active and
-delayed to avail themselves of the opportunity. When at length, after
-eleven days of inertia, L. Botha persuaded Joubert to undertake an
-offensive movement south of the Tugela, it had passed away, as Estcourt
-had in the meantime been reinforced by troops from England under the
-command of Hildyard.
-
-Encouraged by the capture of an armoured train at Chieveley, Joubert
-advanced south in two bodies, one on each side of Estcourt, and seized
-the railway at Highlands, thus cutting off Hildyard's communication with
-Pietermaritzburg; and Hildyard having no cavalry was unable to touch
-him. The raid, which for a time seemed dangerous, was however soon
-checked by troops coming up from the south under Barton, and Joubert
-found himself pressed between two forces each as strong as his own.
-After an action at Willow Grange, which each side claimed as a victory,
-Joubert, fearing lest he should be cut off, retired unpursued, against
-the wishes of the more pushful and energetic Botha, who was in favour of
-an advance on Pietermaritzburg.
-
-The alarms and excursions of October and November were the cause of the
-dissolution of a military apparatus which had been put together at home
-with much care and thought, and which had never yet been seen in
-warfare. Its designers and constructors were proud of it and they looked
-forward with confidence to its successful working. The apparatus was the
-British Army Corps. It was taken to pieces as soon as it reached South
-Africa; but fortunately the ties, ligaments, and braces which held it
-together yielded to slight pressure and little difficulty was
-experienced in resolving it into its constituent elements. The more
-important of these were despatched to Natal and the rest were
-distributed over the western and central commands.
-
-Buller, perhaps leaving the pessimistic atmosphere of Capetown with
-relief, went by sea to Durban, the defence of which was entrusted to the
-Royal Navy, and reached Pietermaritzburg on November 25. By this time
-the situation had improved all along the line, and it seemed that it
-might still be possible to resume the original plan of a central advance
-on Bloemfontein and Pretoria as soon as Ladysmith was relieved. The Boer
-raid towards southern Natal which caused so much consternation had been
-easily foiled and British troops were now at Frere.
-
-Buller, soon after his arrival in Natal, found himself in command of a
-force of 19,000 men with whom to tackle about 21,000 Boers under the
-command of L. Botha. Joubert was invalided after the unsuccessful
-Estcourt raid, and the change was, from the enemy's point of view, for
-the better. The new Head Commandant was a more strenuous and active
-leader than his predecessor.
-
-Little was known of the topography of the country in which Buller was
-about to operate. It had never been systematically surveyed, and the
-existing maps had been constructed for agricultural rather than for
-campaigning purposes, and could not be trusted. The Tugela formed the
-ditch of a natural fortress covering Ladysmith. On its left bank rose an
-almost continuous ridge or rampart from which the easy open ground on
-the right bank could be watched for miles, and reconnaissances kept at a
-distance.
-
-Reconnaissances were, however, not needed to prove to Buller that
-Colenso, where the railway passed up into the Tugela ridge, was immune
-to a frontal attack, and that Ladysmith must be relieved by a turning
-movement. Two alternatives offered themselves. The advance might be made
-through Weenen and across the Tugela some distance below Colenso, and
-thence to Elandslaagte, where the Boer line of communication with the
-Transvaal might be cut; but to Ladysmith this was a circuitous route. It
-also would necessitate the traversing of a rough bush country, into
-which Buller was reluctant to throw raw troops just off the transports
-who had not yet heard the sounds of war.
-
-He therefore decided upon a westerly flank march by way of Potgieter's
-Drift, twenty miles west of Colenso; and once on the left bank of the
-Tugela he would be within a day's march of Ladysmith and the railway
-into the Free State. White was heliographically consulted, and all the
-arrangements for an advance on December 11 were made. The force had even
-been set in motion when certain disturbing news came out of the west.
-Gatacre had suffered a reverse at Stormberg, and simultaneously Methuen
-had been roughly handled at Magersfontein, and was unable to continue
-his march on Kimberley.
-
-The strategic timidity of Buller and his curious habit of allowing
-himself to be influenced by psychological probabilities were at once
-apparent. The anticipated moral effect of these successes upon the enemy
-swayed him back to the plan which a day or two previously he had
-rejected as impracticable. The plan of a flank march by way of
-Potgieter's Drift was thrown aside. It might have been justifiable in
-the presence of a dispirited enemy; but now the burghers on the Tugela
-had been suddenly encouraged by news of victories won on two widely
-separated scenes of action and were no doubt anxious to rival the
-exploits of their comrades far away.[20] The flank march would expose
-the army to the danger of being cut off by a quickened and revived foe,
-and Buller determined not to run the risk. On December 12 he ordered an
-advance on Colenso.
-
-The course of the war in the western and central scenes of action up to
-the time of the two defeats which caused Buller to revise the plan of
-campaign for Natal must now be traced.
-
-[Sidenote: Map p. 260.]
-
-The force of nearly 10,000 men under Lord Methuen detailed by Buller for
-the relief of Kimberley, advanced from De Aar and Orange River Bridge
-along the railway. At Belmont a body of Free Staters under Jacob
-Prinsloo was found strongly posted on the heights east of the line, and
-although reinforced by Delarey from Kimberley, it was unable to hold to
-its positions, and was compelled to retreat eastwards on November 23.
-
-Prinsloo withdrew with his Free Staters across the border, but was
-persuaded by Delarey, who had fallen back on Graspan about eight miles
-N.E. of Belmont, to rejoin him; and a favourable position was occupied
-on a group of kopjes astride the railway, where on November 25 another
-battle was fought, in which the Naval Brigade suffered a loss of nearly
-half its strength. The enemy, though driven back, retreated in good
-order, as at Belmont two days previously, there being no cavalry
-available for effective pursuit. Methuen pushed on to Witkoplaagte.
-
-The Boers were greatly discouraged by Belmont and Graspan, where, as at
-Talana and Elandslaagte, they had been ejected from strong kopje
-positions chosen by themselves. The moral was not lost upon Delarey, who
-determined to try whether a better stand could not be made in a river
-position, and selected the junction of the Modder and the Riet for the
-experiment. His idea was not so much to dispute the passage of the river
-as to use the deep channels as covered ways and as natural trenches from
-which the plain could be grazed by rifle fire. The Modder after
-approaching the Riet changes its direction abruptly three tunes above
-the junction, enclosing a diamond-shaped area which provided the Boers
-with a ready-made perimeter camp.
-
-[Sidenote: Map. p. 59.]
-
-Methuen, thinking that the enemy would as before select the good kopje
-position which offered itself on Spytfontein halfway to Kimberley,
-determined to diverge from the railway with the greater part of his army
-and circling through Jacobsdaal, Brown's Drift and Abon's Dam to attack
-Spytfontein in flank, where he had little doubt that he would find the
-Boers in position; but Modder River, which he was inclined to believe
-was only held as an advanced post, must first be taken. Delarey had been
-joined by P. Cronje, who unperceived by Methuen's cavalry came in with a
-body of Transvaalers from Mafeking, and was in occupation of the loop
-between the rivers.
-
-At sunrise on November 28 Methuen advanced from his camp at Witkoplaagte
-six miles south of the river. The fight began under misapprehensions on
-each side. Methuen believed that only the river bank above the railway
-bridge was held in force; while he was credited by his opponents with
-the intention of crossing the Riet River by Bosnian's Drift of which he
-did not know the existence.
-
-Everything promised well for Delarey and Cronje, but they made little
-use of their opportunities. Methuen fought in the dark, and whenever the
-Fog of War lifted, found that the situation had changed. He attacked the
-Modder as the opening move of his flank march on a mythical position on
-Spytfontein and suddenly discovered before him, not a mere advanced post
-to be checked or masked, but an enemy holding a well-entrenched and
-defended front several miles in length. The maps at his disposal did not
-shew the extraordinary windings of the two rivers over part of the area
-on which he was engaged, and some of the reaches were only discovered
-when they tripped up the advancing troops. The result of a hard day's
-work, in which Methuen was wounded, was the capture of Rosmead, a
-village on the right bank below the railway bridge. The troops of the
-right attack did not succeed in crossing the river, and an attempt to
-work up the right bank from Rosmead failed. What effect the battle would
-have upon the situation, and whether on the whole it had been a success
-for Methuen, were not apparent at nightfall. The question was answered
-next morning when it was found that the Boers had retired to Jacobsdaal.
-Next day the British troops took up a position north of the river.
-
-So far, the Kimberley relief force had done its work well. The obstacles
-in its way at Belmont, Graspan, and Modder River had been thrust aside,
-and it was now within two easy marches of its destination. It seemed
-therefore that in three days at the most, allowing one day for another
-battle, it would be reported to Buller as having finished its task: and
-had the necessity been urgent the relief could no doubt have been
-effected within that time. Kimberley, however, appeared able to take
-care of itself for a few weeks, and Methuen halted for twelve days at
-Modder River in order to receive supplies and reinforcements, and to
-strengthen his slender and vulnerable line of communication with the
-south. He still believed that the Boers would make their next stand at
-Spytfontein.
-
-The Boers remained but a few days at Jacobsdaal. After a council of war
-at which Cronje declared himself in favour of remaining there as a
-menace to the British line of communication which would attract Methuen
-to the town, a movement which Methuen himself had had in mind; while
-Delarey advocated the taking up of a position between the Modder River
-and Kimberley; the plan of the latter was adopted and the Boer forces
-trekked northwards to Spytfontein. They found, however, that between
-Spytfontein and the river, the Magersfontein group of kopjes would
-afford excellent positions to Methuen from which Spytfontein could be
-attacked.
-
-During Methuen's halt at Modder River Delarey and Cronje received
-considerable reinforcements. From Natal, from the Basuto border, and
-from Kimberley, commandos were summoned to Spytfontein. That position
-was, however, for the reason just stated, insecure; and on the December
-4 the Magersfontein position was taken up and prepared for defence by
-Delarey. A low arc stretching from the position towards the Modder was
-discovered, from which a flanking fire could be poured in upon a frontal
-attack.
-
-With an unerring instinct which was more useful to him than most of the
-knowledge he could have acquired in a European Staff College, and with
-an originality which if it had been displayed by a young British officer
-in an examination for promotion would probably have injured that
-officer's prospects, Delarey dug his trenches not at the foot of the
-hill but in sinuous lines some little way in advance of it, by which he
-gained the power of meeting an attack with grazing or skimming fire, and
-which also removed the firing line from physical features on which the
-British guns could be laid. It is said that he manned the works on the
-slope with burghers firing black powder so as to draw the enemy's fire
-away from the trenches in which only smokeless powder was used.
-
-[Illustration: Modder River and Magersfontein.]
-
-Methuen obtained little information during his halt at Modder River. The
-country was so much intersected by the wire fences of the farms that
-cavalry scouting was difficult. He decided to make a direct frontal
-attack upon Magersfontein on December 11 after a bombardment on the
-previous evening; and here, as at Colenso, the text-book preliminary
-shrapnel practice put the enemy on the alert and did no harm. It greatly
-encouraged the burghers in their trenches. Only three men were touched
-by the projectiles hurled by the naval, howitzer, field, and horse
-batteries; and an impending infantry advance was clearly indicated. To
-the Highland Brigade under Wauchope, who had joined the command since
-the Modder River battle, was entrusted the execution of the night
-attack. He does not appear to have altogether approved of Methuen's
-scheme; but with the same dogged valour which he displayed many years
-before when he threw himself upon the Gladstonian political
-Magersfontein in Midlothian, he incorporated himself in it.
-
-At 1 a.m. on December 12 in a storm of rain and thunder the Brigade in
-mass of quarter-columns marched out of its bivouac, guided by a staff
-officer's compass which the lightning and the rain soon made unreliable.
-The objective point was the southern edge of the Magersfontein Ridge,
-about three miles distant. The progress made over the rough and
-encumbered veld was slow, and it was difficult to judge in the darkness
-how much ground had really been covered. Wauchope either underestimated
-the distance made good or, as is more probable, did not expect to find
-the enemy entrenched in advance of the foot of the hill, and the error
-cost him his life and the lives of many other gallant Highlanders.
-Afraid lest dawn should find his Brigade too far away from the position
-to rush it, he hesitated to deploy, and when at last he was about to
-give the order, a further delay was caused by a line of thorn bushes.
-The Brigade passed through or avoided the obstruction and was at the
-halt on the point of changing formation when the Boers in the advanced
-trenches, which had been so stealthily excavated that no one in the
-British Army seems to have been aware of their existence, received the
-alarm and opened fire. Possibly the situation might have been saved if
-an order to charge had been given at once, and the Highlanders had heard
-the skirl of the pipes; but Wauchope had at the first shot rushed
-forward impetuously towards the flashing Mausers. With his life he
-measured the unknown distance to the trenches, and at the supreme moment
-his Highlanders lost their leader and knew not whom to follow.
-
-The sudden stroke of the impact falling upon men of dissimilar
-temperament reacted on them diversely. The majority absorbed it by
-throwing themselves upon the ground on which they stood; others recoiled
-mechanically upon the companies in rear; while to not a few it was a
-stimulus which projected them into the jaws of death gaping before them
-in the dim light. A mixed body, hardly exceeding the strength of three
-companies, pushed on in obedience to the last words that fell from
-Wauchope's lips, to reinforce the right; and succeeded in wriggling
-round the eastward flank of the enemy's advanced trenches and in
-shattering a foreign contingent in the Boer service which was holding
-the gap of level ground between the low arc and the Magersfontein Ridge.
-The little force of progressives came under the fire of the British guns
-which opened upon the ridge at daybreak, but a remnant under Wilson
-drove a keen-edged but slender wedge into the curve of the Boer
-position, and was favourably placed to storm the ridge. A few score of
-Highlanders were now fingering the key with which it seemed possible to
-unlock the sluice gates and allow the flood waters of war to overwhelm
-the foe. But War is a game of chance. The key was snatched away and the
-issue of the day reversed by a man who had lost his way.
-
-In the absence of Delarey, who was absent at Kimberley, P. Cronje was in
-chief command of the Boer forces. His Head-Quarters were at Brown's
-Drift on the Modder, six miles from the key of the position on
-Magersfontein. The sound of the bombardment notified him that an
-infantry attack was imminent, and he hurried off to make the final
-arrangements for meeting it. These he seems to have completed to his
-satisfaction, and he rested for an hour or two, rising soon after
-midnight. In the darkness and rain he lost his way on the unfamiliar
-ground. But chance found him at daybreak close to the gap which Wilson's
-little band of Highlanders had hewn in his line, and their promising
-advance was effectually repressed, as they were simultaneously fired on
-by Cronje's escort on their front and by a commando which had come up on
-their right rear.
-
-Daylight found the shattered and dismembered Highland Brigade lying in
-patches upon the veld, with their leader dead before their eyes;
-themselves unable to advance or retreat, conspicuous, hungry, thirsty,
-and soon to be scorched by the midsummer sun at the zenith; and there
-they lay for eight hours. Only the shells of the artillery, which from
-daylight onwards played upon the trenches and partially mastered the
-fire from them, saved the Highland Brigade from destruction.
-
-The Guards' Brigade under Colvile was in the first instance detailed as
-the reserve of the Highland Brigade, but the repulse of the latter and
-the probability that it would sooner or later be compelled to retreat
-gave the former a definite objective, the low arc held by the left of
-the Boer line. In marching on this the wire fence which was the boundary
-between British territory and the Orange Free State was crossed, and the
-Guards' Brigade had the honour of being the first body of troops to go
-into action in the enemy's country. Colvile held his own, but although
-he was unable to occupy the arc he screened the right flank of the
-Highlanders. On their left a weak Brigade under Pole-Carew was drawn up
-astride the railway, and thus apparently the firing line, which had been
-so hardly pressed during so many weary hours, was secure on either
-flank. But Pole-Carew was paralysed by the variety of the duties which
-had been assigned to him, and was unable to operate offensively on the
-enemy's right. His original orders were to act as camp guard and to
-demonstrate northwards in support of the Highland Brigade; and
-subsequently he seems to have been instructed to hold himself in
-readiness to cross over to support the Guards' attack on the enemy's
-left, with the result that his Brigade was never seriously engaged.
-
-The interval between the Highlanders' right facing the trenches and the
-Guards' left had never been effectively closed and early in the
-afternoon the Boers renewed their attacks upon it, and threatened to
-enfilade the line. Hughes-Hallett, who after the death of Wauchope
-succeeded to the command of the Highland Brigade and to whom Methuen had
-sent orders to hold on until nightfall, asked Colvile in vain to support
-him and at last was compelled to throw back his right. Methuen's orders
-were unfortunately known only to Hughes-Hallett and the movement was
-interpreted as an order from the brigadier for a general retirement. The
-wave of retreat beginning on the right passed rapidly down the line, and
-soon all but a few score of men who held on gallantly as long as there
-was light were streaming back in confusion to the field batteries in
-rear. Even the shelter of the guns did not wholly avail them for
-protection, for they were shelled while rallying by the Boer guns which
-had been strangely silent during the battle; and the retreat was
-continued to the bivouac ground which so many more of them, now lying on
-the veld, had quitted seventeen hours before. The battle was lost.
-
-It is probable that if the work had been more evenly distributed the
-result might have been, at least, less disastrous. An intolerable strain
-was put upon one Brigade which it was unable to bear. The Highlanders
-were blundered into action, then abandoned to their fate for many hours,
-and finally withdrawn by a misunderstanding. The inequality of the tasks
-set to the various columns is strikingly shown in the return of
-casualties. To the total of 948 killed and wounded the Highland Brigade
-contributed no less than 752. Two of its battalions lost 37 per cent of
-their strength; while the losses of the Division were but 7 per cent.
-
-Methuen's expectations that as at Modder River after the fight of
-November 28 so also at Magersfontein the Boers would evacuate their
-positions during the night were not realized. Next day he retired to the
-Modder River Camp, where he received orders from Buller either to attack
-Cronje again or to fall back upon the Orange River; but at the instance
-of Forestier-Walker, who was in command of the Lines of Communication,
-the orders were cancelled and Methuen was allowed to remain.
-
-Magersfontein of itself would probably have sufficed to disarrange the
-plans of Duller in Natal, but coming a few hours after a serious rebuff
-in the centre, of which the story must now be told, it loomed fearfully
-on his near horizon. Soon after he landed at Capetown he ordered the
-weak and vulnerable detachments at Naauwpoort and Stormberg to be
-withdrawn to De Aar and Queenstown. The movement opened to the enemy the
-gates of access to a district in the Cape Colony teeming with Dutch
-disaffection. The Free Staters, however, did not avail themselves of the
-opportunity with alacrity, as they were more or less committed to
-defensive action within their own territory; and a fortnight elapsed
-before Colesberg was occupied by a force under the command of a
-Transvaaler named Schoeman, who on November 1 had crossed the Orange
-River at Norval's Pont. A few days later the Colesberg district was
-formally annexed by proclamation to the Orange Free State and the
-transfer of allegiance was enthusiastically approved by a public meeting
-held at Colesberg on November 14. This action not only brought the
-inhabitants under the commando law of the adjacent Republic by which a
-form of conscription was enforced, but also overcame the scruples of the
-Free Staters who could still maintain that they were only engaged in
-defending their own territory. Simultaneously Du Plooy with a commando
-which had crossed at Bethulie annexed the Burghersdorp district; while
-Olivier with a force mainly composed of colonial rebels took over on
-behalf of the Free State all that remained of the border districts of
-Cape Colony as far as Basutoland. By the end of November the easy
-process of annexation by proclamation had augmented the territory of the
-Orange Free State by about 7,000 square miles; and then almost as an
-afterthought the burghers occupied the important strategic post of
-Stormberg Junction.
-
-To meet and if possible to thrust back these intrusions French was sent
-to the Naauwpoort and Gatacre to the Stormberg district. Buller soon
-found it necessary to order Naauwpoort to be re-occupied, as that town
-would have afforded a useful base to the enemy from which the main line
-of railway could be raided in the neighbourhood of De Aar. French
-arrived at Naauwpoort on November 20 and was for some weeks engaged in
-protecting the lines and in checking rebellion.
-
-[Illustration: Stormberg.]
-
-The little force of half a battalion of infantry which evacuated
-Stormberg withdrew to Queenstown, where Gatacre arrived on November 18.
-He intended to march on Stormberg as soon as he had collected a
-sufficient force; his own Division, which he had brought out from
-England, having been diverted to Natal. He soon advanced to Putterskraal
-near Sterkstroom and about thirty miles from Stormberg, the occupation
-of which by the enemy on November 25 prevented co-operation between him
-and French at Naauwpoort.
-
-Meanwhile rebellion was spreading, and owing to the dilatory
-proclamation of Martial Law by the Cape Government, always reluctant to
-take action which might wound the susceptibilities of the Dutch
-population, it had assumed a formidable aspect. Buller was uneasy, and
-although at first he had cautioned Gatacre to be careful he now
-suggested his closing with the enemy.
-
-On December 7, by which time considerable reinforcements had come in,
-Gatacre felt himself strong enough to tackle Olivier at Stormberg. His
-plan was to take his column by train as far as Molteno, whence a night
-march of about eight miles would bring it into position for attacking
-the Boer laager. The use of the railway would not only enable him to
-strike more suddenly and with a greater chance of taking Olivier by
-surprise but would also economise the strength of his force, a portion
-of which having left the transports only a few days previously was not
-yet in hard condition. The force with which he proposed to take
-Stormberg amounted to 2,600 men, who detrained at Molteno soon after
-sunset on December 9. Gatacre calculated that after a march of about six
-hours he would be able to rush the position before dawn.
-
-The Boers, to the number of 1,700 men, were in occupation of the
-Kissieberg ridge, and of a nek which runs westward from its southern end
-towards a higher hill overhanging Stormberg Junction called Rooi Kop.
-Gatacre had originally intended to attack the Boer position frontally,
-but the reports which he received on arrival at Molteno determined him
-to turn it. The change of plan was not made known to all the troops,
-with the result that the ambulance and ammunition wagons left the town
-by the Stormberg road instead of by the Steynsburg road, along which the
-rest of the column was marching to the new objective. No trustworthy
-maps were available, and the enterprise was dependent for its success
-upon the knowledge and fidelity of a sergeant of police and a few native
-constables who acted as guides and who professed to know "every inch of
-the way."
-
-Soon after midnight, however, Gatacre's suspicions were aroused by the
-sudden appearance of a railway which ought not to have been there, and
-it was discovered that the guides had a mile or two back missed a path
-on which the column should have diverged to the right. They assured him,
-however, that they had chosen a better road and that he was now less
-than 3,000 yards from the Boer position. He therefore halted the column
-for an hour's rest, and hoped for the best.
-
-When the march was resumed another railway was almost immediately
-encountered. It was in fact the colliery line which had been crossed
-before the halt and which here curves almost to the extent of a
-semicircle; but Gatacre believed that he had come upon the main line to
-Steynsburg and judged that he was now N.W. of the Boer position; while
-many of the officers in the rear of the column, unaware of the change of
-plan, imagined that they were approaching it from the S.E. along the
-Stormberg road originally selected for the advance on which the
-ambulance and ammunition wagons had already gone astray.
-
-The direction of the march was now almost reversed, owing to Gatacre's
-misapprehension of his position; and at dawn the column unknown to
-itself reached certain cross roads on Van Zyl's farm which had been
-fixed upon as the point from which the attack should be delivered; but
-the locality was not recognized by the staff, and the guides, who seem
-to have misunderstood the object of the march, conducted the column
-still deeper into the valley beneath the Kissieberg ridge.
-
-Suddenly a shot from the heights startled the errant and plodding
-column. The Boers had indeed been taken by surprise, but were at once on
-the alert and the crest line was soon occupied. The column marching in
-fours halted and turned to the right and, except the leading companies
-of Irish Rifles, which were formed to the front in order to seize a
-detached hill at the end of the ridge, sprang up the slope, but were
-soon baffled by the irregular tiers of krantzes or rock walls on the
-hill side. The artillery diverged to the left, losing one gun in the
-donga which ran down the valley, and took post on the detached hill from
-which the Kissieberg ridge could be shelled. The companies of Irish
-Rifles, after seizing this hill, passed along the nek which joined it to
-the ridge and almost won the crest line.
-
-Meanwhile the Northumberland Fusiliers and the remaining companies of
-the Irish Rifles found the task of mounting the encumbered slope beyond
-their powers, and were soon ordered to fall back into the valley. The
-artillery noticed the movement, and in order to cover the retreat opened
-upon Kissieberg; not perceiving in the eastern dazzle of the sun about
-to rise above the sky line that some of the infantry who had not heard
-the order to retire were still clinging to the darkened westward
-hillside, and these were shelled by their own guns.
-
-Gatacre, confident of an easy success, had thrown all his infantry into
-the firing line, and had no reserves to fall back upon to support the
-companies of the Irish Rifles which were still holding their own on the
-left flank of the attack. As soon as the troops had crossed the valley
-to reform on the opposite ridge a new entanglement beset them.
-
-A commando under E.R. Grobler and Steenkamp, chiefly composed of rebels,
-which had been sent by Olivier on the previous day to stir up trouble in
-the district, was halted for the night a few miles out on the Steynsburg
-road. The sound of the firing quickly called it to attention, and a
-position which seriously threatened Gatacre's line of retreat was
-quickly seized. The commando, however, was handled with little judgment
-or energy, and was soon checked by the field guns which had been
-withdrawn from the detached hill near the Kissieberg ridge to cover the
-retreat of the infantry; and which at one time were firing trail to
-trail, some still engaging Olivier on Kissieberg while others were
-shelling Grobler.
-
-The raid on Stormberg had manifestly failed and Gatacre ordered a
-retreat to Molteno. Thither the weary, dispirited column trudged all
-through the forenoon of December 10. A gun was abandoned on the way, and
-even the wagon in which the breech block had been secreted fell also
-into the enemy's hands. But this was a comparatively insignificant loss.
-It was soon discovered that nearly a third of the infantry was absent.
-When the troops were withdrawn from the attack on Kissieberg not a few
-of them remained in the donga or under the krantzes on the hill side,
-while others appear to have held on to the ridge. By some extraordinary
-neglect or default nearly 600 men were left to their fate. No one seems
-to have missed them at the time and they were made prisoners of war
-without an effort to extricate them.
-
-In less than two hours all the fighting except the little affair with
-Grobler was over. On neither side were the casualties of killed and
-wounded heavy. No British officer was killed and of the eight who were
-wounded four had been struck by shells not fired by the enemy.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Stonmberg on December 10, followed by Magersfontein on December 13,
-brought about Colenso on December 15. The latter was Buller's attempt to
-retrieve the former mishaps.
-
-A naturally strong position on the left bank of the Tugela had by the
-efforts of the Boers during the previous three weeks been almost
-perfectly secured. They showed, however, some hesitation with regard to
-Hlangwhane, a detached hill on the right bank from which the Tugela line
-could be enfiladed. It was a somewhat precarious position as it was
-accessible from the left bank only by two bridle drifts. It had been
-originally held by the Boers, but the garrison was withdrawn when
-Barton's Brigade appeared at Chieveley; and now all Botha's persistence,
-and even a reference to Kruger and Joubert at Pretoria, were required to
-induce the burghers to re-occupy it on December 15. From the south
-Hlangwhane, though separated from the Colenso kopjes by the river,
-appears to be an integral continuation of them.
-
-[Illustration: Colenso Battlefield.]
-
-The enemy's general idea was a defensive occupation of the Colenso
-position, although Botha, with characteristic spirit, proposed to send a
-commando across the river to face the British on the open. The
-initiative, always a disadvantage when attacking an enemy strongly
-posted and entrenched, was thus imposed upon Buller. It was not doubted
-that he would be compelled to make a frontal attack on Colenso and in
-this the Boers showed the more correct appreciation of the situation.
-Botha hoped to lure Buller on and was prepared even to allow him to
-cross the river; and having crushed him to act upon the British flanks,
-an operation which the wide extension of Botha's front from Hlangwhane
-to Robinson's farm, a distance of seven miles, gave him a good chance of
-being able to carry out. If necessary, reinforcements could be drawn
-from the investing circle around Ladysmith, which seemed to be detaining
-more burghers than were necessary for the maintenance of the siege.
-
-Buller proclaimed his intention of attacking Botha by a preliminary
-bombardment of the Colenso kopjes on December 13 and 14; but the
-burghers lay low and gave so little indication of their presence that it
-almost seemed that they had abandoned the line of the Tugela. The
-British Army was encamped near Chieveley four miles south of Colenso.
-
-On the evening of December 14 the scheme of attack was delivered to the
-Brigadiers. The leading idea of it was a frontal attack to be delivered
-from the village of Colenso, where the Tugela is crossed by an iron
-railway bridge as well as by an iron wagon bridge. The latter had been
-left intact by the enemy, possibly in order to entice the British troops
-across the river. Buller appears to have been unaware how far the Boer
-trenches extended towards the west, and to have assumed that only the
-kopjes immediately opposite Colenso were occupied. Hildyard's Brigade
-was ordered to march in the direction of the "iron bridge,"[21] to cross
-at that point, and then to "seize the kopjes north of the iron bridge."
-The attack on the enemy's right, which was believed to be weak, was
-assigned to Hart's Irish Brigade. He was instructed to cross the Tugela
-at a bridle drift about two miles west of Colenso and work down the left
-bank towards the occupied kopjes. Two infantry Brigades were retained as
-reserves to be used when required; and the mounted Brigade was ordered
-to move towards Hlangwhane and occupy it, if possible, and cover the
-right flank; but the weakness of the Boer position on that hill, which
-was cut off by the river from the main line of defence, does not seem to
-have been realized. A few batteries were sent with Hart, but the bulk of
-the artillery was ordered east of the railway to support Hildyard.
-
-Buller's scheme has been severely criticized ever since its failure, but
-Clery who was in nominal command of the Natal force, and in whose name
-the battle orders were issued, as well as the other general officers,
-acquiesced in it. But in fact hardly any scheme could have been devised
-more likely to play into Botha's hands. Buller hoped to get a footing on
-the left bank and Botha hoped that he would succeed in doing so. Botha's
-special idea was to allure the troops of the frontal attack to his own
-side, where he could easily pound them from his kopjes and carry out his
-general idea of netting the British flanks.
-
-Buller had not then been in action with the Boers and he probably
-underrated their tactical capacity; but already he seems to have
-contemplated the possibility of the loss of Ladysmith, for in his
-despatch of December 13 to Lord Lansdowne, in which he justified his
-sudden change of the plan of campaign, he said that "it would be better
-to lose Ladysmith than to leave Natal open to the enemy."
-
-Nor did the Boers enter into the contest with much confidence. They had
-not yet tried Buller's mettle and his name was to them a tradition of
-courage handed down from the Zulu war, in which some of the older
-burghers now opposing him on the Tugela had served under him. The
-curious omission to inform White in Ladysmith that an attack on Colenso
-was to be made on December 15 may have arisen from Buller's doubts as to
-its issue, or from reluctance to heliograph a message in a cipher of
-which the enemy might have the key.
-
-The story of the Battle of Colenso is mainly the narrative of the action
-of two important components of the Army of Natal. Each of these was led
-by a dangerously brave man, whose impetuosity crippled the tactical
-scheme and whose method of working his command was, at least, unusual.
-If in Hart and Long, who commanded the Artillery, the quality of
-personal courage had been less prominent it is probable that Colenso
-would not have filled up the cup of Stormberg and Magersfontein in that
-dark midsummer December week.
-
-The naval guns on the west of the railway had the honour of opening the
-battle, and shelled Fort Wyllie for some time without eliciting any
-response. Long joined Hildyard with another naval battery and two field
-batteries. He was not only an impetuous man but he also belonged to the
-short range school of artillerists;[22] and he soon outpaced his
-infantry escort and came into action with his field batteries in the
-open a little in advance of a shallow intersecting donga, and within
-1,100 yards of the Boer entrenchments across the river. The naval
-battery had been compelled by the flight of the Kaffir ox drivers to
-outspan astride a deeper donga about a quarter of a mile in rear, to
-which Long had sent back his gun teams. A terrific rifle and shrapnel
-fire, which the infantry escort which soon came up was powerless to
-subdue, was now opened upon the guns, and for an hour the batteries were
-beaten on until the casualties left but four men to each gun, and
-ammunition was running short. Long, who was one of the first to be
-wounded, withdrew the dwindled gun detachments to the shallow donga and
-sent back for a fresh supply of ammunition, intending to resume fire as
-soon as the general attack developed.
-
-All the while the batteries had been unsupported except by the escorting
-companies, which were not under Long's orders, and no attempt was made
-by Hildyard's or Barton's brigade in rear to relieve or divert the
-pressure on the guns, which had succeeded in silencing temporarily some
-of the Boer artillery and in checking the rifle fire.
-
-Earlier in the action Buller had been informed that the guns were "all
-right and comfortable," but later reports gave him the impression that
-this cheery optimism was delusive, and that owing to loss of men and
-exhaustion of ammunition the artillery told off to support Hildyard was
-now permanently out of action. The rest of the artillery was engaged in
-assisting Hart, who was in trouble, and Buller came to the conclusion
-that the attack on the Colenso kopjes must be withdrawn.
-
-Hart's Brigade was ordered to march "towards the Bridle Drift at the
-junction of the Doornkop Spruit and the Tugela, and to cross at that
-point." Here was yet another ambiguity. As there were two "Iron Bridges"
-so also were there two "Bridle Drifts," one on each side of the isthmus
-of the river loop, and yet another at the head of it. The West Drift was
-unfordable on the morning of December 15, and a hasty sketch which had
-probably been filled in from hearsay evidence and which was Hart's only
-map, showed the Doornkop Spruit as entering the Tugela below that Drift
-instead of just above the East Drift.[23] The sketch also duplicated the
-loop.
-
-In dense formation, although the enemy was reported to be in force on
-his front, Hart crossed the Doornkop Spruit without recognizing it and
-advanced to the West Drift guided by a Kaffir who lived close by. The
-native seems either to have had misgivings as to the fordability of the
-Drift or to have been carelessly instructed, for as the column
-approached the river he pointed to a Drift which was not the East Drift,
-but the Drift at the head of the loop near his own kraal; and Hart was
-induced to change direction and lead the Brigade into the loop.
-
-At 6 a.m. against the orders of Botha, who wished to lure on his foe,
-the Boer guns commanding Hart's loop suddenly opened on the dense
-battalions, and the trenches on the left bank took up the firing. The
-Kaffir guide disappeared in terror. But Hart still believed that there
-was a drift to be found somewhere or other and pushed his Brigade, like
-a shoal of herrings driven into a purse net, up the loop; and some
-companies even reached the kraal near the head of it. Without
-artillery--for Hart had not brought up the field batteries assigned to
-him--and exposed to a concentrated fire from front, left, and right, the
-unhappy Irish Brigade, which suffered 400 casualties in less than three
-quarters of an hour, was helpless. Hart began to deploy, but Buller who
-from Naval Gun Hill was watching, possibly with astonishment, the
-entanglement in the loop ordered him to withdraw, at the same time
-sending two battalions to dig him out of his hole. It was not an easy
-task and it was made more difficult by the gallant reluctance of the
-Irishmen to retreat before the enemy. Thus Hart and Long, the former
-with his Hibernian zeal to move in the line of the greatest resistance,
-the latter with his rash generalization that entrenched Boers could be
-coerced as if they were Omdurman dervishes in the open, brought about
-the reverse at Colenso.
-
-By this time it was evident to Buller that his scheme must fail. He had
-already arranged the extrication of Hart and now the extrication of Long
-called for immediate action. He therefore rode across to the deep donga
-east of the railway; on his way informing Hildyard, whose brigade was
-awaiting an opportunity to carry out its orders, that the attack was
-abandoned and that the brigade must cover the withdrawal of the field
-batteries. He ordered the naval battery to retire, and sent back the
-ammunition wagons, which after long delay were on their way to the field
-guns: and acknowledged that he was baffled.
-
-Hildyard occupied Colenso but was unable to prevent the Boers re-opening
-fire from Fort Wyllie on the desolate batteries lying on the veld. No
-troops could move across the open; and only individual efforts could now
-save the guns. Not a few officers and men offered for the forlorn hope,
-and at the first attempt two guns were rescued. A later attempt was not
-successful, and at 11 a.m. Buller ordered a general retirement and the
-abandonment of the guns. The main naval battery remained in position
-west of the railway for some hours, and in its presence the Boers were
-afraid to cross the river and take possession of the derelict but not
-disabled guns; which were not captured until all the British troops had
-left the field except a few gunners and infantry details who had taken
-refuge in the deep donga and whom the order to retreat had not reached;
-and these were made prisoners of war.
-
-The mounted Brigade under Lord Dundonald acting on the right flank with
-orders to take Hlangwhane, if possible, was too weak to support the main
-attack effectively. Assistance was refused at first by Barton and
-afterwards by Buller, who thought that Hlangwhane would be of little use
-to him without the possession of the Colenso kopjes; yet these could
-have been enfiladed from it. As the Brigade retired it passed within
-striking distance of the field guns and their captors; but nothing could
-be done as ambulances and groups of prisoners were bemingled in the
-throng. Dundonald seems to have been alone in his recognition of the
-value of the Hlangwhane position.
-
-A retirement to Chieveley and Frere completed the triad of December
-disasters. Buller, of whom so much was expected, had failed in his first
-attempt to measure swords with the burghers. His 19,000 men and
-forty-two guns fighting for six hours inflicted on the enemy a loss of
-less than two score. His casualties exceeded 1,100, he lost ten guns,
-and he then returned to the place from which he came. He thought that he
-had fought a battle, but in reality he had only made a reconnaissance in
-force, a dangerous operation only justifiable by urgent necessity.[24]
-
-Possibly if Buller, who was practically without a staff, had allowed a
-freer hand to Clery, that authority on Minor Tactics might have done
-better. It has been said that the defeat was due to insufficient
-reconnaissance; and this is to a certain extent true, for a more
-accurate knowledge of the terrain and the dispositions of the enemy
-would have clearly demonstrated the hopelessness of a frontal attack on
-the Colenso Kopjes, and the attempt would never have been made. Again,
-as at Magersfontein four days before, a considerable portion of the
-troops was not seriously engaged; and the total casualties in eight
-battalions were but 120.
-
-The loss of the guns is the chief fact in the story of Colenso. What
-were Buller's intentions with regard to the Naval battery and the two
-Field batteries which he sent to "a point from which they could prepare
-the crossing for Hildyard's Brigade," and how did Long understand and
-carry out his orders.
-
-The battle orders had been orally anticipated by Buller, who before they
-were issued, explained his intentions personally to Long: and, as often
-happens in conferences, the impression retained by one conferent
-differed from that intended to be conveyed by the other. Long believed
-that he was instructed to shell the Kopjes and entrenched positions
-behind Fort Wyllie, which he did not at first know was held by the
-enemy, and he opened at a range of a mile; and Buller's statement that
-he was ordered to open fire with the long-range naval guns only, the
-position not being within reach of the field batteries, is contradicted;
-while Buller complained that Long had taken up a position within 1,200
-yards of a fortified hill and less than a quarter of a mile from cover
-occupied by the enemy. There is, indeed, a small area of low trees and
-scrub near the right bank of the Tugela a few hundred yards on the right
-front of the line of guns, but there is no evidence that the Boers had
-ever crossed the river to hold it.
-
-When the field guns, after firing nearly 100 rounds each, became silent,
-Buller, who was already perturbed by Hart's discomfiture, jumped to the
-conclusion that they were exterminated, and that it would be useless to
-proceed with the attack without them; but the gunners were only waiting
-for more ammunition. Not until the following day did he know that men
-enough to fight the guns were still untouched. If the whole of his force
-had been seriously engaged he would perhaps have been justified in his
-decision not to hold on to Colenso with exhausted and parched troops in
-the burning heat of the South African midsummer in the hope of rescuing
-the guns at night; but several battalions had been doing little more
-than watching the fight during the morning, and he might have left them
-on the field; and it is clear from a telegram sent by Botha early in the
-afternoon that if the Naval battery had remained with an effective
-infantry support no attempt would have been made by the Boers to cross
-the river, and that the guns would not have been lost.
-
-The repulse at Colenso staggered Buller's humanity. He was a brave man
-on the right of whose many war medals hung the Victoria Cross which he
-had won not far away from the field on which he was now fighting; but he
-was lacking in bull-dog tenacity, and in the ascetic temperament which
-is quickened rather than disheartened by failure. He returned to his
-tent, wrung his hands, and announced to those whom it might concern that
-all was lost. In the telegram in which he reported his defeat to Lord
-Lansdowne and of which the frankness, the candour, and the copious yet
-not egotistical use of the first personal pronoun were in curious
-contrast to the formal and sterilized paragraphs of an official account,
-he confessed that with the force at his disposal he had little hope of
-relieving Ladysmith and he proposed that he should let it go. He ordered
-the staff to select a defensive line eastward from Estcourt which his
-army might occupy until the end of the hot season.
-
-His message to White in Ladysmith was still more pessimistic, and with
-an intention that was chivalrous but was not war he "spatchcocked"[25]
-into it a suggestion that White should surrender, and even indicated how
-the gain to the enemy could be minimised. The magnanimity of Buller was
-manifest: he desired to give White the opportunity of surrendering
-without incurring the full responsibility for the act, but the lack of
-military instinct in Buller's mind was likewise manifest. To this
-message, which was suspected in Ladysmith to have originated in the Boer
-laagers, White replied that he had no intention of surrendering.
-
-Nor did Buller's pessimism turn the Home Government from its purpose. He
-was ordered to hold on, and on December 17 Lord Roberts accepted the
-chief command in South Africa. In announcing the appointment, the War
-Office explained that Buller was superseded because it was advisable to
-relieve him of responsibility for the operations outside Natal, which he
-could not effectively control from his detached position on the right
-flank. The Vth Division under Sir C. Warren which had been ordered at
-his request a month before, and which he found was available for service
-on the Natal side, was on the point of landing in South Africa; the VIth
-Division was embarking at home; the components of a VIIth Division were
-being assembled, and he became less despondent.
-
-The War Office thought that the Magersfontein mishap called for the
-supersession of Methuen, and when Warren reached Capetown with the Vth
-Division he found orders from home directing him to assume command of
-the force at Modder River. It would probably have been better for Buller
-if he had freely acquiesced in the idea of Pall Mall and had allowed
-Warren, but not necessarily the Vth Division, to operate in a country
-with which he had become acquainted twenty years before in the
-Bechuanaland Expedition, but he could not foresee Spion Kop; and Warren
-while moving towards the Orange was suddenly recalled to Capetown and
-ordered to reinforce the Army of Natal with the Vth Division; and
-Methuen was allowed to retain his command at Modder River.
-
-The transfer of the Vth Division to Natal was undoubtedly called for;
-but the position in the districts of Cape Colony bordering on the Free
-State was alarming. A belt extending from Barkly East near the Basuto
-border westwards and northwards as far as the Molopo River, and
-interrupted only near the Orange and Modder Rivers, had been annexed by
-the Boers and was more or less effectively occupied by them; and had
-they acted with enterprise and concurrence during the period of Lord
-Roberts' journey from England, the task before the new
-Commander-in-Chief would have been still more formidable. In rear of
-French and Gatacre was an indefinite area through which ran the British
-lines of communication, and which, if not indeed actually under arms,
-was ready to spring up whenever a favourable opportunity presented
-itself.
-
-Of the four Generals set to stem the tide of war until the arrival of
-Lord Roberts, French alone did not restrict himself to restraining its
-flow. A policy of "worry without risk" had been recommended to him by
-Buller, and he carried it out with good effect. He thrust Schoeman out
-of Arundel and Rensburg, and occupied a commanding position outside
-Colesberg, which he maintained until he was summoned on January 29 to
-confer with Lord Roberts at Capetown, where he was confidentially
-informed of the plan of campaign. Clements, who a few weeks before had
-reinforced him with a brigade of the recently landed VIth Division under
-Kelly-Kenny, took over the command of the troops before Colesberg. But
-the force which he had to his hand had been considerably reduced by the
-withdrawal of the cavalry and nearly half the infantry to serve
-elsewhere, while Schoeman and Delarey, who had come from Magersfontein,
-had been strongly reinforced.
-
-The Boers doubted not that the positions taken up by Gatacre and French
-indicated that the impending advance of the British Army into the Free
-State would be by way of Bethulie and Norval's Pont, and were
-accordingly disposing all their available men, one commando even being
-sent to Colesberg from Natal; but fortunately they were at first unaware
-that Clements had been almost simultaneously weakened. He soon found
-that he was not strong enough to hold on to the Colesberg positions and
-on February 14 retired to Arundel; losing on the way two companies of
-infantry which had been mislaid and forgotten and which after a gallant
-running fight of three miles were captured.
-
-But now ominous reports of Lord Roberts' movements in the West began to
-come in, and the Boers realized that they had misinterpreted the signs
-which had been so ostentatiously displayed. They hesitated and wavered,
-and on February 20 hurried away from Colesberg to succour Cronje and the
-threatened capital of the Free State.
-
-Notes:
-
-[Footnote 19: Buller aroused a "now-we-shan't-be-long" feeling. He would
-certainly be in Pretoria by Christmas. It is said that a large number of
-plum-puddings intended for the soldiers' dinners on December 25 were
-addressed to Pretoria "to await arrival," by their good friends at
-home.]
-
-[Footnote 20: The history of the war showed, however, that generally the
-Boers fought more strenuously and effectively when the tide was against
-them than when it was flowing with them.]
-
-[Footnote 21: The two chief authorities on the events of the day are not
-in agreement as to which of the iron bridges was meant; and in the
-absence of information of what was in the mind of the staff officer who
-drew up the battle orders the question cannot be answered. The context
-and certain expressions in other paragraphs seem to show that the
-railway bridge was indicated. It was, indeed, broken but there were
-drifts used by the natives above and below it. Probably the river had
-not been carefully reconnoitred and the two bridges were confused, or
-one only was believed to exist.]
-
-[Footnote 22: At the battle of Omdurman he had put short range
-principles successfully into practice against dervishes.]
-
-[Footnote 23: The mistake in Hart's map is shown by a broken line in the
-sketch map. It is, curiously enough, reproduced in the Colenso map not
-only of the _Times_ History, but also of the German Official Report on
-the War.]
-
-[Footnote 24: See _Combined Training_, 1905, p. 109.]
-
-[Footnote 25: _Sic_ in his speech of October 10, 1901, but he probably
-meant "sandwiched."]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-Kimberley and the Siege of Rhodes
-
-
-More than thirty years before the outbreak of the Second Boer War a
-Dutch child in the Hopetown District of Cape Colony found, while playing
-carelessly near the left bank of the Orange, a pretty pebble that was
-destined to mould the History of South Africa.
-
-He took the bagatelle home to his father's farm, where a neighbour, one
-Van Niekirk, saw it and was struck by its brilliancy. It chanced that
-the Irishman O'Reilly was passing that way and to him it was entrusted
-to take to Colesberg for expert opinion upon its value. Here certain
-Jews declared that it was but a white topaz not worth one shilling and
-it was disdainfully cast out into the road, from which it was with
-difficulty recovered by O'Reilly, whose belief in it though shaken was
-not wholly abandoned. Through a mutual friend, Lorenzo Boyes, Acting
-Civil Commissioner of the District, the pebble came to the notice of an
-expert mineralogist named Atherstone at Grahamstown, but it was held so
-lightly in esteem by the sender that it reached Atherstone as an
-enclosure in an ordinary unregistered letter. Atherstone examined it,
-and when it had not only spoilt all the jeweller's files in the town but
-had also passed an examination by polarized light, pronounced that it
-was a diamond worth £500. His certificate to its character, which had
-been so ignorantly disparaged, was the origin of the Diamond industry of
-South Africa. Another diamond was soon picked up near Hopetown which
-without difficulty or misadventure rose to its own plane in mineralogy.
-Its career was short and its destiny happy. It was purchased by the
-first Earl of Dudley for the adornment of his second wife.
-
-When it was noised abroad with the customary exaggeration that the
-monopoly of Golconda and the Brazils was at an end and that diamonds
-grew wild on the South African veld, a wide extent of country was
-explored and the precious crystallized carbon was found in districts
-separated by many hundreds of miles. In certain places, one of which
-became known as the town of Kimberley, it was ascertained to recur in a
-constant proportion of the contents of the "pipes" or volcanic tubes
-which rose through the surface strata.
-
-The pioneers of Kimberley took possession of the diamondiferous grounds
-without ascertaining to whom they belonged, and when their value became
-positive the question of ownership arose. The boundaries of the
-districts administered by the Cape Colony, the Orange Free State, and
-the Transvaal respectively were, as regards territory, supposed to be of
-little account, vague, ill-defined, and unsurveyed; and the districts
-themselves were occupied by native tribes of nomad habits. About the
-middle of the XIXth century a Hottentot chief named Waterboer came up
-out of the West and squatted in the districts lying between the Orange
-and the Vaal. His rights, such as they were, were assumed or acquired by
-the Cape Government, which soon became involved in controversy with the
-Orange Free State as to their extent and nature. Finally the British
-Empire secured a good title to the estate by the payment of £90,000. But
-the Orange Free State not unnaturally, when the value of the Diamond
-Fields increased day by day, soon began to think that it had parted with
-a profitable possession for an inadequate return. The feeling rankled;
-and the confident expectation of recovering Kimberley sold for a song
-tempted Bloemfontein into the fatal alliance with Pretoria.
-
-In 1871 a sickly youth named Cecil Rhodes came from England to South
-Africa in search of health, which after a short sojourn in Natal he
-found at Kimberley. The prospects of the place favourably impressed him,
-and he soon laid in it the foundations of his fortune; but six years
-later the future of Kimberley was still precarious and the discovery of
-gold in a remote district of the Transvaal sucked thither the greater
-proportion of the citizens, who, however, found that they had not
-bettered themselves by the change and returned to the pipes: and soon
-nearly a hundred companies, syndicates, and private adventurers were
-groping for diamonds over an area of less than two hundred acres. The
-waste of energy was manifest to Rhodes, who in 1888 completed, with the
-help of the Rothschilds, the task upon which he had been engaged for
-some years, the amalgamation of the conflicting and overlapping diamond
-interests under the name of the De Beers Consolidated Mines. It was soon
-found that the new industry was insufficiently protected by the existing
-criminal law and a new felony was created by the Illicit Diamond Buying
-Act.
-
-It has been for several centuries the practice of Great Britain to
-entrust to private companies the imperial responsibilities which she is
-reluctant to assume and to let out to contractors, who can be repudiated
-if they fail and expropriated if they succeed, the job of expanding an
-Empire. Of this policy the most prominent instance is the East India
-Company, a commercial venture which obtained from Queen Elizabeth a
-charter empowering it to trade with the East and which, though connected
-with Great Britain only by the slender thread of an ocean track of
-12,000 miles, maintained itself for two centuries and a half with ever
-increasing territory and authority until it became a great military
-Empire. Other examples of lower degree are the Hudson's Bay Company and
-the Borneo Company. The De Beers Company provided out of its abundance
-large sums for exploration and settlement in South Africa and for the
-furtherance of the Imperial idea, and it is said that Rhodes spent the
-whole of one night in arguing with some of the materialistic magnates of
-Kimberley, before he could induce them to consent to the employment of
-the resources of the Company in the advancement of his schemes of
-Empire. He found, however, that these could not be satisfactorily
-promoted by a Company whose primary interests were commercial rather
-than imperial; and in 1888 he obtained a charter for the British South
-Africa Company, an offshoot of the De Beers Company, formed for the
-purpose of extending the British Empire towards the Equator.
-
-The question of the defences of Kimberley engaged the attention of the
-De Beers Company some years before the outbreak of the war. Its
-vulnerability to attack from the Orange Free State, the border of which
-ran close to the town, was obvious; and in 1896 a depot of arms and
-ammunition was formed. A military plan of the place was sent to the
-Imperial authorities and a defence force was also organized. This,
-however, had in 1899 ceased to exist owing chiefly to the action of Mr.
-Schreiner, at that time the Premier of the Cape Colony, who in June
-refused, with complacent optimism, to furnish it with arms, saying that,
-"there is no reason for apprehending that Kimberley is in danger of
-attack," and that "the fears of the citizens are groundless and their
-anticipations without foundation." A battery of artillery was, however,
-surreptitiously brought up from King Williamstown.
-
-The policy of Schreiner during the months preceding the war is obscure.
-While refusing help to Kimberley he was allowing munitions of war, which
-were way billed as pianos and hardware, to pass through the Cape Colony
-to the Transvaal and the Orange Free State. He does not appear to have
-been actively disloyal to the Imperial Government and in his own way he
-probably did his best to keep the peace. His mind was cast in a mould
-which is not uncommon in the British Empire but which is rarely found
-outside it. He was more anxious to stand well with its enemies, and like
-the Unjust Steward to have a claim to a place in their houses, if they
-were successful, than to work for its security. It was with great
-difficulty that Sir A. Milner as late as September 18 obtained his
-consent to the dispatch of a few regulars to Kimberley to form the
-backbone of a defensive force. He seems to have retained almost to the
-end, in spite of all indications to the contrary, the belief that the
-war would be averted or at least that the Orange Free State would not
-join in it. Yet in this he erred in good company. Mr. Balfour said that
-if on September 28 he had been asked whether war with the Orange Free
-State was a probable contingency he would have replied that war with
-Switzerland was one equally probable; and Lord Lansdowne declined before
-September 23 to discuss with Lord Roberts the question of operations in
-the Free State. Buller, with surer insight, had foreseen the alliance as
-far back as 1881.
-
-The War Office, however, was to a certain extent on the alert and
-distrusted the optimism of Schreiner and of a high military official who
-had been for some years in South Africa. Officers were sent to Kimberley
-to organize a scheme of defence, but having regard to the susceptibility
-of the Capetown Government it was done secretly and confidentially and
-Schreiner was outwitted. By October 7 the town, which was under the
-command of Colonel Kekewich, was secure against a _coup de main_ though
-not against a vigorous and sustained siege. Little more than an eighth
-of the garrison was composed of regular troops; the artillery was out of
-date; rifles and ammunition were deficient. On October 13 Rhodes threw
-himself into Kimberley and became for better or worse a power in the
-town. As soon as the siege began the relative value of the chief
-products of the mines was inverted: water, the most generous gift of
-nature and hitherto an embarrassment in the workings, became for the
-time being more valuable than the diamonds.
-
-On October 12 the curtain of the great drama was raised and the first
-scene presented. It showed the capture of an armoured train on the
-railway between Kimberley and Mafeking. Kimberley under any
-circumstances was a prize worth winning. But Kimberley taken with Rhodes
-as a prisoner of war, the man who had curbed and checked on every side
-the expansion of the Republics, who had taken Matabeleland on the north
-and Bechuanaland on the west into the fold of the British Empire, would
-be more than a prize, would be a triumph. Rhodes metaphorically in
-chains, and actually paraded as a captive in the streets of Bloemfontein
-and Pretoria was an alluring prospect.
-
-Great, however, as were the advantages to be gained by the early capture
-of Kimberley, the object was not pursued with energy and determination.
-When the siege began on November 6 the situation was in favour of the
-attack. The Boers were in possession of the railway from Orange River
-Station to Mafeking: Kimberley was ill-supplied with the munitions and
-weapons of war and was defended by a force mainly composed of
-irregulars; it was encumbered with a large native population; and the
-civil and military authorities were not working in harmony.
-
-The defence throughout was more active than the attack. Reconnaissances
-and raids against the enemy's positions were made with effect; and the
-bombardment which followed a rejected summons to surrender did little
-harm. Communication with the outer world was not seriously impeded.
-Cattle grazed almost with impunity inside the line of investment and
-several thousands of the natives escaped.
-
-But the difficulties of Kekewich, who had been in command since
-September 20, were not confined to those created by the military
-situation. He was thrown into close association with the man who was one
-of the indirect causes of the war, and who had little confidence in
-military men, or sympathy with their ideas and methods. Rhodes had come
-into his own Kimberley and for the first time he was not master in it.
-He found himself a sterilized dictator acting in an atmosphere too
-tenuous to support his vitality but sufficient to preserve it from
-extinction. He was subject to the authority of the military commandant,
-a galling position for a distinguished statesman who had not a high
-opinion of the professional capacity of the British officer. From the
-age of eighteen he had been his own master except during the intervals
-which he had spared from South Africa and spent at Oxford, when he was
-temporarily subject to the lax discipline of a University. While his
-contemporaries were amusing themselves at college, or performing routine
-duties in the Army or the Civil Service, or preparing to enter a
-profession, Rhodes was spending the critical years of his life in
-outlining the future and scheming for a South African Empire to be
-erected on the foundation of the Kimberley Mines.
-
-It was inevitable from the nature of the case and from his intimate
-concern in the fortunes of Kimberley that he could not see South African
-affairs at large in their true perspective. The sparkle of his diamonds
-made him curiously colour-blind and out of this defect in his mental
-vision sprang the mischief. Kimberley, for the time being at least,
-stood so closely in the foreground that other objects were thrown out of
-focus. Nor did the disturbing influence of the glare and halation of
-Kimberley only affect the vision of the diamond men within the town. It
-closed the eyes of the besiegers without it to a great strategical
-opportunity which soon passed away.
-
-The figure of Rhodes in Kimberley was the magnet which attracted and
-detained commandos which could have been more usefully employed
-elsewhere, and his presence, so far as it had this effect, was of great
-service to the perilously weak British force during the first few weeks
-of the war. If the commandos squatting before Kimberley had instead been
-sent to raid southwards towards the Karroo, and to inflame the Dutch
-districts in the Cape Colony, they would have met with little
-resistance, and advancing with daily increasing numbers would have had
-little difficulty in planting themselves firmly in the heart of the
-enemy's country. For the moment the war in the west was waged not
-against Great Britain but against the Man of Kimberley.
-
-The diamond men, with Rhodes at their head, forgetting that the object
-of the war was the redress of the Outlanders' wrongs in the Transvaal,
-began to bellow for relief even before the Boers had completed the
-investment of the town. Telegrams couched in extravagant and almost
-hysterical language and betraying the egotism and the want of
-self-control of the senders were repeatedly despatched. One of these, in
-which on October 19 the De Beers directors asked for information as to
-the plans of the military authorities at Capetown, "so as to enable us
-to take our own steps in case relief is refused," was thought not
-unnaturally by Buller to hint at surrender; and although this was not
-the intention of the senders it is probable that they did not regret the
-interpretation that was put upon it.
-
-Fortunately, however, Kekewich was a cool-headed man who did not suffer
-himself to be hustled. While preserving amicable personal relations with
-Rhodes, he was careful to let Capetown know that the situation in
-Kimberley was by no means desperate and that it would be able to hold
-out for several weeks.
-
-The impetuous and childish letters and telegrams sent out by the diamond
-men induced Buller, who said afterwards that "although I had every
-confidence in Colonel Kekewich's military capacity I did not trust the
-other powers within the city," to send Lord Methuen northwards on
-November 10 with instructions to help Kimberley by removing unnecessary
-non-combatants and natives, and "to let the people understand that you
-have not come to undertake its defence, but to afford it better means of
-maintaining its defence."
-
-The news of Methuen's approach did not allay the excitement of the
-townsmen. His movement was not an essential part of the general plan of
-campaign but only a raid in force with the object of putting men and
-supplies into Kimberley and enable it to hold on until pressure
-elsewhere upon the Boers should raise the siege automatically.
-
-The dignity and the self-respect of the diamond men was affronted. Like
-the Syrian captain Naaman, when offered relief of his leprosy by the
-prophet Elisha, they resented the simple process by which their own
-relief was to be effected. They had looked to an Army Corps at least
-marching on Kimberley with all the pomp of war and speedily enabling it
-to resume its normal occupation of diamond grubbing; and now they found
-that the town was not considered of much account in the scheme of the
-military, who regarded it as a mere besieged place of little strategical
-importance; which, after some assistance, was to be left dependent for
-its safety upon its own exertions while the main army advanced through
-the Free State.
-
-On December 4 Kekewich was instructed to make arrangements for the
-deportation of a large proportion of the white and coloured population,
-Methuen hinting that Rhodes himself might be included. Although Rhodes
-had a few weeks before complained of the difficulties caused by the
-presence of non-combatants and had even endeavoured to send them away,
-he now vehemently opposed their removal. His reasons for so doing are
-not very clear, but they appear to be part of the systematic obstruction
-which he offered to every proposition of the military authorities which
-tended to restrict the output of diamonds. His objections were
-transmitted to Buller, who speedily put the question in its proper light
-by telegraphing to Kekewich that "what we have to do is to keep the
-Union Jack flying over South Africa without favour to any particular set
-of capitalists," and Methuen met his protest with the answer that
-"Rhodes has no voice in the matter." After the defeat at Magersfontein
-the plan of deportation had necessarily to be given up.
-
-In his own proper sphere of a civilian working with civilians Rhodes was
-usefully active and his services were great. He employed the persons
-thrown out of work by the closing of the mines in labour for the general
-benefit of the town, and did much to relieve the distress among the
-poorer inhabitants.
-
-The manufacture of a heavy gun, to which the name of Long Cecil was
-given, in the De Beers engineering establishment, was soon countered by
-the Boers, who brought into action a gun throwing a much heavier shell
-which had been disabled by the Naval Battery at Ladysmith, repaired at
-Pretoria, and was now mounted before Kimberley. The appearance of Long
-Tom, supervening on a reduction on the daily rations, caused a panic
-among the civilians. On February 9 Rhodes threatened to call a public
-meeting to consider the situation unless he was informed of the plans
-for the relief of the town: but Kekewich was authorized by Lord Roberts
-not only to forbid the holding of the meeting, but even if necessary to
-arrest Rhodes. A private meeting was then held at which a remonstrance
-was drawn up for transmission to Lord Roberts through Kekewich; and for
-the second time a communication from the Kimberley men was interpreted
-as a threat to surrender. It was probably sent with that intent in order
-to elicit information as to Lord Roberts' plans.
-
-Kekewich meanwhile was finding his position almost intolerable, and his
-representations convinced Lord Roberts of the necessity of raising the
-siege of Rhodes without delay and at any cost. It was effected on
-February 15 by French's brilliant cavalry movement; but at the cost of
-the convoy of 170 wagons which were snapped up by De Wet at Waterval
-Drift, and of an Army compelled to march and to fight for nearly four
-weeks on reduced rations. But the harvesting of the crop of diamonds was
-resumed, and as far as Kimberley was concerned the war was at an end.
-
-Although the siege lasted for more than three months the casualties were
-few, only 40 persons being killed and 123 wounded by acts of war. The
-privations suffered by the inhabitants, especially during the last few
-weeks, were no doubt great, but certainly not greater than the
-privations which unhappily are endured by the unemployed in Great
-Britain during a hard winter. The siege was conducted without much
-vigour and determination, and the most important operation on the side
-of the defence was a sortie on November 29 after the news had come in of
-Methuen's approach.
-
-The relief of Kimberley closed the public career of the most conspicuous
-figure in the British Empire; and with great dignity and self-restraint,
-which might well have been imitated by other persons whose conduct
-during the war was impugned, Rhodes refrained from publishing a
-Kimberley book.
-
-If the Siege of Kimberley brought out the weak side of his character,
-his egotism and impatience, his lack of power to adapt himself even
-temporarily to unaccustomed conditions, it will be remembered that these
-defects were inherent and that his marvellous success in life had
-accentuated them. The acts of a public man are so variously regarded by
-his opponents and his admirers, are seen by them in such different
-lights, that there can rarely be any general agreement on the question
-of the ratio between his merits and his failings; but the chief phases
-of his life afford the raw material out of which each man for himself
-can form an estimate of his character.
-
-Like many men who have afterwards become famous in the secular world,
-Cecil Rhodes was intended for the Church. His health suffered from the
-rigours of the East Anglian climate and he was sent out to South Africa.
-His brother's farm in Natal, to which he was consigned, he found
-derelict on his arrival, but he was soon growing cotton on it, against
-the advice of the local experts, but with eventual success. At the age
-of 18 he was prospecting for diamonds at Kimberley, and forming the
-opinion during a visit to the Transvaal that an insufficient proportion
-of the South African Continent belonged to the British Empire. In 1872,
-being then 19 years of age, he went to Oxford, but in a few months his
-health broke down and another voyage to the Cape became necessary. In
-1876 he returned to the University and remained there for two years when
-South Africa recalled him. As soon as he could be spared he went back to
-his college and, eight years after matriculation, completed his
-undergraduate course. It was a high compliment to the value of a Pass
-Degree at Oxford, where, however, he formed the opinion, which was not
-publicly divulged until his will was opened twenty-one years later, that
-Oxford Dons were "children in finance."
-
-His election to the Cape Parliament in 1881 as Member for Kimberley
-placed him in a favourable position to advance his schemes for the
-northward extension of the British Empire. When the trespasses and
-encroachments of the Transvaal Boers beyond the limits assigned to them
-under the Convention of 1884 made it advisable to incorporate
-Bechuanaland he was unable to persuade the Cape Government to undertake
-that responsibility, but with the assistance of Sir Hercules Robinson
-and the support of Mr. Chamberlain he induced the Imperial Government to
-take action. President Kruger had connived at the establishment on
-native territory under British protection of two little republics of
-raiders, to which the names of Goshen and Stellaland were assigned; and
-a costly expedition under Sir C. Warren was needed to bring him to his
-senses. In 1885 Bechuanaland became an integral part of the British
-Empire.
-
-In 1888 he again opened the flood gates of Imperialism, and secured by
-means of a treaty with Lobengula the reversion of the native territory
-north of the Transvaal, at which two European nations were nibbling, and
-which in his honour received the name of Rhodesia.
-
-He became Premier of the Cape Colony in 1890 by the help of the Dutch
-vote and from that time gradually sank from the zenith of his success.
-His good fortune left him when he attained his ambition. The Jameson
-Raid, for which he was not personally, though he confessed himself
-morally, responsible, ended his political career. His last good service
-to the Empire was given during the Matabele rising. He accompanied the
-troops sent to suppress the rebellion; and when the operations seemed
-likely to be indefinitely prolonged, he brought it to an end by going
-fearlessly and almost unattended among the natives, whose confidence he
-won by meeting them trustfully in council and listening to their
-grievances.
-
-His physical vitality, always inadequate, was seriously impaired by the
-strain of the siege. He never fully recovered his strength and he died
-on March 26, 1902, two months before the Second Boer war was brought to
-a close by the Vereeniging Treaty.
-
-He was a rich but honest man, and the great wealth which he amassed
-never led him to attach undue importance to the possession of it. He
-valued it not for his own advantage, but for its help in advancing his
-political and imperial schemes. He employed it creditably and without
-ostentation, and spent none of it in social display in London. By his
-will he left the greater portion of it to the University of Oxford for
-the establishment of an amiable if somewhat quixotic system of bringing
-the various branches of the Anglo-Saxon race into association at a
-centre of learning and athletics, where they were to be leavened by a
-Teutonic admixture.
-
-The vision of posthumous reputation allured him, and he delighted in the
-hope that the name of his own Rhodesia, like the cities which still bear
-the name of Alexander, would be on the lips of men of generations as far
-distant from his own as his own was from the days of the Great
-Macedonian.
-
-He presented a pair of sculptured lions to President Kruger. Almost on
-the eve of the war he asserted confidently that Kruger would not fight.
-It is probable that this was not his belief, but that it was said in
-order to provoke the President into rejecting the overtures of the
-British Government, and to make inevitable the war which he foresaw was
-the only way of settling the South African question.
-
-Not a few incidents in his life are difficult to explain. The donation
-of £10,000 to the funds of the Parnellite Party by an ardent English
-Imperialist who had never expressed any particular enthusiasm for Home
-Rule may have been a _douceur_ to prevent the Irish members from
-attacking him in the British Parliament. He had not forgotten that
-Parnell inaugurated the policy of obstruction carried to the length of
-all-night sittings upon the occasion of the discussion of a Cape
-Colonial question in the House of Commons. Possibly Rhodes was a Home
-Ruler not in spite of his Imperialism but because of it. Home rule was
-necessary to it. The function of the Imperial Parliament was the general
-control of the affairs of the Empire, leaving local politics to be dealt
-with by local legislatures.
-
-The strong and dominant personality of Cecil Rhodes came to the front at
-a time when the British Empire was beginning to show signs of lassitude
-and appeared to be growing tired of itself. Patriotism was being slowly
-transmuted into a limp and sickly cosmopolitan altruism. He checked this
-decadence, at least for the time being, but passed away before he was
-able to subdue it.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-A Tragedy of Errors
-
-
-The lassitude induced by the battle of Colenso affected each combatant
-on the Tugela. The Boers put the finishing touches to their works on the
-left bank, and at their leisure continued the position across the river
-eastwards from Hlangwhane. They did not seem to have been withdrawn in
-force[26] to assist the besiegers of Ladysmith in the great assault on
-Wagon Hill and Caesar's Camp on January 6, for a demonstration ordered
-by Buller at White's request during the crisis showed that the Tugela
-front was as strongly held as ever.
-
-On January 8, Buller, whose Head Quarters were at Frere, was reinforced
-by the Vth Division under Warren, and he now resumed his original plan,
-out of which he had been scared by Magersfontein, of advancing on
-Ladysmith by way of Potgieter's Drift, rejecting an alternative plan
-proposed by Warren, which differed little from that by which the relief
-of Ladysmith was effected six weeks later, of a direct advance by way of
-Hlangwhane and Pieter's Hill. Between Buller's army and Ladysmith lay
-not only the tortuous and difficult Tugela, but also a barrier of
-heights and ridges through which there were but four or five possible
-ways of access, one of which had already been tried without success, to
-the beleaguered city lying on a plain considerably above the level of
-the open ground on the right bank of the Tugela.
-
-Buller, having selected the route which seemed at the time to be the
-line of least resistance, began on January 9 to transfer the bulk of his
-force from Frere to Springfield, a distance of sixteen miles, but owing
-to difficulties of transport and the necessity of accumulating a large
-stock of supplies at the new base, it was six days before the
-concentration was effected. One brigade was left at Chieveley to watch
-the Boer front at Colenso.
-
-In Orders issued at Frere on January 9, Buller announced that he
-"proposed to effect the passage of the Tugela in the neighbourhood of
-Potgieter's Drift, with a view to the relief of Ladysmith." His scheme
-was based upon imperfect information and misleading maps, and was in
-fact not so much a surprise flank attack, as all his movements had to be
-made in full view of the enemy, as an attack from a position higher up
-the river that must be frontal, because the enemy would have ample time
-to make it so: and herein lay its weakness. When, however, he personally
-surveyed the situation from Mount Alice, which overlooks Potgieter's
-Drift, the aspect of the curving amphitheatre showed the danger of
-attempting to force the river at that point. On the N.E. was Vaalkrantz
-and Doornkop, and the high ridge of Brakfontein, which the enemy had
-already begun to entrench, and over which passed the road by which he
-proposed to reach Ladysmith, everywhere commanded by the heights, filled
-the quadrant towards Spion Kop on the N.W.
-
-On January 13, Buller reported to the War Office that, having found the
-Potgieter's Drift scheme impracticable, he proposed as "the only
-possible chance for Ladysmith" to send Warren across at Trickhardt's
-Drift, five miles higher up the river. The new scheme was based upon a
-theory which had been evolved out of the experiences of autumn manoeuvre
-battles collated on the office desks of Pall Mall, that the easiest
-method of defeating the enemy with a small casualty list was to contain
-his front and attack one or both of his flanks; and General Officers had
-come to regard this as the regulation opening to which they were bound
-to conform.
-
-[Illustration: Spion Kop and Vaal Krantz positions. _Stanford's Geog'l:
-Estab't._]
-
-Buller divided his force into two unequal portions. Warren with the
-stronger portion was to attack the Boer right which Buller believed to
-be weak, while Lyttelton with the remainder demonstrated at Potgieter's
-Drift. To himself Buller reserved the part of the Chorus in a Greek
-play, taking a general interest in the action, yet not personally
-concerned in it; and in that capacity he issued a stirring appeal to the
-relieving force.
-
-On January 15 "secret instructions" were given to Warren. He was
-recommended, after crossing the Tugela at Trickhardt's Drift, to proceed
-west of Spion Kop, and to pivot his right and swing round on to the open
-plain in rear of the Boer position facing Potgieter's Drift.
-
-Warren, who was not of opinion that the Boer right was weak, marched out
-of Springfield on the evening of January 16. Lyttelton had already
-started, and during the night occupied a position on the north side of
-the river near Potgieter's Drift.
-
-The task before Warren was hard. In order to carry out Buller's plan he
-must cross an unbridged river and struggle through a country of which
-little was known. Next day two bridges were thrown over the Tugela above
-Trickhardt's Drift, which recent rains had made dangerous, and Hart's
-and Woodgate's Brigades were transferred to the left bank to cover the
-crossing: but it was not until sunset on January 18 that the entire
-force with its tedious transport was established on the north side of
-the river.
-
-The mounted troops under Dundonald were sent out at mid-day to
-reconnoitre towards the N.W. and in the course of the afternoon his
-advanced squadrons came upon a Boer commando which was easily dealt
-with, but before the issue was decided, he had reported that he was
-engaged near Acton Holmes, and asked for help. Warren assumed that the
-mounted troops, which he had sent out to reconnoitre, had wilfully and
-prematurely forced on an action, and were now in trouble; and it was not
-until the next morning, after an infantry brigade had been moved out to
-support them, that Warren heard from Dundonald, whose previous messages
-had not clearly described the situation, that he was able to take care
-of himself. Dundonald had at first expected that the main body would
-follow him, and his reports seem to show that he had hoped to induce
-Warren to move towards Acton Holmes. He was rebuked for assuming, not
-unnaturally, that the objective of the operations was Ladysmith, and
-instructed that the objective was a junction with the other portion of
-Buller's force. He was summoned to Warren's headquarters and ordered to
-abstain from further attempts to ride round the enemy's right. Thus, as
-before at Hlangwhane, a promising cavalry movement by Dundonald was
-thrown away.
-
-The deliberate march of the British Army from Frere and the delay at the
-Drifts gave the Boers ample time to prepare for the attack. On January
-19, on which day Warren moved to Venter's Spruit three miles from
-Trickhardt's Drift, they were in occupation of the whole line from
-Vaalkrantz to the Rangeworthy Heights. Fourie was in command of the
-left, Schalk Burger of the centre, which included the important features
-of Green Hill, Spion Kop, and the Twin Peaks; and L. Botha of the right,
-in which was Bastion Hill.
-
-There were two roads by which Warren could advance; one running by
-Fairview northwards from Trickhardt's Drift between Green Hill and Three
-Tree Hill, and the other eight miles longer by Acton Holmes. The length
-of the latter and a report from White that several commandos were on
-their way to Acton Holmes from Ladysmith, led Warren to adopt the former
-route.
-
-He informed Buller of his decision, adding that certain "special
-arrangements" which he had made would oblige him to remain near
-Trickhardt's Drift, and that he must therefore have further supplies.
-The "special arrangements" were in fact the steps which every general
-would take before attacking a strong position not immediately
-accessible; namely to acquire ground from which it could be threatened
-and shelled. Clery was ordered to direct the operation, which Warren
-believed would entail "comparatively little loss of life."
-
-Early on January 20 Clery with one brigade and artillery advanced up the
-re-entrant which springs from the river towards the east end of the
-Rangeworthy Heights, and posted his guns half way up the valley on Three
-Tree Hill. Hart, with a brigade of five battalions, was sent to occupy
-the irregular southern crest of the heights running from Three Tree Hill
-towards Bastion Hill. He drove the Boers out of their advanced trenches,
-but found that the northern and higher crest to which they had retired,
-could only be won by a frontal advance across open ground. He and his
-brave Irishmen were as ready as ever to push on in the line of the
-greatest resistance, but he was ordered by Clery to forbear. Meanwhile
-Dundonald, not deterred by the damping of his trek on the 18th, and
-while obeying an order from Warren to come to heel, seized Bastion Hill,
-thereby securing Hart's left flank on the crest. So far as they went,
-the operations of January 20 were successful. Warren's pivot movement
-was in train, the whole of his force was now threatening the Boer right
-which was widely extended but deficient in depth; and the day's
-casualties were few. Following the example of Buller, who delegated his
-authority to Warren, the latter entrusted the conduct of the day's
-operations to Clery, who in succession ordered the chief movement to be
-carried out by Hart. Next day the mounted troops on Bastion Hill were
-relieved by infantry.
-
-Buller was aware that the Ladysmith garrison, weakened by sickness and
-privation, could give him little or no help; but at least during the
-earlier phase of the Trickhardt's Drift operations he was confident. On
-January 17 he told White that "somehow he thought he was going to be
-successful this time," and that he hoped to be within touch of Ladysmith
-in six days. His Head Quarters were at Spearman's Camp, a few miles
-south of Mount Alice, whence he rode over daily to note and criticize
-the tactics.
-
-It now occurred to Warren that he might have been mistaken as to the
-significance of the position occupied by the enemy on the Rangeworthy
-Heights, and that it might be in reality a screen to hide a trek of the
-Free Staters back to their own country; and on this supposition, which
-was founded upon reports that the Siege of Ladysmith had been raised and
-that some wagons had been seen on trek westwards towards the Drakensberg
-passes, he applied for reinforcements to enable him to block the way.
-
-Buller sent him Talbot Coke's brigade with some howitzers; and came over
-to consult with him on January 22. The situation was not satisfactory.
-Time was being wasted, Warren's "special arrangements" had done little,
-and now he had a new idea. Buller still advocated an attack on the
-enemy's right, while Warren wished to persevere with his advance by the
-Fairview Road; but he pointed out that Spion Kop, which his reading of
-the "secret instructions" had led him to regard as out of bounds, must
-first be taken. No definite action seems to have been decided on, and
-Warren was left to act within certain limits on his own responsibility.
-Finally, with the approval of the four infantry generals, he resolved to
-seize Spion Kop that night. The attack, however, was postponed until the
-following night, to give time for the position to be reconnoitred.
-
-Spion Kop is a ridge of which the chief features are a pair of high
-peaks joined by a nek to a plateau, from which a spur, ending in a kopje
-called Conical Hill, juts out at right angles to the nek, which becomes
-a spur of the plateau at a Little Knoll east of the summit. Its tactical
-importance was derived from its height, as the summit, though not the
-peaks, is higher than any of the ground held by the enemy; and from its
-position, as it was on the obtuse angle formed by the meeting of Botha's
-line on the Boer right with Schalk Burger's on the centre, and enfiladed
-each of them. It was accessible from the British front by a slope which
-rises from the lower ground to another spur running S.W. from the
-plateau.
-
-On the morning of January 23, Buller saw Warren, and again pressed him
-to make an attack on the Boer right; but finding that the orders for the
-assault on Spion Kop had already been issued, he refrained from vetoing
-it. He threatened, however, that if immediate action in some direction
-were not taken, Warren's force would be withdrawn to the south of the
-Tugela.
-
-On the previous day Warren, betraying the Engineer officer unused to
-handling large bodies of men, and unfamiliar with the military unities,
-rearranged his command with a straight edge, and distributed it in one
-way for tactical, and in another for administrative purposes. All the
-troops lying west of an imaginary line became the left attack under
-Clery, while those east of it became the right attack. The latter, under
-Talbot Coke, were ordered to seize the Spion Kop position by night, and
-entrench it before daybreak, the actual assault being made by Woodgate
-with two battalions, some mounted infantry on foot, and a few Engineers.
-At sunset on January 23, the curtain fell upon the first act of the
-Tragedy of Spion Kop.
-
-On the night of the January 23 Spion Kop was held as an observation post
-by a party of seventy burghers. When Buller first appeared at
-Potgieter's Drift, it was on the right of the Boer line, but now it was
-only the right of the centre under Schalk Burger. Little was known of
-its features and tactical value, beyond the information obtainable by a
-telescopic reconnaissance. It was a prominent object in the Boer
-position, and it seemed to be within the grasp of a night adventure.
-Woodgate left his rendezvous at 9 p.m., but it is doubtful whether he
-would have reached the summit before daybreak but for Thorneycroft, who
-was in command of the mounted infantry which bore his name, and who had
-before nightfall picked out and noted the recognizable objects on the
-slope. A staff officer from Head Quarters, who accompanied the column to
-direct the march, had had no opportunity of making himself acquainted
-with the way of access to Spion Kop, and Thorneycroft was ordered to act
-as guide.
-
-[Illustration: Sketch Plan of Spion Kop.]
-
-The summit, but fortunately little more than the summit, was veiled in
-mist, and the crest was reached. Bayonets were fixed before the Boer
-picket was alarmed and opened fire, but the ammunition was spent without
-effect, as Thorneycroft's men had by order thrown themselves on the
-ground as soon as they were discovered. A charge into the mist drove
-back the picket and scared the main body off the summit. Thus before
-dawn on January 24, Warren was in possession of the hill which was
-believed to be the key of the Boer position, and the chief obstacle in
-the way of his advance seemed to be thrust aside: but the mist on Spion
-Kop was the forecast of the Fog of War which was soon to envelope him.
-
-Woodgate, having the men, the tools and the ground, at once began
-impulsively to dig, without endeavouring to inform himself of the
-features of the position he had so easily won. A sort of a trench had
-been scratched on the summit by the weary men, when the mist rolling
-away for a little while disclosed the startling topography of the
-position. The surface of the plateau sloped gently at first, and then
-abruptly fell away, and the trench was found to be of little use. The
-enemy could approach on dead ground to within two hundred yards of it.
-Woodgate, seeing that the real defensible line was not the highest part
-of the summit, but the edge lower down, where the steep descent began,
-sent working parties to the front, but they at once came under fire.
-Soon the mist again enveloped the hill, and having disposed his force,
-he reported to Warren that he had established himself on Spion Kop.
-
-The Boer outpost which had been driven from the summit belonged to
-Schalk Burger's command. With Botha's co-operation a storming force was
-soon brought together, and almost every point from which Spion Kop could
-be brought under fire was seized, even the Little Knoll near the summit,
-which enfiladed the main trench. Joubert telegraphed from Ladysmith that
-the position must be re-captured, and Kruger at Pretoria asked what was
-being done to win it back.
-
-Little did Woodgate's force realize what the morning mist was hiding.
-Soon after 8 a.m. the sun dissolved the veil, and the storm burst. From
-the right the men in the trench and lower crest were enfiladed by the
-Little Knoll and the Twin Peaks; on their front and left they were
-rained on by bullet and shrapnel from Conical Hill, Green Hill, and
-beyond; with such effect that the lower crest had to be temporarily
-abandoned. Woodgate was soon mortally wounded and the command devolved
-upon Crofton. Spion Kop was the first position of great tactical
-importance won by the British Army on the Tugela, and the Boers were
-determined to recover it.
-
-The naval guns posted on Mount Alice and at Potgieter's Drift opened
-fire not only on the Little Knoll near the Spion Kop plateau and on the
-Twin Peaks, but were also pitching their shells over the summit on to
-the Boer positions supposed to be in line with it, and a field battery
-on Three Tree Hill shelled the open ground on which the enemy was
-advancing.
-
-Heliograms and flag messages from Spion Kop, orally handed in and
-incorrectly transmitted by scared signallers, bewildered the recipients
-and increased the density of the Fog of War upon the Tugela. To
-Lyttelton was flashed an appeal for help without a signature. A message
-sent by Crofton soon after he assumed command, in which he reported
-Woodgate's death and said that reinforcements were urgently required,
-was transmuted into a despairing cry which made Warren think that he had
-lost his head, and which led to his supersession. Warren replied that
-there must be no surrender, and that Coke was on his way up with
-reinforcements.
-
-Warren and Lyttelton, as well as the Umpire in Chief, Buller, were too
-far away to be able to appreciate the situation on Spion Kop, or to know
-how much or how little of the ridge was in possession of the British
-troops. Lyttelton's naval guns, playing upon the Little Knoll, were
-twice silenced by a message from Warren, who was under the impression
-that the whole of the ridge from the Twin Peaks to the main position on
-Spion Kop was held. A demonstration made earlier in the day by Lyttelton
-towards Brakfontein was checked by Buller, who was unwilling to engage
-the enemy in that direction.
-
-The Boers, a small party of whom before Woodgate's death had climbed the
-dead ground, and had come within fifty yards of the main trench, again
-attained the outer crest, and a counter attack led by Thorneycroft in
-person partially failed, and although the verge was not wholly
-abandoned, only the main trench filled with dead, wounded, and unwounded
-men parched with thirst, remained for effective resistance. Woodgate had
-already paid the penalty for the hasty and fatal act of squatting down
-in an indefensible position, and lay among the other victims strewn upon
-the plateau; but the British soldier is not easily discouraged by the
-errors of his leaders. The cry "_nous sommes trahis_" is never heard
-from his lips, and when called upon on active service,
-
- To live laborious days and shun delights,
-
-he rarely fails to do his duty.
-
-At mid-day the situation on Spion Kop was hazardous but not hopeless.
-Reinforcements had arrived and were quickly absorbed in the works which
-they quickened with patches of new vigour, but the terrible hail of
-bullet and shrapnel was not abated. No definite orders had been given to
-Clery, who was on the southern crest of the Rangeworthy Heights, except
-that he was to "use his discretion about opening fire against the enemy
-to his front, with a view to creating a diversion," a discretion which
-he exercised by doing nothing.
-
-Shortly before noon a step was taken by Buller, who was four miles away
-on Mount Alice, which enlarged the area of the Fog of War and brought
-Spion Kop within its chilling grasp. Thorneycroft was ordered to take
-command on the summit with the local rank of Brigadier-General, although
-there were several officers present senior to him: but many hours
-elapsed before the appointment was made known to all of those whom it
-most concerned. Coke, who was now on the S.W. spur, was unaware of it,
-and without communicating with Thorneycroft, sent at 12.50 p.m. to
-Warren a message which was not delivered till 2.20 p.m., that as the
-summit was crowded and the defence was maintaining itself, he had
-stopped further reinforcements.
-
-Almost simultaneously with the despatch of this not unfavourable report,
-and long before it was received by Warren, two companies posted in a
-detached trench on the right threw up their hands, but not before they
-had lost all their officers. Out of the crest line sprang the Boers, who
-having made them prisoners, endeavoured to impose the surrender upon the
-men in the main trench.[27] Thorneycroft saw that if these wavered, as
-they seemed inclined to do, all was lost; and rallying the details
-within reach, he succeeded in thrusting back the intruders, who,
-however, had already sent their prisoners below the hill. His prompt
-action stayed the wave of doubt which threatened to flood the position,
-and compelled it to break before it could do much harm.
-
-At 3.50 p.m. Coke, who was still on the S.W. spur, and therefore not in
-direct touch with Thorneycroft, informed Warren that the enemy was being
-gradually cleared from the summit, and that he had been reinforced with
-the Scottish Rifles from Potgieter's Drift by Lyttelton, whom Warren,
-after receiving Crofton's mis-transmitted message, had ordered to
-co-operate. He had already forwarded a letter written at 2.30 p.m. by
-Thorneycroft, stating that the force on Spion Kop was being badly
-punished by artillery, was in want of water, and was insufficient to
-hold the position. To this letter he had added a note of his own which
-showed that he did not attach much importance to it, saying that he had
-ordered more troops on to the plateau, where "we appear to be holding
-our own." This letter, with Coke's covering note, did not reach Warren
-until after he had received Coke's message sent nearly an hour later,
-and he assumed that the latter indicated the existing hopeful situation
-with which he had to deal. Of the physical features of the Spion Kop
-position he knew little more than what his telescope told him, and he
-read optimistically the meagre, inconsistent, and misleading reports
-which reached him occasionally from the summit. He hoped during the
-night to place some naval guns on the plateau: he was informed that an
-accessible spring of water had been discovered: reinforcements were at
-hand: there was nothing more to be done.
-
-Lyttelton, when ordered to "assist from his side," acted with
-intelligence and discernment. Noticing that Spion Kop, whither he had
-already dispatched the Scottish Rifles, was full of men, he sent the
-King's Royal Rifles towards the flanking position on the Twin Peaks, and
-the battalion supported by the naval guns, and ignoring messages of
-recall prompted by Buller, who was watching the advance with anxiety,
-worked its way up and expelled a Transvaal contingent and a small body
-commanded by an Irish renegade, all of whom were hurled by the impact
-into a flight of eight miles. The position was at once entrenched and at
-5 p.m. the right flank of Spion Kop was secured, but only for a time.
-Again, as after Lord Dundonald's movement on Acton Holmes, a promising
-enterprise was thrown away. Buller had from the first disapproved of
-Lyttelton's action, which still more widely distributed his already
-scattered command. He was too far away to see its bearing upon the
-situation, and now ordered him to recall the King's Royal Rifles, who
-after sunset were withdrawn from the position, which they had so
-gallantly captured in spite of warnings signalled from Spion Kop that it
-was strongly held by the enemy.
-
-On Spion Kop the Fog of War hung more densely than ever. Coke, who was
-lame and unable to move freely about the position, believed that Hill,
-who had come up with a reinforcement soon after noon, and who was next
-in seniority to Crofton, was in command on the summit. He thought that
-Crofton had been wounded, and neither saw Thorneycroft nor knew until
-the following day that Warren had given him the local rank of
-Brigadier-General at Buller's suggestion. Thorneycroft was a junior
-major in the Army, having the local rank of Lieutenant-Colonel: and with
-two colonels senior to him present as well as a major-general, he was
-doubtful as to his status. No instructions reached him from Coke; he was
-unaware that the Twin Peaks had been taken by one of Lyttelton's
-battalions, and he was without means of signalling to Warren. He had no
-information of the measures which were being taken, such as the dispatch
-of guns, to make the retention of Spion Kop possible.
-
-The men on the summit were utterly exhausted by fatigue, hunger, thirst,
-want of sleep, and exposure to the summer sun beating down upon the
-rocky surface, and their ammunition was running short. At 5.50 p.m. Coke
-reported "that the situation is extremely critical" and that the men
-"would not stand another day's shelling," but it was two hours before
-the message reached Warren. He ordered Coke to come down to consult him.
-Coke endeavoured to obtain permission by flash signal to stay where he
-was, but no oil could be obtained for the lamp, so regarding the order
-as imperative, he quitted Spion Kop at 9.30 p.m., leaving, as he
-thought, Hill in command. For four hours he strayed in the Fog of War
-before he found Warren's Head Quarters, which had come under shell fire,
-and which, unknown to him, had been moved from their original position.
-
-Between 8 and 9, Warren received a letter written at 6.30 p.m. by
-Thorneycroft, who reported that the enemy's shell fire rendered the
-permanent occupation of Spion Kop impossible, and asked for
-instructions.
-
-Coke's departure left the position without a clearly recognized
-commander, although he had done little more than attend to and
-distribute the supports and reinforcements on the S.W. spur. After the
-dispatch of Thorneycroft's letter at 6.30 p.m., the situation grew more
-hopeless every minute. The enemy's artillery was out of reach, the
-nature of the ground and the want of tools made it impossible to cut
-properly designed trenches, rations and water were exhausted, and
-nothing was known of assistance to be brought up during the night except
-that a mountain battery, which would be of little use against the
-enemy's guns, was at the foot of the slope.
-
-For these reasons Thorneycroft justified in his official report his
-decision to retire from Spion Kop. With the acquiescence of all the
-senior officers, except Hill, who could not be found, he ordered a
-withdrawal at 10 p.m. The alternative seemed to be a Majuba surrender
-next morning. At 10.30 p.m. as the troops were beginning to move off the
-hill, he received a letter from Warren, asking for his views on the
-situation, and as to the measures to be adopted. It was now unnecessary
-to give these, and he sent a brief reply that he was obliged to abandon
-Spion Kop as the position was untenable.
-
-The retirement was not made without protests from Hill and from Coke's
-staff officer who was still on the plateau. The former, eleven hours
-after Thorneycroft's appointment as Brigadier-General, believed, as he
-had every right to do, that he was in command, and halted the men; the
-latter sent round a memorandum to the commanding officers, asserting
-that there was no authority for the withdrawal. But the force of
-Thorneycroft's local rank prevailed, and the retreat was not stayed.
-Near the foot of the slope he found the mountain battery, and met a
-fatigue party on its way to prepare emplacements for two naval guns
-which were coming up, and received a message from Warren urging him to
-hold on to the position. It was too late. Ordering back the party and
-the battery, he went on to report himself to Warren, and arrived at Head
-Quarters almost simultaneously with Coke.
-
-The Boers meanwhile were greatly discouraged by their expulsion from the
-Twin Peaks, and their failure to occupy the main position on Spion Kop.
-The guns which had tormented Thorneycroft for so many hours, and which
-were the chief cause of his retirement, were withdrawn, and Schalk
-Burger's commandos oozed away towards Ladysmith. But there was, however,
-a stalwart and not inconsiderable remnant of burghers who responded to
-Botha's expostulations, and stood fast as a forlorn hope determined to
-win back Spion Kop and the Twin Peaks. Their constancy was rewarded, and
-when at sunrise on January 25 they once more climbed the hill, they
-found to their astonishment and relief that it was still held--by more
-than 300 bodies of their fallen foes.
-
-Such in brief is the tale of Spion Kop so far as it can be disentangled
-from the accumulation of messages, orders, reports, dispatches, and
-personal accounts, which obscure the subject. Many of these are
-inconsistent, not a few contradictory, and sufficient evidence might be
-found to support plausibly half a dozen conflicting theories of the
-cause of the disaster, and as many variants of the narrative.
-
-At 2 a.m. Warren heard from Thorneycroft's lips--the latter's written
-message sent off at 10.30 p.m. on the previous evening not having
-reached him--of the evacuation of Spion Kop. At sunrise he was joined by
-Buller, who viewed the situation in a spirit of philosophic detachment.
-He had never cordially approved of the Spion Kop adventure, and was not
-surprised to hear that it had failed. Warren was inclined to persevere,
-but Buller decided to retire south of the Tugela and assumed the direct
-command of the Army, which on January 27 was once more drawn up on the
-right bank after an absence of ten days; with most of its superior
-officers discredited, with Ladysmith unrelieved, and the nation at home
-aghast at the disaster.
-
-The lonely figure of Thorneycroft, the only man of action on the summit
-energizing and quickening the defence, stands out prominently in the
-confusion, gloom, and half lights of Spion Kop. Buller's impulsive
-intervention made him responsible for the position, and he tried to do
-his best. If the final act was an error of judgment, there is little
-doubt that but for Thorneycroft, the Boers would have rushed the plateau
-on the afternoon of January 24. He received no effective support from
-Clery and little from Warren, and was out of touch with Coke and the
-Colonels. His uncertainty as to his authority caused him to refrain from
-exercising it fully until the last moment. For the pain which the
-decision to withdraw must have given him, he deserves much sympathy. But
-although it was approved of by Buller, who probably felt bound to
-support his nominee, it was at least premature. He might reasonably have
-expected that an effort would be made during the night to relieve him,
-and might have postponed it for a few hours. It is unjust to judge a man
-in the light of eventualities which he could not reasonably be expected
-to foresee, but subsequent accounts from the Boer side show that the
-attack would not have been renewed the next morning if the enemy had
-found the Twin Peaks, for the evacuation of which Buller and not
-Thorneycroft was responsible, and Spion Kop still occupied.
-
-Not only the inconvenience, but also the danger of suddenly conferred
-local rank were illustrated on January 24. Buller, hastily concluding
-from a garbled message that Crofton was incompetent, asked Warren to put
-Thorneycroft in charge. Thorneycroft heard of his appointment orally
-through an officer who had chanced to be at the signalling station, and
-the written message which never reached him was, it is said, picked up
-next day by a Boer! If the exigencies of war should ever require the
-sudden promotion of a junior officer to a position of great
-responsibility, it should not take effect until all concerned are
-notified. The defence of Spion Kop was, during the greater part of the
-day, conducted by a syndicate of officers acting severally.
-
-The curtain had fallen, the drama was over, and the critics took up
-their pens. With Thorneycroft's report on the retirement from Spion Kop
-began a controversy which lasted for more than two years. Warren
-enclosed it in his own report to Buller, with the suggestion that a
-Court of Enquiry should be held to investigate the circumstances of the
-unauthorized withdrawal, and in succession each grade of the military
-hierarchy passed censure on the grades below. In Buller's covering
-despatch of January 31 with which he forwarded to the War Office,
-through Lord Roberts, Warren's Spion Kop report, he commented very
-unfavourably on Warren's arrangements and disposition of troops; and
-said that Thorneycroft had "exercised a wise discretion, and that no
-investigation was necessary": while to Warren's general report on the
-whole operations of January 17-27, he attached a memorandum to the
-Secretary of State for War, "not necessarily for publication," in which
-he not only blamed himself for not having taken command on the 19th,
-when he saw "that things were not going well," but also said that he
-could "never employ Warren again in an independent command"; as his
-slowness had allowed the enemy to concentrate and to increase the force
-opposed to him more than twenty-fold.
-
-With this accumulation of censure Lord Roberts dealt in his despatch to
-Lord Lansdowne of February 13, written at a drift on the Riet River
-during the advance on Kimberley. The Commander-in-Chief confirmed all
-the censures passed by his subordinates and added some of his own.
-Buller was rebuked for not having intervened when he saw that a most
-important enterprise was not being "conducted in the manner which in his
-opinion would lead to the attainment of the object in view with the
-least possible loss of life on our side"; Warren was reproved because he
-did not visit Spion Kop during the crisis, and had instead ordered Coke
-to come to him; and while Thorneycroft's gallantry and exertions,
-without which the troops would probably have been driven off the hill
-during the day, were acknowledged, his action in ordering the retirement
-without endeavouring to communicate with Coke or Warren was pronounced
-to be a "wholly inexcusable assumption of responsibility and authority."
-
-Never before had such an inconvenient batch of despatches been laid upon
-the desks of Pall Mall. To publish them and to proclaim to the world
-that the Natal Generals, when they were beaten by the enemy, had began
-to fight among themselves, was impossible. If they were withheld from
-publication, many awkward questions would be asked. The War Office
-temporized, and endeavoured to steer a middle course. Would Buller
-kindly substitute a simple narrative for his despatch? This Buller
-refused to do, and in April, 1900, the War Office published the
-despatches, imperfectly sterilized. As they now appeared, they were
-neither a simple narrative, nor a full revelation. Lord Roberts'
-criticisms on Buller were cut out. The memorandum, "not necessarily for
-publication," in which Buller reflected severely on Warren's incapacity
-was withheld. Only the censure passed upon Thorneycroft was allowed to
-appear. The junior officer was made the scapegoat of his superiors'
-mistakes. Of all the officers concerned, he alone had failed. The War
-Office had taken a politic but not straightforward course. The blame
-must be laid upon some one, and if it were laid upon Thorneycroft alone
-it would affect public opinion less mischievously.
-
-It soon became suspected, however, that certain things were being kept
-back, and the controversy dragged on for two years; Buller to the end
-maintaining that as he was not present at, nor in command of, the Spion
-Kop operations, it was not incumbent on him to write a simple narrative
-of them; and that his duty was to write a critical account of the
-affair, such as would be sent in by an Umpire in Chief during peace
-manoeuvres.
-
-Not until April, 1902, did the Epilogue of the Tragedy of Errors appear.
-The despatches, with the memorandum "not necessarily for publication,"
-were published in full, as well as the "Secret Orders" given to Warren
-at Springfield, which were its Prologue.
-
-Notes:
-
-[Footnote 26: A detachment numbering about 600 only was sent.]
-
-[Footnote 27: In the Fog of War some of the British soldiers thought
-that the Boers were coming up to surrender themselves, and acted in this
-belief for a brief period.]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-More Tugela Troubles
-
-
-By a process of elimination Buller hoped in time to find the road to
-Ladysmith. He had tried in succession, but without success, Colenso,
-Potgieter's Drift, and Trickhardt's Drift. He now informed White that he
-intended to make another attempt, but Lord Roberts advised him to
-postpone it until his own advance should draw off the Free Staters and
-weaken the barrier on the line of the Tugela.
-
-The situation in the besieged town was growing worse every day, but a
-proposal made by White as well as by the War Office that the garrison
-should endeavour to break out, was not sanctioned by Lord Roberts. White
-also was opposed to Buller's making another attempt to cross the Tugela,
-as he considered that the force would be more usefully employed in
-preventing the enemy from concentrating on Ladysmith.
-
-[Sidenote: Map, p. 98.]
-
-Buller's new plan was an advance by way of Vaalkrantz. Here the river
-winds in two salient loops towards the north, with a re-entrant loop
-between them, and there is a slight break in the heights on the left
-bank. The Brakfontein ridge slopes down towards Vaalkrantz Hill, between
-which and Green Hill there is a dip through which a road passes on to
-the open ground towards Ladysmith, eleven miles distant.
-
-Buller proposed to occupy the ridge of Vaalkrantz with artillery, and
-after a feint attack on the Boer position on Brakfontein, to push
-through under cover of the guns. It was believed that the enemy's
-extreme left lay on Vaalkrantz, which was commanded by Mount Alice and
-Zwart Kop. Lord Roberts when informed of the project was not hopeful of
-its success, but did not veto it, although he thought that Buller would
-be better advised to abstain from offensive tactics.
-
-The feint attack on Brakfontein was to be made by seven Field Batteries
-and a Brigade of Infantry, and was to be continued long enough to
-convince the enemy that it was "meant". It was then to be withdrawn and
-the real attack set in motion. The advance of the feint would be covered
-by heavy guns posted on Mount Alice, and concealed batteries on Zwart
-Kop would open on Vaalkrantz in support of the real attack.
-
-The bulk of the infantry was posted in the east loop, so as to appear
-ready to cross the river and support the feint attack between the loops.
-As soon as the guns had driven the enemy into their trenches on
-Brakfontein, a pontoon bridge was to be thrown across the river south of
-Hunger's Drift, and the guns on Zwart Kop were to open on Vaalkrantz,
-and when this had been sufficiently bombarded, it would be carried by
-the infantry, and guns would be brought up to enfilade the Boer line;
-while the cavalry "when feasible" would push through under the ridge and
-threaten it from the rear.
-
-It was a pretty tactical scheme, with much of the War-Game about it, and
-it depended for its success upon the practicability of using Vaalkrantz
-as an artillery position, and upon the correctness of the assumption
-that the enemy was not in force eastward of it.
-
-Buller was not successful in placing his guns on Zwart Kop unnoticed by
-the enemy, who was warned in time. After Spion Kop, Botha went to
-Pretoria, and Schalk Burger took furlough. B. Viljoen was now in
-command. He saw the danger and applied to Joubert at Ladysmith for help,
-who thought he was over-anxious but sent him a heavy gun. Little however
-would have been done but for the intervention of the two civilian
-Presidents. Steyn appealed to Kruger who, having tried without success
-to induce Joubert to take command on the Upper Tugela, fell in with
-Steyn's suggestion that Martin Prinsloo, a Free Stater, should go there;
-and Botha was ordered back from Pretoria. Prinsloo took command of the
-Brakfontein position, Viljoen remaining on Vaalkrantz.
-
-At sunrise on February 5 began Buller's third attempt to relieve
-Ladysmith. Wynne, who had succeeded Woodgate in command of the 11th
-Brigade, advanced in two lines up the slope towards Brakfontein,
-supported by the fire of forty-four guns. Nearly six hours passed before
-any reply was vouchsafed by the enemy. At mid-day some guns on Wynne's
-left front opened on the batteries, but not a shot was fired by the
-Boers in the trenches.
-
-Already one field battery had been detached from the left of the line of
-guns, the first movement in the real attack, and had taken up a position
-to cover the pontoon troop which was throwing a bridge across the Tugela
-near Hunger's Drift. At noon the completion of the bridge was signalled
-to the feint attack. The batteries fronting the Brakfontein ridge were
-withdrawn, and Wynne's brigade which, having been marched up the slope,
-was now marched down again, came under a heavy but almost innocuous
-infantry fire, which at last broke out on Brakfontein.
-
-To the Boers it appeared that another attack, determined while it
-lasted, but devoid of backbone, had been kept at bay. The guns on Zwart
-Kop opened on Vaalkrantz as soon as the detached battery was seen to be
-in motion; and the other batteries came into action as they arrived from
-the Brakfontein demonstration. There was some annoyance from casual
-rifle fire and a Maxim posted on the heights S.E. of the loop, but it
-did not seriously interfere with the work of the bridge-builders.
-
-The rules of the game were strictly obeyed, and there was "a thorough
-preparation by artillery" before the infantry was allowed to advance.
-The movement was delayed until half a hundred guns were playing upon
-Vaalkrantz and the chance of a _celer et audax_ exploit was lost. At 2
-p.m. Lyttelton with two battalions of the 4th Brigade was permitted to
-cross the pontoon and with these he worked up under the protection of
-the left bank, and emerging upon Munger's Farm, rose thence to the
-southern edge of Vaalkrantz, and took hold of the ridge. Here he was
-joined by a battalion of Hildyard's Brigade, whose original orders to
-occupy Green Hill were cancelled, and later on by the remaining
-battalions of his own brigade; which Buller, wavering for a time, had
-held back, as the pontoon and the open ground were under fire from the
-right flank. At 4 p.m. Lyttelton was established on the main hill of
-Vaalkrantz, and during the night the position was entrenched. The
-occupation, however, brought two facts to light. Half a mile to the
-north of the main hill was another hill, only a few feet lower,
-unapproachable and in the enemy's possession; and it was not
-practicable, as Buller had hoped, to bring up artillery on to the
-position seized by Lyttelton.
-
-At daylight on February 6, the situation was favourable to the Boers.
-Botha had arrived and had taken over the command from Prinsloo. The
-heavy gun sent from Ladysmith had been mounted on Doom Kop, which was
-now held by reinforcements under L. Meyer; other good positions east of
-Vaalkrantz had been strengthened; and some of the guns on the
-Brakfontein position had been moved round. Vaalkrantz standing between
-Doorn Kop and the Twin Peaks, was shelled simultaneously from the left
-front, and the right rear, as well as from Green Hill;[28] it seemed as
-if Spion Kop were about to be repeated.
-
-Buller opened on Green Hill with artillery, and on the hill north of the
-main hill of Vaalkrantz, in the hope of making the North Hill
-assailable. In view of a retirement, a pontoon bridge was, at
-Lyttelton's request, thrown across the river under the main ridge. He
-discouraged a proposal made by Buller to attack the North Hill by a
-force creeping along the foot of the westward slope of Vaalkrantz,
-covered by fire from the ridge.
-
-Buller was now stalemated. The artillery fire had not cleared the way to
-the North Hill, and Lyttelton was unable to move on it, but he said that
-he could hold on for the rest of the day if no more artillery were
-brought to bear on him from the S.E.
-
-Finally Buller determined to shift the responsibility. He reported the
-capture of Vaalkrantz to Lord Roberts, and in effect asked what he
-should do with the white elephant. To carry out his plan would "cost
-from 2,000 to 3,000 men," and he was "not confident of success." Was
-Ladysmith worth it? Yes, replied Lord Roberts without hesitation,
-Ladysmith was worth it and it must be done.
-
-In the evening Lyttelton, having thwarted an attempt by the enemy to
-recover Vaalkrantz, was relieved by Hildyard. On the following
-afternoon, Buller, in spite of Lord Roberts' message, made up his mind
-to withdraw. Further reconnaissances had shown that the North Hill, even
-if taken, could hardly be held. A council of war was summoned, at which,
-as might have been anticipated, Hart alone was for persevering, and at
-which Warren again put forward the scheme rejected by Buller at Frere,
-but now gladly adopted by him, of advancing on Ladysmith by way of
-Hlangwhane.
-
-Orders were issued for the withdrawal of the force from Vaalkrantz
-during the night. It was skilfully carried out, and Buller was once more
-ferrying his men across the Tugela, having for the third time failed to
-reach Ladysmith.
-
-On February 8 the Army was retracing its steps on the road by which four
-weeks before it had marched from Springfield to Potgieter's Drift; and
-on the 11th it was concentrated at Chieveley, from which eight weeks
-before it had been thrown at the Colenso heights. All the Tugela
-operations had been conducted in a rarified medium. Want of
-determination, want of system, the absence of maps, the lack of a
-sufficient staff, were responsible for two months of misadventure.
-Buller, like the Boers, was easily discouraged by failure, but unlike
-them was unable to quicken himself readily for a renewed effort. He lost
-confidence in himself, and then in his subordinates. Like a nervous
-child, he opened the door of a dark chamber, but was afraid to enter.
-The terror of the unknown drove him back in a panic. When his plans,
-which were usually well thought out, miscarried, he became peevish, and
-scarcely made an attempt to reconstruct them. Only an Army of which the
-backbone was the stolid, unimaginative Englishman of the lower classes,
-and which believed that its leader was doing his best, could have
-remained undemoralized by the campaign on the Tugela.
-
-Buller possessed one quality which to a great extent outweighed his
-shortcomings as a military commander: namely the power of inspiring
-confidence. His men believed in him, and would do anything for him. They
-liked him for his bluff, John-Bullish, and rampant manner. The enlisted
-man is a curious differentiation from the class to which he belongs. His
-democratic instincts become less acute when he shoulders the
-Lee-Metford, and he readily accommodates himself to the will of a
-benevolent despot of robust appearance, and blunt and somewhat
-contemptuous address; whom in fact he prefers to the ascetic,
-dispassionate General Officer of quiet habit and speech.
-
-The criticisms passed upon Buller were far more friendly in the men's
-than in the officers' bivouacs. Possibly the men's opinions, as being
-the more natural and spontaneous, were also the more correct. The enemy
-conducted the war upon principles which were strange to the British
-Army, and to which it had to adapt itself painfully; and the men seem to
-have recognized sooner than the professors the difficulties of the
-situation, and to have been less intolerant of ill-success.
-
-Few general officers have ever revealed in their official communications
-more of the workings and the moods of their minds than did Buller in
-Natal. His telegrams and despatches always reflected the thoughts of the
-moment. After the Colenso fight, he candidly referred to it as my
-"unfortunate undertaking of to-day." Six days before the Vaalkrantz
-affair he told Lord Roberts that "this time I feel fairly confident of
-success"; and on the eve of the attack he said that "while I have every
-hope of success, I am not quite certain of it."
-
-After the retirement, it was, "wherever I turn I come upon the enemy in
-superior force to my own." He subjected his personal and individual
-ideas and feelings to no restraint, and they incontinently leavened all
-his messages which were now confident, now diffident, and now querulous,
-and which read as if they were quotations from his private diary. From
-Vaalkrantz he heliographed to White that the enemy was too strong for
-him, and that the "Bulwana big gun is here"; and could White suggest
-anything better than an advance by way of Hlangwhane? In his telegrams
-from Chieveley to Lord Roberts, he complained of want of support, and of
-the feebleness of the resistance made by the Ladysmith garrison, which
-he professed to believe did not detain more than 2,000 men. Yet in
-recording his weakness, it must in justice be said that he gained and
-never lost the confidence of the rank and file of the relieving force,
-and that under any other leader it would probably have succumbed to its
-misfortunes.
-
-On February 12 the re-concentration of Buller's Army at Chieveley was
-complete. The enemy's front had been greatly strengthened since the
-attack on Colenso. The Boers saw what Buller could not be persuaded to
-believe, that Hlangwhane was the key of the position, and extended their
-line thence in a curve through Green Hill and Monte Cristo, with a
-detached post outside it on Cingolo. These four hills and the ground
-between them Buller proposed to occupy, and then pass between Cingolo
-and Monte Cristo to a drift of the Tugela N.E. of Monte Cristo, cross
-the river and advance by the Klip Riyer on Bulwana. The two "iron
-bridges" at Colenso were impassable, but the Boers had thrown a bridge
-across near Naval Hill by which, and also by a ferry higher up,
-communication was kept up with their left flank.
-
-The initial movement on February 12 was made appropriately enough by
-Dundonald, who two months before had seen the value of the Hlangwhane
-position, and who now perhaps as he marched out, realized the truth of
-the proverb _tout vient à ce qui sait attendre_. He occupied Hussar Hill
-temporarily as a reconnaissance to give Buller an opportunity of
-surveying the ground over which he was about to operate. The
-Intelligence officers reported that the enemy was strongly posted at
-several points within the area and unmasked some of his slim tricks. In
-order to conceal the line of the trenches, the excavated earth was piled
-up some distance towards the front, and tents not intended for
-occupation were pitched to divert fire from the positions in which he
-lay. The war-craft which comes by instinct to nationalities not in an
-advanced state of civilization and leading simple lives face to face
-with wild animals and native tribes, and which the conventionally
-trained European soldier only learns by experience, strengthened the
-Boer commandos without an augmentation of individuals liable to be
-killed or wounded. The veld trenches which kept Methuen at arm's length
-at Magersfontein and the Boer devices on the Tugela seem to show that
-War is not a Science, but an Art, easily acquired by unprofessional
-soldiers.
-
-On February 14 the movement began and a front at Hussar Hill was taken
-up, but owing to the heat and the scarcity of water, little was done
-during the next two days, except a bombardment of the Boer trenches and
-gun positions. The advance of the relieving force has been likened to
-the deliberate progression of a steam roller.
-
-Clery having been invalided, the IInd Division was temporarily under the
-command of Lyttelton, whose orders for February 17 were to move upon
-Cingolo Nek and Green Hill. Dundonald was instructed to work in rear of
-the infantry and outflank any detachment of the enemy that might appear
-on the Nek. But Dundonald was not a military pedant devoid of initiative
-and tied to the letter of his instructions, and when the difficulties of
-the ground broke the touch between him and Lyttelton he was perhaps not
-sorry to find himself disengaged; and when he saw that the Boers were
-entrenched on Cingolo Ridge, he attacked instead of outflanking it.
-
-While the commando on the ridge was occupied with the infantry, it was
-suddenly surprised from the flank by Dundonald's men, and was driven out
-of the trenches. Meanwhile one of Lyttelton's battalions, which in
-ignorance of Dundonald's movement, had been sent to clear Cingolo of
-some Boers who were firing on the advance and checking it, found when it
-reached the ridge that it had been forestalled in the capture.
-
-When Lyttelton became aware that the enemy had been expelled, he
-proposed to avail himself of the success without delay, and push on to
-the Nek and Monte Cristo, while Warren's Vth Division attacked Green
-Hill; but Buller objected to an advance which could not be completed
-before nightfall. Lyttelton bivouacked S.W. of the ridge and Dundonald
-on the detached hill at its northern end. During the night, field guns
-were brought up the slopes and with much difficulty emplaced in a
-position from which shell fire could be directed on Monte Cristo.
-
-If the movement of the day was not remarkable for speed and enterprise,
-it was at least directed with skill and without excessive caution; and
-Dundonald showed that his military spirit had not been chilled by
-previous rebuffs, one of them administered almost on the spot where he
-was now in activity.
-
-At daylight on February 18, the movement was resumed, the immediate
-objective being the capture of Monte Cristo and Green Hill. One brigade
-was sent through the Nek on to the eastward slopes of Monte Cristo,
-while the other attacked the hill from the south. With the help of the
-ever-ready Dundonald the IInd Division established itself on the main
-hill of the ridge early in the afternoon. The Fusilier Brigade of the
-Vth Division was meanwhile acting in support; and advancing as soon as
-Monte Cristo was seen to be occupied, easily took hold of Green Hill.
-The enemy was now expelled from all the positions commanding the
-proposed line of advance over the Nek, and was retreating westward
-towards the positions near the right bank of the Tugela, but no attempt
-was made to pursue him. The motto of Buller's Army was _festina lente_
-and its track towards Ladysmith was in zigzag.
-
-On the following day Hlangwhane was occupied by the British troops, and
-before noon on February 20, all the Boers had withdrawn to the left bank
-of the Tugela, and Buller was favourably placed for the advance by way
-of the Klip River on Bulwana. A reconnaissance, however, caused him to
-change his mind and to resume the movement at an acute angle by doubling
-back towards Hlangwhane and crossing the river by a pontoon bridge west
-of the hill.
-
-His new plan was to capture a position between the Onderbroek and
-Langewacht Spruits, which appeared from a distance to be one hill, but
-which in reality was two, Wynne's Hill and Horseshoe Hill, which were
-separated by a donga. On the morning of February 21 he signalled his
-intentions to White, saying that he thought he had "only a rearguard
-before him"[29] and that he hoped to be in Ladysmith next day.
-
-After the capture of Monte Cristo and the Hlangwhane position, some of
-the commandos seem to have trekked away towards the north, and even
-Botha for a time appears to have lost heart and to have suggested to
-Joubert that the siege of Ladysmith should be raised. The Boer leaders
-had already, like King Arthur,
-
- Heard the steps of Modred in the west,
-
-and their army in Natal had been weakened, before Buller's final
-advance, by the departure of commandos going to succour their brethren
-not only on the Modder, but also in the Cape Colony.
-
-The situation on the Tugela was reported to Pretoria almost
-simultaneously with the news that Cronje was hemmed in at Paardeberg.
-But owing it may be to the distance which intervened between Kruger and
-the scene of action, the dour old _voortrekker_ of Colesberg would not
-hear of any voluntary retirement before the enemy who had driven him out
-of the Cape Colony sixty years before. He sent an appeal to the Boers of
-the Tugela which, in an intense human document, displayed his steadfast
-and touching faith, and which might have been addressed by his prototype
-Cromwell to the Ironsides.
-
-He rebuked the burghers for their cowardice, which he attributed to the
-waning of their trust in the power of the Almighty to help them in their
-distress, and with many instances and quotations from Holy Writ, he
-adjured them to stand fast in faith. He was confident that the cause
-which he in all sincerity believed to be the cause of the Church of
-Christ would prevail in the end, and justifiably encouraged by successes
-in the field against superior numbers he exhorted the commandos to
-endure without flinching the purification by fire. Kruger's passionate
-appeal availed, and the waverers returned to their posts. The incident
-disclosed the power of the factor of moral force, wherein the Boer
-strength lay; and it will in a great measure account for the
-prolongation of the war. When their cause seemed hopeless, they
-comforted themselves with the honest and irradicable belief that its
-righteousness was the assurance of final success. Though most of their
-leaders were incompetent, though they themselves were easily
-discouraged; disobeyed orders; often malingered and mutinied; quitted
-the field with their wagons which they were reluctant to abandon, under
-such frivolous pretexts that the _verlafpest_ or leave-plague became a
-bye-word; though time after time their power of resistance seemed to be
-exhausted; though in their thousands they were distributed over the
-British Empire as prisoners of war; though their confident expectation
-of European intervention was not realized; though they were always
-greatly outnumbered; they continued stubbornly to defy for the space of
-two years and seven months the most numerous and the most efficient Army
-which has ever left the shores of Great Britain, until at last they were
-worn down by mechanical friction and attrition, and not by the stroke of
-war. When the Boers were driven out of the Hlangwhane positions, they
-took up a new position facing S.E. on the left bank of the Tugela. Their
-right was near the head of Hart's loop, and their centre came within a
-few hundred yards of the river at Wynne's Hill, whence the line was
-carried on towards Pieter's Hill.
-
-At noon on February 21 Buller began once more to send his men across the
-Tugela, intending to content himself that day with establishing his
-force "comfortably" on the position north of the railway bridge enclosed
-by the bend of the river, which was now free of the enemy. He ordered
-Talbot Coke with the 10th Brigade of Warren's Division to pass over the
-Colenso Kopjes on to the open ground beyond, from which the Onderbroek
-valley could be enfiladed by artillery. He had received information that
-the enemy were there in force, and in the belief that "what Boers there
-were, were hiding in that kloof," he changed his plan of moving
-northwards at once on Wynne's Hill.
-
-On February 21 Coke advanced in three lines, but soon after he had
-cleared the hilly ground, his scouting line came under fire from the
-Grobelaar slopes, and his right flank was also involved from the
-direction of Wynne's Hill. His Brigade was pinned to the ground by rifle
-and shell fire until nightfall, when it was retired to the Colenso
-Kopjes, where Wynne's Brigade of Warren's Division had arrived during
-the afternoon.
-
-[Illustration: Map of the Final Advance on Ladysmith.]
-
-The route march to Ladysmith was checked. Instead of a mere rearguard to
-be driven in, as Buller had fondly believed, a strongly posted line,
-extending nearly four miles S.W. from Wynne's Hill, had to be attacked.
-The enemy had been so much encouraged by the failure of Coke's movement,
-that Botha telegraphed to Kruger that he had hopes of a "great reverse."
-
-Warren thought that it would be necessary to diverge from the advance
-and take the Grobelaar slopes, and White reported that Boer
-reinforcements were coming in from the north. Towards evening on
-February 21, it seemed not unlikely that another Colenso, Spion Kop, or
-Vaalkrantz would soon be debited to Buller. The line of approach to
-Ladysmith was held by the enemy, and the British Army of relief, the
-greater part of which had crossed to the left bank of the Tugela, was
-entangled in the Colenso Kopjes, and the river loop.
-
-Warren's general idea for the 22nd, of which Buller approved, was to
-attack Wynne's Hill with the 11th Brigade, leaving Horseshoe Hill to be
-dealt with by the artillery. Although the Boers on the Grobelaar slopes
-had been well pounded for some hours by the field batteries, Wynne
-considered that it would be unsafe to advance unless these slopes were
-actually taken, but he was overruled. He had also been promised support
-on his left rear, but only two of the battalions detailed for the
-purpose were at hand and these were fully occupied in offering a front
-to the Boers on Grobelaar, while the movement was in progress; and he
-advanced against the enemy's centre unsupported except by the long range
-fire of a brigade on Naval Hill across the river.
-
-He had expected that the promised supports would secure his left flank
-by seizing Horseshoe Hill, and in default he was compelled to detach a
-portion of his own scanty force against it. At sunset the cutting edge
-of the advancing wedge was touching the enemy, but was unable to break
-into him, and Briton and Boer were face to face on Wynne's Hill and on
-Horseshoe Hill.
-
-Reinforcements were brought up and defences were constructed during the
-night, while the Boers continually fired upon the confused units
-labouring in the darkness. The enemy had an entrenched position on
-Hart's Hill which enfiladed Wynne's Hill, and which Warren had not been
-able to take, as Buller hoped, with the 11th Brigade.
-
-Next morning the 5th Brigade under Hart, which was in reserve near the
-river loop, was sent against Hart's Hill. He advanced, wherever
-possible, under cover of the steep left bank of the river along a trail
-so narrow that the men were compelled often to move in single file; and
-at one place, where the Langewacht Spruit enters the Tugela, it was
-necessary to make a detour and cross the spruit by the railway bridge,
-and to quit the dead ground and emerge on to a defile under heavy fire.
-The advance of the Brigade was retarded by the stringing out of the
-battalions, and from time to time Hart's Hill was shelled without
-seriously harming the enemy, who as usual was not posted on the apparent
-crest, but some distance in rear of it.
-
-Two battalions of the 4th Brigade, which had been lent to Hart, were so
-far behind that as only two or three hours of daylight remained, he
-decided to attack without them. For impetuous gallantry the advance of
-the Irish regiments was not surpassed by any other exploit in the War.
-Working up on difficult ground to the sound of the Regimental calls, and
-then almost brought to a standstill by the barbed wire fences of the
-railway, which became a trap of death, they rushed the slope, pushing
-the enemy's outposts before them, and won the crest: and then in the
-failing light which compelled the supporting artillery to discontinue
-the bombardment and relieve the enemy from the pressure of shrapnel,
-they saw the Boer positions still above them. The crest was false.
-
-It was a cruel disappointment to brave men who had struggled so well,
-but they did not flinch. A charge was made across the plateau, but it
-soon was withered by fire and few of the men reached the Boer trenches.
-Two more battalions of the 4th Brigade arrived at dawn, but the
-reinforcement came too late. The troops were reorganized, as far as
-possible, on the slope leading down from the crest, but were eventually
-compelled to retire across the railway to the lower ground by flanking
-fire, which Hart succeeded in silencing, and was able to reoccupy the
-dead ground below the false crest with fresh troops.
-
-The failure of the attack did not deter Buller from pursuing his plan,
-and on February 24 he proposed to renew it and to operate against
-Railway Hill, which stands fourth in the line of hills running in a N.E.
-direction from Horseshoe Hill to Pieter's Hill; but by Hart's suggestion
-the movement was postponed, and in the end, abandoned. The greater part
-of his Brigade was dangerously and densely posted on the lower ground,
-and when during the night a surprise party of Boers opened fire, there
-was some fear of a general panic. The situation was precarious. The Boer
-line had not been pierced: on each side it outflanked Buller and fronted
-the Tugela loops in which the greater portion of his force was huddled.
-It was fortunate for him that DeWet had gone to the Modder.
-
-On the night of February 24 began the third movement in zigzag. The
-general direction of the first was N.E.; of the second W.S.W.; of the
-third East. It was discovered that there was a path by which troops
-could pass east of Naval Hill down to the right bank out of the enemy's
-reach, and that they could cross the Tugela by pontoon. Buller then
-determined to transfer the bulk of his force back to the Hlangwhane side
-of the river over the pontoon bridge by which he had crossed to the left
-bank three days before. The plan involved not only the concentration of
-a clubbed and unwieldy force on the right bank, but also the necessity
-of keeping it there until the passage of the last detail allowed the
-pontoon bridge to be taken up and moved to the new place of crossing,
-three miles below.
-
-An armistice, restricted to the arena of the recent fighting, was
-granted by the Boers on February 25, for the purpose of bringing away
-the wounded and burying the dead; and during the barter of news on the
-very narrow strip which separated the British fallen from the enemy's
-positions, the burghers refused to believe that Cronje was surrounded at
-Paardeberg, and retorted that Lord Roberts had lost all his transport
-and supplies at Waterval Drift, and was helpless.
-
-The cessation of the music of war during the armistice dismayed the
-garrison of Ladysmith, which feared that it must indicate another
-failure; for owing to spies and the leakage of plans, Buller was afraid
-of informing White fully of his position and intentions, and during the
-final advance he usually restricted himself in his heliograms to the
-expression of his hopes or to the reasons for their non-fulfilment.
-
-On the enemy's side, in spite of a strong line held in sufficient
-numbers, the moral position was weak. Botha, who commanded the Boer
-right, distrusted Meyer, who was in charge of the threatened left. The
-war-sick burghers skulked in their laagers, and it is said that even
-necessary movements within the line were not ordered, from a fear lest
-the burgher, when once on his feet, would march in the direction which
-soonest took him out of his enemy's reach. To Botha, Buller's retirement
-across the Tugela came as a gleam of hope. If it did not signify a
-retreat, as he suggested to Joubert, it at least indicated that the
-attack on the line of hills would not be immediately renewed.
-
-On February 26, the preparations for the fifth attempt to relieve
-Ladysmith were completed. Horse, Field, Howitzer, Mountain, and Naval
-Guns, to the number of nearly three score and ten, were in position on
-the northern features of Hlangwhane, Naval Hill and Fuzzy Hill, and also
-on Clump Hill, N.W. of Monte Cristo. The relieving force was arranged in
-two commands; the troops west of the Langewacht Spruit being placed
-under Lyttelton, the rest being assigned to Warren. On Hlangwhane was
-Barton with the 6th Fusilier Brigade; and W. Kitchener, now in command
-of the 11th Brigade, was also on the right bank. On the left bank near
-Hart's Hill were Norcott and Hart with the 4th and 5th Brigades. Under
-Lyttelton was the 2nd Brigade, the 10th Brigade, though in his section,
-being placed under Warren's orders.
-
-On the previous day, a mounted brigade had been sent to the east to deal
-with an expedition under Erasmus against the British lines of
-communication south of Colenso. He led it timidly, and it was easily
-checked, and the brigade was brought back to the river.
-
-Buller's scheme for the operations of February 27, was an attack on
-Pieter's Hill by Barton, followed in succession by attacks on Railway
-Hill by Kitchener, and on Hart's Hill by Norcott, supported by artillery
-fire from the positions on the right bank. By the evening of February 26
-the troops for the main attack had recrossed the Tugela, and the pontoon
-bridge west of Hlangwhane could now be removed. Early in the forenoon of
-February 27, it was thrown over the river S.E. of Hart's Hill, where the
-left bank afforded a covered way of approach to Pieter's Hill, and the
-fourth and final member of the zigzag advance was traced, on this
-occasion towards the north. For the seventh time Buller ferried the
-Tugela with his men, who impelled alternately by the impulse of his
-initiative and by the resilience of the enemy, had been tossed like a
-tennis ball from bank to bank at Trickhardt's Drift, Vaalkrantz, and
-Hlangwhane, yet whom nothing could dishearten. As they heard the news of
-Cronje's surrender at Paardeberg, they were crossing the newly placed
-pontoon bridge, and on it they set up a signpost bearing the legend "To
-Ladysmith."
-
-Barton led the way across the bridge, then turning to the right, crept
-down the left bank of the river for two miles, and mounted the slopes of
-Pieter's Hill, when he became aware of the great strength of the Boer
-position. It was hedged in by a river, a wooded donga, and a valley;
-along its westward face ran a line of kopjes, ending in a detached rocky
-hill; and it was supported by fire from Railway Hill. The nearer kopjes
-were carried without much difficulty, but a sweeping movement to clear
-the plateau as with the swing of a scythe, was checked by heavy fire
-from the east, and failed to gather in the rocky hill which commanded
-the outlying kopjes, and which the enemy succeeded in reinforcing during
-the fight, and in holding for several hours.
-
-Until the development of the attack on Railway Hill by Kitchener,
-Barton's Fusiliers were able to do little more than maintain themselves,
-as their reserves had been absorbed and their ammunition was running
-short. A final attempt was made, with partial success, at the close of
-the day, to occupy the rocky hill, but at the cost of many casualties.
-The enemy was not entirely expelled, but those who remained disappeared
-during the night.
-
-Kitchener followed in Barton's track as far as the gorge which separates
-Pieter's from Railway Hill. In spite of the Boer rifles and of the
-shrapnel of the British gunners on the right bank playing upon the Hill,
-whose attention was eventually drawn to the situation by the bold
-advance of two companies to a position from which they could be seen and
-recognized through the gunners' telescopes, the eastward edge of Railway
-Hill was won. But a portion of Kitchener's command in rear was
-magnetically attracted away from the direction of the advance by a
-flanking fire from Hart's Hill and, by diverging towards it, broke the
-continuity of the line facing the position entrenched by the Boers.
-Kitchener was, however, able to fill the gap, and he expelled the
-burghers, most of whom fled before the charge got home; and Railway Hill
-was won.
-
-Norcott's Brigade was nearer to its objective than either of the
-brigades which had preceded it, as it was lying south of Hart's Hill
-between the railway and the river; and although deprived of a
-considerable portion of his command by a demand for help which purported
-to have come from Railway Hill, he finished his task in three hours. He
-toiled up the dead ground to the apparent crest of Hart's Hill, and then
-came face to face with the higher position, which three days before had
-so cruelly baffled the Irish Brigade. But the Boers were not now in a
-mood to stay. The shrapnel from the right bank, which they had not to
-meet when Hart charged across from the crest in the failing light, was
-now hailing on them. All but a few stalwarts took to flight, and Hart's
-Hill was taken before sunset on February 27.
-
-The capture of the hills supervening on the bad news from Paardeberg
-shattered the Boer Armies in Natal. Botha's left had been defeated; and
-although his right had not been seriously attacked by Lyttelton, but
-only prevented from effectively reinforcing the hill positions, it fell
-away towards the north. He was not able to stay the general retreat, but
-he hoped at least to join Joubert and cover it with the aid of the
-besieging force. Joubert, however, had already raised the Siege and was
-retreating towards Elandslaagte.
-
-Next morning Barton on Pieter's Hill vainly appealed for permission to
-press forward, but Buller would only put the two mounted Brigades under
-Dundonald and Burn-Murdoch on to the enemy's trail. Dundonald made for
-Ladysmith, and Burn-Murdoch was instructed to act on the right front
-towards Bulwana, but was soon called upon to assist Dundonald in driving
-in a Boer rearguard. He then resumed his advance, and from the east
-covered Dundonald, who being fired on from Bulwana thought it advisable
-to send his Brigade to a safer position in rear, and having done so,
-rode on at the head of a body of colonial troops, and as the sun was
-setting on February 28, marched into Ladysmith and ended the four
-months' Siege. It was a fitting exploit to be performed by the grandson
-of that Lord Cochrane who at Aix Roads nearly a century before had
-similarly chafed and strained at the leash of a superior officer's
-reluctance.[30] Burn-Murdoch came into action with a rearguard covering
-Bulwana, which was evacuated during the night. He bivouacked near the
-Klip River, and next morning proposed to pursue the enemy, but Buller
-whistled him to heel. The relieving force advanced with deliberation,
-and on March 3, entered Ladysmith, and unravelled the Natal entanglement
-which at one time seemed likely to wreck the South African Campaign.
-
-The flight of the Boers continued for three days. Ladysmith, which lay
-directly in the line of the retreat, divided it into two streams, one of
-which flowed towards the Drakensberg, while the other went in the
-direction of Elandslaagte and Glencoe, some of the fugitives not
-outspanning until they reached Newcastle. So great was the
-demoralization that Kruger hurried down from Pretoria to Glencoe in the
-hope of staying it. He succeeded in persuading the burghers to hold the
-line of the Biggarsberg, but was almost immediately summoned away to the
-arena in the west; and only a few hours after he was upbraiding the
-fugitives from Ladysmith and the Tugela for their irresolution and want
-of faith, the fugitives of the Modder were streaming past him at Poplar
-Grove.
-
-Buller has been severely criticized for allowing the Boers to retreat
-unpursued, taking with them all but two of their guns. Assuming however
-that his appreciation of the situation was correct, he probably acted
-wisely. He thought that his first duty was to put food into Ladysmith.
-All his guns, except one Field Battery at Colenso and one Horse
-Artillery Battery with Burn-Murdoch, as well as all his supply and
-regimental transport, were still on the right bank of the Tugela, for
-the crossing of which he had but one pontoon bridge. He therefore
-decided that the wagons must have precedence, and that the army must
-wait.
-
-He was misled by his recollections and by his experience of the Parthian
-tactics of the burghers whom he commanded during the Zulu War of 1879,
-and from whom he says he learnt "all that he knew" about rearguards. He
-believed "that an attempt to force a Boer rearguard is merely a waste of
-men." Yet only a week had passed since he told White that he thought
-there was "only a rearguard" between him and Ladysmith.
-
-Thus in the glamour of an ancient rearguard reputation the enemy
-disappeared.
-
-Notes:
-
-[Footnote 28: Not the Green Hill near Spion Kop. There were several
-Green Hills on the left bank of the Tugela.]
-
-[Footnote 29: White, however, said that he saw no signs of a general
-retreat.]
-
-[Footnote 30: The Cochrane daring and resourcefulness were not confined
-to the men of the clan. During the Jacobite troubles Grizel Cochrane,
-when her father was sentenced to death for treason, turned
-highway-woman, and held up the coach which was bringing his death
-warrant from London, and abstracted it from the mail-bag.]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-Ladysmith at Bay
-
-
-Eighty-seven years before the outbreak of the South African War, the
-British Army was besieging the city of Badajoz, in Spain. When it was
-taken by assault, a Spanish matron and her sister were molested and came
-for protection to the British Camp, where they were received by Harry
-Smith, a young Captain in the 95th Regiment, who when the Peninsular War
-was over, married the girl fugitive, Juana Maria de los Dolores de Leon.
-
-After a distinguished military career in the East Indies and elsewhere,
-Sir Harry Smith went out to South Africa in 1848 as Governor of the Cape
-Colony, and its dependencies; and in that year he proclaimed the country
-between the Orange and the Vaal to be British Territory.
-
-The Boers of the Great Trek resented the annexation, and one Pretorius
-took the field, but was beaten on August 29 at the battle of Boomplatz
-by Smith, who had under his command six companies of infantry and two
-squadrons of cavalry; a force which strangely contrasts with the masses
-of soldiery opposed to Pretorius' successors, Joubert, Botha, Cronje, De
-Wet, and Delarey.
-
-Harrismith, in the Free State, was named after him; his services in the
-Sikh War were commemorated by an Aliwal on the Orange; while upon a new
-township in Natal, she who was once Donna Juana Maria de los Dolores de
-Leon of Badajoz on the Guadiana, bestowed the commonplace designation
-for which she had exchanged her retinue of tuneful Spanish, and it was
-called Ladysmith.
-
-[Illustration: The siege of Ladysmith.]
-
-After fifty years of obscurity, Ladysmith suddenly became the pivot upon
-which the fortunes of the British Empire were poised. Its loss, at least
-during the early weeks of the siege, would not only have thrown a
-British Army into captivity, but would have left an encouraged and very
-mobile enemy, replenished with the spoils of war, free to march
-irresistibly towards the sea.
-
-In November, Buller was prepared, if Ladysmith should fall, to abandon
-the whole of Natal except Durban. He had private information that, if
-the Boers reached the coast, a certain European power would intervene.
-There was also the fear that another reverse would call out the
-disaffected Dutch in the Cape Colony, and the danger lest the British
-nation, treacherously harassed by the cries of the disaffected at home,
-who sympathize with the misfortunes of every nation but their own, would
-again write off South Africa as a bad debt, and offer peace on
-ignominious terms. In India the news of the capture of White, a former
-Commander in Chief, and of his removal as a prisoner of war, would have
-seriously, if not fatally, impaired the British _raj_.
-
-At a later period, when the reinforcements had arrived and the plan of
-campaign had been altered to suit the situation in Natal, the loss of
-Ladysmith would not have so vitally affected the position in South
-Africa; and, in fact, Buller on December 16, authorized White to
-surrender.
-
-On November 1, the commanders of the allied forces, Joubert and A.P.
-Cronje, decided to invest and bombard Ladysmith, confidently expecting
-that the only obstacle in the way of the procession to the sea would
-soon be removed by the fall of the intimidated town. They were even
-urged by some of the subordinate leaders, who, as a rule, were never so
-venturesome as when there was no immediate prospect of meeting the
-enemy, to mask White and march at once upon Durban, but Joubert would
-only sanction a minor effort in that direction which was postponed until
-it was too late to be effective.
-
-The last man to leave Ladysmith was French. He was ordered to Capetown
-to meet Buller, who was persuaded by his report on the situation that
-White's force was insufficient to keep Natal from being overrun, and
-that the worst might be feared. The escape of French, by a margin of a
-few minutes only, made him available for employment in an arena more
-suited to his capacity than a besieged town; and his subsequent good
-work in the Cape Colony, south of the Orange River, and during the
-advance on Kimberley and Bloemfontein, showed how ill the fortune of war
-served the Boers, when they just failed to capture the train which was
-taking out of their clutches the soldier who was to relieve Kimberley
-and head off Cronje at Paardeberg before the relief of Ladysmith was
-effected.
-
-White has been blamed for keeping the whole of his strong force of
-cavalry in Ladysmith. He had with him four regiments of regular cavalry
-besides five irregular colonial corps. For the space of three months the
-action of the British Army was hampered by the absence of the mounted
-troops interned in Ladysmith and engaged in garrison duties, until at
-last the horses were either killed for food, or, when forage was
-exhausted, turned out on the bare veld under the enemy's fire, to
-support themselves as they could. White justified, or it may be,
-excused, his retention of the cavalry, by its mobility, which virtually
-increased the effective strength of the garrison, and enabled him to
-reinforce rapidly any threatened section of the defence, as for example,
-during the attack on Caesar's Camp. It is no doubt arguable that cavalry
-was more useful within the lines of investment than it would have been,
-if squandered over the whole area of the concurrent operations
-elsewhere; and if so, the limits of its tactical employment have been
-considerably extended.[31]
-
-White's force, which numbered about 13,000 men, occupied a perimeter of
-fourteen miles on the hills and kopjes nearest to the town, and was
-enveloped by an outer perimeter of thirty six miles held by 23,000
-Boers. The positions N.E. of the Klip River were occupied by the
-Transvaalers, and the opposite semi-circle by the Free Staters.
-
-On November 2, began the bombardment, which the enemy fondly hoped would
-bring White on his knees within a week; the first death casualty during
-the siege being a naval officer who had reached Ladysmith only a few
-hours before the investment with a re-inforcement of long-range naval
-guns from the fleet; and during the next two days it was continued from
-Pepworth, Bulwana, and elsewhere, with such effect as to induce White to
-ask, at the instigation of the civilian authorities, permission to send
-away the women, children, and other non-combatants. This somewhat
-_naive_ request was naturally disallowed by Joubert, who, however,
-consented to the formation of a neutral camp for them and the sick and
-wounded at Intombi, within the area of the siege, and dependent for its
-supplies and maintenance upon the resources of the garrison. Joubert put
-into Ladysmith 200 derelict Indian coolies from the Natal collieries, an
-act which was perhaps justified by the code of war, which sanctions the
-employment of any means by which the difficulties of a besieged town can
-be increased; but a subsequent attempt made by Schalk Burger during
-Joubert's advance on the raid towards the south, to saddle White with
-the Indian refugees from the Transvaal was successfully resisted.
-
-On November 9, the enemy was foiled in an attack on Observation Hill and
-Wagon Hill which were not then held in force, and for eight weeks the
-siege was carried on with so little vigour, and confronted with so much
-skill, that the British casualties in killed and wounded during that
-period numbered less than 250. When the Boers found that the walls of
-Ladysmith did not at once fall to the sound of the artillery, they began
-with equal confidence to rely upon the indirect casualties caused by
-sickness and privation, and awaited the result without impatience in
-their laagers. During the last fortnight of November a strong column
-under Joubert was detached to raid into Southern Natal. It was prudently
-but not enterprisingly led, did little harm, and returned with slight
-loss.
-
-Meanwhile the enemy's artillery had been considerably re-inforced, and
-the British gun ammunition was beginning to run short. The capture of a
-large herd of cattle by the Boers, who neatly drew the animals away from
-the town by exploding shells behind them, entailed a reduced meat
-ration. In order to co-operate with the relieving force under Clery, who
-at the end of November was within signalling distance, White exercised a
-part of the garrison as a striking column, which, when the time came, he
-proposed to take out under his own command, and to clear the line of
-approach from the South.
-
-Three weeks after the abortive attack of November 9, Joubert returned
-from his expedition to Estcourt. A council of war was held, and an
-assault on the Platrand[32] was determined on for the 30th. On the
-previous evening the commandos detailed as covering parties on the left
-flank went into position on Rifleman's Ridge, and awaited the main
-attack. Meanwhile much had happened in the laagers. The decisions of the
-Boer Krijgsraad seem to have been subject to confirmation by a minor
-convention composed of the subordinate officers. These took counsel
-during the night, and resolved that "the plan was too dangerous to
-attempt." When the covering parties opened fire at dawn there was no
-assaulting column to cover.
-
-The activity during December was confined to the defence. On the night
-of the 7th a raid on Gun Hill, an underfeature of Lombard's Kop,
-silenced--at least in Natal--two heavy guns which were worrying the
-garrison. By the rules of the game the pieces were injured beyond repair
-by the gun-cotton charges which the sappers had fired in the breeches
-and muzzles; but the heavier gun was removed to Pretoria, where it was
-made serviceable. It was eventually sent to Kimberley, and its arrival
-greatly alarmed the timid and irresolute diamond men, whose life was
-easy and almost luxurious when compared with the privations which the
-steadfast garrison of Ladysmith endured for four months. On the same
-night Limit Hill, which the enemy seized a few days after the
-investment, was recovered.
-
-A heavy gun was emplaced by the Boers to the front of the northward
-section of the defence, on a hill in the angle between the Bell Spruit
-and the railway to Harrismith. The approach to it was commanded by
-Bell's Kopje and Thornhill's Kopje, but a Battalion of Rifles under
-Metcalfe wriggled in between them at midnight on December 11, without
-alarming the enemy, and almost reached the crest of the eminence which
-was thereafter known as Surprise Hill, before the Boers opened fire. The
-assaulters encircled the emplacement, but could not find the gun. In a
-little time it was discovered outside the work, and disabled, but not
-permanently. The Boers on the flanking kopjes were now on the alert; and
-the battalion as it withdrew down the slope met in the darkness a small
-but determined detachment which had formed up athwart the line of
-retirement. The obstacle was rushed with the bayonet, and the expedition
-returned to Ladysmith with a loss exceeding 12 per cent of its strength.
-
-The gun raids were almost the only offensive action taken by the defence
-during the siege, and though successful as far as they went, they did
-not greatly reduce the strength of the enemy's artillery and were not
-continued. He had still more than a score of pieces with which he daily
-bombarded the town; but no attempt to assault it by a moving force was
-made for some weeks. His confidence in the final issue was unimpaired;
-he had but to squat in his trenches worrying the garrison with shell
-fire, and the inevitable surrender must come.
-
-His complacent view of the situation was manifested by his use of the
-besieging force as a depot which was from time to time called upon to
-furnish drafts for service elsewhere. Joubert's absence on the raid
-towards the south did not sensibly diminish the retaining power of the
-attack, and although the loss of several thousand Free State burghers
-who were transferred to Cronje's command on the Modder or to Delarey's
-at Colesberg was in part made up by a reinforcement of Transvaalers, the
-force sitting round Ladysmith had to assist in the defence of the line
-of the Tugela against Duller; yet, albeit weakened by that necessity, it
-was still able without much effort to pin White down to the banks of the
-Klip River. The inactivity of the garrison, as well as the daily
-increasing hospital camp at Intombi under the shadow of Bulwana and the
-mournful processions to the cemetery hard by, showed that sickness, the
-waning physical and moral strength of those who were still on duty, and
-the expenditure of stores, supplies, and ammunition, were slowly
-impairing White's power of resistance; and that the numbers of the
-besieging force, which later on Buller believed did not exceed 2,000
-men, could be safely reduced.
-
-The Boers believed that "their strength was to sit still," and they were
-not far wrong. Early in the New Year, however, external pressure
-emanating from Pretoria and Bloemfontein was brought to bear upon
-Joubert, and he sanctioned another assault on the Platrand, which was
-from the first considered to be the key to Ladysmith. It is a series of
-plateaux, about two miles long and varying in breadth from half a mile
-to a few hundred yards. Its chief features are Caesar's Camp and Wagon
-Hill. A mile north of the centre of the position is Maiden's Castle. The
-contours on Caesar's Camp and Wagon Hill are pinched in in three places
-and divide the Platrand into four positions of unequal area, the
-smallest being Wagon Point, an underfeature on the extreme right of
-Wagon Hill. The latter is joined by a nek to Caesar's Camp, the plan of
-which owing to the contraction of the contours somewhat resembles the
-outline of a dumb-bell. The highest point of the position is a knoll on
-Wagon Hill, and the front slopes southwards down to Bester's Valley and
-Fourie's Spruit. On each flank were hills occupied by the enemy's
-artillery.
-
-The strength of the assaulting column as detailed was composed of
-approximately equal numbers of Free Staters and Transvaalers and
-amounted to upwards of 4,000 burghers. To the former Wagon Hill was
-assigned as their objective, to the latter Caesar's Camp, which was held
-in greater strength. Early on the morning of January 6, the sentry of
-the picket posted on the nek between Wagon Hill and Wagon Point, became
-aware of movement on the slope and gave the alarm. Soon after, a party
-of Engineers and Infantry preparing gun positions on Wagon Point in view
-of a contemplated operation in support of Buller's expected advance by
-way of Potgieter's Drift, were fired on at short range by a body of Free
-Staters, who had succeeded in climbing to the nek, and who then
-threatened a redoubt in the western shoulder of the knoll on Wagon Hill,
-which commanded Wagon Point. The first rush was checked by the Natal
-Volunteers, who opened with a Hotchkiss gun from the knoll at a range of
-less than 100 yards, and threw the leading ranks of the enemy into
-confusion. The working parties were thus given time to take up their
-rifles, and to organize themselves more effectively for defence.
-
-A counter-attack was made from the adjacent post on the eastern
-shoulder, but it failed to dislodge the enemy, a small party of whom
-diverged towards their left, and circled round Wagon Point to the rear
-of the position between Wagon Hill and Maiden's Castle. Here they
-lighted upon the heavy gun at the foot of the northward slope for which
-an emplacement had just been made on Wagon Point, and although the gun
-was successfully defended by the escort, the insecurity of the Platrand
-position was shown by the attempt.
-
-While the Free Staters were assaulting Wagon Hill and Wagon Point, the
-Transvaalers obtained a footing on the edge of the Caesar's Camp
-position; but their supports failed them. A considerable proportion of
-the burghers detailed for the attack on Caesar's Camp, most of them
-Transvaalers, again either refused, as on November 9, to take part in
-it, or shirked during the advance. But at dawn, after a struggle in the
-dark at such close quarters that the face of each combatant was often
-for the first time revealed by the flash of his adversary's rifle, the
-enemy had his finger on the key to Ladysmith; and was clinging, like
-swallows on the eaves, to the whole length of the Platrand from Wagon
-Point along a sinuous contour line which curved round the eastern
-shoulder of Caesar's Camp, and awaiting the supporting bombardment
-which, as soon as there was light enough for the alignment of the
-sights, would be opened upon the position from the flanking guns on
-Bulwana and Rifleman's Ridge, and from Middle Hill on the front.
-
-The normal garrison of the Platrand, which, since the attack on November
-9 had been entirely included in the perimeter of the defence, numbered
-not more than about 1,000 men, but it was under the command of Ian
-Hamilton.
-
-When the firing began he was in his bivouac near Caesar's Camp. He
-quickly collected what troops he could lay his hands on, and went to
-Wagon Hill, where he found the situation so serious that he asked White
-to re-inforce him. At daybreak the Boer artillery opened upon the
-position, and it is probable that it would have been lost, but for the
-action of two field batteries which, at a critical moment, came out of
-Ladysmith and diverged so as to protect each flank.
-
-Already on the Wagon Point flank, the enemy had worked round and had
-threatened the heavy gun, and on the other flank he was holding the
-eastern shoulder of Caesar's Camp. Wagon Point was saved from a turning
-movement by one battery, while the other, though itself under artillery
-fire from Bulwana, opened on the Boers clinging on to the eastern
-shoulder, and by checking the advance of their supports, caused them to
-withdraw the hook with which they were grappling that flank. But more
-than this the British guns could not do, and the Boers holding on to the
-front crest could not be touched by shrapnel, and were maintaining
-themselves against the defenders of Caesar's Camp; while a combat of
-even greater intensity was being waged on Wagon Hill.
-
-Here an attempt made by a few companies of Highlanders to outflank the
-Boer line on the crest by working round the shoulder of Wagon Point, had
-failed, as the men were exposed to an irresistible fire as they turned
-the corner. On Wagon Hill the enemy was holding on to the front of the
-redoubt on the knoll and each attempt to dislodge him was unsuccessful.
-
-Towards noon there was a lull in the storm. After nine hours' fighting,
-the combatants were face to face on the plateau and the advantage lay
-apparently with the attacking Boers, who, in spite of the strong
-re-inforcements which had been sent up by White, were still clinging to
-the southern crest of Caesar's Camp, and who on their left had won a
-footing close to the knoll on Wagon Hill, and were effectively checking
-the details on Wagon Point. White having used up all the infantry which
-he could safely spare from the other positions on the perimeter, now
-sent the cavalry to the rescue.
-
-The pause in the fight, which seems to have been occasioned by the
-exhaustion and discouragement of the enemy, and which, perforce, had to
-be acquiesced in by the defence, led White to report to Buller soon
-after noon, that the Boers had been beaten off for the time being, but
-that a renewal of the attack was probable. It came at the moment when he
-was sending the despatch from his Head Quarters on Convent Hill, and
-when Ian Hamilton was preparing a counter-attack round the shoulder of
-Wagon Point. A small body of Free Staters rushed the summit of Wagon
-Point, and by their impact drove many of the defenders down the reverse
-slope. But those who remained were resolute. After a hand to hand fight
-between Boer commandants and British officers around the emplacement
-which had been prepared for the heavy gun, the position was recovered
-and a reinforcement of dismounted Hussars came up in time to secure it.
-
-On Wagon Hill also the struggle was renewed, and here also the defence
-was strengthened by some dismounted cavalry which had been waiting in
-support in rear of Caesar's Camp. It was evident that if the enemy were
-not dislodged from Wagon Hill during daylight, he would be able to
-establish himself irremovably after dark, when all the waverers would
-come up under the protection of the night. At 3 in the afternoon White
-reported to Buller that the attack had been renewed and that he was
-"very hard pressed." He called the Devons to his aid from their post on
-the northern section of the perimeter, and in a storm of rain and
-thunder, themselves a resistless tempest, they cleared Wagon Hill with
-magazine and bayonet.
-
-On Caesar's Camp the enemy had already wavered, and the crest was in
-possession of the defence; and now all along the line from Wagon Point
-to the eastern shoulder the Boers were scuttling down the slopes toward
-the flooded dongas below under a hail of rifle fire. The battle, which
-had begun soon after midnight, was continued until near sunset and
-resulted in the discomfiture of the only serious attempt made by the
-Boers to capture Ladysmith by offensive action. The success was due
-primarily to the determination of an enfeebled garrison, which had
-already undergone a siege of nine weeks; and secondarily to the tactical
-mistakes of the enemy, who had allowed troops to concentrate upon the
-Platrand which should have been contained and pinned to their posts at
-other sections of the perimeter of defence. Not a few of the commandos
-detailed for the assault on the Platrand flinched, yet it almost
-succeeded; and if these had been distributed to positions elsewhere,
-they would not have incurred great danger, and their presence would
-probably have prevented the transfer of the Devons and of the mounted
-troops to Wagon Hill at the critical moment.
-
-The battle casualties of January 6 outnumbered in the proportion of 6 to
-4 the entire losses due to the acts of the enemy during the whole four
-months' investment before and after that date. Twice Wagon Point was
-occupied only by the wounded and the dead. Much of the fighting was
-either hand to hand or at such short range that the effect of the bullet
-could be almost read in the expression on the face of the stricken
-opponent; now of anguish, despair, or hatred, now of a gentle sinking to
-sleep after toil. The homely name of Wagon Hill, far away from the
-fatherland under the southern sun, will abide for all time in the
-chronicles of the deeds of the British private soldier. It was his own
-battle, by which he saved Ladysmith. Next day a message from home
-reached White.
-
-"Heartily congratulate you and all under your command for your brilliant
-success. Greatly admire conduct of Devonshire Regiment." The Sender was
-Queen Victoria.
-
-The failure of the attack on the Platrand deterred the Boers from
-further attempts to break into Ladysmith, which was left like Paris
-thirty years before to "stew in its own juice." An ingenious but
-impracticable method of bringing the place to its senses by damming the
-Klip River below the town in the hope of isolating it by flood was put
-in hand, and some alarm was created, but the loyal stream refused to
-rise. The garrison was too much weakened by disease and famine to be
-able to assist effectively Buller's promised advance by way of
-Potgieter's Drift, and in fact he never came near enough to Ladysmith to
-make co-operation possible. A mobile column was for the second time
-organized by White, but it is doubtful whether it could have taken the
-field.
-
-Perhaps some poet of a future generation may follow the example of the
-Homeric syndicate and select the Siege of Ladysmith as the theme of a
-great Epic, romantically but unhistorically interwoven with the legend
-of Juana Maria of Badajoz. On the Boer side the struggle was carried on
-with much of the simplicity of Homeric times and the Siege of Troy. The
-debates in the war councils; the doubts of the subordinate commanders;
-the devices and stratagems, such as the attempt to dam the Klip River,
-and the proposal to disguise an assaulting commando in the helmets and
-accoutrements of the slain opponents; the abstinence of some of the
-leaders from the fray; the single combats on Wagon Point; the democratic
-organization of the Boer forces; the difficulty of keeping the burghers
-to their duty when the attraction of a domestic and pastoral life
-presented themselves in an alluring form; were not of these days nor
-even of the Puritan period, but belonged to a remoter age when every man
-was a soldier or a shepherd according to the exigences of the moment.
-Many a Boer leader, like Ajax, defied the lightning--when it was not
-playing directly upon him. Not one of them comes prominently into the
-foreground in the great South African siege.
-
-De Wet's brief service in Natal came to an end before the investment,
-and in the light of his exploits elsewhere, it is interesting to
-speculate upon what might have happened if he had been in command of the
-attack on January 6. In all probability it would have succeeded. The
-Boers rarely failed when commanded by a resolute leader who knew his own
-mind and was able to impose his own will upon them. In isolated
-enterprises daringly conducted, they were usually efficient, and
-sometimes irresistible, but like most primitive communities in which the
-military instinct is individual rather than collective, they were
-incapable of forming themselves into a coherent and unified Army for
-action in mass. De Wet, in his _Three Years' War_, protests against the
-British theory that the burghers were only fit to engage in _guerilla_,
-which, possibly from ignorance of the meaning of the word, he seems to
-regard as an unworthy term of reproach; but the theory was in reality a
-grudging recognition of a suppressed factor in the problem of the war
-which the professors had overlooked. His own exploits go far to prove
-its soundness.
-
-Like mariners adrift upon the ocean in an open boat, their food and
-their water dwindling hour by hour, who eagerly watch a white topsail or
-a faint wreath of smoke which seems for a time to be approaching, yet
-soon sinks beneath the horizon and leaves them alone upon the waste; the
-garrison of Ladysmith was cruelly tantalized by Buller's fitful
-appearances on the Tugela. Again and again the boom of his guns growing
-clearer and clearer and his heliographs sparkling more distinctly
-deluded the defenders with the hope that the day of their deliverance
-was at hand. During the Spion Kop affair, the confidence was so great
-that for a day or two full rations were issued. The summit could be seen
-crowded with people on January 25 who surely must be Buller's men. Not
-so; they were the Boers who, to their astonishment, had found the summit
-unoccupied, and were burying the dead and collecting the wounded. The
-roar of war died away; was heard again from Vaalkrantz, soon to sink
-into silence on February 7, when Buller announced that the enemy was too
-strong for him. It was renewed at Hlangwhane, Monte Cristo, and Pieter's
-Hill, but former disappointments had made the garrison insensible to
-hope and it fell upon apathetic ears. When at last Dundonald's little
-band was seen approaching, the chilled and dazed soldiers of the
-garrison could scarcely realize that they were saved.
-
-After January 6 the increasing sickness and the deficiency of food
-became the chief facts of the Siege. More than three-score horses were
-sacrificed daily to provide a meat ration for the garrison. The men
-slaked their thirst with the turbid water of the Klip River, and munched
-a makeshift biscuit made of Indian corn and starch. "Chevril" soup and
-potted horse were luxuries. At Intombi nearly 2,000 sick and wounded
-were lying without hospital diet or comforts.
-
-On January 27 the situation was so grave that White, when he heard from
-Buller that the attempt on Spion Kop had failed, proposed as a last and
-desperate resource, but one which, at least, would not involve the moral
-effect of a surrender, to abandon Ladysmith, his sick and wounded, and
-his heavy guns, and with about 7,000 men and 36 field guns to endeavour
-to join Buller. Even if another Buller failure did not sooner doom the
-garrison he could only hold out until the end of February.
-
-With this proposal Buller temporized and communicated it to Lord
-Roberts, who sent an encouraging message to White, in which he asked the
-garrison to accept his congratulations for its heroic defence and
-expressed his regret at the delay of the relief and his hope that the
-term would not be the limit of possible endurance; though he fully
-expected that his own operations in the Free State would before its
-expiration relieve the pressure on Ladysmith. Buller doubted Lord
-Roberts' forecast and preferred to "play his hand alone," and nothing
-came of the proposed break out of Ladysmith. White in his acknowledgment
-of Lord Roberts' message said that by sacrificing most of his horses, he
-could hold out for six weeks.
-
-There was good reason to believe that by this time the besieging force
-numbered not more than 4,000 men, who, however, could be reinforced in a
-few hours from the 16,000 burghers standing up to Buller on the Tugela.
-The enfeebled garrison was, however, not in a condition to act against
-the attenuated cordon from which a constant bombardment was maintained.
-As the month of February wore on, the news of Lord Roberts' entry into
-the Orange Free State infused more hope into the garrison than the too
-familiar sound of Buller once more in action on the Tugela, and so
-little was expected of Buller that the lull in the fire during the
-Sunday armistice on February 25 was interpreted as another repulse; and
-the rations which had been increased, when a message came that he would
-be in Ladysmith on February 22--which he soon found was a too confident
-expectation--were again reduced. The darkness before the dawn was very
-black. The news of Paardeberg reached Ladysmith on the afternoon of the
-27th; towards sunset next day Dundonald marched in. White endeavoured to
-organize a column to pursue the commandos retreating before Buller, but
-found that the toll of war had been paid so heavily by the Natal Field
-Force that little more than the strength of one company in each
-battalion was fit for service.
-
-Not the least of the trials undergone by the Ladysmith staff were the
-heliograms from the Tugela and the constant surprises of the
-_déchiffrage_. Sometimes pessimistic, sometimes the reverse and
-frequently trivial, there was scarcely an occasion on which they were
-helpful. The troubles of the relieving force figured largely in them.
-
-The sequel to the Colenso disaster was a suggestion that White after
-burning his ciphers[33]--a precaution which he naturally would take--and
-firing away his ammunition, should negotiate with the enemy for the
-surrender of the town. To this White made the manly and dignified reply
-that there was no thought of surrender; and to his own men he issued a
-soldier-like order of the day, in which he told them that they must not
-expect relief as early as had been anticipated, and expressed his
-confidence that the defence would be continued in the same spirited
-manner in which it had hitherto been conducted; and dutifully he applied
-himself to his task.
-
-A few days later he was bidden by Buller to "boil all his water." From
-Potgieter's Drift, Buller heliographed that "somehow he thought he was
-going to be successful this time"; that it was "quite pleasant to see
-how keen the men were"; that he hoped to be "knocking at Lancer's Hill"
-in six days' time; but after Spion Kop it was, "we had awful luck on the
-25th."
-
-Notes:
-
-[Footnote 31: As the officer in command of the Naval Brigade neatly put
-it: "the proof of the pudding is in the eating. The cavalry soldiers did
-excellent service in the lines--and we ate their horses."]
-
-[Footnote 32: The Boer name for Caesar's Camp--Wagon Hill Position.]
-
-[Footnote 33: This instruction was not included in the original
-heliogram, but was annexed to it as an afterthought in a supplementary
-message.]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-Deus ex Machina, No. II
-
-
-On January 10, 1900, Lord Roberts reached Capetown in the _Dunottar
-Castle_, the ship which ten weeks previously had brought Buller to South
-Africa, and resumed the task which he was not allowed to finish in 1881.
-The terms of peace imposed upon the British Government by the Boers
-after Majuba Hill resulted in an armistice of eighteen years, and he was
-still the soldier to whom the nation instinctively turned when it was
-again in trouble in South Africa.
-
-With one unimportant exception all his war experience had been gained in
-India or near its frontiers; but India is a spacious arena where
-spacious ideas can be freely developed. His mind had not been scored
-into grooves by years of desk duties in Pall Mall, or subjected to the
-necessity of accommodating itself to obsolete methods and House of
-Commons' views. The Indian Army, of which he obtained the command after
-serving in it in each commissioned rank, more closely approaches in its
-training, organization, and readiness for active service, the military
-standard set up by the chief continental nations, than the British Army;
-of which a distinguished German officer said at the time of the Boer War
-that it was meant for detachment warfare only and not to win great
-battles.
-
-With Lord Roberts came, as Chief of the Staff, Lord Kitchener of
-Khartoum, a hard and ready man who for fifteen years had been scouring
-the Nile. All his war service had been in Egypt, where recently he had
-not only smashed the dervishes and secured the Soudan, but by his
-diplomatic tact in the Fashoda affair had relaxed the tension of a
-dangerous international situation. He belonged to the Royal Engineers,
-who are, like the Army Service Corps, a semi-combatant body engaged in
-technical duties that do not offer much opportunity of gaining
-experience in the art of war or of practice in handling troops, but who
-have, nevertheless, given to the nation not a few soldiers of
-distinction. It was, perhaps, for this reason that Lord Roberts
-generally employed Lord Kitchener as an expert military foreman,
-entrusted with the supervision of the work of others.
-
-The situation in South Africa at the time of Lord Roberts' arrival was
-as follows:--
-
-Methuen was established at Modder River; Mafeking and Kimberley were
-holding out, and the latter at least seemed to be in no immediate
-danger; French was in a good position before Colesberg; Gatacre was
-maintaining himself without difficulty at Sterkstroom; the garrison at
-Ladysmith, after sixteen hours' fighting, had recently warded off a
-determined attack; the disaffected districts in the Cape Colony had not
-risen; and the despondent Buller, quickened by reinforcements and
-stimulated by the approach of the _Dunottar Castle_, was about to make
-another attempt to relieve Ladysmith.
-
-Schemes for a South African campaign had been for some time under
-consideration by the War Office, but as the attitude of the Free State
-could not be forecasted, they were more or less provisional. As late as
-the end of September the Premier and the War Minister scouted the idea
-of war with the Free State, and the official plan of a central advance
-on Bloemfontein by way of Bethulie and Norval's Pont, which held good
-until some little time after Lord Roberts' arrival, must therefore have
-been subterraneously drawn up without their knowledge. It was no doubt
-an excellent solution of a strategical problem studied by men in an
-office with a map of South Africa before them which showed several lines
-of communication converging on the Orange River; and Buller was about to
-carry it out when he was called aside to Natal.
-
-[Sidenote: Map, p. 260.]
-
-Lord Roberts had, however, two years before drawn up a scheme for an
-advance on the Transvaal by way of the Kimberley line as far as Mafeking
-and thence across country to Pretoria, and before leaving England he
-modified it so as to adapt it to action in the Free State. He proposed
-to leave the Kimberley line at some point between the Orange River and
-the Modder River, and to march in a S.E. direction on the Bloemfontein
-line. He was a firm believer in the indirect results of military
-movements, and he expected that his arrival at Springfontein or Edenburg
-and the menace to the Free State capital "must draw the Free Staters
-back from Kimberley and Natal," and that the occupation of it "would
-render the Boer positions south of the Orange River untenable." The
-official plan of an advance from the centre would force back the Free
-Staters engaged in the Cape Colony, and instead of isolating them would
-enable them to reinforce Cronje.
-
-After his arrival at Capetown, circumstances however compelled Lord
-Roberts to modify his plan of campaign. The news of the Spion Kop
-affair, anxiety on account of Kimberley, the presence of Cronje at
-Magersfontein and other considerations, determined him to march through
-the Free State by a more northerly route which would enable him to
-relieve Kimberley _en passant_ and to give battle to Cronje.
-
-The secret of the plan, which was known only to Lord Roberts' personal
-staff, was well kept, and operations were continued without reference to
-it. The earlier orders issued by him seemed to indicate that the central
-advance was still to be carried out. The VIth Division under Kelly-Kenny
-was sent to Naauwpoort; French was instructed to make a demonstration
-against Norval's Pont; and Methuen was warned that it might be necessary
-to withdraw part of the Modder River force.
-
-The Boers, who had captured at Dundee some intelligence papers which
-disclosed the original plan of campaign, were now more than ever
-convinced that the British Army must advance by way of Norval's Pont and
-Bethulie, and did not discover their error until it was too late to
-rectify it.[34] When Lord Roberts had made all his preparations, which
-involved the entire reorganization of the transport, and the raising of
-a considerable force of mounted troops, for his march of 100 miles
-across the veld eastward from the railway, the secret was disclosed to
-Kelly-Kenny and French on February 1. This plan of a flank march had
-also suggested itself to Buller, who proposed it in a memorandum which
-Lord Roberts found on his arrival in Capetown; but as Buller's scheme
-included the construction of a railway across the veld, and limited the
-advance of the Army to the rate at which the line could be pushed
-forward, it did not fall in with Lord Roberts' ideas.
-
-Meanwhile Cronje was not perturbed by the reports of troops coming up
-the Western line, and was confident that they only indicated a renewed
-but isolated attack on Magersfontein. He had no doubt that if necessary
-he could always fall back upon Kimberley and retreat towards the
-Transvaal; and the demonstrations made by Methuen westwards in the
-direction of Koedoesberg Drift served the double purpose of warning a
-disaffected region and of diverting Cronje's attention from the flank on
-which he was to be attacked and which he believed to be secure.
-
-The two months following the arrival of Lord Roberts in South Africa
-were the only brilliant period of a dreary war which lasted nearly three
-years, and will perhaps save it from being quoted in military history as
-the most sluggish campaign of recent times. In each of the two objects
-of strategy, namely to avoid fighting the enemy on ground of his own
-choosing, and to compel him to fight under unfavourable conditions, Lord
-Roberts was extraordinarily successful. There was a light touch, an
-ingenuity, in his swift and silent strategy which contrasted strongly
-with the heavy and dull methods which had hitherto controlled the
-action. While Buller was talking about his tedious railway across the
-veld, and Milner at Capetown was dismalling the situation and
-discouraging the advance, Lord Roberts had in effect entered the capital
-of the Free State and seemed to have completed half his task. The Boers
-were hypnotized and deceived not only by signs from which they drew
-wrong inferences, but also by bogus orders which it was arranged should
-come under their notice and which were simultaneously cancelled in
-cipher: and when too late they awoke from the bewilderment, they began
-to scuttle to and fro like rabbits in a warren. There is good reason to
-believe that if the strategic ability of Lord Roberts could have been
-united in one mind to the determination of Lord Kitchener the war would
-have been over in a year.
-
-On February 8 Lord Roberts arrived at Modder River, where he found bad
-news awaiting him. Buller had failed at Vaalkrantz, and the diamond men
-of Kimberley were threatening to capitulate. By February 13 30,000
-combatants, some of whom in order to preserve the illusion had been kept
-in the centre until the last moment, were in readiness at various points
-between the Orange and the Modder. The immediate problem before Lord
-Roberts was the relief of Kimberley in combination with the cornering of
-Cronje. In the background was the Natal trouble. Buller was again
-helplessly wringing his hands and reaching round to find excuses for his
-misadventures. Lord Roberts wisely left him alone and went on with his
-own work. He saw what Buller refused to see, that the Tugela could be
-crossed at Magersfontein and Ladysmith relieved at a drift of the Modder
-River.
-
-[Illustration: Sketch map of the Riet and Modder Drifts.]
-
-On February 11 Lord Roberts set his army in motion; and the operations
-of the next few days may be summarised with sufficient accuracy as a
-cavalry raid northwards, but avoiding Cronje's left flank at Brown's
-Drift, to relieve Kimberley; combined with an infantry advance to cut
-him off. It was not possible to make the initial movements in the
-direction of the eventual advance, as the Magersfontein-Brown's Drift
-quadrant N.E. of Modder River was strongly held by the enemy, and
-disallowed a cavalry advance from below the junction of the Riet and the
-Modder in the direction of Kimberley except by a westerly detour which
-could not be accommodated to the general scheme. In order to strike the
-practicable drifts on the two rivers above their confluence, it was
-necessary for the advance to be made along the curve of a parabola which
-issued from Modder River Station in a S.E. direction, and in a
-sixty-mile circuit crossed the rivers and finally approached Kimberley,
-only twenty miles distant from the starting point, almost in the
-opposite direction.
-
-At midday on February 11 the Cavalry Division under French reached
-Ramdam, a farm east of Graspan and fronting the drifts of the Riet,
-where the Army was being concentrated for the advance. Some hours
-elapsed before Cronje became aware that French had trekked away to the
-S.E., and to his slow and sullen spirit the movement did not appear to
-have much significance. He was persuaded that the British never trusted
-themselves much more than a day's march away from a railway. It was only
-a demonstration, a reconnaissance. He did, however, take certain
-precautions which, if they had been devised with a true appreciation of
-the situation and intelligently carried out, might have seriously
-checked French.
-
-He assumed that the initial direction of French's march would be
-continued indefinitely towards Koffyfontein, possibly even that it was a
-retirement from the Modder River position caused by bad news from the
-centre, and he sent a commando of observation, under C. de Wet, up the
-right bank of the Riet. The most adroit and skilful movement of the war
-had now begun without Cronje's comprehending its object.
-
-But French did not complete his first day's work very auspiciously. His
-supply column was far behind when he reached Ramdam, and owing to a
-misunderstanding Hannay's Brigade of Mounted Infantry from Orange River,
-which was instructed to join him, did not turn up: conflicting orders
-had resulted as usual, _ordre_, _contr'ordre_, _désordre_. French,
-however, felt himself strong enough to continue his march without
-Hannay, who, on his delayed march to Ramdam, engaged a detached body of
-Boers and thereby strengthened the enemy's conviction that Koffyfontein
-was the objective.
-
-As French approached the river, Waterval Drift, the lower of the two
-drifts across the Riet, was found to be occupied by De Wet, and the
-Division was diverted to De Kiel's Drift, which was reached without much
-difficulty at midday, February 12. On the right bank were the commando
-of the Jacobsdaal garrison under Lubbe, and the commando under De Wet
-and A.P.J. Cronje which had been sent to observe the cavalry movement;
-about 1,000 men in all. But De Wet could not get the Koffyfontein idea
-out of his head, and its influence removed many obstructions from the
-path of the advance. He boldly rode across French's front at De Kiel's
-Drift, and made S.E. for Winterhoek, closely followed by A.P.J. Cronje;
-and all French's horses could not find out where they had gone. Next day
-it was given out in Divisional Orders that the commandos had gone to the
-Modder River, and four weeks passed by before the Army ceased to suffer
-from the error.
-
-There was still "one more river to cross" before the diamond men of
-Kimberley could be relieved; and ere the thirst of the South African
-summer could be slaked on the banks of the Modder, a tract of
-twenty-five miles of veld, in which the absence of any homestead having
-"_fontein_" for its suffix declared the scarcity of water, must be
-traversed under the sun.
-
-In the forenoon of February 13 the Cavalry Division started northwards
-from De Kiel's Drift; and at last De Wet, who, unknown to French, was
-watching the trek from its right flank, partially relieved himself of
-the Koffyfontein idea. The effort weakened him, and he displayed none of
-that readiness of resource and promptitude of action with which he
-subsequently worried the British Army for the space of two years. He
-withdrew his own commando towards Koffyfontein, and having ordered Lubbe
-to follow French, reported to Cronje at Magersfontein that the cavalry
-was making for the Modder.
-
-French's objective points were now Rondeval and Klip River Drifts on the
-Modder, but in order to deceive Lubbe, who was hanging on to his right
-flank, and to elbow him away from the drifts, French changed direction
-with two brigades and headed for Klip Kraal Drift, some eight miles
-above Klip Drift, reverting suddenly to his original line as soon as the
-river came in sight. The drifts were held by small parties of the enemy,
-who offered no resistance, and on the evening of February 13 the
-Division took possession of the kopjes on the north bank.
-
-The occupation of the drifts was soon made known to Cronje, but the news
-revealed little to his dull and uninstructed nature, permeated with the
-idea that a British force and a railway were indissoluble entities.
-Though his communications eastward were now seriously threatened, it did
-not occur to him that there might be an alternative to fighting him out
-of Magersfontein, namely manoeuvring him out of it; and he persuaded
-himself that French's movement was a trap to entice him away pending an
-attack on Magersfontein from the south, and he was probably unaware that
-the relief of Kimberley was an urgent matter. He moved his own camp from
-Brown's Drift to a less exposed position at Bosjespan, and while
-retaining his hold on Magersfontein with his main body, sent out two
-commandos to watch French, and these accidentally occupied a line
-through which the cavalry must pass on its way to Kimberley.
-
-The arrival of the VIth Division on the morning of February 15 set
-French free to resume his march on Kimberley. The two commandos had on
-the previous day joined hands with Lubbe, who, after he was pushed out
-of French's way, crossed the Modder at Klip Kraal Drift and worked round
-to a position north of Klip Drift. The relieving force was now
-obstructed in the line of its advance by ridges on its right and left
-fronts and by the nek connecting them, all occupied by the enemy; while
-on its left flank was Cronje's new camp at Bosjespan, of the existence
-of which it was unaware. The situation seemed awkward, as the only way
-out of it was the shallow valley leading up to the nek, and exposed to a
-converging fire from the ridges on which two guns were posted.
-
-But French was not long in doubt, and like a bridge player who in order
-to win the game is sometimes compelled to assume the position of certain
-cards, with rare intuition correctly assumed that the nek was weakly
-held. Like a ship going down the ways to the water, the Division was
-launched to the front; cleaving the opposing waves and gaining momentum
-as it advanced, then righting itself, rose to the slope of the nek and
-carried it with resistless energy.
-
-After a short midday halt at Abon's Dam, French raised the siege of
-Kimberley before sunset; the besiegers under Ferreira did not wait to be
-attacked, but withdrew towards Boshof.
-
-The relief of Kimberley was perhaps the most brilliant feat of arms in
-the campaign. It was well-conceived and, considered by itself alone,
-well carried out, but the merit of it has been obscured by the fact that
-it cost less than half a hundred human casualties. When, on the morning
-of February 15, the VIth Division took over the outposts, and the
-Cavalry Division fell in on the banks of the Modder, there was the
-terrain of a Balaklava charge before it.
-
-It may well be doubted whether the price paid for the relief of the
-diamond men was not too high. Uninstructed public opinion at home called
-for the movement, and forced Lord Roberts' hand, but it was never an
-imperative military necessity. The horse casualties,[35] due to want of
-water, forced marches, and ignorance of horsemastership on the part of
-all ranks, who were inclined to regard cavalry work in the light of a
-steeplechase, were so heavy that when on February 17 French, after an
-attempt on the previous day to pursue a body of retreating Boers with
-his exhausted horses, was suddenly called upon to march thirty miles to
-head off Cronje, he could in all his Division mount less than the
-strength of two regiments. Nor was this all, for the rush to Kimberley
-was the indirect cause of the loss of the supply column at Waterval
-Drift on February 15; and thus in a few hours the mounted force and the
-supply column and transport which Lord Roberts and his staff had
-assembled with so much difficulty were, the former partially and the
-latter entirely, sacrificed.
-
-The VIth, VIIth, and IXth Infantry Divisions, under Kelly-Kenny, Tucker,
-and Colvile respectively, were withdrawn from Modder River and the
-stations south of it, and concentrated at Ramdam on February 11 and the
-two following days. Owing to the steepness of its banks the Riet River
-could only be crossed at Waterval and De Kiel's Drifts, and on these the
-Army converged, and trickled through them like the sands in the neck of
-an hour-glass. Men, horses, guns, supply and ammunition wagons were
-slowly and painfully transferred to the right bank, and the VIth
-Division, which followed the cavalry to De Kiel's Drift, though the
-first infantry to get through by more than twenty-four hours, was
-delayed by the block of transport and lost its start in the race to the
-Modder River.
-
-Meanwhile to Waterval Drift came Kelly-Kenny and Colvile in succession,
-and were soon pushed on to Wegdraai Drift, to which Tucker also hastened
-as soon as he could shake himself clear of De Kiel's Drift. The latter
-was now out of the running, for although Kelly-Kenny had already had a
-nine hours' march from Waterval Drift beginning soon after midnight, by
-5 in the afternoon of February 14 the VIth Division was ready to resume
-its march to support French at Klip Drift, some hours before Tucker came
-in. Kitchener had been ordered by Lord Roberts to attach himself to the
-VIth Division as assessor to Kelly-Kenny, and marched out with it.
-
-When Colvile, whose division was detailed as a reserve, arrived at
-Waterval Drift, he found the passage congested by transport of all
-kinds; and although after half a day's delay he was able to proceed to
-Wegdraai Drift, a large convoy on which the Army depended for the
-greater part of its supplies for the march to Bloemfontein, had to be
-left behind. A small escort remained with it, the wagons were laagered,
-and the oxen outspanned and sent out upon the veld to graze. No danger
-was anticipated.
-
-De Wet had not been lurking on the banks of the Riet for nothing.
-Hitherto he had not greatly distinguished himself. On the outbreak of
-the war he and his three sons were commandeered as private burghers, and
-when he reached the Natal border he was appointed vice-commandant. He
-served under A.P. Cronje and witnessed Carleton's surrender at
-Nicholson's Nek. In December he joined P. Cronje at Magersfontein, and
-was sent early in February to Koedoesberg Drift to check the British
-demonstrations on the Riet below Modder River Station, and later on to
-observe French. It is probable that the military deficiencies of his
-leaders made him sullen. Erasmus at Dundee stood idly in the background
-while Symons and Yule were on the slopes of Talana Hill, and Cronje was
-deaf to his remonstrances against a mere passive defence on the Modder
-River and the presence of women and children in the laager.
-
-But De Wet with a free hand quickly recovered himself when the fortune
-of war threw him a casual chance after French had despatched him in
-imagination to a destination where he could do no harm. The convoy was
-ordered to follow Colvile to Wegdraai at 5 p.m. on February 15, and at 8
-that morning, while the oxen were still grazing on the veld, De Wet, who
-was hovering near Winterhoek, swooped down upon the laager. The slender
-escort made a good resistance and the attack was reported to Lord
-Roberts at Wegdraai, who at first sent back a battalion with a battery
-and some mounted infantry, and when these were found insufficient the
-rest of the 14th Brigade were despatched under Tucker to endeavour to
-extricate the convoy. But when Tucker reached the Drift at sunset he
-found himself unable to bring it away. Most of the oxen had disappeared
-and De Wet had been reinforced. Lord Roberts was unwilling to delay his
-advance, and finding that the supplies were not absolutely indispensable
-to the success of his march, at midnight ordered Tucker to abandon the
-convoy and to return to Wegdraai. Next morning De Wet took possession of
-176 wagon loads of supplies and 500 slaughter oxen--his first exploit in
-the war.
-
-On February 16 Lord Roberts moved his Head Quarters to Jacobsdaal. It
-was his intention to advance on Kimberley and to make that town the base
-of his operations in the direction of Bloemfontein, when suddenly his
-plans were disarranged by an unexpected event. Cronje, who for two
-months had held stubbornly to Magersfontein, was reported to be trekking
-to the east. French's relief of Kimberley, the presence of an infantry
-division at Klip Drift, and the occupation of Jacobsdaal, were facts
-which even his obstinacy could not disregard. Like a wild creature
-startled in the night by a veld fire and suddenly dazzled by the glare,
-he rushed blindly towards the flames which were soon to consume him.
-Almost any direction but that which he took, the line of the Modder
-River, would have given him a better chance of escape. French's maimed
-cavalry could not have stopped him if he had retreated on either side of
-Kimberley, and even a withdrawal westward down the right bank of the
-Riet would have probably saved him. Methuen at Modder River took twelve
-hours to discover that Magersfontein had been abandoned at midnight on
-February 15.
-
-On the morning of the 16th Kelly-Kenny sent out from Klip Drift a force
-under C. Knox to cover the advance of the rest of the VIth Division on
-Kimberley. Soon a long column of dust was observed in the distance
-beyond the ridge on the right, and a closer examination showed that it
-was caused by Cronje's wagons. The discovery came not altogether as a
-surprise, for Boers had been noticed crossing the front on the previous
-day, and as what was now seen proved to be the rear of a column, the
-trek must have been some hours in progress.
-
-Kelly-Kenny at once abandoned his march on Kimberley and faced
-eastwards. It was found that the enemy had taken up a rearguard position
-on the southern end of the ridge. The northern end was soon seized by
-mounted infantry, but an attempt in interpose between the river and the
-Boer position failed. The ridge was cleared at 9 a.m. by a frontal
-attack, but not before Cronje's convoy had retired without molestation
-to Klip Kraal, where a second rearguard position was taken up on either
-side of Klip Kraal Drift.
-
-On the assumption that Cronje was endeavouring to effect a retreat on
-Bloemfontein, it was necessary to confine him to the right bank of the
-Modder. He was already in possession of Klip Kraal Drift, and although
-he could hardly hope to pass his wagons across it in sight of an active
-enemy, it was not his only chance. Within ten miles of his laager were
-Brandvallei, Paardeberg, and Vendutie Drifts, each of which would give
-him access to the southern bank.
-
-The task before the pursuing army was therefore to drive in his
-rearguards from their successive positions and prevent him getting
-comfortably away to secure a passage across the river. At nightfall on
-February 16 it seemed likely that he would succeed. His convoy in the
-main laager at Klip Kraal had had twelve hours' rest, and his rearguard
-had maintained itself on the second position; in spite of a frontal
-attack on the right bank, and of a flank attack on the left bank made by
-a battery and a force of mounted infantry which had crossed the
-semicircle formed by a northward bend of the river between Klip Drift
-and Klip Kraal Drift. The guns even succeeded in throwing a few shells
-into the laager, but ran short of ammunition. Kitchener, who remained
-with Kelly-Kenny as military assessor, had early in the day advocated a
-raid up the river in order to head off Cronje at Paardeberg Drift, but
-the exhaustion of the troops prevented the enterprise.
-
-Next day the chase began in earnest--to borrow for the occasion, as was
-done so frequently during the war, a metaphor from the sporting
-world--but only a few of the hounds were on the spot, and the rest of
-the pack were at Kimberley and Jacobsdaal.
-
-When the report of Cronje's retreat from Magersfontein, which Lord
-Roberts received soon after he reached Jacobsdaal, was confirmed by a
-message from Kitchener, he ordered French, who at that time was engaged
-with the enemy some miles north of Kimberley and endeavouring to capture
-the Long Tom whose recent arrival from Ladysmith _viâ_ Pretoria had
-scared the Kimberley civilians into a threat of surrender, to hurry
-eastward and endeavour to place himself between Cronje and Bloemfontein;
-but owing to a break in the field telegraph cable the message was
-delayed. Kelly-Kenny was at the same time instructed to carry on the
-pursuit.
-
-But the situation had not yet clearly disclosed itself, and Lord Roberts
-did not abandon his intention of sending Colvile's and Tucker's
-Divisions towards Kimberley; and their orders to march on the lower
-drifts of the Modder held good. Cronje's retreat in an unexpected
-direction was hard to explain. Was he going to meet the reinforcements
-which Buller had just reported were on their way from Natal? De Wet had
-just shown that there was a vigorous and enterprising body of the enemy
-ready to raid the railway south of Kimberley, and it was possible that
-he might have been reinforced from Colesberg.
-
-Towards evening, however, a second message came from Kitchener at Klip
-Drift. He summarised the situation on the Modder, which he was unable to
-control with the troops at his disposal, and said that he was asking
-French to proceed to Koodoos Drift to check Cronje from the east. Lord
-Roberts was not the man to adhere stolidly to his own plan when a better
-one was laid before him. The orders to the Divisions were cancelled, and
-before midnight on February 16 Colvile was marching out to join
-Kelly-Kenny in the chase. Tucker, whose Division had hardly recovered
-from the Waterval Drift affair, remained at Jacobsdaal.
-
-After sunset Cronje broke up his camp at Klip Kraal Drift and trekked
-along the right bank. At midnight he passed half of his transport over
-to the left bank at Paardeberg Drift, himself going on to Vendutie
-Drift, where the remainder, with the women and children against whose
-presence in camp De Wet had vainly protested, joined him next morning.
-
-So far he had done well, and even when his rearguard at Paardeberg was
-fired on by an advanced brigade of mounted infantry which had been
-pushed on by Kitchener, he did not lose confidence; although he was
-surprised that the British, "who could not march," had overtaken him.
-
-To De Wet and especially to Ferreira, whom he knew to be not far off, he
-looked for help, and even without them he believed that he would be able
-to cross Vendutie Drift.
-
-Ferreira was indeed not far off, but an obstacle suddenly sprang up
-between him and Cronje, and the aspect of it was so alarming that he
-withdrew in the opposite direction. The obstacle was French's attenuated
-Cavalry Division which, in obedience to Kitchener's summons, had left
-Kimberley before sunrise that morning, and after a march of twenty-six
-miles had reached the spot indicated by Kitchener for the heading of
-Cronje. As the Boer wagons were about to cross Vendutie Drift the shells
-of French's Horse Artillery began to fall upon them. The convoy was
-thrown into confusion, the oxen stampeded, Cronje was entangled and
-bewildered, and but for the gallant exertions of some foreign officers
-in the service of the Boers a fatal panic might have ensued. The advance
-guard under De Beer was reinforced from the main laager, and a
-demonstration made against the left flank of the cavalry; and although
-French held on, his position remained insecure and even precarious until
-the arrival of the infantry on the following morning. With a handful of
-tired, hungry, and unsupported horsemen he not only frightened Ferreira,
-whose force outnumbered his own, off the field, but also paralysed and
-prepared for destruction the army which had beaten Methuen and had held
-Magersfontein for two months.
-
-[Illustration: Paardeberg.]
-
-Next day, February 18, at 3 a.m. began the ten days' operations to which
-the name of the Battle of Paardeberg has been somewhat inaccurately
-given. Paardeberg is a prominent hill on the right bank of the Modder,
-four miles W.S.W. of the battle centre, Cronje's laager at Vendutie
-Drift, and lies on the extreme edge of the elliptical arena on which the
-battle was fought. It seems to have been chosen as the official word
-because the hill was the only distinctive physical feature shown on the
-banks of the river in the incomplete surveys of the time, and because
-the alternative would have been Stinkfontein, a farm near the field of
-battle. The Battle of Vendutie Drift would have been a more correct
-term.
-
-The Modder forms the major axis of the ellipse, which it enters near
-Koodoos Drift and leaves at Paardeberg Drift, and like most South
-African rivers runs in a deep channel between banks intersected by the
-tributary dongas which the rains have scored in the soft soil, and which
-afford almost the only shelter from artillery fire. The whole area is
-commanded by the surrounding kopjes and ridges.
-
-Cronje, though urged to break out of his laager on the night of February
-17, refused to move. It is probable that he might have effected his
-escape if he had abandoned his transport. An active force led by a
-determined man could have wriggled out under cover of the night, and
-joined one or other of the commandos which were known to be hovering.
-Cronje was in communication with Ferreira; he had sent to Bloemfontein
-for help; and De Wet was known to be on his way from Koffyfontein. But
-instead of making an effort to save himself he fatally trusted to relief
-from outside. He did not realize that Vendutie Drift was not a
-Magersfontein which he could hold indefinitely, or that during the last
-few weeks the British Army had been greatly increased. One result of his
-obstinacy was the desertion of several hundred Free Staters, who had not
-served very willingly under the leadership of a Transvaaler. Most of
-them returned to their homes.
-
-In the absence of the Commander-in-Chief, who was detained at Jacobsdaal
-by illness, Kelly-Kenny was the senior officer present with the force on
-the Modder River; but for some reason which may have formed itself in
-Lord Roberts' mind when they were fellow-passengers on the _Dunottar
-Castle_, he was not entrusted with the management of the battle.
-Kitchener had marched several hours with the VIth Division on February
-14 before Kelly-Kenny was aware of his presence; and as Chief of the
-Staff in direct communication with Head Quarters, he had much to say at
-Klip Drift. At Paardeberg the status of Kelly-Kenny became still more
-anomalous, Kitchener, though junior not only to him but also to two
-other generals present, being empowered by Lord Roberts to issue orders
-in his name so that there might be "no delay such as references to and
-fro would entail." The difficulty of the situation was increased by the
-fact that Kitchener was practically without a staff.
-
-The reason which induced Cronje to remain in his laager, namely the
-expected arrival of help from outside, also determined Kitchener to
-attack it without delay. He confidently expected to carry it in less
-than four hours, but Cronje held out for nine days.
-
-Kitchener's plan might have been foreseen by any officer who had been
-present at manoeuvres: a preliminary bombardment of the laager, followed
-by a holding frontal attack, in combination with rolling-up flank
-attacks. The strength of Cronje's position was supposed to be the laager
-itself, whereas it was rather the river banks and tributary dongas which
-he had occupied.
-
-The frontal display was assigned to a portion of the VIth Division; the
-Mounted Infantry under Hannay supported by an infantry brigade were to
-work round upstream and fall upon Cronje's left flank; while the IXth
-Division attacked his right flank from the west.
-
-Kitchener, who had come on with Hannay in advance of the VIth Division,
-began to issue his orders before he had seen the commanding officers of
-the troops which were to carry them out. Hannay, who was at hand, was
-despatched to his place in the east from which he never returned.
-Kelly-Kenny's ambiguous and humiliating position; Kitchener's impatience
-and impetuosity; his lack of a staff to carry out his plan; his omission
-to explain it to the divisional and brigade commanders; and his habit of
-"short-circuiting" orders to subordinates while their superior officers
-stood passively in the background, made unity of action impossible and
-February 18 a day of misunderstanding and ill-success. The battle was
-fought by a Board of Directors, who, in the unavoidable absence of their
-Chairman, were dominated by a headstrong General Manager, who was
-doubtful of their capacity to carry on the business.
-
-Kelly-Kenny and Colvile, whose Divisions came in during the night, had
-begun to put their troops in motion before Kitchener's plan was made
-known to them, and throughout the day the difficulty of co-ordinating
-the whole force to it was increased by the incorrect transmission or
-apprehension of oral orders. Kelly-Kenny proposed a preliminary
-investment of Cronje, but Kitchener would not consent to any
-postponement of his attack, for which no operation orders were issued.
-In a few hours, however, the soundness of Kelly-Kenny's judgment was
-shown; the attack became an investment, which was prolonged many days by
-the moral and physical exhaustion of the troops, who after forced
-marches by day and night on scanty rations were hustled without method
-into a costly battle.
-
-By 8 a.m. Kitchener was able to report to Head Quarters that Cronje was
-hemmed in. The cavalry had occupied the ground in rear of the laager,
-and he "thought that it must be a case of complete surrender." The
-troops were now set to the assault, and were quickened by an encouraging
-message from Lord Roberts. But they were almost immediately in trouble.
-Hannay had placed himself into position for the flank attack from the
-east, and his battery had already opened fire on the laager, when the
-guns themselves were shelled. A commando with two guns, under Steyn of
-Bethlehem, had arrived from Natal, and unobserved had seized a ridge
-between Stinkfontein and the Modder, which Hannay was about to cross;
-and although the Boer guns were silenced and the commando compelled to
-retire, the diversion seriously disarranged the scheme of assault.
-
-Stephenson's Brigade of the VIth Division, when on its way to cross to
-the right bank at Paardeberg Drift under instructions from Kelly-Kenny,
-had been recalled by Kitchener, whose orders were so vaguely expressed,
-that while the Brigadier believed that he was to act in the frontal
-attack from the south with the other brigade of the Division, he was
-really intended by the Chief of the Staff to support Hannay's flank
-movement. He was now compelled to change front to meet Steyn's threat,
-and Hannay's attack was postponed. Stephenson was then ordered to resume
-his advance, but apparently still in ignorance that he was expected to
-act in co-operation with the mounted infantry, he so disposed his troops
-that he gave little support to Hannay, who early in the afternoon
-reported to Kitchener that he was too weak to advance with the flank
-attack. A peremptory message was returned, in which he was ordered "to
-rush the laager at all costs," even without Stephenson's support. Some
-of the words of the order seemed to reflect upon his determination, so
-he obeyed it literally and immediately. At the head of as many men as he
-could bring to him on the spot, he charged towards the laager, and when
-his horse was killed under him he marched on foot to meet his death.
-
-As soon as it was seen that Hannay had thrown himself away, Stephenson
-was ordered to renew the flank attack. With a portion of his troops and
-some mounted infantry, he crossed to the right bank at Vanderberg's
-Drift, and formed to the left. A small body of Hannay's force had won a
-position near the Boer entrenchments, and it is probable that
-Stephenson's assault would have succeeded but for a curious accident,
-which could not have been foreseen, and by which he was deprived of part
-of his firing line when it was most needed. The setting sun suddenly
-appeared from beneath a bank of clouds in the west, directly in line
-with the objective, and the dazzle of the light blotted out the laager,
-at the same time illuminating the target on which the Boers were firing.
-A further advance was impracticable, and the troops, which had already
-fixed bayonets for the assault, were withdrawn when within 500 yards of
-the enemy's position. Thus the second attempt to get at the laager from
-the east failed, but Stephenson's action was not entirely without a
-result, as he was able to put his men into entrenchments, where they
-remained during the night.
-
-Meanwhile, Colvile was pushing upstream from the west. On that side the
-Boers had an advanced position in a big donga, which runs into the right
-bank, about two miles below the laager, and upon which a few companies
-of the Highland Brigade, having waded the river, had already made a
-gallant but unsuccessful attack. Colvile, under orders from Kitchener,
-placed himself astride the river, sending the Brigade under
-Smith-Dorrien across to the north bank, while the Highland Brigade acted
-on the left of the frontal attack; and when Gun Hill, which outflanked
-the donga, was occupied, Kitchener ordered an assault on the donga, to
-be carried out simultaneously with Hannay's attack on the left flank.
-The order, however, was not communicated to Smith-Dorrien on Gun Hill,
-and he was not aware of it until he saw some troops of his own Division,
-supported by a few companies sent across by Kitchener from the left
-bank, charging across the open. In a few minutes, the gradual
-retardation of the rush, and then its extinction under a heavy fire,
-showed that the attempt had failed. It is said that Smith-Dorrien had
-been so imperfectly made acquainted with Kitchener's plan, that he was
-under the impression that he had been sent to the north bank to prevent
-the Boers breaking out of the laager, and not to attack them upstream.
-
-The frontal attack was initiated by Kelly-Kenny with the 13th Brigade
-under C. Knox, the 18th Brigade having been detached to support Hannay's
-flank attack. The main body of the Boers was north of the river, but
-strong detachments held the left-bank dongas. Colvile was dealing with a
-demonstration against Paardeberg Drift when an oral message from
-Kitchener reached him, which he interpreted as an order to go to Knox's
-assistance with his Division, which was thus withdrawn from the flank
-and lent to the frontal attack. He was doubtfully carrying out what he
-believed to be his instructions when an order reached him to send the
-19th Brigade, under Smith-Dorrien, across the river. A few companies of
-his Highland Brigade succeeded in establishing themselves on the right
-bank, and Knox drove the enemy out of the left-bank dongas, but was
-forbidden by Kelly-Kenny to cross the river, as the enemy was too
-strongly posted. The frontal attack was spent, but the troops remained
-on their ground until the approach of night released them.
-
-Two miles S.E. of Vendutie Drift, a hill, to which the name of
-Kitchener's Kopje was afterwards given, rises out of the veld. In the
-tactics of the assault on the laager, it was not a position of much
-importance, but in the Paardeberg drama it was a striking scene. The
-detachment of infantry which Kelly-Kenny sent early in the day to occupy
-it had been withdrawn without his knowledge by some wandering staff
-officer, who thought he had found a better use for the little garrison,
-and replaced by a few mounted men. These, while watching the progress of
-the fight, and perhaps regretting that they were not taking a more
-active part in it, were suddenly called upon to defend themselves.
-
-De Wet, with two guns and 600 men, had arrived from Koffyfontein at the
-opportune moment of the crisis of the flank attacks. He soon carried the
-kopje, and when at 4.30 p.m. he opened fire, the shells which he pitched
-into the VIth Division baggage and artillery were the first intimation
-of his intervention received by the Head Quarter Staff, absorbed in
-their attack on the laager; and for the second time the troops were
-called away from the work in hand, to deal with an unexpected attack
-from the rear, and the dwindling hope of carrying Cronje's position
-before nightfall passed away.
-
-If, on the British side at Paardeberg, the commanders were not at their
-best when acting _in partibus_ beyond the personal control of Lord
-Roberts, on the other hand De Wet's release from immediate subordination
-to Cronje seemed to make him a more dangerous foe. His capture of the
-convoy at Waterval Drift on February 15 was followed in three days by a
-daring raid on a British army with a handful of men. It was an impudent
-and haphazard enterprise, which would hardly have been attempted if he
-had been in possession of fuller information, but it was justified by
-its success. De Wet had been reinforced at Koffyfontein, and if he had
-brought all the commandos at his disposal with him to Paardeberg Cronje
-would probably have been relieved. But he had not clearly discerned the
-strategy of Lord Roberts, whose presence at Jacobsdaal deceived him, and
-instead of striking with all his strength in one direction, he weakened
-his force by expeditions eastward towards Edenburg and westward towards
-Belmont.
-
-His appreciation of the tactical situation at Paardeberg, based on the
-rumours which drifted into Koffyfontein, was imperfect, and when he came
-within sight of the Modder, and saw the British Army before him, he must
-have regretted that he had not entirely abandoned the idea that the
-advance would be made by way of Koffyfontein. But the time and the place
-could not have been better arranged. The British Army was preoccupied
-with Cronje; and Kitchener's Kopje in De Wet's hands gave a strong flank
-protection to Steyn, and later on to De Beer, who, when driven out of
-his position north of Koodoos Drift by a resuscitated cavalry brigade
-under Gordon, crossed to the kopjes south of the river. Neither Steyn
-nor De Beer had been effectually checked, and they were hovering for a
-chance to swoop down.
-
-At nightfall the situation was as follows:--
-
-The laager was holding out, and the chief result of the day's work was a
-contraction of the line held by the Boers on the river; an attempt by
-Kelly-Kenny to recapture Kitchener's Kopje had failed; fully one quarter
-of the perimeter commanding Vendutie Drift was in the possession of the
-enemy; the troops were exhausted and the casualties exceeded 1,200.[36]
-
-It does not necessarily follow from the failure of a tactical scheme
-that it was unsuited to the occasion; but the failure of February 18 was
-due to one of three causes: to the defects of the scheme, to the mode of
-its execution, or to the Boer external attacks. It was not a scheme
-which either Kelly-Kenny or Colvile would have devised if left to
-himself, and it is very doubtful whether Kitchener had Lord Roberts'
-direct authority for it. But assuming that it offered a better chance of
-crippling the enemy at large than the alternative of an investment, it
-was so hastily devised and so clumsily pursued that it became hourly
-more difficult to carry through, until it was finally subverted by De
-Wet. Many of the commanding officers had as little knowledge of
-Kitchener's purpose as the pawns which are moved by the hands of the
-chess player.
-
-The conclusion seems to be that but for De Wet's intrusion the brute
-force of the investors might possibly have prevailed. But the final
-cause of the failure was Lord Roberts' error of judgment in putting
-Kitchener into virtual command of the Vendutie Drift force, thereby
-superseding senior officers of greater tactical ability. The
-complications arising out of brevet rank and local rank, grades peculiar
-to the British Army,[37] were already sufficiently disturbing, and yet
-Kitchener was irregularly advanced by a few words in a private letter
-from Lord Roberts to Kelly-Kenny.
-
-In his report on the day's work to Lord Roberts at Jacobsdaal, Kitchener
-could only say that he hoped to do something more definite on the
-morrow. Lord Roberts at once ordered him to be reinforced, and being now
-convalescent set out for Paardeberg, where he arrived during the
-forenoon of February 19.
-
-It is significant that Lord Roberts did not renew the assault on the
-laager, and confined himself to operations against Kitchener's Kopje,
-thus reverting to the scheme of investment proposed by Kelly-Kenny on
-the previous day. The burghers evacuated the big donga during the night.
-
-Lord Roberts was, from motives of humanity as well as from lack of
-hospital accommodation, reluctant to inflict another loss of 8 per cent,
-upon his troops. The inability to deal with a further accumulation of
-wounded was perhaps a justification of his decision, but his hesitancy
-to fight costly battles, which was characteristic of many general and
-field officers of undoubted personal courage, is not so easy to excuse.
-Even on the score of humanity, it is better to fight one decisive action
-in which the casualties amount to 20 per cent., than to obtain the same
-result by fighting three actions in each of which the casualties amount
-to 8 per cent. The aggregate of human suffering caused to each side by
-the war would have been less if the struggle had been fought out more
-relentlessly, and without so much regard to the expenditure of life.
-There seems to have been a theory that a percentage of casualties which
-exceeded ten would demoralize the troops, although it had often been
-greatly exceeded in the battles of former campaigns. In some of the
-operation orders subsequently issued, the reservation, "if this be
-possible without undue loss," appeared.
-
-The presence of De Wet on Kitchener's Kopje gave Cronje a moral support
-which was not of much use to him. According to De Wet's account, he
-considered it a point of honour to remain with the women, children, and
-wagons in the laager, which every hour was growing more unfit for
-occupation.
-
-The ejectment of De Wet, to be followed by an advance on Bloemfontein by
-French's cavalry, was substituted by Lord Roberts for the assault on the
-laager, which was to be left to starve itself out. But the removal of De
-Wet from the kopje, which he had stolen from his opponents, was not an
-easy task, and for three nights and two days the Ajax of the Boers
-defied the lightnings which played upon the hill. On the 19th, a body of
-cavalry was brought round from the north, but was found unequal to the
-task. Towards evening an infantry brigade was thrown at the kopje, but
-after it had obtained some success, and had partially entrenched itself
-on the slopes, it was withdrawn by Lord Roberts. No action was taken on
-the following day, but on the 21st a cavalry attack forced De Wet out of
-his hold; but though squeezed like a sponge between the fingers, his
-commando was incompressible, and oozed away towards the east; no
-effective pursuit being possible, owing to the condition of the horses.
-Meanwhile the investment continued, but the scarcity of ammunition
-restrained the activity of the bombardment. An offer made by Lord
-Roberts to take away the piteous women and children, praying for peace
-in their time, was rejected by Cronje.
-
-The departure of De Wet, who picked up De Beer and Steyn on his way,
-enabled the gap in the circle of investment to be filled in, and the
-agony of the laager was drawn out for six days. Nothing but a strenuous
-attack from outside the circle could save it. De Wet indeed, who had
-trekked in the direction of Poplar Grove, and who had received
-reinforcements from Colesberg and Natal, which placed 5,000 burghers
-under his orders, made an unsuccessful attempt to recover the kopje and
-retreated hastily, though a gallant remnant of eighty-seven burghers
-under Theunissen held on, and were not made prisoners until a brigade
-had been launched against them. An envoy was sent by De Wet into the
-laager to urge Cronje to break out. A half-hearted consent was given,
-but at the appointed time the river was in flood and the attempt was
-postponed.
-
-The exhaustion of the cavalry, and the report of the arrival of
-reinforcements at Poplar Grove, compelled Lord Roberts to abandon his
-plan of sending on French to Bloemfontein; but as he confidently looked
-to an early occupation of the Free State capital, he detached Kitchener
-to Naauwpoort with instructions to see to the opening up of the railway
-from the south, upon which the Army would depend for its supplies as
-soon as it reached Bloemfontein. He was, perhaps, glad of an excuse to
-employ his Chief of the Staff elsewhere for a time, for although the
-Divisional Commanders had loyally accepted the situation, he could not
-but feel that they had not been quite fairly treated, and that the
-Kitchener dictatorship had not been a success.
-
-The end came on February 27. Soon after sunrise on the anniversary of
-Majuba Hill the white flag was raised in the laager. During the last
-five days, Tucker, who with a portion of his Division had been ordered
-up from Jacobsdaal when the news of the investment reached Lord Roberts,
-closed gradually in on the west, and Stephenson on the east; and on the
-26th the laager was severely bombarded by four newly arrived howitzers.
-The final stroke was delivered by two companies of the Royal Canadians,
-who, disregarding a false order to retire, held on, and by daybreak had
-entrenched themselves within 100 yards of the flanking trench of the
-laager; and though this feat was not the direct cause of the surrender,
-which had been decided on the previous evening, it was not the less
-meritorious. Cronje in vain endeavoured to persuade the burghers to
-postpone the surrender over Majuba Day. In a few hours 4,000 men, the
-majority of whom were Transvaalers, were under guard as prisoners of
-war, and Cronje was on his way to St. Helena, there to commune with the
-Shade of Napoleon.
-
-It is said that when Kruger heard of the capitulation of Vendutie Drift
-he exclaimed, "The real war will now begin." To the British public, the
-surrender of Cronje, followed in a few hours by the relief of Ladysmith,
-seemed to prove that the real war had now ended.
-
-On the following day Lord Roberts transferred the bulk of the Army to a
-fresh camping ground at Osfontein, and remained there for seven days.
-The halt was rendered necessary by the exhaustion of the cavalry and
-artillery horses, on whom the greater stress of the advance had fallen,
-and whose rations had been docked even more than those of their riders;
-and it gave Lord Roberts an opportunity of drawing supplies for the
-advance from the Kimberley line, from which he was about to sever
-himself. The halt also enabled the Army of the Modder to pull itself
-together for a fresh effort, after a fortnight of harassing marches and
-weary investment work on stinted rations.
-
-What might almost be called a Select Committee of the House of Lords met
-at Kimberley on March 1. Lord Roberts rode over from Osfontein to
-consult Lord Methuen, and they were joined by Lord Kitchener, who
-returned from his brief visit of inspection to Naauwpoort and De Aar.
-
-Mafeking was in greater embarrassment than ever had come upon Kimberley,
-and there was trouble in the spacious area of Cape Colony lying west of
-the Capetown-Kimberley railway. Lord Roberts' hopes that a force raised
-locally in Kimberley might be available for the relief of Mafeking were
-disappointed; and after his return to Osfontein with Kitchener, he
-instructed Methuen to see to it with a Yeomanry brigade, which would be
-sent to him. To check the risings in Cape Colony, which for the time
-being were confined to the Prieska district, Kitchener had already sent
-out flying columns from De Aar.
-
-The tenacity and resolution of De Wet were never more conspicuous than
-during the disheartening days which followed his retirement from
-Kitchener's Kopje. Neither Cronje's surrender, nor the news of the
-relief of Ladysmith and of the British working steadily towards the
-Orange River bridges, nor the despondency of his own men, diverted him
-from his purpose of interposing between Lord Roberts and the Free State
-capital. President Steyn came over from Bloemfontein to stimulate the
-discouraged, and President Kruger was brought round from Joubert's Head
-Quarters in Natal, where he had been successful in persuading the
-burghers dismayed by the relief of Ladysmith to hold on to the
-Biggarsberg positions. After a conference with Steyn, he went on to
-Poplar Grove, arriving there in time to hear the opening shots of the
-battle of March 7.
-
-[Illustration: Map.]
-
-De Wet's force at Poplar Grove was at first sufficient for the
-occupation of a position on the left bank of the Modder only, but
-subsequent reinforcements brought it up to a number which was estimated
-by the British Intelligence not to exceed 14,000 and which was probably
-much less. The position was then prolonged across the river, the front
-being divided into two unequal portions by the Drift at Poplar Grove.
-
-To drive away De Wet, and to entangle him as Cronje had been fatally
-entangled in the Drifts of the Modder River, and cut off his retreat to
-Bloemfontein, was the tactical scheme of Lord Roberts, who had twice as
-many men, and at least five times as many guns, as his opponent.
-
-In his method of communicating his plan to the officers concerned Lord
-Roberts made an innovation. Instead of issuing written Battle Orders he
-read a memorandum at a council of war, and afterwards circulated copies
-of it. Thus he was able to explain the situation and expound his plan in
-greater detail than is possible in the bald and sterilized paragraphs of
-Orders; but he omitted to give in it definite times at which certain
-movements were to be begun, or to be completed, and the oral
-instructions on these points given subsequently were not clearly
-understood.
-
-In brief, Lord Roberts' plan for Poplar Grove was as follows. When
-French's cavalry had made a wide circuit of seventeen miles south of the
-Modder, out of reach of De Wet's left flank, and had placed itself in
-rear of the Boer position, the VIth Division was to make a flank attack
-on the Boer left on the Seven Kopjes, and endeavour to roll it up
-towards the river, by way of Table Mountain. The enemy's centre was to
-be threatened by the VIIth Division along the line of the Modder, and
-his right on the north bank of the river by the IXth Division. With his
-great superiority in men and guns, Lord Roberts might reasonably expect
-to capture the whole Boer force, although he had no longer a Cronje but
-a De Wet to deal with.
-
-The day's operations began at 3 a.m., when the cavalry marched out of
-Osfontein; but soon the absence of precise staff arrangements gave
-trouble. The VIth Division, which was ordered to follow French, who it
-was understood would leave camp at 2 a.m., was headed off by the
-cavalry, and had to be halted until he was clear of the infantry front.
-Neither Kelly-Kenny nor French seems to have mastered the scheme of
-attack. At daylight, when the cavalry should have been well in rear of
-the Boer position, it was in fact not far from the VIth Division, about
-two miles south of the Boer left flank on Seven Kopjes and in full view
-of the enemy.
-
-As soon as the Boers perceived that an enveloping movement was in train,
-they withdrew towards the river, and French reported that he had turned
-their left flank, and was in pursuit, and that Seven Kopjes was open to
-Kelly-Kenny's advance. The part assigned to him in the morning's work
-was, however, the cutting off of the enemy's retreat, and he nullified
-the tactical scheme by showing himself prematurely.
-
-His next message to Lord Roberts, who was watching the battle from Le
-Gallais Kopje, announced that he was shelling the wagons in retreat, but
-that he could not get at them, as they were protected by flanking
-positions on neighbouring kopjes. It was now evident that French instead
-of cutting off the enemy was only pursuing him without much success.
-
-The VIth Division advanced with great deliberation. Kelly-Kenny reported
-to Head Quarters that Seven Kopjes had been reoccupied, and that a
-detached hill to the east seemed to be strongly held, which was not the
-impression given by French's message less than an hour previously.
-However, Kelly-Kenny occupied Seven Kopjes without opposition, and it is
-said that the infantry on the south bank were never in touch with the
-enemy. On the north bank the IXth Division slowly, but without much
-difficulty, pushed back the Boer right and captured a gun on Leeuw Kop,
-the solitary trophy of the day.
-
-Finally, the Divisions converged on Poplar Grove, but De Wet had shaken
-himself free without the loss of a single burgher taken prisoner, and
-with almost his full complement of wagons. He retired along the Modder
-towards Abraham's Kraal, keeping French at arm's length with his
-rearguards. He owed his escape to the hesitancy of his opponents and his
-own mobility. The details of the fight show that some of the commanders
-waited upon one another like Lord Chatham and Sir Richard Strachan at
-Walcheren. Again the British cavalry was ineffective for pursuit.
-
-It was not known at the time that had Lord Roberts' scheme been
-successful in its entirety, a capture would have been made that might
-have brought the war to a sudden close. President Kruger was present
-during the greater part of the battle, and with bitter chagrin saw the
-burghers streaming past him in retreat.
-
-Whether the battle of Poplar Grove is to be considered a success or not
-depends upon the view which is taken of its actual and potential
-results. Lord Roberts did not capture another Boer army, as he fully
-expected to do, but he expelled it from a good position, and put it on
-the run; and the British Army was one stage nearer to Bloemfontein.
-
-Next day Kitchener was again, in his capacity of military foreman, sent
-away to superintend the carrying out of the arrangements he had already
-made for dealing with the disaffected Prieska district. His
-disengagement from Lord Roberts removed for the time a potential cause
-of failure, namely, the uncertainty, to which perhaps the escape of De
-Wet at Poplar Grove may be due, whether a battle was to be fought with
-the Commander-in-Chiefs rapier or with the Chief-of-the-Staff's
-bludgeon.
-
-De Wet, undaunted by his defeat and by the defection of a large number
-of his men, who disappeared after Poplar Grove, summoned a Krijgsraad,
-which authorized further resistance. A position threatening the left
-flank of the advance on Bloemfontein was taken up on the kopjes near
-Abraham's Kraal.
-
-Reinforcements of "Zarps" from the Transvaal, and of contingents under
-Delarey and P. de Wet, came in, and a force of about 5,000 men was
-rallied, to make one more rearguard stand against Lord Roberts. In the
-absence of C. de Wet, who had been called away to Bloemfontein, Delarey
-was in command.
-
-Lord Roberts' scheme for the advance on Bloemfontein was based on
-reports that the Boers would take up a strong position a few miles N.W.
-of the capital. He divided his force into three columns, each having a
-cavalry brigade attached to it, which, marching by different routes to a
-point south of the city, would cut the railway and turn the Boer flank.
-On March 10 the advance began, French being in command of the left
-column, which alone was seriously engaged during the march.
-
-The position taken up by the Boers at Abraham's Kraal at first only
-included a group of kopjes near the river, and another group at
-Damvallei, but eventually it was extended further south to Driefontein
-and Boschrand, in order to command another road to Bloemfontein.
-
-In accordance with Lord Roberts' instructions, and to the great
-disappointment of Delarey, who hoped to commit the left column to a
-frontal attack on the Abraham's Kraal and Damvallei Kopjes, which lay on
-the direct road to Baberspan, where it was due to bivouac that night,
-French avoided them, and changed direction towards Driefontein and
-Boschrand. Delarey, finding that he was not to be attacked on his right,
-reinforced Driefontein Hill, which, as it happened, had just been
-evacuated by De Wet, who had returned from Bloemfontein. The occupation
-of a detached spur of the Boschrand by a chance body of mounted infantry
-from the centre column, and a threatening movement of that column's
-cavalry brigade, had drawn him away from Driefontein on to the crest of
-the Boschrand. French's change of direction caused the march of his
-column to converge upon that of the centre column, and he was now
-crossing the front of a sinuous line of ten miles occupied by the enemy,
-and extending from the Boschrand, through Driefontein, Damvallei, and
-the Abraham's Kraal Kopjes to Oertel's Drift on the Modder. The right of
-the line had already diverted French from his march on the appointed
-bivouac, which he now proposed to reach by turning the left.
-
-Suddenly Delarey opened fire from Driefontein on the cavalry, and the
-advance of the infantry had to be delayed while the situation was
-examined. The result of the reconnaissance determined Kelly-Kenny, who
-was in command of the left column's infantry, to attack the minor
-features of Delarey's position. He was unable to communicate with
-French, but the latter, as soon as he saw that Kelly-Kenny had achieved
-his object, ordered a turning movement by the cavalry.
-
-The cavalry of the centre column, which earlier in the day had been
-informed that French was not in need of its assistance, co-operated
-imperfectly. The afternoon was wearing away, and Kelly-Kenny, while
-waiting impatiently for the turning movement to take effect, received a
-message from Lord Roberts, instructing him to push on, as it was
-believed that the enemy's position was not held in great strength.
-
-Kelly-Kenny, for the first time able to fight a battle in his own way,
-now set himself to clear the enemy out of the Driefontein ridge.
-Reinforcements were ordered up to him from the centre column, but he won
-his victory without their aid, and after a struggle which lasted till
-sunset, Delarey was expelled from Driefontein. The Boers were still in
-occupation of the other positions on the line, but De Wet, although
-strongly urged by Delarey to hold on, found it advisable to withdraw
-from them. The burghers drifted away in the darkness, after the
-exhausted cavalry had made a formal attempt at pursuit.
-
-Two of the field guns which had been taken three months before at
-Colenso fought on the Boer side at the Battle of Driefontein, which
-though but a passing incident in the war, has been favoured by the
-German critics with their cordial approval. "Driefontein was fought
-substantially on the principles evolved by the experiences of the
-campaign of 1870-1871." Kelly-Kenny's wilful and successful "use of deep
-formations, limited front, and of a wasting fire to obtain ascendancy
-before crushing the enemy with a simultaneous charge" is considered to
-uphold the correctness of the German theory of attack, which thirty
-years of new conditions of warfare have not modified.[38]
-
-Next day the advance on Bloemfontein was resumed, and French's column
-was merged in the centre column under Lord Roberts. The column under
-Tucker was marching on the Free State capital by way of Petrusburg,
-twenty miles to the south, as there was a possibility that some of the
-commandos in retreat from beyond the Orange might be approaching. De Wet
-did his best to organize a final stand N.W. of the city, but it was soon
-evident that Lord Roberts' movements could not be checked, and President
-Steyn fled to Kroonstad.
-
-The cavalry was pushed on, and on the afternoon of March 12 the railway
-was cut at Ferreira's Siding, a few miles south of Bloemfontein. Some
-resistance was offered at a ridge commanding the approach to the
-capital, but the defenders withdrew during the night. Soon after
-midnight, a small party of pioneers, under Hunter-Weston of the Royal
-Engineers, started to circle eastwards round the city, and having with
-much difficulty in the darkness found the railway on the north side,
-destroyed a culvert on the line and thereby entrapped a considerable
-amount of rolling stock.
-
-Next morning Lord Roberts came to the line, and at midday the
-municipality and leading citizens of Bloemfontein waited on him at
-Ferreira's Siding, and tendered the submission of the city. It was a
-notable episode in the military history of Great Britain, and there was
-a touch of a vanished mediaevalism in the ceremony.
-
-The march from Ramdam to Bloemfontein restored the British Army in the
-eyes of the nation. It was no longer a machine which constantly broke
-down whenever stress was laid upon it, but was working quietly and on
-the whole successfully. It had acquired confidence in itself, and the
-infantry especially had done well during the month's advance.
-Notwithstanding long marches, which in the end were equally fatiguing
-whether made by day or by night, on restricted rations in a trying
-climate, the proportion of men who fell out was small.
-
-The cavalry did not greatly distinguish itself. Two brilliant exploits,
-the rush from Klip Drift to Kimberley, and the heading off of Cronje at
-Vendutie Drift, practically exhausted it. Its reconnaissance work during
-the advance was poorly executed, and after each fight came the same
-report, that the horses were unable to pursue the retiring burghers.
-Overloading, indifferent march discipline and horsemastership, night
-marches without previously watering and feeding the horses, reduced Lord
-Roberts' mounted troops to but a fraction of their nominal strength; and
-raised a question whether French, whose military capacity was
-undeniable, might not be more usefully employed in infantry operations.
-
-There is more than a substratum of truth in the remark once made by a
-caustic foreign critic, that an Englishman talks more and knows less
-about horses and their management than any other man.
-
-Notes:
-
-[Footnote 34: In the Egyptian War of 1882 Arabi was similarly misled by
-Sir Garnet Wolseley, who making as if to land his Army near Aboukir Bay,
-suddenly took it into the Suez Canal, and threw it ashore at Ismailia.]
-
-[Footnote 35: 350,000 horses were used up during the campaign, in other
-words, the war strength of one cavalry regiment every other day. The
-removal of a cavalry officer from his command after the battle of
-Graspan, because he could not do with exhausted horses what was expected
-of him by an infantry officer, will perhaps account for a considerable
-portion of the wastage.]
-
-[Footnote 36: It is stated on the authority of the United States
-Military attaché that Kitchener said next day that if he had known the
-power of the Mauser behind entrenchments, he would not have attempted to
-assault the laager.]
-
-[Footnote 37: They were originally granted as a counterpoise to the
-irregularities of the system of promotion by purchase.]
-
-[Footnote 38: See Colonel du Cane's translation of Vol. II. of the
-German Official Account, p. 52.]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-Alarms and Excursions
-
-
-The occupation of Bloemfontein by the British Army in March, 1900,
-ushered in the second or _guerilla_ period of the war. Hitherto the
-struggle had been mainly, though not entirely, maintained against
-considerable bodies of Boers, who though widely dispersed acted more or
-less under a common direction; but after the capture of the Free State
-capital, a system of partisan and irregular warfare was adopted by the
-enemy.
-
-The change was not suddenly effected. It was an instinctive, almost an
-imperceptible, development rendered necessary by circumstances. The
-reverses on the Modder, the failure at Ladysmith, the ill success which
-attended the attempts to raise the fiery cross in the northern districts
-of Cape Colony, indicated to the burghers the cause of the instability
-of their military machine. They discovered, in time, that its centre of
-gravity was too highly pitched and must be brought nearer the earth. For
-five months the war had been carried on under the orders of a federal
-syndicate composed of the two Presidents sitting with casual military
-assessors, scarcely one of whom was a strategist or capable of viewing
-the Boer cause synoptically. Cronje was gone into captivity; Joubert was
-suspected to be half-hearted; and Botha, who had begun so well in Natal,
-was a disappointment.
-
-The Boers recognized that the British strategy had been astonishingly
-successful, and that they could not hope to compete with it. But they
-believed, not without justification, that in minor tactics and the
-smaller operations of war they were the equals of their enemy and in
-war-craft his superior. The power of a slender, well-led, and resolute
-force was shown at Nicholson's Nek, Waterval Drift, and elsewhere, and
-it began to dawn upon their lethargic minds that the individual efforts
-of handy commandos acting to a great extent independently offered them
-the best chance of resisting the invader.[39] The new method was almost
-immediately put on trial and, with certain notable exceptions, continued
-throughout the war, which mainly by its use was prolonged for twenty-six
-months against an enemy daily increasing in numbers. Not that the Boers
-were not at first greatly discouraged by the victories on the Modder,
-which admitted Lord Roberts to Bloemfontein, and by the tranquillity
-which suddenly brooded upon the arena of war. Even the Prieska
-rebellion, from which so much was hoped owing to its proximity to the
-line of communication with Capetown, was dying away under the vigorous
-hands of Kitchener, who had been detached from Head Quarters to deal
-with it.
-
-Many of the burghers availed themselves of a proclamation issued by Lord
-Roberts on March 15, under which, after taking an oath of neutrality,
-they were allowed to return to their farms, and there remain during good
-behaviour. Others took furlough, with or without permission, or fled to
-Kroonstad. When Joubert remonstrated with De Wet for acquiescing in the
-exodus, the latter replied that he could not help it. The burghers were
-not accustomed to discipline and could not be coerced, but they would
-return with renewed courage by and by.
-
-The demoralization was, however, confined to the burghers who had been
-fighting on the Modder River. The commandos which had been opposed to
-Gatacre, Clements, and Brabant in the Cape Colony retired across the
-Orange in good order under Olivier, Lemmer, and E.R. Grobler; and
-although encumbered by lengthy trains of ox-wagons, marched up the right
-bank of the Caledon along the Basuto Border, and established themselves
-with a strength of 6,000 burghers on Lord Roberts' right flank near
-Ladybrand and Clocolan: a daring exploit which was justified by its
-success, as the left flank throughout the trek was exposed to a raid
-from Bloemfontein or Edenburg. A mounted force 1,800 strong under French
-was indeed sent eastward to show the flag, detach the waverers, and if
-possible, intercept the retreat; but the information at Head Quarters
-was imperfect and the strength of the commandos was greatly
-underestimated. It was assumed that they had been subject to the
-disintegration which obliterated the Modder River commandos; but a small
-reconnoitring column, detached under Pilcher by French from Thabanchu,
-found itself in presence of a force which outnumbered it thirty times,
-and was recalled.
-
-The presence of a considerable body of the enemy organized on the flank,
-the necessity of accumulating a large stock of supplies and stores, and
-a serious epidemic of fever among the troops, postponed the advance on
-the Transvaal many weeks beyond the end of March, when Lord Roberts had
-hoped to set out for the north. The apparent pacification of the country
-and the alacrity displayed by the burghers in submitting to the generous
-conditions of the proclamation of neutrality, had encouraged him in the
-belief that prompt action before the enemy had time to take breath would
-finally crush the dwindling opposition; but he soon became aware that it
-was but a lull in the storm, of which the mutterings were almost
-immediately renewed.
-
-Pole-Carew, who shortly after the occupation was sent south with a
-brigade to establish touch with Gatacre and Clements and open up the
-railway, heard of the Boer movement along the Basuto Border and at once
-reported it to Lord Roberts, whom he rejoined at Bloemfontein on March
-17. Before the end of the month the line was cleared and trains were
-passing to and fro between Capetown and the capital of the Free State,
-which had lately been renamed the Orange River Colony. From that time
-forward the enemy succeeded on one occasion only, and then but for a few
-hours, in cutting the Springfontein-Bloemfontein railway; and the
-hazardous advance along the Modder River, which involved the possibility
-of the Army being left in the air at Bloemfontein, was fully justified.
-
-The Boers, who were supposed to be hypnotized, soon began to show signs
-of returning animation. At a Krijgsraad which assembled at Kroonstad on
-March 17, and at which Steyn and Kruger were present, plans for the
-renewal of the struggle were discussed and measures for enforcing
-discipline on the burghers were taken. Steyn professed to have
-information that a Russian advance on India was imminent. The idea of
-resistance _en masse_ was abandoned, and a policy of flying columns
-unencumbered with wagons and acting aggressively against the British
-lines of communication was adopted. It was hoped that a timely
-demonstration would lure the enemy out of his hold, and that a little
-encouragement would revive the Prieska rebellion. The determination to
-continue hostilities in which even Joubert, who after the fall of
-Ladysmith joined the commandos operating in the Free State, acquiesced,
-was a proof of the courage and the steady patriotism of the Boer
-leaders, and the events of the next two years justified their
-resolution. Joubert, who had attended the Krijgsraad in feeble health,
-died a few days after its adjournment, and L. Botha was appointed to the
-thankless office of Commandant-General.
-
-The only direction from which Bloemfontein appeared to be vulnerable was
-the north, which also was the direction in which Lord Roberts hoped soon
-to be leading his troops. At a distance of a day's march from the
-capital, the railway to Pretoria crosses the Modder at Glen, and again
-the river which had recently figured so prominently in the campaign came
-upon the stage of war, and not as a last appearance. The railway bridge
-had been destroyed by the Boers, who thus excluded themselves from
-action on the left bank. A considerable force was sent out from
-Bloemfontein to hold the position while the bridge was being rebuilt,
-and to keep at arm's length the enemy skirmishing on the right bank. It
-was soon found necessary to hold a more advanced post at Karee Siding,
-north of Glen, and a force which seems out of proportion to the
-resistance which, according to the ideas then prevalent at Head
-Quarters, might be expected, was assembled at Glen on March 28. The
-VIIth Division under Tucker was brought up from Bloemfontein, and French
-was recalled from Thabanchu to lead the cavalry. With him, in command of
-the mounted infantry, was Le Gallais, a remarkable association of two
-soldiers whose names, though in different languages, were identical.
-Bloemfontein was denuded of cavalry, but the combined strength of the
-two cavalry brigades was much under 1,000. The force under Tucker and
-French, which judging from its strength Lord Roberts seems to have
-detailed rather as the advanced guard of an immediate march on Pretoria
-than as the minimum with which the opposition could be safely
-encountered, numbered about 9,000 men with thirty guns. At Karee Siding
-were 3,500 burghers under T. Smuts, who had come up to carry out the
-Krijgsraad idea of enticing the British out of Bloemfontein.
-
-Next day a battle of the usual type was fought. The mounted troops
-worked upon the flanks of the enemy, who was posted on a line of kopjes
-on each side of the railway, while the infantry attacked frontally with
-success and drove back the burghers, who retired in good order towards
-Brandfort unmolested by the cavalry, which was as before too much
-exhausted for effective pursuit. Thus, at a cost of less than 200
-casualties, Lord Roberts made good the first stage on the road to the
-north.
-
-Soon after his entry into Bloemfontein Lord Roberts sent out a small
-mounted column under Amphlett to Sannah's Post, where the water which
-supplied the capital was drawn from the Modder River. This had been cut
-off by the enemy, and the Army was dependent upon the disused and
-tainted wells within the city. The Boer commandos, which under the
-command of Olivier had retreated from the Cape Colony to Ladybrand and
-Clocolan, now began to threaten Broadwood, who, when French was sent to
-Glen, succeeded to the command of the mounted column. Broadwood was
-compelled to retire from Thabanchu on March 30. Early on the following
-morning he bivouacked at the Waterworks, whither his convoy under
-Pilcher had already preceded him; and simultaneously the IXth Division
-under Colvile and a brigade of Mounted Infantry under Martyr were
-ordered out from Bloemfontein to help him in.
-
-Meanwhile De Wet at Brandfort was watching his opportunity of working at
-the task assigned to him under the Krijgsraad scheme, of attacking the
-British lines of communication. His anticipation that the burghers would
-return with renewed vigour from the furlough which they had granted to
-themselves proved to be accurate. While Smuts was standing up to Tucker
-and French at Karee Siding, 1,600 men with five field guns under C. De
-Wet, whose second in command was his brother Piet, were circling to the
-Waterworks. The initial direction of the march was N.E., in order to
-conceal the real objective of the raid even from his own men. His
-intention was to seize Amphlett at the Waterworks, and there lie in wait
-for Broadwood's convoy. Before reaching his destination he handed over
-two-thirds of his force to his brother, who early in the morning took up
-a position on the right bank of the Modder east and north of the
-Waterworks, while he himself went to the Wagon Drift on the Korn Spruit,
-where the bed is deep enough to afford perfect concealment to a large
-body of men in ambush. He occupied it at 4 a.m. on March 31.
-
-A farmer, brought in by a patrol from Amphlett's post, reported to the
-officer in command of the connecting post at Boesman's Kop that the
-enemy had been seen; but the officer did not pay much attention to the
-report, though he communicated it to the connecting post at Springfield
-in the direction of Bloemfontein; at the same time sending back the
-patrol to Amphlett at the Waterworks with a reinforcement of his own
-men. The patrol was fired on while attempting to return to the
-Waterworks, and retired to Boesman's Kop.
-
-[Illustration: Map.]
-
-Broadwood, whose column had already been in bivouac near the Waterworks
-for some hours with the convoy which had preceded it, was at sunrise
-shelled by Piet De Wet, of whose presence on the right bank of the
-Modder he had only a few minutes previously been made aware, and in the
-belief that his front was clear, he at once determined to take up a
-position on Boesman's Kop.
-
-Rarely had two leaders about to meet in battle been more strangely
-deceived by the Fog of War. C. De Wet, although cut off from his guns
-and the main body of his command by an unfordable river, was confident
-in his lurking place in the Korn Spruit that he could easily repeat his
-exploit of February 15 and annex another British convoy; yet he suddenly
-discovered that he had to deal not with a mere escort, but with a strong
-mounted force and two batteries of Horse Artillery, and he was equal to
-the occasion.
-
-Broadwood, equally confident that the whole force of the enemy was on
-his flank on the right bank of the Modder, marched heedlessly into the
-ambush which De Wet had laid for him in the Korn Spruit, on the direct
-line between two adjacent British posts, and which neither of them had
-discovered, although the usual patrols had been sent out. When the
-patrol from the Waterworks to Boesman's Kop did not return in due course
-on the morning of March 31, its absence seems to have caused no anxiety
-to Amphlett.
-
-Broadwood, groping in the Fog of War, believed that the force on his
-flank was Olivier's, who had driven him out of Thabanchu, and who now,
-as he thought, had overtaken him. The possibility of a raid from the
-north did not occur to him. He pressed on towards Boesman's Kop and
-carelessly approached the sunken and treacherous cutting through which
-the Korn Spruit trickles to the Modder, between banks of even height
-which almost up to the brink make no perceptible break in the surface of
-the veld. His ground scouts and advanced guard were Cape carts full of
-refugees followed by the wagons of his convoy. Next in succession came U
-Battery of Horse Artillery with its mounted escort of colonial troops.
-
-Preceded by the Cape carts, which De Wet, in order to disarm suspicion,
-allowed to cross to the left bank, the column lumbered down the slope
-into the spruit and was quickly sucked into the trap. In silence broken
-only by the rumble of the wheels and the Kaffir cries of the drivers,
-and unseen by the gunners close behind the leading wagons were seized by
-quiet, determined burghers and placed under guard. The approach to the
-drift was soon blocked, and in the heart of the entanglement was U
-Battery. When it reached the incline, men sprang up out of the spruit
-and lined the bank, and without firing a shot made prisoners of the
-gunners, who, jammed by the transport, could neither fight nor retire,
-and were easily taken from their teams and guns, and conducted by their
-captors down to the bed of the spruit. Only the Major commanding the
-Battery and the Serjeant-Major got away. Q Battery and its mounted
-escort narrowly escaped being drawn into the ambush, but were warned in
-time and galloped back to the railway station buildings.
-
-Up to that moment not a shot had been fired, but as Q Battery wheeled
-the Boers lining the bank opened upon it, and in the scrimmage another
-gun was lost.
-
-The derelict and riderless teams of U Battery at the spruit were shot
-down by the Boers to prevent the escape of the guns, but not before one
-gallant team had wrenched its gun out of the enemy's grasp and had
-broken away. The Boers were now in possession of five guns of U Battery
-and of one gun of Q Battery. The spruit was shelled with little effect
-by Q Battery, which unlimbered near the station buildings. Only a
-plunging fire could have harmed the enemy hidden in it.
-
-It is hard to say whether De Wet or Broadwood was in the greater danger
-at 9 a.m. on March 31. The former had, it is true, just obtained a
-dramatic and most encouraging success. He laid a trap for a convoy and
-found himself in action with a force numerically equal to his own. He
-had made many prisoners, and almost without striking a blow had captured
-not only Broadwood's convoy but also six of Broadwood's guns. His force,
-however, was divided. The portion of it under his own command could not
-be effectively supported by his brother's command, and was confined in a
-spruit out of which he could not move, and which was commanded in rear
-by higher ground.
-
-Broadwood had been outwitted by De Wet and very roughly handled. With a
-crippled and maimed force he was lying between the jaws of a vice which
-might at any moment close and crush him. The loss of the convoy was,
-from a tactical point of view, not an unmixed evil, as he gained thereby
-greater freedom of action, but the loss of half his guns was for the
-time being irremediable. The careless and haphazard scouting from the
-Waterworks and Boesman's Kop, in which he complacently trusted, had
-lured him on.[40] When it was reported to him that the spruit was in
-possession of the enemy, he could scarcely believe it possible. Whether
-he or the officers in command of the artillery and the mounted escort
-were responsible for the extraordinary omission to send out ground
-scouts in advance of the column is not known, but the guns and wagons
-would not have been lost had this simple and customary precaution been
-taken.
-
-Broadwood, who had no information that Colvile and Martyr were
-approaching from the west, and that the latter was actually at Boesman's
-Kop, acted in the belief that he would have to deal with the situation
-unaided. He ordered the mounted infantry under Alderson to hold P. De
-Wet's force on the Modder, while the cavalry, supported by fire from Q
-Battery at the station buildings and working south and west of the Korn
-Spruit Drift, endeavoured to turn C. De Wet's precarious position.
-Neither of these operations was successful. Alderson could barely hold
-his own; the turning movement, although aided by a few companies of
-Martyr's force, was frustrated by small parties of marksmen whom C. De
-Wet had posted on the ridge in rear; and Q Battery was losing heavily.
-
-At 10 a.m. Broadwood ordered a general retirement. No attempt seems to
-have been made to communicate with him by heliograph, and he was still
-unaware that Martyr had been on Boesman's Kop for three hours, and was
-actually assisting in the turning movement; and that Colvile was
-hurrying forward to the sound of the firing with the IXth Division. As
-the battle had begun in the Fog of War, so also therein did it end.
-
-With the utmost difficulty Q Battery, which had been fighting in the
-open until only Phipps-Hornby and less than a dozen gunners were left to
-work five guns, was withdrawn. The enemy's fire was so heavy that the
-teams could not be brought up to the guns, four of which were run back
-by hand to the station buildings, which afforded some cover. The fifth
-gun was abandoned, but by the heroic efforts of Phipps-Hornby and a
-handful of gunners and volunteers from the mounted infantry escort, four
-guns were brought away.
-
-Meanwhile Alderson was fighting a rearguard action against P. De Wet, to
-cover the retirement of the guns, and when this was effected, he
-followed them, closely pursued as far as the Korn Spruit by P. De Wet's
-burghers, who crossed the Modder at the Waterworks. Before noon the
-remains of Broadwood's column were formed up near Boesman's Kop. He had
-lost seven[41] guns, seventy-three wagons and nearly a third of his
-strength in killed, wounded, and prisoners.
-
-Broadwood's withdrawal gave C. De Wet the opportunity which he could
-hardly have dared hope would ever be offered to him. He was reinforced
-by his brother, and at once drew his spoils out of the spruit and easily
-got away with them to the right bank of the Modder, where at noon he met
-the advanced guard of Olivier's force. Although he was in presence not
-only of Broadwood's force, but also almost in touch with a division of
-infantry and a brigade of mounted infantry his movements were so little
-impeded that he was able to bring two of the captured guns back to the
-left bank, and to bring them into action against a detachment of mounted
-infantry which was holding Waterval Drift.
-
-Martyr reached Boesman's Kop at 7 a.m., where in the course of the
-morning he was joined by Colvile, whose Division was also on its way to
-Waterval Drift. Broadwood, who was about two miles away, was ordered by
-Colvile to come to him, but he refused to leave his command so long as
-there was any chance of recovering the guns. He technically committed a
-breach of discipline, but Lord Roberts subsequently approved of his
-action. He requested Colvile to advance against the spruit, but the
-message was not delivered; and Colvile said that it would not have
-modified his dispositions. He had already refused to listen to the
-obvious suggestion made by his staff that he should go to Broadwood, who
-after waiting for two hours in the expectation that something would be
-done by the infantry division, gave up hope and retired towards
-Springfield.
-
-Colvile's appreciation of the situation was that it would have been
-useless to pursue De Wet's mounted troops with infantry. He therefore
-carried out the letter of his instructions from Lord Roberts, and,
-seeing that Broadwood's column was apparently safe, went on towards
-Waterval Drift: whither also Martyr had already sent the greater portion
-of the mounted infantry. Thus the brothers De Wet gained not only an
-actual, but also a moral success of the greatest importance to their
-cause, and took away the prizes they had so unexpectedly won, under the
-eyes of a strong British force helplessly watching the commandos
-trailing away across the veld.
-
-Waterval Drift had been indicated to Colvile and Martyr as their
-objective by Lord Roberts, and they considered that it was their duty to
-make for it. They did not, however, recognize that instructions must be
-read in the light of the information at the disposal of the superior
-officer at the moment of issue, and they adhered to them
-pedantically.[42] Lord Roberts could not have anticipated Broadwood's
-plight when he ordered Colvile and Martyr to Waterval Drift.
-
-Meanwhile, the news of the disaster had reached Bloemfontein. French's
-attenuated cavalry brigade, still panting with the fatigue of the Karee
-Siding affair, was ordered out, and Colvile was instructed to endeavour
-to make a turning movement, and with French's assistance to act on the
-Boer line of retreat. By sunset Colvile, after some opposition, was in
-possession of the Waterval Drift; the enemy having despatched the
-prisoners, the loot, and the captured guns to the north, was still in
-occupation of the Waterworks; Broadwood's mangled column was on its way
-back to Bloemfontein; and French was expected to appear upon the stage
-at sunrise next morning. The approach of the cavalry, which had picked
-up Broadwood at Springfield, was delayed by a report, which proved to be
-unfounded, that a body of the enemy was on the right flank marching on
-Bloemfontein, and French did not come into touch with Colvile until
-nearly midday on April 1. After reconnoitring the Waterworks and the
-Boer positions on the right bank of the Modder, Colvile came to the
-conclusion that he was not strong enough to attack them. Next day all
-the troops were ordered by Lord Roberts to fall back upon Bloemfontein.
-
-Broadwood was not wholly, not even mainly, responsible for the Sannah's
-Post disaster. He was unable to retrace that unlucky first false step
-when, rashly assuming that the ground had been properly reconnoitred and
-patrolled, he pushed into the angle between the Modder and its
-tributary; and there can be no excuse for the negligence which tossed
-the convoy and the guns into the abyss. But he received neither support
-nor information until it was too late. No serious attempt was made to
-let him know that a strong force was on its way from Bloemfontein.
-Martyr failed to report himself, and Colvile was content to be an
-interested spectator of the closing scene of the drama. Each leader
-assumed that the moves of the Kriegspiel had been correctly played and
-that there was nothing more to be done.
-
-After the occupation of Bloemfontein, the columns operating south of the
-Orange River were drawn into the Free State. Clements crossed at
-Norval's Pont, and Gatacre at Bethulie on March 15; Brabant, who
-commanded the colonial troops of the latter's Division, having reached
-Aliwal North four days previously. Clements' force advanced in a
-peaceful procession through the districts west of the railway, meeting
-with no opposition, and receiving what, under the circumstances, was
-almost a welcome from the inhabitants. Early in April he joined Lord
-Roberts at Bloemfontein.
-
-Not so with Gatacre and Brabant, who were soon seriously involved. Lord
-Roberts' view of the situation, which although mistaken was not
-unwarranted, was that the majority of the Boers were inclined to submit,
-and would do so but for the malign influence of a small belligerent
-party; and in order to encourage the waverers to assert themselves, and
-to give protection to them when they took the oath of neutrality and
-returned to their homes, he sent out flying columns in various
-directions to register names, take over arms, and make known the
-conditions on which surrenders would be accepted.
-
-The story of the Thabanchu column has already been told. Other columns
-were detached from Gatacre's and Brabant's commands, and Smithfield,
-Wepener, and Dewetsdorp, and smaller towns were occupied. Lord Roberts'
-orders for the occupation of Dewetsdorp were conditional on Gatacre's
-having enough troops for the purpose at his disposal. So little was it
-expected that the columns would meet with serious resistance that they
-were unaccompanied by guns, and all Gatacre's artillery was sent to
-Bloemfontein.
-
-De Wet, a soldier possessed of more power of initiative than many of his
-opponents, took "upon himself the responsibility of varying the
-instructions" he had received from the Kroonstad Krijgsraad. The chance
-of snapping up isolated garrisons allured him from the less brilliant
-but more practically useful work of hacking at the railway upon which
-Lord Roberts depended for his communications, and his wonderful and
-unexpected success at Sannah's Post encouraged him to persevere. He
-became aware that small columns were scouring the country, administering
-lightly taken oaths and giving receipts for arms handed in by burghers
-who protested that they were "sick of the war"; and he determined to
-deal promptly with these ominous signs.
-
-Between Sannah's Post and Reddersburg he in one day persuaded more than
-a hundred sworn burghers to break their oaths of neutrality and join
-him. Whether the energy and resource which he displayed would not have
-been more profitably expended in a vigorous effort to shrivel up the
-line between Bloemfontein and the Orange is a matter for speculation.
-Kruger watched his proceedings with misgiving, and proposed that he
-should retire northwards, as soon as he had cut the railway, or even
-without doing so.
-
-Korn Spruit opened Lord Roberts' eyes. He became alarmed for the safety
-of the railway, and ordered Gatacre to evacuate Dewetsdorp and to
-concentrate the weak pacificatory columns wandering helplessly over the
-country. The column of 550 men without guns, sent by Gatacre to garrison
-Dewetsdorp, had not been there many hours before it was ordered to
-retire on Reddersburg, and at daybreak on April 2 was again on the
-march, and soon De Wet was in touch with it. On the following morning he
-was close to it. In his own account of the affair he says that there was
-a sort of a race, which was won by the British column, for a ridge near
-Reddersburg, named Mostert's Hoek. He had with him 2,000 men with four
-guns, but an invitation to surrender was promptly declined by the
-defenders, who all that day were beaten on by bullet and by shell. After
-sunset the last drop of water was served out. Next morning De Wet rushed
-the western spur of the ridge, which now became untenable, and at 9 a.m.
-on April 4 the column surrendered and was swept into his net.
-
-Another hour of resistance would probably have saved it. On the previous
-evening Gatacre and Lord Roberts received the news that it was in
-trouble, and a relieving force was hurriedly collected at Bethany from
-Springfontein and Bloemfontein, and sent out under Gatacre's command.
-His scouts heard the last shot fired, and the silence which followed
-seemed to show that all was over. When reports of the surrender reached
-him near Reddersburg, and before De Wet, only six miles away, had
-cleared out of Mostert's Hoek, he abandoned the attempt; although some
-of his advanced mounted troops did indeed come into touch with the
-rearguard of De Wet hurrying away with his prisoners.
-
-Next day he was recalled to Bloemfontein by Lord Roberts, who held him
-responsible for the disaster. He had occupied Dewetsdorp, an exposed and
-isolated position, with an inadequate force, although expressly
-instructed to leave it alone if he had not sufficient troops for the
-purpose. Mostert's Hoek supervening on Stormberg ended the career of a
-most gallant, energetic, and enthusiastic soldier. _Bic peccare in bello
-non licet_. He was removed from his command and sent back to England.
-
-After leaving Sannah's Post, De Wet seems to have recognized that he was
-not exactly carrying out the Krijgsraad policy, for he informed Steyn
-that he was going to Dewetsdorp to "collect the burghers and to obtain
-dynamite for our operations" against the railway between Bloemfontein
-and Bethany. Next day he heard that the British had occupied Dewetsdorp,
-and soon after that the garrison was retiring on Reddersburg, and the
-attack on the line, which perhaps he never seriously intended to make,
-was indefinitely postponed.
-
-For as soon as he had disposed of the prisoners of Mostert's Hoek, he
-cast his eye round the horizon and descried two other isolated
-garrisons, at Smithfield and Wepener. Against the former he sent one of
-his lieutenants, who, however, found the little town evacuated, while he
-himself made for Wepener, and longing to teach a lesson to Brabant's
-loyal colonials, sat down before it on April 9 with ten guns and 6,000
-men. In the course of the northward advance from the Orange it had been
-occupied by a detachment from Brabant's force, which was increased by
-subsequent reinforcements to a strength of nearly 1,900 men under
-Dalgety, of whom little more than 100 were regular troops, with seven
-guns. The town itself was not held, but a circular position outside it
-with a perimeter of seven miles was taken up on the right bank of the
-Caledon.
-
-De Wet maintained the siege for sixteen days. The failure of an attempt
-by night on April 10 to storm a post on the southern section of the
-perimeter deterred the Boers, as at Ladysmith after the abortive attack
-on Caesar's Camp two months before, from further offensive action; but
-the position was vigorously bombarded from time to time, and an almost
-unceasing hail of Mauser bullets fell upon it. De Wet did his best to
-add Wepener to the scalps of Sannah's Post and Mostert's Hoek; but when
-two columns detailed for the relief by Lord Roberts under the command of
-Brabant and Hart, who had come round from Natal with his brigade,
-reached Wepener from Aliwal North on April 25, they found that the siege
-had been raised, and that De Wet had trekked away to the north.
-
-At Waterval Drift, Kitchener's Kopje, Sannah's Post, and Mostert's Hoek,
-De Wet showed himself to be a daring and successful partisan leader. He
-was instinctively drawn towards helpless or unwary detachments. He
-played his own hand without reference to his partner's, and seemed to be
-incapable of co-operating in a general scheme of strategy. Perhaps he
-had not much confidence in those who directed the campaign of defence.
-He did not act in accordance with the instructions he had received from
-the Krijgsraad; but who could find fault with a leader who was ever
-sending in batches of prisoners of war? Many critics say that he was
-wanting in the true military instinct and spirit, and that he lost the
-greatest opportunity in his career when he allowed himself to be
-attracted away from the British lines of communication by the feeble,
-peregrinating columns. He says that his reason, or it may be his excuse,
-for not raiding vigorously towards the south, instead of sitting down
-before Wepener, was the fear lest the Transvaalers should think that the
-Free Staters had abandoned them to their fate. If his action is open to
-criticism when judged by the generally accepted principles of warfare,
-it should be remembered that these are framed from experience only, and
-are subject to accommodation. By all the rules of the game, the Boers
-must have been beaten in six months: yet when, after the occupation of
-Bloemfontein, the cause seemed to be hopeless, the De Wet revival
-prolonged the contest for two years and more. It is almost certain that,
-but for De Wet, the war would have been brought to a close in 1900. One
-man only, and he was Napoleon, added a greater sum to the British
-National Debt.
-
-The fortune which proverbially attends the bold never deserted him. To
-the Boer forces at large he was what the pirate adventurers and
-buccaneers of the Elizabethan period, and the privateersmen of the
-eighteenth century, were to the National Navy. He sailed where he would
-under letters of marque from the Presidents. He is the most interesting
-and the most original personage of the South African War: and when its
-history is mellowed by time, and its epic is written by some Walter
-Scott or Homer of the future, De Wet will be the central figure, and his
-exploits will be sung.
-
-Five years later, having thrown aside his sword, he became a controller
-of ploughshares as Minister of Agriculture in the Government of the
-Orange River Colony, and the father-in-law of a British officer who had
-fought against him.
-
-Notes:
-
-[Footnote 39: At the Krijgsraad at Kroonstad Delarey maintained that the
-commandos were too large and must be subdivided.]
-
-[Footnote 40: The scouting of the British Army in South Africa has been
-compared to a housemaid searching for an escape of gas with a lighted
-candle.]
-
-[Footnote 41: A The gun of U Battery, which had broken away at the
-Drift, was recovered.]
-
-[Footnote 42: In the official handbook on _Combined Training_ issued
-after the war, it was expressly laid down that "officers, must take upon
-themselves, whenever it may be necessary, the responsibility of
-departing from or varying the orders they may have received." This
-responsibility had been laid by Napoleon upon his officers nearly a
-century before. Seep. 251.]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X
-
-Baden-Powell and the Siege of Mafeking
-
-
-Mafeking is a dull, unimportant town in the veld with a history that
-attracted the Boers to it.
-
-They considered that, like Natal and Kimberley, it did not rightfully
-belong to Great Britain. They were a community of trekking and
-centrifugal atoms, especially in the direction of territories in the
-possession of native tribes, and their own country, though sparsely
-inhabited, was not spacious enough for them. The bucolic ambition of the
-Boer, which is to dwell in a house from which he cannot see the smoke of
-his nearest neighbour's chimney, can be satisfied in a flat country only
-when the house stands in the midst of a farm many thousand _morgen_ in
-extent.
-
-For a generation or two before the war, the Transvaalers had been
-encroaching upon Bechuanaland. A Baralong chief named Montsioa was
-dispossessed of Mafeking and could obtain no redress from the British
-Government, which at that time was in an intermediate frame of mind, and
-did not necessarily act on the assumption that in every dispute between
-white man and native the latter was in the right.
-
-Thus encouraged, the Transvaalers annexed Bechuanaland in 1868, but
-three years later it was taken away from them under the Keate award, in
-an arbitration to determine the respective rights of Boer and native
-over the debateable territory.
-
-After the war of 1881, the Transvaalers supposed that the British
-Government would be unlikely to assert itself, and two little impudent
-republics of adventurers were set up in territory which the award had
-declared to be within the British sphere of influence. Montsioa fought
-for his rights, but the British Government lay torpid for some time.
-Finally it was goaded into action by a proclamation issued by Kruger
-annexing the territory to the Transvaal. He soon found it advisable to
-cancel the proclamation, and in 1885 the Republics of Goshen at Mafeking
-and of Stellaland at Vryburg were effaced by an expedition led by Sir
-Charles Warren. Bechuanaland was again annexed by proclamation, but on
-this occasion to the British Empire.
-
-The resentment of the Transvaalers against Mafeking, which originated in
-the conviction that they had been wrongfully deprived of it, was
-aggravated by the fact that it was the starting place of the Jameson
-Raid.
-
-On October 13 nearly 7,000 burghers, with six guns, under P. Cronje, sat
-down before it. He expected to have little difficulty in recovering it.
-Appearances were encouraging; the town was open and defenceless, and he
-was probably aware that it was held by a weak garrison. Why the British
-should have occupied such an out-of-the-way place as part of their plan
-of campaign, he could not understand, but there it was, inviting attack.
-
-Of the half-hearted measures taken by the War and Colonial Offices in
-1899, when a war with the Transvaal seemed to be more probable every
-day, one of the most intelligent was the commissioning of R.
-Baden-Powell, who had formerly served in Bechuanaland and had recently
-commanded the 5th Dragoon Guards, to "organize the defence of the
-Bechuanaland and Rhodesia frontiers." It would neither involve a great
-expenditure of money, nor be likely to wound the susceptibilities of the
-Transvaalers, who might be provoked by more vigorous and minatory
-measures: and thus little harm would be done if after all it were found
-to be an unnecessary precaution.
-
-For these reasons it commended itself to Pall Mall, but its chief merit
-was that it sent to South Africa a capable, versatile and zealous
-soldier, whose mind did not run in the grooves. Yet if Baden-Powell had
-been sent to Kimberley instead of to Mafeking, Kimberley would probably
-have fallen--after an outbreak of civil war within the lines between him
-and Rhodes. It would have been impossible to insulate the personal
-electricity with which each of them was so highly charged, and short
-circuiting must have occurred.
-
-The object of the contemplated display upon the Bechuanaland and
-Rhodesia frontiers was twofold. They ran through the indefinite border
-belt which separated black from white territory, and activity on them
-would not only be witnessed by the tribes and exert an impressive
-influence on the native mind, but would also draw away the Boers and
-prevent them concentrating their forces. The central position of
-Mafeking on the Western line, and the stores and supplies which had been
-collected in the town, attracted Baden-Powell to it. It was singularly
-ill-adapted to hold defensively against an active enemy.
-
-In spite of recruiting difficulties raised by the Facing-both-Ways
-Ministry at Capetown, which in a less tolerant and philosophic age would
-at once have been swept away by a storm of indignation, he raised two
-irregular regiments: the Rhodesian Regiment, which was sent into
-Rhodesia under Plumer, and the Protectorate Regiment under Hore.
-
-The Cape Ministry did what it could to prevent the Protectorate Regiment
-going to Mafeking, and the corps was in fact mustered outside the Cape
-Colony, and only entered the town a few days before war was declared. As
-at Kimberley, so also at Mafeking, the Schreiner sect set itself
-placidly to thwart the gentle and tentative early efforts of the British
-Government to deal with the situation.
-
-When P. Cronje appeared before Mafeking, Baden-Powell had a force of
-less than 1,200 men, none of whom were regular soldiers and less than
-half of whom were efficiently armed, with which to sustain the siege of
-an open town by 7,000 Boers. He had also four small field guns of
-obsolete pattern, to which were added later on a home-made howitzer and
-an ancient man-of-war's smoothbore, which had left the foundry during
-the Napoleonic wars. In its youth it had probably fought the French
-through a porthole, and now having in the interval trekked across the
-South African veld into the possession of a native tribe, was discovered
-in a Baralong kraal, restored to active service, and, mounted on a Dutch
-wagon, aided in the defence of a little settlement 400 miles away from
-the sound of the sea.
-
-In one respect only Baden-Powell had the advantage over Kekewich at
-Kimberley. His burden was not increased by discord within the lines. The
-civilians behaved with exemplary composure and put themselves
-unreservedly into his hands.
-
-An archaic but effective simplicity characterized the methods of the
-defence. Baden-Powell eked out his slender stock of men and instruments
-with tricks and devices that might have been employed at the siege of
-Troy, but which none the less deceived and confounded the slow-witted
-besiegers, whom he scandalized with gibes and taunting messages. When
-asked to surrender to avoid further bloodshed, he replied that the only
-blood hitherto shed was the blood of a chicken in a compound; and on
-another occasion he reproved Cronje for inactivity. Many of the
-incidents read like passages from the Iliad. The besiegers were allured
-into determined attacks upon dummy trenches; deceived by bogus orders
-shouted for their information through a megaphone; alarmed by the sudden
-appearance of cavalry within the lines, for did they not see the glint
-of lances? The lances were weapons that had been forged in the railway
-workshops, and carried round, as it were in a parade before the
-footlights by a body of supers making a gallant show upon the stage.
-
-What should be done in a besieged place with such an embarrassing asset
-as ten tons of dynamite? Buller would have handed them over to his
-second in command for disposal, and then if any accident occurred would
-have disclaimed responsibility for it. Gatacre would have taken the
-chances, but would not have hesitated to pitch his tent if necessary
-beside them. Colvile would have searched his orders for instructions.
-Baden-Powell, not being able to rid himself of the explosive by firing
-it, arranged that it should be fired by the enemy. He loaded it on
-railway trucks, which he propelled a few miles out of the town and then
-abandoned. There was no Laocoon to warn the Boers, and they rushed at
-what they thought was an armoured train in trouble. In the skirmish the
-dynamite exploded, and although no one was hurt the enemy was terribly
-scared, and the resisting powers of the garrison virtually augmented.
-
-Baden-Powell thoroughly understood the Boer temperament. Many
-generations' isolation from the progressive European world had rendered
-it peculiarly liable to be ensnared by simple expedients. It was not
-wanting in "slimness," but it was the "slimness" or cunning of a
-primitive race, and was easily gulled by wiles that might have been
-employed against a tribe of Red Indians. Baden-Powell alone of all the
-British leaders was aware of this, and he owed much of his success to
-the knowledge. With but one man to defend each ten yards of his
-perimeter of seven miles he hypnotized Cronje, a dull man bewildered by
-a resourceful. His versatility instantly found a way out of each
-difficulty that beset him. Before he sent out a party detailed for a
-night attack that might easily go astray, he bethought himself of the
-device by which a ship is often guided into her haven, and hung up two
-lamps in the town as leading lights across the veld.
-
-Cronje soon found that Mafeking was not an easy prey. Although in all
-probability he might at any time have overwhelmed it by sheer weight of
-numbers, he refrained from making the attempt. It hit out so vigorously
-and was believed to be so well protected by mines that he requisitioned
-a big gun from Pretoria, which was mounted south of the town and came
-into action on October 23. With a weapon throwing a shell more than
-three times heavier than all the shells that could be fired in salvo by
-the artillery of the defence, there was no doubt in his mind that the
-place must fall before the end of the month.
-
-The arrival of the gun quickened the attack for a time. The native
-location S.W. of the town was made the object of a feint on October 25
-to be immediately followed by a real attack elsewhere, but the
-Baralongs, who had been armed, resisted so stoutly that the operation
-failed. By the beginning of November the Boers had been cleared out of a
-newly made advanced trench on the east side; and Cannon Kopje on the
-south, the possession of which by them would have made a considerable
-section of the defence works and perhaps even the town itself untenable,
-was held under a converging fire of artillery by fifty troopers of the
-British South African Police against a thousand Boers.
-
-Five weeks of Baden-Powell were enough for Cronje, who on November 19
-trekked away to the south, leaving Snyman and 3,000 burghers to continue
-the siege. His self-esteem had been wounded because the walls had not
-immediately fallen to the sound of the big gun, and by Baden-Powell's
-refusal to take a serious view of the situation in the frequent
-communications that passed between them. It may be said that Cronje was
-"chaffed" away from Mafeking; the gibes put him out of conceit with
-himself, and instead of stimulating him into activity only made him more
-dull-spirited than he was by nature. He had none of the instinctive
-military genius which showed itself so notably in most of his
-colleagues, who, having turned their ploughshares into swords at a
-moment's notice, were generally more than a match for the professional
-soldiers against whom they were pitted. He had the misfortune of meeting
-almost the only British leader then in South Africa capable of
-instinctively assessing him on the spot at his true valuation; and like
-a timid poker-player with a good hand, he allowed himself to be bluffed
-by the flourishes of his opponent. He held good cards, but he feebly
-threw them down. At Magersfontein he played his hand with skill, but
-lost the deciding game at Paardeberg.
-
-Baden-Powell was too zealous a soldier to conform to the schism that the
-operations of war were akin to athletics or sport. Externally his
-predilections were for the drama. He was a competent actor and manager,
-and he rejoiced in Mafeking as in a stage play.
-
-Many of his devices were as unsubstantial as stage scenery; the
-besiegers were the villains of the piece who would meet with their
-deserts before the curtain fell; there was comic by-play in his ways of
-beguiling the tedium and the lassitude of the siege, in the bantering
-messages he sent out to the besiegers, and now and then even in his
-garrison orders. The little garrison was permeated by the exosmose
-action of his cheery optimism and humour during seven weary months of
-waiting; and while it might seem to some that he was treating the
-serious situation with unbecoming levity, he wisely kept the tragedy of
-it, of which he was fully conscious, in the background.
-
-His methods were so far successful that in a few weeks he had driven
-away two-thirds of the force originally opposed to him, and had firmly
-gripped the place. The enemy's superiority in artillery was neutralized
-by the construction of underground shelters and warrens in which the
-women and children took refuge during the daytime, leaving an apparently
-deserted town to be bombarded. Thus Baden-Powell was relieved from the
-moral pressure which a large number of casualties among them would have
-caused; and the garrison suffered but little in the redoubts and
-trenches. Supplies were plentiful and the water supply secure.
-
-What Cronje had failed to do, Snyman could hardly be expected to
-accomplish with a considerably reduced force, and the attack became more
-faint-hearted. He carried out the Cronje policy of comfortable,
-lethargic squatting, doubting not that the place must fall into his
-hands sooner or later. Friends and relations tripped over from
-Johannesburg to admire and encourage his brave burghers at their posts,
-and some were even allowed as a treat to fire a shot at the Khakis.
-
-No serious operation occurred until the end of the year. On the morrow
-of Christmas Day, Baden-Powell made an unsuccessful attempt to carry a
-fort on Game Tree Hill, which commanded the approach to the town from
-the north. He was unaware of its strength, and the casualties amounted
-to nearly one-fifth of the force engaged, a loss which he could ill
-afford; but early in January he compelled the big gun, which could
-neither face the shells of his little battery of 7-pounders nor the
-rifles of his marksmen, to withdraw to a more distant emplacement east
-of the town. Towards the end of the month an encouraging message was
-received from Lord Roberts at Capetown.
-
-The Boer line of circumvallation was in plan an irregular hexagon, of
-which the north-east face was pushed inwards and a re-entrant angle
-formed at the Brickfields; where a fort was built nearer to the town
-than any other post of the attack, and the operations during February
-and March were mainly a struggle for the possession of it. After several
-weeks of sapping and counter sapping, the Boers, though supported by the
-fire of the big gun in its new emplacement, were expelled from the
-Brickfields on March 23.
-
-April was marked by the final withdrawal of the big gun, which, after a
-heavy bombardment on the 11th, was sent away to Pretoria; and by the
-appearance of young Eloff, fresh from the capital, with instructions to
-do what he could to stimulate the attack, for once in a way, into real
-activity. More than a fortnight elapsed before he succeeded. Snyman gave
-him little encouragement, but could not oppose a mandate from Kruger,
-Eloff's grandfather.
-
-The Molopo River, after passing south of the town, runs through the only
-weak place in the defence, the native location, which during the first
-few days of the siege had been attacked without result by Cronje.
-Westward of it the steep banks of the river afford a covered way of
-access to the thickly clustered huts lying within the perimeter of the
-defence, which Eloff saw might be turned if he got a footing among them.
-
-Early in the morning of May 12 a heavy fire was opened upon the town
-from the east, but was soon discontinued; and then an alarm came from
-the S.W. It was Eloff, who, with 300 burghers, had wriggled up the river
-bed through the outposts and had set fire to the native huts: a signal
-for the reinforcements which Snyman had promised in writing. It also
-warned the garrison. The natives were too much terrified to offer
-resistance, and Eloff, leaving the greater part of his force to hold the
-location, advanced upon the town. The police building in the open was
-surrounded and the detachment holding it taken prisoners. A pause was
-now made to allow the promised reinforcements to come up.
-
-Eloff's gallant thrust gave the garrison the opportunity for which it
-had long been hoping. The troops of the western section of the defence
-closed in and were manoeuvred by Baden-Powell through the telephone. The
-door by which Eloff came in was shut, not only to a retreat but also to
-the reinforcements which timidly knocked at it; the burghers holding the
-location were overpowered, and Eloff's party was penned up in the police
-building with its prisoners, whose condition was suddenly dramatically
-reversed. Eloff, seeing that Snyman had failed him, surrendered to the
-men he had captured a few hours before, within the walls of the prison
-in which he had confined them.
-
-The ordeal of Mafeking soon came to an end. On May 15 it was reported
-that the relief column under Mahon, who on that day joined Plumer at
-Massibi on the Molopo twenty miles from Mafeking, was approaching. The
-combined forces, though vigorously opposed by Delarey, whom L. Botha had
-sent when the news of the advance reached him, entered the town on May
-17 and ended a siege of 213 days.
-
-Mafeking, the last and most instructive of the sieges, proved that there
-was hardly any disparity of numbers or preponderance of available
-military resources that could not be neutralized by good leadership
-opposed to bad. Baden-Powell had not only detained a considerable Boer
-force on the edge of the storm, but with a body of irregular troops had
-beaten the men of Magersfontein, Colenso, and Spion Kop.
-
-The relief of Mafeking, however, did not vitally affect the general
-situation. The capture of the town during Lord Robert's advance would no
-doubt have caused annoyance and trouble, but if necessary it could have
-been retaken without much difficulty. Nor would its fall have greatly
-benefited the enemy, who probably would have been tempted by the success
-to hold an unsound position and detain in it commandos urgently required
-elsewhere.
-
-Kimberley, Mafeking, and Wepener, more than the operations at large,
-demonstrated the anomalous character of the war. Hitherto, invaders had
-been accustomed to besiege the invaded, in South Africa the invaded
-besieged the invaders. Such a reversal of the order of things military
-had rarely before occurred. The sieges of the Peninsular War are not an
-exception, for Wellington was from a military, though not from a
-political point of view, as much an invader as the lieutenants of
-Napoleon.
-
-Baden-Powell is a suppressed personality whose merit was not fully
-recognized. With scarcely an exception, no individual leader was more
-self-reliant, or handled imperfect tools with greater skill. For seven
-months he kept the flag flying over the lonely Baralong kraal in the
-veld. His unconventional even theatrical methods were not to the taste
-of his serious superiors, who underestimated his success. His only
-reward was the Companionship of the Bath, which was also bestowed upon
-the militia colonels, most of whom, from no fault or no want of zeal on
-their part, but from lack of opportunity, never met the enemy except in
-some casual paltry skirmish.
-
-The junction of the two columns advancing to the relief of
-Mafeking--Plumer's from the north and Mahon's from the south--was
-effected at the right moment, for it is doubtful whether either of them
-acting alone would have been able to deal with Delarey.
-
-Plumer with the Rhodesian Regiment had been trekking here and there and
-skirmishing with the enemy for seven months. On the eve of the war he
-was sent by Baden-Powell to Tuli, a village in Rhodesia not far from the
-right bank of the Limpopo, which is the northern boundary of the
-Transvaal. His instructions were "to defend the border, to attract the
-enemy away towards the north, and then in due time to co-operate with
-the British force," which it was expected would soon be invading the
-Transvaal from the south, and also to overawe the doubtful native tribes
-between Tuli and Mafeking, a distance of 500 miles; and he had under his
-immediate command at Tuli one irregular regiment 500 strong.
-
-He remained for some weeks seeing to the drifts, which were now in his
-possession and now in that of the enemy. A Boer raid into Rhodesia on
-November 2 forced the outlying detachments back upon Tuli, which was
-seriously threatened by some commandos under F.A. Grobler of Marico. The
-Government of Pretoria, however, growing anxious at the presence of
-British troops elsewhere, vetoed a promising enterprise and recalled
-him. The raid of November 2 was answered a few weeks later by Plumer,
-who, finding the drifts unoccupied, reconnoitred thirty miles towards
-the south. Nearly six months elapsed before another British soldier set
-foot in the Transvaal. A subsequent reconnaissance again found no trace
-of the enemy on the left bank of the Limpopo, and showed that it was
-unnecessary for him to remain on the river. He had the advantage of
-being cut off from communication with superior officers ignorant of
-local conditions, and was able to act freely upon his own
-responsibility.
-
-He soon heard news which clearly indicated the way he should go. The
-railway from Buluwayo to Mafeking was held as far as possible towards
-the south by patrols of police under Nicholson, and the Rhodesian
-Volunteers under Holdsworth were also on the line. In the gap between
-the railhead and Mafeking, a Boer commando, said to have been detached
-from Mafeking by Cronje, was at Sekwani on the N.W. border of the
-Transvaal and within striking distance of the Western line. It was face
-to face with the border tribes and was soon in trouble with them.
-Although they were not allowed to attack Sekwani independently, they
-were permitted to co-operate as non-combatants in an attack which
-Holdsworth was about to make on it, but only on the condition that they
-did not cross the Transvaal border. This was a refinement of policy
-which they could hardly be expected to understand, and they precipitated
-Holdsworth's action by attacking the Boer laager, which lay but a mile
-or two across the border, on their own account, and the operation had
-therefore to be abandoned. To avenge this native attack, in which
-several burghers had been killed, reinforcements were brought over by
-the Boers from the Pietersburg line, and Holdsworth's position at
-Mochudi on the Western line, whither he had retired after the Sekwani
-failure, was endangered.
-
-This was the news which reached Plumer at the end of the year. His
-original instructions were obsolescent and he readily adapted himself to
-the altered situation. He saw that it was more important to clear the
-railway north of Mafeking than to remain where he was on the chance of a
-Boer invasion of Rhodesia, of which his reconnaissances south of the
-Limpopo saw no sign. The nearest station on the Western line was
-Palapye, and on December 27 he set out on his midsummer march of 170
-miles to it. Within a fortnight, his little force of irregulars, which
-three months before had been sent out into the South African wilderness
-to perform duties that might have engrossed a division, passed away from
-Tuli beyond the Limpopo on to the visible stage of war near Mochudi.
-
-In the middle of January, 1900, he reached Gaberones. On his left flank
-Sekwani was still occupied by the enemy, though in reduced numbers; in
-front of him the Boers were not only strongly posted on the railway at
-Crocodile Pools, but able to draw upon Mafeking for reinforcements, by
-the help of which they successfully resisted an attack on February 11.
-Plumer's force, though augmented by detachments he had picked up on the
-line, was unequal to the task of advancing along it. He therefore
-decided to diverge from the railway and advance by way of Kanya, a
-native town lying twenty miles west of the line.
-
-On March 6 he reached Lobatsi, where he was forty-five miles from
-Mafeking. He found, however, that it was an awkward place to defend and
-soon quitted it, as Baden-Powell seemed to be in no immediate need, and
-was in fact averse to Plumer's small force throwing itself upon the
-besiegers. With the greater part of his command, the rest being sent
-back to hold the railway at Crocodile Pools, he withdrew to the base
-which he had established at Kanya; afterwards advancing to Sefetili,
-thirty miles from Mafeking, where he awaited the approach of Mahon's
-relieving column from the south. Baden-Powell, rejoicing in his siege,
-was not anxious that the game which he was playing so well should be
-brought to a premature conclusion, and was more afraid for Plumer than
-for himself.
-
-Plumer filled in his two months at Kanya and Sefetili by occasional
-raids in the direction of Mafeking and by an expedition towards Zeerust.
-The column in the south, of whose movements many false reports reached
-him from time to time, seemed to be tarrying by the way, and it was not
-until May 12 that he received a message from Lord Roberts that it was
-nearing its destination.
-
-For some weeks after his entry into Bloemfontein, Lord Roberts was
-unable to arrange for the direct relief of Mafeking by a column
-specially detailed for the purpose. He had originally intended that this
-should be done by Methuen, but subsequently ordered him to operate in
-the Free State on the left flank of the advance on the Transvaal. He
-hoped to apply his favourite method of an automatic relief, brought
-about by external pressure elsewhere. At the end of April, however, when
-it had become an urgent matter, he ordered Hunter, who had recently
-arrived at Kimberley from Natal, to send out a mounted force under
-Mahon, following it himself with the rest of the Xth Division.
-
-He left Kimberley on May 3, and on the following day Mahon set out from
-Barkly West on his 230 miles' march to Mafeking. Mahon advanced wide of
-the railway up the Hart's River, which joins the Vaal at Barkly West,
-his right flank being covered by Hunter, who kept close to the Vaal.
-Mahon met with no serious resistance until he had covered 200 miles of
-his journey, when he found a, force which had been sent down from
-Mafeking across his path, and which diverted him to Massibi; where he
-joined Plumer on May 15.
-
-The advance of the main and less mobile body under Hunter was aided by
-demonstrations made by Methuen from Boshof. With three columns claiming
-their attention the bewildered Boers were unable to do more than offer a
-stout but ineffectual resistance to Hunter on the Vaal on May 5. Two
-days later he occupied Fourteen Streams and restored the railway
-communication across the Vaal, having during his halt taken possession
-of Christiana, a village in the Transvaal a few miles up the river. It
-was now no longer necessary for him to hurry after Mahon, and his
-advance northwards was made at leisure. Early in June he occupied
-Lichtenburg, where Mahon rejoined him.
-
-Mafeking as well as Kimberley were now in the hands of Lord Roberts, but
-the Western line joining them to Capetown was not yet secure. The
-districts of Cape Colony west of De Aar and Hopetown were remote and
-backward, and sparsely inhabited by discontented and unprosperous Dutch
-farmers. Nearly a year before, while the Cape Government was placidly
-blinking under the shadow of Table Mountain and only taking action that
-thwarted the attempts of the Imperial Government to prepare for war, and
-like the unjust steward intriguing for reception in Boer houses if the
-Empire should fail, arms had been sent into these districts by the Boers
-of the Republics, and courses of instruction in the use of them were
-actually being held.
-
-To stir up the discontented and set the veld on fire, a party of
-Transvaalers swooped down from Vryburg before the war was many days old.
-Rebel commandos were raised, and most of the districts lying between the
-Orange and the Molopo were involved, some of them being annexed by
-proclamation to the Republics. For several months the trouble was
-confined to the right bank of the Orange, but during February it passed
-over to the left bank.
-
-In pursuance of his policy of striking swiftly and strongly at the
-centres of population, and not from neglect, Lord Roberts had left the
-rebellious and disaffected districts more or less to themselves, in the
-belief that indirect action would retrieve the situation and that his
-advance would take the heart out of the rebels and deter them from
-crossing the river; and for some months there had been no British troops
-south of the Orange except at De Aar and Hopetown.
-
-Now, however, the railway, which until his arrival at Bloemfontein was
-his only line of communication, was threatened. The Prieska and Herbert
-districts on the left bank of the Orange, and even the remote Gordonia
-district lying in the angle between the Orange and the Molopo, which was
-too far away to be included in the first batch of proclamations, were
-annexed by the Boers. There was much danger of the advancing army not
-only finding its communications broken, but also a formidable rebellion
-springing up behind it.
-
-The troops on the line were insufficient to deal with the situation, and
-Lord Roberts was obliged to draw upon Clements, who was acting in the
-other disturbed districts of the Cape Colony south of the Free State.
-Lord Kitchener, who chanced to be passing through De Aar on his way back
-from Naauwpoort, where he had been sent to look after the central
-advance, made arrangements for the Prieska operations and rejoined Lord
-Roberts at Kimberley; but his presence was soon required again at De
-Aar. Three columns had started westward from the line, but the centre
-column, which was composed of the troops withdrawn from Clement's
-command, met with opposition in the Prieska district, and was compelled
-to retire on March 6. When the news reached Lord Roberts he sent
-Kitchener to take charge of the operations, which from that time was
-successful. The rebellion south of the Orange was suppressed; the
-leaders disappeared; and by the end of the month Kitchener was free to
-return to Head Quarters at Bloemfontein.
-
-Not many weeks, however, elapsed before there was trouble in Griqualand,
-a considerable portion of which was in the hands of rebel descendants of
-the burghers of the Great Trek, who were joined by rebels expelled from
-the districts south of the Orange during the late operations. A column
-had been sent out against them from Kimberley by Methuen in March, but
-Lord Roberts disapproved of the expedition and it was recalled. At the
-request of Sir A. Milner, who from the first had been of the opinion
-that the British hold on South Africa was in greater danger from
-rebellion in the Colony than from the commandos of the two Republics,
-Lord Roberts consented to send a force into Griqualand under the command
-of Warren, who was brought round from Natal, and returned to the country
-through which he had worked in the Bechuanaland Expedition of 1885. In
-the middle of May, Warren set out from Belmont. The only regular troops
-in his column were a few Irish mounted infantry. Douglas was easily
-taken on May 21, and on his way to Campbell he was compelled by supply
-and transport difficulties to halt at Faber's Put, where at dawn on May
-30 he was surprised by the rebels, who, knowing that they had not to
-face regular troops, anticipated an easy victory. They succeeded in
-almost surrounding the camp before the alarm was given, but after a
-brief struggle were driven off.
-
-Early in June Campbell and Griquatown were occupied; and on the 24th
-Kuruman, which had been in the hands of the rebels for nearly six
-months, was recovered. Near Khies, lower down the Orange, the force
-which had been left to watch the banks after the suppression of the
-Prieska rebellion, some of the fugitives from which had returned to the
-river under the leadership of a Jew, attacked and carried their laager.
-This and the Faber's Put affair were the only serious fights in the
-clearing of the Colony north of the Orange.
-
-Thus by the end of June Lord Roberts had secured the railway from
-Mafeking and Kimberley to the south.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI
-
-Bloemfontein to Pretoria
-
-
-[Sidenote: Map, p. 260.]
-
-The agile mind of Lord Roberts rather than the heavy hand of his Chief
-of the Staff is discernible in the method of the advance on the
-Transvaal.
-
-There were two courses open to the British Army. It might have
-deliberately pulverized and extinguished each atom of opposition within
-reach in the Free State, and have taken no step to the front until the
-rear and the flanks were absolutely and finally clear of the enemy; or
-it might have advanced boldly towards the Transvaal with the ordinary
-precautions for the protection of the lines of communication and of the
-flanks.
-
-Lord Roberts adopted the latter course. He had tried it with success in
-the Afghan War twenty years before, when he marched even more "in the
-air" from Kabul to Kandahar. The tedious process of "steam-rollering"
-the Free State was not to his taste, nor would the expectant British
-public at home have understood it; and it would have been severely
-criticized by the military experts. It would have concentrated before
-him north of the Vaal all the Boer forces which could not be crushed on
-the spot, and have left the resources of the Transvaal for some time
-untouched: free communication with the outer world by way of the neutral
-port of Lorenzo Marques, the treasury of the Johannesburg gold mines
-upon which the enemy could draw, and the railway and mining workshops in
-which munitions of war could be manufactured.
-
-Lord Roberts therefore determined upon a swift advance from
-Bloemfontein. He was confident that the occupation of places would bring
-the war to an end without an excessive loss of life; and he would
-probably have been right if he had been engaged in a European war. He
-did not see, however, that the Boers derived little or no strength from
-their towns, which were rather a source of weakness; they were men of
-the veld and the veld was their strength.
-
-De Wet's _guerilla_ advanced Chermside to the command of the IIIrd
-Division, in place of Gatacre sent home. A new Division, numbered the
-VIIIth, under a new commander, Sir Leslie Rundle, a general with an
-Egyptian reputation, was assembled south of Bloemfontein in April.
-
-The siege of Wepener called for activity from Bloemfontein as well as
-from the Orange, and Lord Roberts sent Rundle to Dewetsdorp, where his
-presence would, it was hoped, not only draw the Boers away from Wepener,
-but deny them a retreat to the north. Pole-Carew with the XIth Division
-and French followed Rundle, but De Wet abandoned the siege on the
-approach of Hart and Brabant from the south, and his brother P. De Wet
-scuttled away from Dewetsdorp on the approach of Rundle; and the
-commandos ran the gauntlet successfully. Their hereditary trekking
-instincts told them when to move and how to move, and their mobility had
-not at that period been recognized by the British Staff. Wepener was
-indeed relieved, though not from Bloemfontein, but the subsequent
-divagations of the Boers baffled three British divisions which were
-endeavouring to squeeze them northwards and head them off. A strong
-rearguard was left by the Boers at Houtnek, ten miles north of
-Thabanchu.
-
-Lord Roberts' position at Bloemfontein, and on the line of
-communication, had never been seriously endangered. The brilliant
-affairs of Sannah's Post and Mostert's Hoek were no doubt annoying to
-the British Army and encouraging to the enemy. At home the importance of
-them was greatly exaggerated. If the advance on the Transvaal was
-delayed by them and the subsequent operations arising out of the siege
-of Wepener, more time was given to prepare for it; and the British Army
-was usefully informed of a fact which hitherto had hardly been
-suspected, namely, that the enemy derived much of his power from
-mobility, resourcefulness, and aptitude for _guerilla_.
-
-Lord Roberts' plan for the movement on the Transvaal was an advance in
-line, on a front which extended from Ladysmith to Kimberley. It soon
-became an echelon owing to the slow movements of Buller in Natal. In the
-centre at Bloemfontein were the troops under the immediate orders of the
-Commander-in-Chief; on the left at Kimberley were Methuen, and Hunter
-with the Xth Division which had been brought round from Ladysmith.
-Between the centre and the right the intervention of Basutoland and the
-Drakensberg prevented the effective co-operation of the Natal Army with
-Lord Roberts; and a portion of the interval was occupied by the enemy.
-
-The centre columns under Lord Roberts were about 43,000 strong. Hunter
-and Methuen in the west had each under his command about 10,000 troops,
-while Buller's force, which was much nearer to the Transvaal objective
-than the centre, and which was still lingering on the banks of the Klip
-River two months after the relief of Ladysmith, numbered about 45,000.
-Ian Hamilton, who had done so well in the Elandslaagte and Caesar's Camp
-affairs, was not allowed to waste himself in the Natal lethargy. He was
-recalled from Ladysmith, and after taking part from the Bloemfontein
-side in the Wepener operations, was given command of a column which was
-sent on, a few days before the general movement, in the direction of
-Winburg to protect the right flank of the central advance and to fend
-off from it the hovering Boer commandos which had been pressed
-northwards by the April operations. He started from Thabanchu on April
-30 and was soon in action with the Boer force a Houtnek under P. Botha.
-The battle lasted until nightfall and was renewed next day, when, with
-the help of reinforcements from French and Colvile, Ian Hamilton forced
-the Boers to retire on Clocolan.
-
-Meanwhile there was energy on the left. Methuen had been for some time
-in occupation of the Boshof district, where he was in a position to
-threaten Kroonstad as well as the commandos at the Vaal bridge at
-Fourteen Streams between Kimberley and Mafeking. The relief of the
-latter was to be undertaken by a flying column under Mahon supported by
-Hunter's division. On May 3 Lord Roberts left Bloemfontein for the
-north. Kelly-Kenny's Division remained in charge of the Free State
-capital, while Chermside's policed the railway and the country in rear.
-Rundle at Thabanchu was instructed to prevent the enemy from regaining a
-footing in the districts east and south of Bloemfontein, and Methuen to
-push on towards the left bank of the Vaal beyond Hoopstad. No definite
-orders were sent to Buller, but for two months there had been a constant
-interchange of suggestions, counter-suggestions, plans, and projects for
-co-ordinate action.
-
-Lord Roberts' objective was now Pretoria. The country in front of him
-was not difficult and he had a railway behind him. The line of
-communication with the south was fairly safe, and it was estimated that
-not more than 12,000 Boers with twenty-eight guns, under Delarey and L.
-Botha, who had been brought round from Natal to take chief command
-during the crisis, barred the way into the Transvaal; not including the
-loosely associated commandos operating on the right flank under the
-general control of De Wet, the Prince Rupert of the Boer War.
-
-The nearest Boer post was at Brandfort, a few miles north of Karee
-Siding. On the right was the Winburg intervening column, 14,000 strong,
-under Ian Hamilton, who dragged in his train a weak supporting Division
-under Colvile, his superior officer in an anomalous position obliged to
-conform to his movements, and without authority to direct them.
-Brandfort was occupied that evening by Lord Roberts at the cost of six
-men killed. Vet River, the next obstacle, was secured on May 5, and
-crossed on the following day by the greater part of the main column. Ian
-Hamilton went into bivouac eight miles north of Winburg, which was
-occupied by his henchman Colvile.
-
-Up to this time, Lord Roberts was acting without the cavalry under
-French, who since the Sannah's Post affair had been working in the
-Thabanchu district, and who joined the main column on May 9. Though his
-horses were not in good condition, his arrival increased the power of
-the centre to strike rapidly at the next obstacles, the Zand River and
-the town of Kroonstad forty miles beyond, which was now the seat of the
-Free State Government. The drifts on a section of the river nearly
-twenty miles in length were seized, the most easterly being taken by Ian
-Hamilton, who had gradually converged on the centre column and was now
-on the right of the line. Next day the passage of the river was
-effected; but Lord Roberts' hope of getting round and grappling each
-flank of the enemy, who numbered about 3,000 Transvaalers and 5,000 Free
-Staters, was not realized, and Botha withdrew without serious loss. That
-night the Army went into bivouac astride the railway between Zand River
-and Kroonstad.
-
-On the left was the cavalry under French, who next morning raided
-northwards; but although he was unable, owing to the opposition of a
-force which came out of Kroonstad, to reach the railway north of the
-town, a small party of pioneers whom he had sent on succeeded during the
-night in blowing up the line at America Siding within a few yards of the
-high-road by which the enemy was retreating. This daring exploit, which
-although it had not much effect on the situation was not the less
-meritorious, was carried out by Hunter-Weston, who, just two months
-previously, had similarly cut the line north of Bloemfontein. The Boers
-had taken up a position at Boschrand to defend Kroonstad on the south,
-but French's turning movement scared them, and the position as well as
-the town was abandoned, in spite of efforts made by Steyn and Botha to
-arrest the flight. The seat of Government was transferred to Lindley.
-
-The Zand River affair was an incident in the advance rather than a
-battle. Lord Roberts suffered but 115 casualties. Its effect on the
-enemy was chiefly moral. The Transvaalers, whose country had not yet
-heard the sounds of war, were alarmed, but the Free Staters were
-dismayed. The ties of race and kindred had engulfed them in a war which
-was not for their own cause, and the brunt of which they had borne for
-ten weeks. They thought that they had done all that could be expected of
-them and that the Transvaal must now look after itself. From that time
-there was no organized co-operation between the allies.
-
-On May 12 Lord Roberts entered Kroonstad. In his advance, averaging
-thirteen miles per day, he had outstripped the reconstruction of the
-railway, of which almost every bridge and culvert had been blown up by
-the retreating Boers, and many miles of the permanent way had been
-destroyed. A halt was therefore necessary until the railhead could be
-brought nearer, and to give the Army an opportunity of pulling itself
-together, which was especially required by the cavalry. Little more than
-one-half of the 6,000 horses with which French marched out of
-Bloemfontein on May 6 were fit for service at Kroonstad seven days
-later.
-
-Ian Hamilton was sent out in chase of the flitting Free State
-Government. He found it not at Lindley, nor at Heilbron, for it had
-trekked away to Frankfort. Between Lindley and Heilbron he was attacked
-in rear by a body of Boers, who emerged from the presumed vacuum behind
-him, but they were beaten off.
-
-The bulk of the enemy's force which had evacuated Kroonstad, was now in
-the triangle formed by the railway, the Vaal and the Rhenoster. On its
-left flank was Ian Hamilton; and French was ordered out to hook the
-right flank, a repetition of the movement which had failed at Zand
-River. On May 22 Lord Roberts left Kroonstad.
-
-The enemy, however, again evaded the net. Reconnaissances by French on
-May 23 showed that Botha had been frightened by the appearance of Ian
-Hamilton at Heilbron, and had crossed into the Transvaal. The discovery
-necessitated the recasting of Lord Roberts' plan, and brought about an
-interesting and entirely successful strategic movement. It was evident
-from Botha's dispositions that he expected Ian Hamilton to march
-straight to his front and endeavour to cross the Vaal above the railway
-bridge at Vereeniging. The difficult drifts and country below it were
-considered to be a sufficient protection, and were not strongly held by
-Botha, who on this occasion was completely out-generalled by his
-opponent.
-
-Lord Roberts ordered Ian Hamilton to march from the right flank to the
-left, across the front of the main Army, and then in conjunction with
-French to wheel round to Meyerton on the line between Johannesburg and
-Vereeniging. On the evening of May 26 he entered the Transvaal at
-Wonderwater Drift. But Ian Hamilton's column had not the honour of being
-the first troops of the main body to enter the Transvaal, for he found
-the cavalry in front of him. French,[43] who had been sent out from
-Kroonstad on May 20, reached the Vaal at Paris on the 24th, and at once
-threw part of his force into the Transvaal, the rest crossing higher up
-at Old Viljoen's Drift. He thus fittingly celebrated the last birthday
-festival of Queen Victoria, which was also appropriately honoured by a
-proclamation issued on the same day by Lord Roberts, by which the Orange
-Free State was annexed to the dominions of Her Majesty under the
-designation of the Orange River Colony--a suitable birthday offering
-from a distinguished soldier to his Sovereign.
-
-The main body of the Army with the Commander-in-Chief at its head
-entered the Transvaal at Viljoen's Drift on May 27, and, like the
-pioneer columns of French and Ian Hamilton, met with no opposition. It
-was of good augury for the speedy subjugation of the South African
-Republic. The expected firm stand of the enemy along the right bank of
-the Vaal, where the great battle of the war was to be fought, was not
-made. Vereeniging and subsequently Meyerton were abandoned in spite of
-all Botha's efforts to keep his burghers' faces to the front. He held a
-strong line enclosing Vereeniging and the drifts and extending from near
-Heidelberg to Potchefstroom, but it impotently watched the British
-troops crossing the river. Some opposition was indeed offered to French
-when he was a day's march from the drift by which he had crossed into
-the Transvaal, but the bulk of the commandos fell away to the north and
-took up positions between Johannesburg and Krugersdorp. By arrangement
-between the Governments, none of the Free Staters accompanied Botha into
-the Transvaal; but he was in communication with De Wet at Frankfort, and
-was urging him to act against the railway in the Free State. He must
-have regretted that the strong hand and will of the man of Waterval
-Drift, Kitchener's Kopje, Sannah's Post, and Mostert's Hoek, were not
-with him on the right bank of the Vaal to animate the shrinking burghers
-of the South African Republic.
-
-The immediate purpose of Lord Roberts was now the capture of
-Johannesburg, the relations of some of whose inhabitants towards
-Pretoria had brought on, not only the Jameson raid, but also the war.
-Although it was not defended by permanent military works, the burghers
-had taken up a position before it which might be very hard to capture,
-and there was another and greater cause for anxiety. The task before
-Lord Roberts may be likened to an attack on a ship manned by pirates,
-who threaten to fire the magazine as soon as a hand is laid upon the
-bulwarks. It was seriously proposed by certain persons in authority
-under Kruger, that on the appearance of the British Army before the
-city, the mines in which so many millions of British capital were
-invested should be wrecked; and it is probable that the threat would
-have been carried out with official sanction if Botha had not set his
-face resolutely against such a piratical act.
-
-[Sidenote: Map, p. 240.]
-
-Lord Roberts proposed to effect the capture of Johannesburg by
-surrounding it. While with the main body of his Army he occupied
-Elandsfontein on the east, French and Ian Hamilton, the pioneers of the
-advance from Bloemfontein, would deal with the enemy posted south of the
-city and then establish themselves, the former near Klipfontein, north
-of it, and the latter near Florida, west of it. The right and the most
-vulnerable part of the Boer line was posted on Doornkop near the scene
-of the surrender of Jameson, the enthusiast, who, a few years before,
-had endeavoured with a few hundred adventurers and soldiers of fortune
-to solve the South African question which Great Britain was now tackling
-with a quarter of a million of trained soldiers.
-
-On May 29 Ian Hamilton attacked the Doornkop position and won it after
-some hard infantry fighting; French, reinforced by the loan of
-Hamilton's mounted troops, having thrown a grappling iron round it,
-thereby rendering it untenable. At nightfall the two leaders were firmly
-planted west of the city. The movement deceived the enemy, to whom the
-advance of the main body under Lord Roberts on Elandsfontein came as an
-unwelcome surprise, though Botha had to some extent prepared for it. The
-detachments posted by him at various places east of the city offered no
-effectual resistance, and Lord Roberts went into bivouac that night at
-Elandsfontein. Johannesburg was entrapped between him on the east, and
-French and Hamilton on the north and west.
-
-On May 30 the city agreed not unwillingly to surrender, but having
-regard to the presence in it of splinters of the lately shattered
-commandos, to the probability of street fighting, and to the risk of
-injury to the mines, Lord Roberts consented to postpone his formal entry
-until the following day; by which time the judicious action of the
-representatives of the Boer Government had averted the impending danger,
-and the troops took peaceful possession of Johannesburg.
-
-In spite of disquieting news from the Free State, Lord Roberts remained
-firm in his purpose of advancing on Pretoria without delay. Not only was
-it the head quarters of Krugerism, but also the place in which the Boer
-harvest of war--more than 4,000 British prisoners, some of whom had been
-in captivity since the day of Talana Hill--was garnered.
-
-On June 3 the advance on Pretoria, which it was hoped would be the last
-important movement of the war, was resumed; Wavell, with a brigade of
-Tucker's Division, being left behind as Bank Guard over the treasure in
-the mines. Botha had retired on the capital, but no one knew whether he
-would endeavour to defend it, or whether the vaunted forts would
-imperiously address the invader. In view of possible eventualities,
-however, a siege train, in which were included two 9.45" howitzers which
-had been hastily acquired in Austria, was taken up to answer Forts
-Schanzkop, Klapperkop, Wonderboom, and Daspoort if they should speak.
-
-Throughout the month of May there had been alarms and excursions in the
-capital of the South African Republic. The sound of the _plon-plon_ of
-the British Army was daily growing more distinct. The house of Ucalegon
-was on fire. The Volksraad met on May 7, and after a session of three
-days handed over the situation to the wavering executive Government,
-which had already made arrangements for an eastward retirement. Kruger,
-fearing lest his retreat by the Delagoa Bay railway should be cut off,
-slipped away to Machadodorp on May 29; the forts were emptied and
-abandoned, and Botha was bidden to do the best he could with the
-remnants of the Transvaal forces. On June 3 he took up a position on a
-ridge a few miles south of the city and prepared for the worst.
-
-French, on the left front of the advance, was ambushed in a defile by a
-commando which had come up out of the west, but cleared himself with
-slight loss. The forts were dumb. Only the ridges between the city and
-Six-Mile Spruit were found to be held. The southern ridge was taken, and
-when the northern ridge was turned by Ian Hamilton, who was recalled
-from acting at large in support of French, the Boers retired. French
-passed through Zilikat's Nek and marched on Pretoria north of the
-Magaliesberg. On June 5 the capital of the South African Republic
-surrendered to Lord Roberts.
-
-The Boers streamed away towards the east. An attempt made a few days
-before to cut the Delagoa Bay railway failed, not, however, through the
-fault of Hunter-Weston, who led the enterprise. The force given to him
-was insufficient for the purpose, and he was unable to repeat the
-exploits of Bloemfontein and Kroonstad.
-
-The prisoners of war, whom to the number of 3,000 the Boers had not been
-able to drag away with them in their hurried flight, and who were in
-confinement at Waterval twelve miles north of the city, were brilliantly
-liberated on June 4 by some squadrons of cavalry; which not only ran the
-gauntlet of the Wonderboom defile, but passed through the Boer posts at
-the further Poort and snatched away the prize from under the eyes of
-Delarey, who was covering Waterval with 2,000 burghers and some guns.
-
-On the day of Lord Robert's entry into Pretoria, Buller was still in
-Natal. They had started simultaneously, and in thirty-four days the main
-body had marched 300 miles, but the tardigrade Natal Army was now on
-Lord Roberts' right rear. It had been his hope that Buller would advance
-step by step with him, and having reached the Transvaal, would strike
-northwards and establish himself on the Delagoa Bay railway and deny it
-to Kruger. At Kroonstad, Lord Roberts, seeing that he could not expect
-assistance from Buller, contemplated detaching Ian Hamilton and sending
-him into the Eastern Transvaal, but the fear of unduly weakening the
-main body in view of probable opposition at the Vaal, Johannesburg, and
-Pretoria, caused him to give up the project. As events turned out, it
-would in all probability have been successful.
-
-Pretoria was in the hands of the British Army, Kruger was in flight, the
-war was over said the experts. Without having fought a single action
-that could be termed a battle, and at a cost of less than 500
-casualties, of which but sixty-one men were killed, Lord Roberts had
-passed from Bloemfontein and had seized the perverse city in which most
-of the South African troubles of the past twenty-five years had been
-brewed. The Free State, though kicking, was apparently helpless. There
-were, however, not a few observers on the spot to whom the easy success
-and the few casualties were of ominous import. A change in the method of
-the opposition to be offered in the future to the invader was indicated.
-The Boers were discovering that they were incapable of waging systematic
-warfare and were on the point of resorting to _guerilla_, for which
-they, as well as the arena, were by nature particularly well adapted.
-
-[Illustration: Sketch map of Magaliesberg district.]
-
-On the Boer side there was a transitory interval of weakness. Even
-before Lord Roberts' occupation of Pretoria Kruger wrote doubtfully to
-Steyn; and after it Botha was inclined to negotiate with the invader. He
-was with his commandos at Hatherley, a few miles east of Pretoria. A
-Council of War was held in the office of a Russian Jew, who was a
-distiller of whisky. The leaders complained that they had been deserted
-by Kruger, who had slunk away with the civil government and all the
-money he could lay his hands on, and the general opinion was in favour
-of abandoning the struggle. A meeting between Lord Roberts and Botha was
-even arranged, when suddenly De Wet intervened. The news of his
-successful raids on the line of communication in the Free State relaxed
-the tension of the minds of the despondent commandants. Easily
-disheartened and easily reassured, they leapt in an instant from one
-psychological pole to the other. Botha announced that he was ready to
-meet Lord Roberts, not only in conference, but in battle. The
-negotiations were, however, not definitely broken off until after the
-Battle of Diamond Hill.
-
-Lord Roberts had sent Kitchener with a column to see to the trouble in
-the Free State, and could not put more than about 16,000 men into the
-field against Botha, who, with 6,000 men, had taken up a strong position
-astride the Delagoa Bay railway sixteen miles east of Pretoria. His
-centre was at Pienaar's Poort, where the railway passes through a
-defile, and his front, which his former experience of Lord Roberts'
-tactics led him to extend greatly, was nearly twenty-five miles in
-length, and ran along an irregular chain of hills, kopjes, and ridges.
-Facing the Diamond Hill and Donkerhoek range, south of the centre, is
-another range of heights through which the two poorts Tyger and Zwavel
-pass, and which circles round the source of Pienaar's River towards the
-Diamond Hill range. North of the centre runs a broken range ending
-abruptly at the Kameelfontein ridge, which overlooks the broad
-Kameelfontein valley leading to the Krokodil Spruit; and across the
-valley rises the Boekenhoutskloof ridge, a detached feature with
-triangular contours, which, being somewhat in advance, commands the
-approaches to Kameelfontein ridge, where the Boer right flank under
-Delarey was posted.
-
-The left flank was on Mors Kop and curved round indefinitely to
-Kameelzyn Kraal with detached posts in the direction of Tygerpoort. The
-centre north and south of Pienaar's Poort was the strongest section of
-the line, and for this reason and for another it was held by
-comparatively small numbers. Botha was an acute observer and had learnt
-the moves of the British autumn manoeuvre opening, a holding attack on
-the centre not intended to be pushed home in order to eke out paucity of
-numbers operating on a wide front. Lord Roberts, in spite of his
-superiority of strength, could not hope to inflict a decisive defeat
-upon Botha's well-posted commandos, but only to remove them out of
-striking distance of Pretoria, and he was successful.
-
-The earlier movements of the attack on June 11 were in the nature of a
-reconnaissance in force, as it was uncertain how far to the north and
-south the Boer front extended. The usual tactics were adopted. French
-with the 1st and 4th Cavalry Brigades under Porter and Dickson was to
-work round the enemy's right flank and to endeavour to circle round it
-to the railway; a demonstrating attack on the centre would be made by
-Pole-Carew; while Ian Hamilton acted against the left flank.
-
-French approached the Kameelfontein valley and won a footing on
-Boekenhontskloof ridge, which the Boers were only now moving out to
-occupy, with his left. His right soon came under heavy fire from
-Krokodil Spruit Hill on the Kameelfontein ridge, but he succeeded in
-seizing Louwbaken, which he held tenaciously in spite of Delarey's
-attempts to work round it and of the shells of a heavy gun posted six
-miles away near Edendale. Meanwhile his left had been struggling for
-several hours on the Boekenhoutskloof ridge, which it eventually
-cleared, and was then able to support the right, which was still
-clinging desperately to Louwbaken. Throughout the afternoon the Boers
-continued their attacks on French, but were unable to shift him. At
-nightfall he found that instead of turning the enemy's right, he had
-only plastered himself against it. He had already reported the situation
-to Lord Roberts, who authorized him to withdraw if necessary, at the
-same time cautioning him "not to risk too many casualties."
-
-[Illustration: Diamond Hill.]
-
-Pole-Carew, in the centre, was in action with his heavy guns only,
-"demonstrating" according to the rules, pending the development of the
-flank attacks.
-
-The force on the right under Ian Hamilton was strong in mounted troops.
-He entered the arena through Zwavelpoort, and thrust at the bristling
-but indeterminate left flank of the enemy. The 2nd Cavalry Brigade under
-Broadwood evicted a small body of Boers from Tygerpoort, and when the
-3rd Brigade under Gordon came up to hold the position until the arrival
-of an infantry regiment, Broadwood advanced across the valley in the
-direction of Mors Kop, and soon was not only under shell fire from
-Diamond Hill, but also under rifle fire from some vague detachments of
-Boers on his right rear.
-
-Nor was this all, for as he proceeded, the enemy was seen pouncing down
-from Diamond Hill on to the Kleinfontein ridge upon the line of his
-advance, and simultaneously he was fired on from the right. Two horse
-artillery guns, which had been sent out, with an insufficient escort, to
-deal with the swoop, were almost captured, and were only saved by Lord
-Airlie at the cost of his own life. The attack on the right was soon
-checked, but the cavalry instead of outflanking the enemy was itself
-outflanked and unable to make a further advance.
-
-Gordon had now come away from Tygerpoort, and, in touch with Broadwood,
-screened the right flank of Ian Hamilton's infantry attack; which after
-the failure to turn the enemy's left flank, had necessarily to be a
-frontal movement against the strongest section of his line. Bruce
-Hamilton, with a brigade of Ian Hamilton's command, crossed Pienaar's
-River near Boschkop and expelled the Boer advanced front from the
-Kleinfontein ridge. Ian Hamilton was now face to face with Diamond Hill,
-but the afternoon was too far spent for further action.
-
-The general idea for the right attack on the following day was a
-movement by Bruce Hamilton, reinforced by the Brigade of Guards from
-Pole-Carew's command in the centre. Diamond Hill was taken without much
-difficulty early in the afternoon, and the Donkerhoek plateau was
-cleared. A gap was now made in the Boer line, the commandos driven off
-making for the Donkerpoort ridge on the one side, or the
-Rhenosterfontein heights on the other. From three positions a double
-rain of bullets poured upon Bruce Hamilton on the plateau, until the
-heights were reached by De Lisle's mounted infantry from Broadwood's
-brigade. Bruce Hamilton's right flank was thus relieved, but between him
-and the enemy clustering on the ridge intervened the impassable ravine
-of the Donkerpoort. Night was approaching and nothing more could be
-done.
-
-On the left, French held his own but no more during the day, and
-Pole-Carew in the centre had no opportunity of going into action. The
-capture of the Rhenosterfontein heights occurred at an opportune moment
-and perhaps averted a disaster. At Delarey's request Botha was on the
-point of sending reinforcements to the Boer right to enable it to drive
-away French and fall upon the weak British centre, when De Lisle's
-success vitally changed the situation.
-
-Next morning, June 13, the British Army found that it had won a victory
-without knowing it. The Boers had faded away during the night and had
-abandoned the strongest position which they had ever held in the Free
-State or the Transvaal. French and Ian Hamilton went in pursuit with no
-results. Delarey succeeded in circling round towards the Western
-Transvaal, Botha retired to the east. The casualties on the British side
-were 176; the Boers professed to have lost but four burghers killed and
-twenty wounded.
-
-Lord Kitchener was away in the Free State, and the battle was fought
-under the usual restrictive conditions, that no operation likely to
-entail serious loss of life was to be undertaken: and the enemy found
-that the ordeal of combat was not very dreadful.
-
-With the occupation of Pretoria, which was not virtually effected until
-Botha's retreat from Diamond Hill, the ranging phase of Lord Roberts'
-campaign was nearly at an end. At the two capitals and at other towns
-already occupied, he had places of arms, from which without wide
-divagations of large bodies of troops, he could hope soon to control and
-eventually to dominate the Republics.
-
-To see to the long and lonely furrow which he had ploughed across the
-veld from the Orange to the Magaliesberg, and to prevent its being
-obliterated by the wayward and shifting sand of the desert, was the
-present task before him.
-
-Notes:
-
-[Footnote 43: Plumer raided across the Limpopo into the Transvaal as far
-back as December, 1899, and Hunter occupied Christiana on May 15.]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII
-
-The New Colony
-
-
-[Sidenote: Map, p. 260.]
-
-The Orange River Colony did not receive its incorporation into the
-British Empire with a display of gratitude for the honour conferred upon
-it.
-
-The urgent message sent by Botha to De Wet on May 27 after the British
-Army had crossed into the Transvaal was hardly necessary to incite that
-free lance into action after his own heart, and he at once quitted
-Frankfort for Lindley.
-
-When Lord Roberts entered the Transvaal he left behind him a
-considerable force to teach the New Colony its duties. Besides the
-stationary troops at Bloemfontein and on the railway, the VIIIth and
-Colonial Divisions under Rundle and Brabant were at Senekal and
-Ficksburg; Colvile with the IXth Division, who had been taken off Ian
-Hamilton's lead and allowed to run alone, was near Lindley; and Methuen
-had come into Kroonstad from Bothaville, the line of his march, which
-was originally towards the Transvaal, having been changed by orders from
-Lord Roberts.
-
-Such were the forces against which De Wet was ready to fling himself.
-Early in June he was faced by another opponent. Lord Kitchener had come
-down from the Transvaal with a strong column.
-
-Lord Roberts, on leaving Bloemfontein for the north, instructed Rundle
-to "exercise a vigilant control east of the railway." In co-operation
-with Brabant, he worked up through the fertile district along the Basuto
-border, slowly but steadily; his immediate object being to prevent the
-enemy breaking back towards the south. No serious opposition was
-encountered, and by the middle of the month the Divisions had advanced
-to Clocolan and Winburg, where Rundle came in touch with the IXth
-Division.
-
-Colvile received orders to advance to Lindley and Heilbron. He was
-instructed to reach Heilbron with the Highland Brigade on May 29, and
-was informed that a force of Yeomanry under Spragge would on May 23 join
-him at Ventersburg, which he would pass through on his march.
-
-Spragge was unable to be at Ventersburg on the date fixed and was
-ordered on to Kroonstad, where he received telegraphic instructions to
-join Colvile at Lindley on May 26 at the latest. It has never been
-ascertained by whom this fatal message was despatched. No British staff
-officer has ever acknowledged himself the sender of it, and it has been
-suggested that it was sent by a Boer sympathizer who was better informed
-of Colvile's movements than the Intelligence Staff.
-
-Colvile believed that his presence at Heilbron on May 29 was
-imperatively required in connexion with the advance, and, although very
-weak in mounted troops, he pushed on from Ventersburg without waiting
-for Spragge. On May 26 he reached Lindley after some resistance outside
-the town, and next day resumed his march to Heilbron, which, though
-checked on the way, he reached on the appointed day.
-
-Meanwhile, Spragge was doing his best to deliver himself to the IXth
-Division, to which he was waybilled. He moved a few miles out of
-Kroonstad on May 25, and next evening was in bivouac within eighteen
-miles of Lindley. Next day he resumed his march on the town, about the
-same time that Colvile was quitting it for Heilbron. The two commanders
-were in entire ignorance of each other's movements.
-
-At midday, Spragge reconnoitred the town, and finding it occupied,
-withdrew to a position outside. Although Colvile had quitted it but a
-few hours previously, and although the dust of his column could still be
-seen on the Heilbron road, a commando under Michael Prinsloo, which he
-had driven out, had promptly returned; and some burghers who had
-surrendered to Spragge on May 26, and who, having given up their rifles,
-had been "allowed to return to their farms," went to Lindley instead and
-gave warning of the approach of the Yeomanry.
-
-Spragge counted on being able to draw rations at Lindley when he joined
-Colvile, and marched out of Kroonstad with two days' rations only, and
-these, although eked out by a capture of sheep on the way, were almost
-exhausted. There were three courses open to him: to retire to Kroonstad,
-to follow Colvile, or to remain where he was. He chose the last.
-
-He took up, and did his best to make defensible, a plateau and kopje
-position two miles N.W. of the town. He had 500 men, but no guns, and he
-reported the situation to Colvile, who was eighteen miles away when he
-received the message next morning; and to Rundle, who was at Senekal.
-Colvile answered his appeal for assistance with a refusal, but suggested
-a retirement on Kroonstad; but the message did not reach Spragge. Rundle
-was too far away to help Spragge directly, but made a movement towards
-Bethlehem, which he hoped would draw the enemy away from Lindley.
-
-On May 28 the Boers took up positions which practically surrounded
-Spragge, but he held his own that day and the next; and although the
-enemy was reinforced on the 29th, he was not so closely invested that he
-could not have broken out. Firing was heard in the S.E., and Spragge,
-believing that it was Rundle in action, endeavoured without success to
-communicate with him.
-
-So long as the investing force was without guns, Spragge was confident
-of being able to hold on. But on May 30 a further reinforcement came in.
-Martin Prinsloo joined his brother with three guns and a strong
-commando. The Prinsloos, who were acting under the orders of De Wet, had
-originally been detailed to look after Colvile, but were drawn away by
-the attraction of an easier prey at Lindley.
-
-On May 30 a kopje on the west, from which the Boers were sniping into
-the position, was captured by Spragge, but soon fell again into the
-hands of the burghers. It was recovered next morning, but pressure
-elsewhere squeezed it finally out of the grasp of the re-captors. The
-Boers had brought their guns into action. The key of Spragge's position
-was two kopjes on the S.E. of the defence. The outer kopje was rushed by
-the enemy, the detachment occupying it being driven back towards the
-inner kopje. A panic-stricken non-commissioned officer in the connecting
-post between them raised the white flag without authority, and, it is
-said, was immediately shot for having done so. The officer in command on
-the inner kopje considered that he was bound by the act and recognized
-it, and only hastened the inevitable end. There was a last wriggle or
-two, and then Spragge, who was surrounded by 2,000 Boers with artillery,
-gave in.
-
-Nearly 500 yeomen were added to the panel of British prisoners of war by
-the hawk-like swoop of De Wet and the brothers Prinsloo almost under the
-eyes of three Divisions of the British Army. For not only were Colvile
-and Rundle aware of Spragge's predicament, but as soon as it was
-reported to Lord Roberts, Methuen was ordered to the rescue.
-
-Methuen, who only arrived at Kroonstad from the west on May 28, was
-already on the move to help Colvile, from whom a disquieting message had
-been received at Head Quarters. Colvile's safe arrival at Heilbron next
-day rendered assistance unnecessary, and Methuen, under instructions
-from Lord Roberts, turned towards Lindley. He was, however, too late,
-for as he approached the town the news of Spragge's surrender reached
-him on June 1. He ran into the rear of the Boers hurrying away with
-their prey, and even intercepted two guns and some wagons, but was
-unable to retain them.
-
-The Lindley affair sent Colvile back to England in the wake of Gatacre.
-The responsibility of the surrender was fixed upon him and he was
-deprived of his command. He had no doubt been in a false position during
-the first fortnight of the advance from Bloemfontein when he was kept
-trailing behind a junior officer, and this slight perhaps affected his
-judgment, but he was constitutionally incapable of viewing a situation
-synoptically and perspectively. As at Sannah's Post, so again at Lindley
-the halation of a word or two in his orders fogged the image on his
-retina. He doggedly stared at the words _Heilbron, May 29_, as if the
-whole issue of the campaign depended upon them. There was nothing in the
-context to show that they were more than the details of an itinerary
-which he was expected to follow if circumstances permitted. He was
-urgently in need of the very mounted troops with which he made no effort
-to put himself in touch. _Bis peccare in bello non licet_. Lord Roberts
-could forgive once, but Colvile was superseded for having twice shown a
-"want of military capacity and initiative."[44]
-
-Yet the disaster was not due to his default alone, although the
-contributory defaults of others were rightly not permitted to excuse
-him. He had good reason to think that a well-mounted force would be able
-to take care of itself, and to believe that proper staff arrangements
-had been made for Spragge's march; but in each of these warrantable
-assumptions he was wrong. Lindley was the first of a series of disasters
-which seemed to show that Lord Roberts had pushed on too hastily.
-
-Rundle's endeavour to help Spragge by a demonstration in the direction
-of Bethlehem soon came to an end. It is said that a telegram in which he
-announced the movement to Brabant fell into the hands of the Boers, who
-promptly utilized the information. On May 29 he was seriously checked at
-the Biddulphsberg, where they had taken up a position. He failed in an
-attack on what he believed was the Boers' flank but which was in reality
-their front. During the engagement he received a telegram from Head
-Quarters, dated three days previously, ordering him to join Brabant in
-the Ficksburg district, and he withdrew from the action, having suffered
-186 casualties, some of which were caused by a fire which broke out in
-the long grass through which he had advanced, and in which helpless
-wounded men were lying. A brigade of Tucker's Division under Clements
-took his place at Senekal.
-
-De Wet now set himself in person to execute the task entrusted to him by
-Botha of getting behind the British force in the Transvaal and breaking
-or interrupting the line of communication in the Free State. He had not
-long to wait for opportunities. He left Frankfort with 800 men, and on
-June 2 placed himself in observation near Heilbron, where Colvile was
-awaiting a supply column from the railway at Roodeval. The convoy was
-harassed from the first by mischances. Against Colvile's orders it was
-despatched with but a small escort and without guns. When he heard that
-sufficient protection could not be given, he counter-ordered the convoy,
-but the message did not arrive until after it had started.
-
-On the second day of the march a body of the enemy was found blocking
-the road at Zwavel Kranz between Heilbron and Heilbron Road Station. It
-was De Wet waiting for the convoy.
-
-The news of its plight reached Heilbron Road Station,[45] and a
-relieving column was sent out, which came within four miles of Zwavel
-Kranz. No firing, however, was heard, and the officer in command,
-hastily concluding that all was well, returned to the railway without
-finding the convoy, which next morning surrendered, the victim of
-easy-going indifference and neglect.
-
-So far De Wet had done well, but he was only beginning his work. The
-railway between Bloemfontein and Vereeniging was weakly held by
-regiments of militia threaded like beads on a string in posts along the
-line. At Roodeval supplies and stores in large quantities, urgently
-needed by the Army in the Transvaal, were waiting until the bridge over
-the Rhenoster River, which had been destroyed by the Boers retreating
-before Lord Roberts, could be rebuilt. There was scarcely a post that
-did not beckon to De Wet to come to it.
-
-He was within reach of the railway at three vulnerable points, and he
-divided the force to attack them simultaneously; himself taking command
-of the raid on Roodeval, which was held by casual details of
-departmental troops stiffened by a detachment of militia. Thus an
-important link in the chain was unable to bear a comparatively slight
-tension. No one was recognized as being definitely responsible for the
-railway north of Bloemfontein. The charge of it had been given to an
-officer who, unknown to the staff, was at the time in hospital and
-unable to take over his command; detachments were moved promiscuously by
-orders which came now from Pretoria and now from Bloemfontein; and in
-the chaos De Wet wriggled in between Colvile and Methuen.
-
-On June 7 Heilbron Road Station, Rhenoster River Bridge, and Roodeval
-were captured in succession. At the Bridge the Derbyshire Militia fought
-gallantly for several hours, but were overpowered in a hopeless
-position, and soon afterwards Roodeval and its accumulated booty fell
-into the hands of De Wet,[46] who on that day severed Bloemfontein from
-Pretoria for a week and added nearly 500 men to the muster-roll of his
-prisoners of war.
-
-It was evident to Lord Roberts that things had taken a serious turn, and
-that his position in the Transvaal was unsound. In framing his plans for
-the advance from Bloemfontein, he had naturally expected that the Natal
-railway would be available as an alternative line of communication soon
-after he entered the Transvaal; but the movements of Buller were
-deliberate, and nearly a third of it was still in the enemy's hands. It
-is probable that Lord Roberts would have been less disinclined to the
-"steam-rollering" policy if he could have foreseen that on the day he
-entered Pretoria the Natal Army would be still south of Laing's Nek.
-
-As a preliminary measure pending, the elaboration of a definite scheme
-to put the Free State in order, Kitchener, who was always held in
-readiness with steam up to proceed to districts in difficulties and
-hustle local commandants and their staffs, was sent across the Vaal with
-a column; and Methuen's Division was set in motion.
-
-On the Bloemfontein side, Kelly-Kenny took temporary charge of all the
-troops south of Kroonstad, whither a brigade under C. Knox was sent to
-protect the stores and supplies; and Winburg was strengthened. While C.
-De Wet was engaged upon his own work his brother P. De Wet, whom he
-threatened to shoot if he gave in, was discussing terms of surrender
-with Methuen at Lindley, but as in the contemporaneous negotiations
-between C. Botha and Buller at Laing's Nek, and between L. Botha and
-Lord Roberts in the Transvaal, no terms of settlement were arranged; and
-Methuen quitted a pacificatory colloquy with one brother to encounter
-the other in arms, and joined Kitchener at Heilbron Road Station on June
-10.
-
-De Wet was elbowed away westwards from the railway, but he soon circled
-back, recrossing it at Lieuw Spruit between Rhenoster River Bridge and
-Heilbron Road Station, where he not only took fifty prisoners, but
-almost captured Kitchener, who chanced to be passing through at the
-time.
-
-It is interesting to speculate briefly on the effect which such a
-notable capture might have had upon the general situation. The Boers
-themselves would hardly have realized its importance. They were unaware
-of the position held by Kitchener in the British Army, and his name was
-unfamiliar to them. He had been here and there like many another
-commander whom they had met in the field. Still, they had never yet
-captured an unwounded general officer, and they would no doubt have made
-a great effort to prevent his services being again available against
-them.[47] It is, however, unlikely that De Wet would have been able to
-retain his prisoner for more than a few weeks at most. But no one can
-say what De Wet could not do. At home it is probable that a disastrous
-reaction would have followed the news of the railway broken, of Lord
-Roberts insolated in the Transvaal, and of Lord Kitchener of Khartoum a
-prisoner of war and possibly a hostage. It is very doubtful whether the
-nation, entangled by fresh difficulties and deafened by pro-Boer yells
-growing shriller and shriller every hour, would have remained firm of
-purpose. It is hardly too much to say that June 12, 1900, was one of the
-most critical dates in the history of the war.
-
-During the next fortnight, attacks on a convoy for Colvile at Heilbron,
-on the railway a few miles north of Kroonstad, a threat on Lindley which
-almost became a siege, and a raid on Virginia Siding by a commando under
-Roux, which sprang out of the Senekal district, maintained the mutiny,
-and again showed that however tightly the Boers might seem to be grasped
-in the hand, some of them were sure to wriggle through the fingers.
-
-It was soon apparent that the Free State would not be brought into
-subjection by haphazard divagations of brigades and columns; and about
-the middle of June Lord Roberts planned a systematic and simple
-campaign. The towns and strategical points were to be strongly held
-while flying columns shepherded De Wet and his commandos and endeavoured
-to enfold them. Buller, who arrived at Standerton on June 23, would bar
-the way should they attempt to retreat into the Transvaal, and a retreat
-southwards would throw them on to Rundle and Brabant. The four flying
-columns were based on the line of garrisons which extended from
-Heidelberg in the Transvaal to Winburg and Senekal in the Free State.
-
-The command of the Heidelberg column, which was strong in mounted
-troops, was given to Ian Hamilton, but an accident compelled him to hand
-it over to Hunter, who had come up into the Transvaal after the relief
-of Mafeking. The Heilbron column was the Highland Brigade of the late
-IXth Division, which was broken up when Colvile returned to England. At
-Rhenoster River was Methuen to prevent a break out towards the west.
-When the Winburg district was cleared by a strong column under Clements,
-who, a few weeks before, had relieved Rundle at Senekal, he would
-advance on Bethlehem, Paget at Lindley co-operating with him. As soon as
-Hunter, who was put in general charge of all the troops engaged, entered
-the Free State, Macdonald was ordered to join him with the Highland
-Brigade. Methuen's force at Rhenoster River was soon found to be
-unnecessary, as the enemy was retreating in the opposite direction, and
-it was sent into the Transvaal.
-
-At the end of June the columns began to move. Each of them was, as it
-were, the head of a spear prodding the mob of commandos towards the pen
-which had been assigned to them. With them, union was not strength, but
-weakness: the more they were agglomerated the less were they to be
-feared.
-
-[Illustration: Brandwater Basin.]
-
-Clements herded Roux, whose commando was the only body known to be at
-large, towards the kraal, and advanced with Paget to Bethlehem, which
-was occupied on July 7. The Boers opposed with delaying actions only,
-capturing but being unable to retain two of Paget's guns, and outside
-Bethlehem they brought into action and lost a field gun which had been
-taken from Gatacre at Stormberg, and which now, after half a year's
-exile _in partibus inimicorum_, was restored to the British Service. Two
-days after Clement's entry into Bethlehem, he was joined by Hunter, who
-had crossed the Vaal on June 29 and had picked up Macdonald at
-Frankfort.
-
-The Brandwater Basin, into which the Boers had retreated from Bethlehem,
-taking with them Steyn and the Free State Government, which was set up
-at Fouriesburg, is a semicircle formed by the Witteberg and Roodeberg at
-the head-waters of two tributaries of the Caledon, the Little Caledon
-and the Brandwater; the Caledon being the diameter and the mountains the
-circumference of the area. The river section of the perimeter lies on
-the Basuto border, and the mountain section is wild and difficult, there
-being but four wagon roads into it in nearly seventy-five miles: at
-Commando, Slabbert's, Retief's, and Naauwpoort Neks. The passes at
-Witnek, Nelspoort, and the Golden Gate are scarcely better than rough
-bridle-paths.
-
-The strength of the enemy holding the Basin and the Neks was about
-7,000. The Boers had indeed established themselves in an apparently
-strong defensive position, but they had not been there many days before
-they began to ask each other what was the good of it to them. They had
-taken it up against the advice of De Wet, who saw that it was playing
-the game of Lord Roberts. They had deprived themselves of their mobility
-and were confined in a house of detention, where they could do no
-mischief except to each other. They realized too late that De Wet was
-right. The commandants were at variance and there was indiscipline in
-the laagers.
-
-De Wet saw that the Brandwater Basin was no place for him. He was
-beating his wings in a vacuum, and he resolved to get out of it as soon
-as possible. After a Council of War orders to decamp were issued. The
-general idea was that a column under De Wet should break out through
-Slabbert's Nek and make for Kroonstad, and that Roux should take out
-another column and march on Bloemfontein, a portion of the force being
-left behind to guard the passes.
-
-On the night of July 15 De Wet, accompanied by Steyn, who went out to
-establish yet another seat of government, pulled his column, which
-included 2,600 burghers and 460 vehicles and was nearly three miles
-long, out of the Basin through Slabbert's Nek. He met with no
-opposition, and successfully carried out the first episode of the
-programme.
-
-Hunter at Bethlehem was standing sentry over the northward passes, but
-want of supplies and deficiency of ammunition prevented him advancing at
-once on the Basin: and of the range before him he had no accurate maps
-and knew less about its topography than an astronomer knows of the
-Mountains of the Moon. While formulating a scheme for blocking the
-passes, De Wet's sudden outbreak took him by surprise, and he was unable
-to head the Free State leader, who passed northwards between Bethlehem
-and Senekal, pursued by Broadwood's cavalry. The hounds were on the
-scent of the first De Wet hunt.
-
-Rundle, who for two months had been painfully, but not with unnecessary
-deliberation, pushing his force up the right bank of the Caledon, was at
-first ordered by Hunter to watch Slabbert's Nek, but on a report that
-the Boers were about to come out through Commando Nek, he was sent back.
-The movement, though justified on the assumption that the report, which
-came on good authority, was correct, was unfortunate, as it left the key
-of the gate at Slabbert's Nek in the enemy's hands, and allowed De Wet
-to escape.
-
-De Wet had assigned to himself the initial movement of the withdrawal,
-and left the rest of the programme to develop itself without him. Roux
-was put in charge of the Brandwater Basin. De Wet was an unpopular
-leader. His attempts to leaven the commandos with a little of the
-military spirit were resented. He had from the first, with only partial
-success, set his face against the incumbrance of wagons which marched
-with every commando. On the way to Sannah's Post he had cashiered a
-commandant named Vilonel for disobeying his orders with regard to
-transport. His nomination of Roux did not give satisfaction. The
-partisans of other leaders protested, and it was determined to settle by
-election the question of the Chief Command. In the meantime, the
-management was in the hands of a triumvirate composed of Roux, Olivier,
-and Martin Prinsloo.
-
-In the chaos, the commandos which De Wet had arranged should break out
-remained in the trap and simplified Hunter's task. In succession,
-Retief's Nek, Slabbert's Nek, and Commando Nek were taken, the latter by
-Rundle, who on July 28 joined Hunter at Fouriesburg. Witnek had been
-abandoned by the Boers, who now had only Naauwpoort Nek and the scarcely
-practicable Golden Gate open to them.
-
-The Nek was closed by Hunter on July 27, and a position outside the
-Golden Gate, but not the Gate itself, was occupied. The greater part of
-the Boer force was now practically sealed up in the Basin.
-
-A Council of War was held to elect a new chief commandant. Had the vote
-been taken ten days earlier the situation might possibly have been
-saved, but the belated proceedings which displayed the weakness of a
-democratically organized army, and which, in the absence of
-representatives of the commandos not on the spot, were of doubtful
-validity, only added to the existing confusion. Prinsloo, however, seems
-to have been informally chosen.
-
-His first act was to endeavour to obtain an armistice from Hunter, who
-naturally refused it. A few hours later Prinsloo agreed to surrender,
-and on July 30 the main body of the Boers in the Basin laid down their
-arms at Slapkranz. Roux, the rival candidate for the Chief Command,
-protested against the surrender, not only to Prinsloo, but also in
-person to Hunter, to whom he pleaded, that as Prinsloo had not been duly
-elected, the act was unauthorized and therefore was not binding on him.
-Hunter refused to listen to such quibbles. On several occasions during
-the war the Boers had profited by the honourable reluctance of the
-British commanders to repudiate an unauthorized raising of the white
-flag, lest they should be accused of having laid a trap to lure on the
-enemy. Hunter rightly held that Roux's plea for local option was
-inadmissible, and that the surrender must apply to the whole force. Roux
-then yielded.
-
-A large number of burghers, however, as soon as they heard that Prinsloo
-had agreed to surrender, hurried away under Haasbroek, and scraped
-through the Golden Gate and joined Olivier and Hattingh outside the
-Basin. They were successful in evading the capitulation, for Olivier,
-when informed of it officially under a flag of truce, also declined to
-be bound by Prinsloo's act, and Hunter was unable to insist upon it. He
-trekked away towards Harrismith unmolested by the troops watching the
-Golden Gate, and he baffled for four weeks the columns sent in pursuit
-by Hunter, who, however, prevented him joining De Wet. He was taken
-prisoner near Winburg on August 27.
-
-The tangible result of the Brandwater Basin operations was the capture
-of more than 4,000 Boers and of three guns, two of which had been lost
-at Sannah's Post. The mountains in which the burghers had taken refuge
-became a prison, from which they were taken when Hunter came on circuit
-for the gaol delivery, and on conviction they were sent beyond the seas.
-
-Yet subsequent events showed that Lord Roberts would have made a good
-bargain if he could have exchanged all the burghers and the guns, and
-all the loot of horses, cattle, and sheep, for one man who had slipped
-through Slabbert's Nek on July 15, 1900.
-
-Notes:
-
-[Footnote 44: Napoleon said that "a military order must not be passively
-obeyed except when it is given by a superior who is on the spot at the
-moment the order is given, knows the state of things, and can hear
-objections and give full explanations to the officer charged with
-executing the order."]
-
-[Footnote 45: Also called Vredefort Road Station.]
-
-[Footnote 46: 660,000 rounds of Lee-Metford ammunition were buried by
-him for future use.]
-
-[Footnote 47: In the Russian War the Japanese gave orders that a Russian
-admiral, who was a wounded prisoner of war on board a Japanese torpedo
-boat, was to be shot if any attempt was made by the Russians to capture
-it.]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII
-
-Nec Celer nec Audax
-
-
-[Sidenote: Map, p. 50.]
-
-Lord Roberts had almost as much difficulty in bringing Buller out of
-Ladysmith as he had had in putting him into it. The relieved garrison,
-wasted and enfeebled by the rigours of the siege, was unfit to take the
-field, but there does not seem to have been any good reason why the
-relieving force, or at least a portion of it, should not have been
-pushed forward boldly without delay. The inaction invited the retreating
-enemy to halt and occupy the Biggarsberg Range; only a few days after
-Buller had informed Lord Roberts that he did not expect that any stand
-would be made south of Laing's Nek. Buller did indeed propose on March 3
-to advance on Northern Natal, as well as to attack the Drakensberg
-passes leading into the Free State; but Lord Roberts thought the scheme
-premature and ordered him to remain on the defensive, to police the
-country adjacent to the Harrismith railway with the greater part of his
-available force, and to send one division round by way of East London to
-join the central advance under Gatacre. Warren's Division therefore left
-Ladysmith on March 6. White, to whom Lord Roberts had intended to give a
-command in the Free State, was compelled by ill health to return to
-England. The order to "remain strictly on the defensive" was afterwards
-not unreasonably quoted by Buller in justification of two months of
-inaction, which, however, Lord Roberts ascribed to other causes, as he
-had agreed to subsequent proposals made by Buller for offensive action.
-
-The Boers on the Biggarsberg at first numbered about 15,000, but by the
-end of March many commandos had been attracted away by Lord Roberts'
-advance to more strenuous fields. Some time passed without any definite
-action having been agreed upon between Lord Roberts and Buller. The
-latter objected to almost every proposal made by the former, and
-sometimes even on reconsideration criticized his own proposals. He was
-allowed to recall the Vth Division, which after a brief absence rejoined
-his command; but even with it he protested against an advance on Van
-Reenen's Pass, which he had himself proposed and which he was instructed
-to make at the beginning of April, because Lord Roberts would consent to
-the employment of one division only in it. Lord Roberts did not insist
-on the movement, as Buller now said that it would endanger not only his
-own force, but also Natal; and finding that Buller had far more troops
-than he could usefully employ, ordered him to send the Xth Division
-under Hunter round to Kimberley. Even after its departure Buller
-outnumbered the enemy by more than five to one.
-
-He was still haunted by the troubles of the Tugela, and was unable to
-nerve himself for the risks that every leader must run. The Boers
-bewildered him. He could plan no scheme without a conviction that
-somehow their "knavish tricks" would frustrate it, and his inactivity
-made him more prone than ever to brood over possible mischances. He
-remained in Ladysmith because it was the only course open to him after
-he had by a process of elimination considered and rejected all the
-alternatives. Each of them had its disadvantages and its dangers,
-therefore it were better to stay where he was. During a critical period
-the Natal Army was of as little use to Lord Roberts as were the Spanish
-contingents to Wellington in the Peninsula; and its laggard action
-retarded the progress of the war. Lord Roberts laid his plans for the
-advance on the assumption that it would be in operation on his right
-flank when he reached Pretoria, and if L. Botha had found it pressing on
-him when he was playing at peace-making in June, instead of engaged in
-equally fruitless negotiations with his brother 180 miles away at
-Laing's Nek, it is improbable that he would have continued the struggle.
-
-On May 2 Lord Roberts informed Buller that he was ready to start from
-Bloemfontein, and that he expected the Natal Army to co-operate with him
-by attacking the Boers on the Biggarsberg, and then advancing towards
-the Transvaal. For this movement Buller considered that his force, which
-consisted of three divisions of infantry and three brigades of mounted
-troops, in all about 45,000 men, was insufficient; but he proceeded to
-carry it out. The Boers were in occupation of the whole line of the
-Biggarsberg from Helpmakaar westwards, and commanded the roads as well
-as the railway running through the range.
-
-Buller on this occasion determined rightly upon a turning movement. All
-his previous attacks had either been frontal or had been made so by the
-enemy. His plan was to move eastwards with the IInd Division under
-Clery, while the Vth Division under Hildyard, who succeeded Warren when
-the latter was called away to Bechuanaland, advanced up the railway
-against the Boer centre. The IVth Division under Lyttelton, composed of
-the infantry which had been in Ladysmith during the siege, was kept in
-reserve pending the development of the turning movement, which began on
-May 11, and was skilfully conducted by Buller and was entirely
-successful. Places and rivers which had not been named in the chronicle
-of the war since October of the previous year now emerged from their
-obscurity. Elandslaagte became the fulcrum of an aggressive operation.
-Sunday's River and the Waschbank River after an interval of seven months
-were again crossed by British troops, not, like Yule's force, in hasty
-retreat, but in confident advance.
-
-The Boers prepared for, and fully expected, a direct advance on Beith by
-way of Van Tender's Pass, but Buller made for the extreme flank of the
-range near Helpmakaar, which they held but lightly. It was rendered
-untenable on May 13, and after dark they retired on Beith, setting fire
-to the veld to mask the movement and hinder pursuit. At dawn Dundonald
-pushed on through the flames and smoke with his mounted infantry, but
-was checked by a body of Irish traitors who were acting as rearguard to
-their flying employers, and was unable to come up with the burghers. On
-the following night his patrols reported that Dundee was clear, and
-Buller occupied the town and reached Newcastle on May 18. The success of
-the turning movement was due in a great measure to a small force under
-Bethune, which had been lying for some months lower down the Tugela, and
-which Buller called up to threaten Helpmakaar from the south while he
-advanced from the west. It had been originally detached to protect his
-right flank during the advance on Ladysmith, and after long inaction as
-a watching force was restored to the strenuous campaign.
-
-Of the rest of Buller's troops, one portion only, namely Hildyard's
-Division, was actively engaged in the movement. Its menace to the Boer
-centre near Glencoe, through which passed the railway to the north,
-attracted commandos away from the enemy's left flank at Helpmakaar and
-facilitated the turning movement. Lyttelton's Division and two cavalry
-brigades, which although Buller had informed Lord Roberts that he "was
-short of his proper strength" for the advance he had left behind near
-Ladysmith, took no part in it; and the absence of the cavalry allowed
-the enemy to retreat without molestation. The advance of Hildyard's
-Division was retarded, not by opposition, but by the duty which fell
-upon it of repairing the railway along which it advanced, and it did not
-reach Newcastle until May 27. On the 23rd Lytteltonand most of the
-cavalry were ordered up from Ladysmith.
-
-As soon as Buller reached Newcastle he sent on Dundonald to reconnoitre
-the Laing's Nek position. On the west it was flanked by Majuba Hill, on
-the east by Pougwana, and was found to be strongly held. He therefore
-decided to make no further advance until he had concentrated his force
-at Newcastle. The cutting edge of the reconstructed Natal wedge had not
-as yet sufficient substance behind it to warrant its being put into
-operation. Pending the assembly of the Army Buller prodded across the
-Buffalo at Vryheid and Utrecht in order to safeguard his right flank.
-The expedition against the former town was ambushed and compelled to
-retire; while the two strong columns which were sent against Utrecht
-were hardly more successful. The town did indeed profess to surrender,
-but no garrison was left to enforce the submission, and on the
-withdrawal of the troops the Boers hovering in the hills returned like
-birds who have been temporarily scared out of their nests.
-
-By the end of May, Buller's Army was concentrated in the northern corner
-of Natal. Towering over his left front was the Drakensberg Range through
-which Botha's Pass runs into the Orange Free State; on his right front
-was the Buffalo River with a difficult country beyond; and on his front
-was Majuba of ill-omened memory and Laing's Nek, over which the road to
-Volksrust and the Transvaal passed.
-
-Buller remained at Newcastle for eighteen days, of which three were an
-armistice during negotiations for surrender with C. Botha, who was
-unable to accept the terms offered. On June 5 the advance was resumed,
-Laing's Nek being the immediate objective. At first Buller proposed to
-attack it directly, but soon after reaching Newcastle he found that the
-enemy was unassailably established on the position, and that it must be
-turned either from the east or from the west. The former movement would
-involve a wider detour through difficult country to the line of advance
-which would be taken up after the Transvaal was entered, and the western
-movement through Botha's Pass was therefore selected. Lord Roberts had
-for some time been in favour of it, but he had intended that it should
-be more than a mere turning operation. His advance from Bloemfontein had
-driven many of the commandos into the N.E. corner of the Free State, and
-he asked Buller to cross the Drakensberg and take them in rear by
-passing into the Transvaal by way of Vrede; but Buller could not be
-persuaded to remove himself so far from the railway. He had already
-missed an opportunity of co-operating with the main advance by a
-westward movement from Ladysmith to Van Reenen's Pass along the railway
-to Harrismith, where the presence of a division of the Natal Army would
-have been of the greatest use. The relations between Lord Roberts and
-Buller during the Natal campaign were rather those of leaders commanding
-the armies of allied nations than of superior officer and subordinate.
-
-Thus the westward movement, instead of being a helpful operation at
-large in support of the main advance, was whittled down to the turning
-of Laing's Nek. Between Botha's Pass and Laing's Nek the dominant
-contours roughly assume the outline of a sickle and its handle, the Pass
-being at the end of the handle and the Nek near the point of the blade.
-Within the curve of the blade stands the high Inkwelo Mountain facing
-Majuba Hill, and at the upper end of the handle is a mountain of less
-elevation called Inkweloane. The Ingogo River, which rises near the
-Pass, is flanked on its right bank by Van Wyk's Hill, which commands the
-eastern approach to the Pass, and on its left bank by Spitz Kop, a
-detached hill of the main range.
-
-Inkwelo had been held for some days by a portion of Clery's Division.
-The Boers occupied Spitz Kop and the ridge from Inkweloane to the Pass
-and a short section beyond it, but their line was thin. The Vryheid and
-Utrecht affairs had deceived them into the belief that an eastward
-turning movement was in contemplation. On June 6 Van Wyk's Hill was
-occupied by Hildyard and held against the enemy on Spitz Kop, who
-attempted to dislodge him; and by the following morning artillery had
-been brought up, and the Pass and the enemy's position on the adjacent
-crestline were commanded. These on June 8 were carried by an infantry
-movement in echelon with loss of two men killed. Spitz Kop offered no
-resistance. A fusillade broke out on Inkweloane, but Dundonald's brigade
-soon quenched it by a determined ascent up alpine slopes to the
-crestline As at Helpmakaar the enemy set fire to the grass and passed
-away behind a veil of smoke.
-
-The capture of Botha's Pass was an affair which did credit to Buller. It
-showed that since Colenso he had learnt how to use artillery, and his
-disposition of his guns was admirable. They rendered the enemy's
-position untenable and left little but hard climbing to the infantry. It
-can hardly be termed a battle, it was rather an autumn manoeuvre
-engagement, conducted on Lord Roberts' principles. A very important
-position was won and the enemy driven back with scarcely the shedding of
-a drop of blood on either side. Hildyard was in executive charge of the
-operations.
-
-Thus, after eight months' fighting, the main body of the Natal Army was
-at last in bivouac in the enemy's country. Buller had taken Botha's Pass
-with three infantry and two cavalry brigades; and with these he made for
-his next objective, the town of Volksrust in the Transvaal, a few miles
-north of Laing's Nek, which Clery at Ingogo was watching from the south.
-Lyttelton was posted on the left bank of the Buffalo watching the right
-flank of the advance.
-
-Buller's operations in the Free State lasted two days only. On June 10
-he engaged a small body of the retreating enemy and entered the
-Transvaal. In front of him was the Versamelberg, a spur of the
-Drakensberg, over which the road from Vrede to Volksrust passes at
-Alleman's Nek, where 2,000 Boers with four guns had taken up a very
-strong position. The road rises to the Nek between heights, and the
-initial movements of the attack had to be made across two miles of open
-veld. The burghers had not had the time, or did not think it necessary,
-to strengthen the position artificially, but they were observed throwing
-up some entrenchments when Buller approached.
-
-His bivouac on June 10 was at the Gansvlei Spruit on the Transvaal-Free
-State border, and next day at dawn he resumed his march on Volksrust. No
-serious opposition was encountered until early in the afternoon, when
-Dundonald, who was operating on the right front, came under artillery
-fire from the Nek. The infantry, whose left flank was watched by
-Brocklehurst with a cavalry brigade, was then ordered to advance, the
-objective of the 2nd Brigade under E. Hamilton being the ridge on the
-left of the Nek, and that of the 10th Brigade under Talbot Coke the
-ridges on the right of it, the 11th Brigade under Wynne being kept in
-reserve.
-
-The advance was made under a heavy and worrying but not very effective
-fire from each section of the ridge. The key of the position proved to
-be a conical hill on the right of the road at the entrance to the Nek.
-The Dorsets of Coke's brigade gallantly climbed the slopes, and aided by
-artillery fire carried it with the bayonet. The fight, however, was far
-from ended. The Boers beyond remained until the shells which had been
-pouring on the conical hill followed them to the crestline. Then again
-the Dorsets threw themselves upon the enemy, and by sunset the heights
-on the right of the Nek were in possession of Coke. Almost
-simultaneously E. Hamilton established himself on the left of it. The
-resistance offered to Dundonald on the right flank was more effective;
-and as between him and his immediate opponents the day waned upon an
-uncertain issue. He had driven them out of successive positions though
-not actually off the ridge; but the occupation of the Nek made further
-opposition useless and they withdrew during the night.
-
-The capture of Alleman's Nek rendered Laing's Nek untenable, and Clery
-closing up from Ingogo next day found it abandoned. The enemy had
-evacuated the whole of the Majuba-Laing's Nek-Pougwana position, leaving
-scarcely so much as a wagon behind him, and was retreating northwards.
-The westward turning movement was tactically a success but strategically
-a failure. With three brigades of mounted troops under his orders,
-including some regiments of regular cavalry which were lying idle at
-Ladysmith and elsewhere, Buller made no attempt to cut off the
-retreating Boers. A daring raid, such as had been twice made by French
-on the Modder four months before, concurrently with the Botha's Pass
-operations would have had a good chance of crushing C. Botha; and
-Brockleburst's cavalry, which during the attack on the Nek was working
-somewhat widely on the left flank, might well have been sent to bar the
-way. The ponderous movements of Buller were in strange contrast to the
-activity of his ally Lord Roberts. The Natal Army made its way through
-the country like an elephant trampling through a sugar-cane plantation.
-
-On June 13 Buller entered Volksrust and next day established his Head
-Quarters at Laing's Nek. Wakkerstroom, a town which threatened his right
-flank, surrendered _pro formâ_ to Lyttelton on June 13, and again to
-Hildyard four days later; and no doubt would have been equally ready to
-accommodate itself to the wishes of any other column sent to it, but
-after each surrender it reasserted itself, and Buller was obliged to
-leave it in charge of the commandos.
-
-With the occupation of Laing's Nek the Natal campaign, which had lasted
-eight months, came to an end, and Buller, having left a strong force
-under Lyttelton in charge of Natal, passed up the railway to Heidelberg;
-where on July 4 he for the first time came into physical touch with the
-main Army under Lord Roberts. By a curious coincidence he here met
-Hart's Brigade of the Xth Division, which had left his command three
-months previously at Ladysmith, and which had in the meantime marched up
-from Kimberley.
-
-[Sidenote: Map, p. 292.]
-
-Lord Roberts' plan for the Natal Army was that it should march across
-the veld to the Delagoa Bay railway and co-operate in his movement to
-clear the Eastern Transvaal. The Brandwater Basin surrender relieved the
-railway in Natal from immediate danger and allowed the ample force
-holding it to be reduced. At the end of July Buller was instructed to
-lead 11,000 of his men across a sparsely populated country where no
-railway was. It was for him a novel phase of warfare. Hitherto he had
-hardly dared trust himself out of sight of a culvert. But he was a man
-from whom the terror of the unknown very soon passed away when he had no
-choice but to face it. In Natal he would have stood aghast at a
-suggestion that he should cut away his moorings and be wafted by the
-winds of war for ten days or more across a strange ocean. If hitherto he
-had been _nec celer nec audax_ now he became at least _audax_. Lord
-Roberts had imbued him with the progressive spirit. He raised no
-difficulties of his own, and he encountered those arising out of the
-situation resolutely and successfully. His army was strung out upon the
-railway from Ladysmith to Heidelberg; his transport was still organized
-regimentally, a system which had hampered Lord Roberts' movements and
-was soon abolished in the main body; and oxen, mules, and wagons were
-scarce. For infantry he chose the IVth Division under Lyttelton, and for
-cavalry the brigades under Brocklehurst and Dundonald.
-
-On August 7 Buller's column quitted the Natal line;[48] its destination
-being Belfast on the Delagoa Bay line, along which Lord Roberts was now
-advancing.
-
-Its progress may be compared to the course of a steamer across an
-unquiet ocean. The waves raised by a fresh gale on the starboard bow
-were cleft by the stem, only to reunite behind the churn of the
-propeller. They were powerless to abridge the day's run by many miles,
-but they could still swing forwards to the shore. On one occasion the
-ship was slowed down to a standstill by a fog.
-
-The waves were the commandos of the district, most of which had retired
-under C. Botha from the Laing's Nek positions. Buller had not much
-difficulty in dealing with them as obstructions to his advance, and in
-succession he occupied Amersfort, Ermelo, and Carolina; but they soon
-returned to their stations. His own inclinations would probably have
-persuaded him to halt and smash them, but he was marching against time
-between two widely separated bases. Near Carolina on August 14 he came
-in touch with French, who was acting with Lord Roberts' eastward
-movement from Pretoria, and from that date the operations of the Natal
-Army were merged in those of the main Army, and came under the immediate
-direction of the Commander-in-Chief.
-
-A scheme proposed by French and sanctioned in substance by Lord Roberts,
-for an immediate cavalry turning movement round the left flank of the
-enemy, who was strongly posted astride the railway near Belfast; in
-conjunction with a central infantry advance to be made by Buller and
-Pole-Carew, whose Division was within reach, was discountenanced by
-Buller, and a simple frontal movement was substituted for it. Its
-practicability was doubtful owing to the marshy character of the ground.
-
-On August 25 Buller, French, and Pole-Carew entered Belfast, where they
-were joined by Lord Roberts.
-
-Notes:
-
-[Footnote 48: i.e. the section of the railway from Johannesburg to Natal
-which is in the Transvaal.]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV
-
-The Taming of the Transvaal
-
-
-The course of the war north of the Vaal after the battle of Diamond Hill
-up to the date of Lord Roberts' arrival at Belfast seven weeks later was
-tortuous and difficult. The main Army changed front as soon as Pretoria
-was reached and faced to the east in the direction of the retreating
-Transvaal Government. Its line of communication became a prolongation of
-its front; its left flank towards the north was open; and on its rear
-was the unsubdued country west of the capital in the direction of
-Mafeking and Vryburg.
-
-Through this district, which is intersected by ranges running generally
-east and west, and which contains some towns of importance, the troops
-set free by the relief of Mafeking advanced in two columns towards
-Pretoria and Johannesburg. The southern column was Hunter's Xth
-Division, which after easily occupying Potchefstroom and Krugersdorp,
-passed through Johannesburg, and on Hunter's being sent into the Free
-State was broken up at Heidelberg. The northern column, under
-Baden-Powell, occupied Rustenburg and met with little opposition during
-the month of June. It was intended by Lord Roberts, if all went well,
-that this column should eventually take up a position on the Pietersburg
-railway, north of Pretoria, which was unprotected in that direction.
-
-The inactivity of the Boers seemed to show that they had really lost
-heart, and that an awakening such as that which came a few weeks after
-the entry into Bloemfontein was improbable. Earlier in the month of June
-there had been negotiations for peace, not only between subordinate
-leaders in the Free State and Natal, but also between the two
-Commanders-in-Chief in Pretoria; and although they were broken off, the
-fact that they had occurred made the silence more significant and gave
-hope that the enemy was reconsidering his position.
-
-The illusion was soon dispelled. Whether owing to the natural resilience
-of the Boer character after a brief phase of doubt, or to the news of De
-Wet's successful attacks on the railway in the Free State, the
-smouldering fires broke out anew early in July. Delarey, who had checked
-French at Diamond Hill, came out of the east to quicken the west; the
-baffled burghers of Snyman, released from the siege of Mafeking, were
-trickling vaguely into the district; a force under Grobler of Waterberg
-was reported north of Pretoria; an incursion was made across the Vaal
-from the Free State; and commandos appeared south of the Magaliesberg
-near Olifant's Nek and Commando Nek, thus threatening the movements of
-Baden-Powell, who was operating north of the range and who had occupied
-Commando Nek and the adjacent Zilikat's Nek on July 2, leaving only a
-small force at Rustenburg. Five days later the Boers failed in an
-attempt to recapture the town, which was saved by a detachment of the
-Rhodesian Field Force.
-
-This force, which was under the command of Sir F. Carrington, was
-composed mainly of mounted contingents from the Colonies. It had been
-raised a few months before at the instance of the British South Africa
-Company to hold the northern frontier of the Transvaal, which after
-Plumer's departure for the south was unguarded, and to deny Rhodesia to
-the Boers should they attempt to break out northwards. It was from the
-first under a sort of dual control which militated against its
-efficiency. The Company made the arrangements for its enrolment and
-equipment, while the War Office provided the staff. It was in
-difficulties from the first. By a somewhat strained interpretation of a
-treaty between Great Britain and Portugal, and after some weeks of
-diplomatic discussion and in spite of a protest naturally made by the
-Transvaal Government, the Rhodesian Field Force was permitted to land on
-Portuguese territory at Beira in April and to move up country. Its
-advance was further delayed by a break of gauge on the railway between
-Beira and Buluwayo; it was pulled hither and thither, and was never able
-to co-operate effectively with the general operations. It was moved in
-driblets, and some details did not reach Buluwayo until September. A
-portion of it came along the Western line, and Rustenburg was saved by
-the Imperial Bushmen. At the end of the year it was disbanded.
-
-[Sidenote: Map, p. 240.]
-
-On July 11 three blows were struck by the Boers with success. The
-attempt on Rustenburg drew back Baden-Powell, whose place at Zilikat's
-and Commando Neks was taken by a regiment of regular cavalry which
-happened to be passing that way. As it was required elsewhere, a body of
-infantry was sent out from Pretoria to take over the Neks, and on the
-night of July 10 Zilikat's Nek was held by three companies and a
-squadron. Next day, after a struggle which lasted throughout the day, it
-was captured by Delarey, and two guns and nearly 200 prisoners of war
-fell into his hands. The disaster, the first of its kind in the
-Transvaal, was due to two causes. The British force actually at the Nek
-was insufficient to hold it; and the main body of the cavalry stood
-aloof. The latter was no doubt in a dubious position. It was under
-orders, which were brought by the infantry relief, to meet Smith-Dorrien
-nearly twenty-five miles away on July 11; and when the enemy was seen
-occupying a strong position on the Nek, it assumed that assistance would
-be of no avail, and beyond a short artillery bombardment nothing was
-done. Even the squadron holding Commando Nek was ordered to retire at
-midday. A relieving force was sent out from Pretoria, but it arrived too
-late to avert the disaster.
-
-The cavalry thus delayed was intended to reinforce a column under
-Smith-Dorrien, who had come up into the Transvaal with Ian Hamilton's
-column, and who was marching from Krugersdorp to take off the pressure
-from the south on Baden-Powell at Rustenburg; Olifant's Nek, over which
-the road to the town passed, being in the possession of the Boers. On
-July 11, when Smith-Dorrien had marched about ten miles from his
-starting point, he met a commando at Dwarsvlei, which was so well
-handled that not only was he compelled to retire on Krugersdorp, but
-also had much difficulty in bringing away his guns. The failure was
-chiefly due to the non-appearance of the cavalry, without which he did
-not feel himself justified in standing up to the enemy.
-
-On the same day another cavalry regiment was in trouble. Onderste Poort,
-a few miles north of Pretoria, was attacked by Grobler of Waterberg, and
-while reinforcements were on their way he drove back still nearer to the
-capital the force which was holding the outpost, and forced one troop to
-surrender.
-
-The situation was alarming. The districts west and south-west of the
-capital were infested by energetic commandos which had thwarted all
-Baden-Powell's and Smith-Dorrien's efforts to suppress them, and Grobler
-was threatening Pretoria from the north. There were indications that the
-enemy's plan was to transfer the opposition from the east to the west;
-and if so, then Lord Roberts' force, whose front after Diamond Hill
-faced eastwards, would have to conform to the movement. A few weeks
-previously it had been weakened by the departure of Hunter's strong
-column for the Free State, and now Lord Roberts was compelled to redress
-the balance by calling up Methuen's Division from Lindley to
-Krugersdorp, where it arrived on July 18. French was ordered to operate
-north of Pretoria with cavalry, and a column under Ian Hamilton[49] was
-also sent up.
-
-Methuen marched at once on Rustenburg, and cleared Olifant's Nek on July
-21. The scheme of shutting up the Boers in it failed, as Baden-Powell
-was unable to close the northern exit, and they escaped with slight
-loss.
-
-At the beginning of August the situation was, if anything, worse. The
-events which succeeded the occupation of Bloemfontein were repeating
-themselves in the Western Transvaal. Methuen had been recalled from the
-Rustenburg expedition to deal with an outbreak on the line from
-Johannesburg to Klerksdorp, which fell into the hands of the enemy;
-5,000 Boers were reported to be on or near the Magaliesberg; a small
-British force was besieged in Brakfontein, west of Rustenburg, on the
-road to Mafeking; De Wet was at large in the Free State, and it seemed
-probable that he would come up into the Transvaal and add to the
-trouble.
-
-At the end of July Ian Hamilton's force was diverted from its movement
-towards the north and ordered westward to relieve and bring away
-Baden-Powell; and Carrington was instructed to co-operate from Mafeking.
-Lord Roberts had decided to abandon Rustenburg and Olifant's Nek and the
-greater part of the Magaliesberg. These detached positions detained more
-troops than he could spare[50] and were difficult to supply. Ian
-Hamilton's trek lasted only a few days. He recaptured Zilikat's Nek, and
-on August 5 brought away Baden-Powell, who left Rustenburg most
-unwillingly and who was ready to sustain another siege in it. Lord
-Roberts, however, would not heed his repeated protests, and the only
-section of the Magaliesberg held after the withdrawal from Rustenburg
-was that lying between Pretoria and Zilikat's and Commando Neks.
-Rustenburg and Olifant's Nek had called for the diversion of three
-columns in succession: Smith-Dorrien's, which did not reach them, and
-then Methuen's and Ian Hamilton's; and the abandonment of them was
-imperative. From the west Carrington made an attempt to relieve
-Brakfontein on August 5, but was compelled by the presence of the enemy
-in superior force to return to Mafeking. The relief was effected ten
-days later, not from the west, but by Lord Kitchener with a column that
-had been engaged in the pursuit of De Wet.
-
-Suddenly all the operations were deranged by the news that De Wet had
-crossed the Vaal at Schoeman's Drift on August 6, and the greater part
-of the British Army in the Transvaal was either directly or indirectly
-turned on to the pursuit of one man; Lord Kitchener, as usual when
-energy and pushing power rather than tactical skill were looked for,
-being placed in general charge of the operations. The two most
-determined and unfaltering men in South Africa were now pitted against
-one another.
-
-De Wet's escape from the Brandwater Basin on July 15 was soon discovered
-and he was unable to get a good start. Broadwood's and Little's mounted
-brigades were sent after him, now and then taking long shots at him or
-worrying his rearguard. His object was to conduct Steyn and the Free
-State Government officials into the Transvaal, where they could
-co-operate with Kruger. He chose the route which appeared to him, and
-rightly so, to be the line of least resistance, namely, towards the Vaal
-Drifts near Potchefstroom; instead of making for the upper reaches of
-the river, on the other side of which Buller was established on the
-Natal railway.
-
-It was soon found impossible to overtake him, even with mounted troops.
-The only course was to shepherd him into a fold from which he could not
-escape. The tracery on the map of his movements and of those of his
-chief scout Theron, intersected by the reticulations of the pursuing
-columns, resembles a spider's web in disorder.
-
-[Sidenote: Map, p. 292.]
-
-Finally he was hemmed in on the left bank of the Vaal near Reitzburg. On
-the right bank Methuen, supported by Smith-Dorrien, was watching the
-drifts. He did his best, but his force was insufficient for the purpose,
-and on August 6 De Wet, with it is said no less than 400 wagons, entered
-the Transvaal at Schoeman's Drift, the greater part of Methuen's force
-having been sent to hold a drift lower down. Methuen doubled back and
-fell upon the Boer rearguard, which, though driven out of successive
-positions, maintained itself long enough to allow the main body to
-escape unscathed.
-
-De Wet's subsequent movements greatly puzzled his pursuers. He divided
-his column into two portions which did not always march in the same
-direction, and it was therefore difficult to discern the ruling movement
-of his trek. At one time it appeared that he was about to re-cross into
-the Free State, and the plans for the northward pursuit were temporarily
-suspended; to be resumed when he had received an allowance of one day's
-start. It is probable that his original intention had been to return to
-his own country as soon as he had put Steyn and the officials into the
-Transvaal, leaving them with an escort to find their own way to Kruger,
-and that he was prevented by the appearance of a strong column under
-Kitchener on the left bank. As a Free Stater, moreover, he would be
-disinclined to give his services to the Transvaal.
-
-Kitchener crossed the Vaal on August 8, and hung to De Wet's right rear,
-Methuen hanging on to the left rear; but neither was able to do more
-than clutch vainly at the skirts of the elusive column. In front of De
-Wet, Smith-Dorrien was holding the Klerksdorp railway, but again he
-misled his pursuers, and instead of trekking north after he had crossed
-the Gatsrand, a movement which Smith-Dorrien anticipated and provided
-for, he changed direction, and on August 11 passed over the railway at a
-section which had been left unoccupied on Smith-Dorrien's right flank.
-
-[Sidenote: Map, p. 240.]
-
-Lord Roberts saw that Methuen's and Kitchener's pursuit would probably
-fail, and that De Wet would reach the Magaliesberg. Ian Hamilton was
-instructed to prevent him crossing it, and on August 11 he was
-specifically ordered to occupy Olifant's Nek. Commando Nek was held by
-Baden-Powell. There was a third pass, the Magato Nek, a few miles west
-of Rustenburg, for which De Wet was apparently making, and which seemed
-to be his only possible way of escape, as it was confidently assumed
-that the other passes were held by British troops. It was, therefore,
-only necessary to head him from Magato Nek, and this was done by
-Methuen. But the movement threw De Wet towards Olifant's Nek, which to
-his great astonishment was not occupied, and through which he passed
-with Steyn on August 14 and shook off his pursuers. Ian Hamilton had not
-been made to understand that the actual closing of Olifant's Nek was an
-urgent matter; and he, in fact, informed Lord Roberts that he did not
-propose to do so except indirectly by a movement which would command the
-approach to it.
-
-In this, the first of the De Wet hunts, nearly 30,000 British troops
-were directly or indirectly engaged in heading or pursuing over an area
-of 7,000 square miles. Nine columns blindly zigzagged and divagated to
-false scents and imperfect information in chase of one man encumbered
-with a civil government on the run and several hundred wagons. Again and
-again the fowler's net was cast upon the migrant, who always wriggled
-through the meshes. In one month he trekked 270 miles from the
-Brandwater Basin to the north of the Magaliesberg, with British troops
-continuously to his flanks, his front, and his rear.
-
-It would have been regarded as the most notable personal exploit of the
-war if De Wet had not himself twice repeated it under circumstances of
-even greater difficulty. It must be acknowledged that his daring and
-resolution deserved success. He did not attain it by the means of
-followers eager to serve a trusted and beloved leader, for they by no
-means rose to him. When he reached the Vaal he was careful to throw the
-burghers' wagons across the river first of all, knowing that their
-unwillingness to leave the Free State would be overcome by their greater
-reluctance to sever themselves from their oxen and stuff. He owed his
-success mainly to the power of a strong will to make weaker wills work
-for it; and in a less degree to the accuracy of the information which
-Theron, his chief scout, obtained for him.
-
-It is at least doubtful whether Lord Roberts did not take De Wet too
-seriously. Was the capture of a _guerilla_ leader worth the withdrawal
-of so many British troops from the main operations, and would not the
-sounder strategy have been to ignore him? If he had been severely let
-alone, he would hardly have done more than that which he did with the
-strength of an Army Corps against him, and his prestige with his own
-people would not have been so surely set up.
-
-The escape of De Wet was an incident of war, which, having regard to all
-the circumstances of the campaign, could not be made impossible. Columns
-working independently under directions from Head Quarters cannot be made
-aware of all that each has or has not done, and must take many things
-for granted; and the information of the enemy's movements which reaches
-them from the same source must often be received too late for effective
-action. If Lord Roberts had listened to Baden-Powell's protest against
-the evacuation of Rustenburg and Olifant's Nek, De Wet would probably
-have followed Cronje to St. Helena; but that does not prove that the
-policy of withdrawing from remote and exposed positions was unsound. All
-that can be said against it is that it chanced to be carried out a few
-days too soon.
-
-Steyn and the officials left for Machadodorp. De Wet felt that his own
-country had a claim upon his services, and desired to return to it
-without delay. He divided his force, leaving the greater part under
-Steenekamp north of the Magaliesberg, himself going south with a small
-commando. The division materially aided his return, for it was not known
-for certain at Head Quarters with which portion he was marching. While
-he was in imagination being chased north of Pretoria, he was in fact
-scaling a rough mountain path, for all the passes had been closed, near
-Commando Nek, and looking down from the heights upon a British force by
-which he was not discovered. On August 21, after an absence of sixteen
-days, he recrossed the Vaal, and entered the Free State. The net result
-of all the labour, all the efforts, and all the consequent distress and
-exhaustion to which the British troops had willingly subjected
-themselves, was to re-establish De Wet as a greater power for mischief
-than ever.
-
-The Free Staters under Steenekamp joined Grobler of Waterberg, but the
-combination was hustled to the north out of striking distance of
-Pretoria by Baden-Powell, whose purely military service in South Africa
-ceased soon after. He had been selected to raise and to command the
-South African Constabulary, a semi-military body, which it was hoped the
-approaching end of the war would ere long permit to take over some of
-the duties of the troops.
-
-For some weeks after the escape of De Wet the various columns operating
-north and west of Pretoria were engaged in patrolling the country. They
-nowhere encountered serious resistance, but Delarey was neither taken
-nor crippled.
-
-[Sidenote: Map, p. 292.]
-
-While these events were occurring in Lord Roberts' rear, he was
-advancing eastwards from Pretoria. The battle of Diamond Hill was
-followed by a brief period of quietude in the east as well as the west.
-The objective of the British Army was the railway from Pretoria to
-Komati Poort, on which the Transvaal Government, covered by Botha at
-Balmoral, was now dwelling at Machadodorp. The movements of Lord Roberts
-were for some time controlled by the situation in the Free State and the
-Western Transvaal, which called more pressingly for attention than the
-eastward advance.
-
-Early in July a column under Hutton was sent out to feel towards Botha's
-left. As he was opposed and made little progress, Lord Roberts a few
-days later reinforced him with French and a cavalry brigade, and on July
-11 the combined columns thrust back the Boers from their positions at
-Witpoort, a few miles south of Diamond Hill. Botha had arranged with the
-commandants on the other side of Pretoria for concurrent attacks on the
-British forces in the vicinity of the capital, and his own was the only
-operation that was foiled on July 11. French's success, however, could
-not be followed up. He proposed to raid the railway near Balmoral, but
-Lord Roberts had been made anxious for the safety of Pretoria by the
-news of the affairs of Zilikat's Nek and Onderste Poort, and recalled
-him. Hutton was ordered to remain where he was, about twenty-five miles
-south-east of the capital, with a reduced force.
-
-There were indications that an attack not only on Pretoria but also on
-Johannesburg was contemplated by the enemy, in collusion with plots for
-risings against the British which were hatching in each city. It was no
-time yet for an eastward advance. The successes north and west of
-Pretoria stimulated Botha to attack what he supposed would strategically
-now be the most vulnerable section of the perimeter of defence, namely,
-the section facing him. If it had not been weakened by the withdrawal of
-troops to the west, troops would probably have been withdrawn from the
-west to meet him, and the task of Delarey thereby lightened. Either
-alternative would forward his policy.
-
-[Sidenote: Map, p. 240.]
-
-East of Pretoria Pole-Carew with the XIth Division was in touch with
-Hutton. Botha recalled Grobler of Waterberg from the north, and on July
-16 threw himself upon Pole-Carew and Hutton, near Witpoort. The brunt of
-the attack fell upon the latter, who, though at first pressed back and
-outflanked on his right, recovered himself and forced the enemy to
-retire. His immediate opponent was B. Viljoen, a leader who showed great
-military capacity in his management of the action. Against the XIth
-Division Botha demonstrated only. The chief incident of the affair was
-the holding of an outflanked and commanded kopje position by a few
-companies of the Royal Irish Fusiliers for six hours.
-
-The scheme for the eastward advance, which Lord Roberts did not feel
-himself justified in initiating until after the affair of July 16, was
-that French should rejoin Hutton and take charge of the right; with Ian
-Hamilton, brought down from his northward demonstration against Grobler,
-on the extreme left north of the railway, while Pole-Carew advanced with
-Lord Roberts centrally along it.
-
-[Sidenote: Map, p. 292.]
-
-The advance began on July 23. French, with the natural spirit of a
-cavalry officer, chafed at being restricted to the slower progress of
-Pole-Carew's infantry and proposed to push forward boldly and cut the
-railway east of Middelburg, but Lord Roberts was reluctant to part with
-the only cavalry he had, and vetoed the movement. Botha was soon
-frightened out of Balmoral, which had been his Head Quarters since the
-battle of Diamond Hill, and which was entered by Lord Roberts on July
-25. Two days later French rode into Middelburg.
-
-The eastward advance had now gained possession of eighty miles of the
-Delagoa Bay railway, but the De Wet trouble and the disturbed state of
-the Western Transvaal made the continuation of the movement unsafe, and
-Lord Roberts called a halt. It was also advisable to wait until supplies
-had been collected at Middelburg, and until Buller, who was coming up
-from the south, was in a position to co-operate. Lord Roberts returned
-to Pretoria, leaving French in charge. Ian Hamilton, the emergency man,
-was sent to the west to deal with Delarey and De Wet. Towards the end of
-August Pole-Carew advanced to near Belfast, where he hoped soon to
-report himself to Buller.
-
-Nearly three months had now elapsed since the battle of Diamond Hill.
-The progress of the Transvaal campaign was not very apparent, but it was
-real. Botha had been driven back along the Delagoa Bay railway, and
-neither the outbreaks in the Western Transvaal nor the meteoric
-incursion of De Wet had availed him. Nothing that had occurred elsewhere
-weakened the western advance to an extent that gave him an opportunity
-of effectively withstanding it. Buller was approaching, and Lord Roberts
-was no longer dependent upon one line of communication. The fugitive
-Free State Government had been driven into asylum with the fugitive
-Transvaal Government. No commandos were at large which could seriously
-threaten Bloemfontein, Johannesburg, or Pretoria; and the only organized
-body which the enemy could bring into the field was confronted by a
-British Army and had the barrier of the Portuguese frontier behind it.
-There was good hope that in a few weeks the already undermined fabric of
-Boerdom would totter to the ground, and that the worst that could happen
-was that some of the fragments might not fall clear of the British
-troops.
-
-The arrival of Buller's force from the south gave Lord Roberts, who
-returned from Pretoria on August 25, the reinforcement justifying the
-resumption of the eastward advance. He found the troops unfavourably
-placed for immediate action. Botha was posted on each side of the
-railway near Belfast; the junction of his right with his left, which had
-different fronts, forming an obtuse salient angle. The greater part of
-the British force was south of the line and prevented by the nature of
-the ground from undertaking an enveloping movement on the enemy's left.
-Buller had kept the cavalry to heel, and it was lying compressed between
-him and Pole-Carew, who was entrenched round Belfast.
-
-Lord Roberts' first act was to distribute over a wider front the
-conglomeration of troops, which were hampering each other's movements.
-French with his own cavalry, but without Buller's, was sent north of the
-line to face Botha's right flank and to clear Pole-Carew's left flank,
-while Buller worked up from the south towards the line.
-
-The movement began on August 26, and by the afternoon French, having
-made a wide detour, had established himself north of Belfast; thus
-enabling Pole-Carew to leave the town and extend his division in front
-of the enemy's right. Buller's movement was at first directly
-northwards, on account of the soft ground. His march, like that of
-Pole-Carew on the other flank, was across the enemy's front, but neither
-of them was seriously checked and the casualties were few.
-
-Buller had proposed to move eastward in the direction of Dalmanutha as
-soon as the ground permitted, but a cavalry reconnaissance discovered
-the enemy posted at Bergendal, close to the railway. The position was,
-in fact, the point of the obtuse angle formed by the two sections of the
-Boer front, one of which faced S.W. towards Buller, and the other west,
-towards Pole-Carew; and if it could be carried not only would Botha's
-line be broken, but Buller would be in a good position to deal with a
-retreat from either section,
-
-The battle of Bergendal on August 27 was mainly a struggle between less
-than fourscore Transvaal Police and two battalions and forty guns of
-Buller's Division. The "Zarps" held a rocky ridge at the end of a spur,
-where they were bombarded for three hours, yet when the infantry
-advanced it was met with a vigorous rifle fire, which was continued
-almost without intermission until at last the kopje was carried by
-assault. The defence of the kopje was one of the most conspicuous feats
-of the war on the Boer side, and it is noteworthy that it was made by a
-body of regularly disciplined men. Owing partly no doubt to the
-difficulty of reinforcing such an isolated position, no effective
-support was given by Botha to the gallant little band, neither did he
-trouble Buller seriously with artillery fire; and the commandos east and
-north of the Zarps' kopje did little. He does not seem to have
-recognized that Bergendal was not a mere strong post, but the key of an
-unsound position which should at all hazards have been safeguarded. This
-Buller saw at once, and he moved so as to meet with the least
-interference from the enemy, who, having two fronts, could not act
-solidly upon either of them.
-
-The capture of Bergendal dissolved the Boer position. The commandos
-facing Buller were driven off; and the right, which had been opposing
-French and Pole-Carew so feebly that neither of them suffered a single
-casualty, fell away. Buller went in pursuit, but was unable to worry the
-retreat. Some commandos withdrew eastwards along the line, others broke
-off towards Lydenburg and Barberton. The Boer Governments retired from
-Machadodorp to Nelspruit. Buller crossed the railway, and on August 29
-Helvetia was taken. Next day the British prisoners of war, whom the
-Boers had brought away in the scuttle from Pretoria when Lord Roberts
-entered the city, were released at Noitgedacht by their captors, who
-were no longer in a position to detain them.
-
-Botha had indeed been forced into retreat, but not cut off, and he
-escaped with all his guns and his losses were comparatively slight. His
-burghers were, as usual after a lost battle, demoralized and
-disheartened for the time being, but not, as was thought by the British
-Army, scared by their reverses into abject impotence. From the time of
-the occupation of Bloemfontein _guerilla_ had been gradually taking the
-place of organized warfare, of which Bergendal was the last act, and
-which the burghers saw that they could not hope to wage successfully.
-The history of the previous seven months showed what could be won by
-_guerilla_, and what could be lost by pretending to be an Army. The fact
-that they were no longer able to act as a coherent military body did not
-permanently discourage them, and the struggle had not yet run more than
-one-third of its weary course.
-
-It was, however, the general belief not only in Great Britain but also
-in the Army in South Africa, that the Boers had kicked their last kick
-at Bergendal. There might be a final wriggle or two; but the end was in
-sight, and before the first anniversary of the declaration of war, peace
-would again reign in the land. These not ill-founded hopes justified
-Lord Roberts' Proclamation of September 1, by which the Transvaal was
-formally incorporated in the British Empire.
-
-To prevent the enemy escaping to the north or to the south, and to
-impale him upon the stakes of the Portuguese frontier, Lord Roberts
-pushed forward three columns; one under Pole-Carew to follow the railway
-towards Komati Poort, another under French to march towards Barberton,
-and a third under Buller to occupy the Lydenburg district; to which
-Botha had gone after the battle of Bergendal, and which if held by him
-would leave in the possession of the Boers the best line of retreat from
-the railway to the northern Transvaal.
-
-Ian Hamilton, on his return from the west after the escape of De Wet,
-was lent to Buller for a few days. The occupation of Lydenburg on
-September 7, and of Spitz Kop four days later, drove Botha back to the
-line at Nelspruit. Buller's operations were carried out with success in
-a country more difficult than any that had yet been entered by the
-British Army in South Africa. South of the railway, French spread the
-net, casting it from Carolina to Barberton, which he entered on
-September 13, and where he not only captured a considerable amount of
-rolling stock and supplies which the Boers had shoved into the little
-branch line, but also released a final remnant of about a hundred
-British prisoners of war, most of whom were officers. He had advanced
-through a country almost as difficult as that in which Buller was
-engaged, and although the commandos opposing him had at first been drawn
-away to the south by the report that he was making for Ermelo, they
-returned in time to offer some resistance east of Carolina; but he
-entered Barberton without the discharge of a rifle. Botha had sounded
-the Cease Fire.
-
-The Boers had found it necessary to consider the situation seriously.
-They had been driven into a relatively minute area, which was morally
-congested with a pair of Presidents and their parasites, remnants of
-Government offices, superfluous commandants, and commandos some of which
-were eager and some of which were not eager to continue the struggle;
-and physically by the accumulation of stores, supplies, guns,
-ammunition, and rolling stock which had been rammed down into the last
-section of the Delagoa Bay railway.
-
-Kruger was induced to lighten the ship which he had so signally failed
-to keep on her course. He left Nelspruit on September 11 for Lorenzo
-Marques, where he was taken under the protection of the Portuguese
-Government, and where he remained until the eve of the first anniversary
-of the opening scene of the drama, the battle of Talana Hill. On October
-19 another nation offered him asylum, and he sailed for Marseilles in
-the _Guelderland_, a cruiser of the Dutch Navy; thus symbolically
-repatriating the French and Dutch emigrants who had quitted Europe for
-South Africa in the seventeenth century.
-
-The positions of Buller on the north of the railway, of French at
-Barberton, and of Pole-Carew ready to advance centrally, made immediate
-action imperative; but Botha was hampered by the presence of not a few
-unwilling and unmounted commandos. These he sent under Koetzee to Komati
-Poort and left to arrange their own destiny; and with the rest, which
-numbered 4,000 burghers, he broke away in two directions, himself with
-B. Viljoen leading the northward trek, while T. Smuts endeavoured to
-escape southward into Swaziland.
-
-Thus when Pole-Carew, who had been joined by Ian Hamilton and whose
-advance had been delayed to allow French and Buller to get into position
-on his flanks, reached Komati Poort on September 24, he found himself
-hitting at vacancy with the wreckage of two lost republics around him,
-derelict railway stock, disabled guns, abandoned ammunition, and burning
-stores. Koetzee's men had disappeared, most of them into Portuguese
-territory, which they had been partly persuaded and partly compelled to
-enter by the Portuguese authorities, who, although they had regarded the
-Boer cause with a more than benevolent neutrality during the earlier
-stages of the war, now saw that a fight near the frontier would be a
-most embarrassing episode; and, while offering an asylum to the
-fugitives, threatened to allow Lord Roberts to land troops at Lorenzo
-Marques if it were not accepted. On the 28th Pole-Carew was engaged not
-in battle with the Boers, but in celebrating the birthday of the King of
-Portugal, a singular interlude between the acts of the war drama.
-
-Botha in making for the north hoped to establish his remnant and
-cultivate the germs somewhere in the Leydsdorp or Pietersburg districts,
-which were the only portions of the Transvaal not occupied by British
-troops. Lord Roberts' expectations that they would be denied to the
-enemy by the Rhodesian Field Force under Carrington were not fulfilled,
-and he could not spare any of his own troops to occupy them.
-
-Botha, preceded by a few days by Steyn, left the Delagoa Bay line on
-September 17, and succeeded in scraping past Buller without serious
-excoriation, but he was compelled to send the greater part of his force
-under B. Viljoen by a circuitous route through the unhealthy lower veld.
-
-The enemy was now to all appearances chased to the ends of the earth,
-but throughout October and November roving bodies worried the railway
-and detained a considerable British force upon it.
-
-Commandos that could not be accounted for by the British Intelligence
-Staff seemed to spring out of the ground. Trains were de-railed, raids
-and counter-raids north and south were the order of the day. Lydenburg
-was prowled upon. Botha and Viljoen, stirred by Steyn, hovered in the
-north, and Viljoen went south to co-ordinate the several activities. On
-November 19 he effected a temporary success at Balmoral, capturing a
-small post and cutting the railway, but it served him little and he soon
-retired.
-
-Of the force engaged in the Komati Poort advance, the Guards' Brigade,
-which the hopeful situation would soon, it was thought, allow to be sent
-home, as well as French's cavalry and other troops, had been withdrawn;
-and a column under Paget which was operating west of Pretoria had to be
-called up to expel Viljoen from a position which he afterwards took up
-twenty miles north of the railway at Rhenosterkop. The affair was the
-only serious action during October and November.
-
-French did not advance beyond Barberton. Early in October he was ordered
-to clear the country lying between the Natal and the Delagoa Bay
-railways. At first opposed by Smuts and subsequently impeded by bad
-weather, transport difficulties, and constant sniping, his movement
-resembled a retreat rather than a voluntary advance, and it was so
-regarded by the commandos. When he reached Heidelberg on October 26, he
-had lost half his oxen and a third of his wagons.
-
-After the conclusion of the Komati Poort operations Buller returned to
-England. No general officer serving in South Africa was regarded by the
-non-commissioned officers and men under his command with greater
-affection and admiration. The Natal Army was held together in spite of
-disasters and failures by the personality of its leader. He had made not
-a few mistakes, but they never lost him the confidence of his troops,
-who, when he left their camp at Lydenburg, said farewell to him with an
-extraordinary demonstration of genuine regret.
-
-At the end of November the command of the British Forces in South Africa
-was taken over by Lord Kitchener from Lord Roberts, who sailed for
-England in the belief that the war was practically over. He had
-completed the task which he had set himself when he landed at Capetown
-ten months before. At that time hardly even a scout had quitted British
-territory; now almost every mile of railway and every considerable town
-of the two republics, except Pietersburg, was in the possession of the
-British Army; the Boer Governments had been expelled; Natal was free;
-organized resistance had ceased; the remnants of a baffled and
-bewildered enemy were prowling aimlessly in small bodies. All the
-precedents indicated a speedy termination of the War.
-
-When Lord Roberts left the shadow of Table Mountain the last word in
-Strategy and Tactics had been spoken, and the war gradually became a
-problem in Mechanics. His strategy was freely criticized at first, but
-it proved to be sound; and the only fault that could be found with his
-tactics was that like a skilful chess player he always endeavoured to
-defeat his opponent with the least possible loss on either side.
-
-The organization of a European Army had been found inefficient for
-dealing with Boer _guerilla_. The Army Corps fell to pieces as soon as
-it landed in South Africa; and as time went on the Divisions, the
-Brigades, and even many of the regimental units were one by one
-liquidated and re-shuffled into columns.[51]
-
-Lord Kitchener, who had been General Manager to Lord Roberts, was
-admirably qualified to succeed him, and to deal with a situation which
-seemed to call for the exercise of a strong will and of the power of
-organization rather than for the display of purely professional
-qualities, in which he was somewhat deficient. It is doubtful whether he
-would have commanded a large army successfully on the field of battle,
-but no better man could have been chosen to control the vast area over
-which the British Forces were distributed.
-
-[Illustration: Map.]
-
-Notes:
-
-[Footnote 49: Not the column with which he had come up to Pretoria with
-Lord Roberts, and which after his accident had been taken over by
-Hunter, but a newly-constituted column.]
-
-[Footnote 50: Lord Roberts said that if he had been free to send Ian
-Hamilton into the Free State instead of to Rustenburg, De Wet must have
-been surrounded.]
-
-[Footnote 51: After June, 1901, the classification of the South African
-Army in Divisions and Brigades disappeared from the Army List.]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV
-
-The Recurrences of De Wet
-
-
-[Sidenote: Map, p. 292.]
-
-In October, 1900, De Wet, with 1,000 men, again crossed into the
-Transvaal at Schoeman's Drift. His movement, which was preceded by
-constant raids on the railway throughout September, was not altogether
-voluntary, but was rather a withdrawal from columns pressing on him in
-the Free State.[52] Barton, who with the Fusilier Brigade had been sent
-down by Lord Roberts to meet him, took up a position at Fredrikstad,
-where he was surrounded by De Wet and Liebenberg on October 24. The
-situation was now so serious that Lord Roberts ordered a brigade under
-Knox to come up to Barton's assistance from the Free State, but it was
-not required, as the arrival of a column from the north broke the
-cordon, and De Wet returned to the Free State.
-
-The new De Wet hunt was soon in cry. When Knox was set on the trail, he
-was in the Free State and De Wet was in the Transvaal. Two days later
-the positions were reversed, for they had crossed the river in opposite
-directions. The situation now developed itself favourably for De Wet's
-methods. For a purely military operation he had never shown much
-aptitude. He had failed against Barton at Fredrikstad, but he was not
-discouraged by the repulse, which he unjustly attributed to want of
-co-operation on the part of Liebenberg. He had put the Vaal between
-himself and Knox, who was on the right bank blindly nosing the drifts.
-He knew from recent experience that his pursuers, with their imperfect
-methods of acquiring information, would hunt by sight and not by scent,
-and he had the mobility of a hare as well as the instinct of a fox. He
-lay _perdu_ for some days near the left bank of the Vaal, while a net
-with spacious meshes was being cast to ensnare him. Again he crossed and
-re-crossed the river in order to bring Steyn away from Ventersdorp, whom
-two months previously he had conducted into the Transvaal, and who had
-in the meantime worked round the British Army to Machadodorp and back;
-and who after conferences with Kruger and L. Botha, now returned with
-him unscathed into their own land with schemes for the future.
-
-[Sidenote: Map, p. 260.]
-
-Pom-pom batteries and mounted infantry, the latest fashions of war, were
-sent after him by Knox. On November 6 he was surprised in laager near
-Bothaville, but escaped with Steyn and the greater portion of his
-command on the first alarm. The gallant Le Gallais was killed and the
-laager itself captured after a stout resistance some hours later, and
-with it all De Wet's field guns, wagons, a considerable quantity of
-ammunition and horse equipment, and more than 100 prisoners of war.
-
-Most men would have succumbed to the disaster, but it only spurred De
-Wet. He had signally failed in his late attempt on the Transvaal, and he
-had just lost almost everything at Bothaville, but he resolved to make a
-raid in the opposite direction on the northern districts of Cape Colony.
-To reach his new objective, he must traverse the whole length of the
-Free State, which, having been in the occupation of the British Army for
-several months, should have offered the line of greatest resistance to
-his movement.
-
-The Brandwater Basin disaster of July 30 had, however, by no means
-crushed Free State Boerdom, which, after having been heavily hurled to
-the ground, where it lay for a time apparently unconscious, began to
-show signs of returning animation, and in a few weeks was again on its
-legs; thanks to the restoratives freely administered by De Wet on his
-return from his first incursion into the Transvaal. Into each district
-he sent irreconcilable men after his own heart to stimulate the wavering
-and animate the discouraged; and barely a month elapsed before the
-burghers were besieging Ladybrand, which, however, they failed to take,
-and were hacking at the railway into the Transvaal. In October every
-village in the S.W. district of the Orange River Colony in the
-possession of a British garrison was attacked, all but one of them
-without success.
-
-Lord Roberts had already taken measures to curb the new activities. His
-plan was to occupy certain places strongly as bases from which mobile
-columns could constantly move to and fro, eating up the intervening
-country and rendering it incapable of supporting the enemy. Its
-operation was mainly confined to the northern districts of the Free
-State, in which lay the centre of disturbance, and the troops engaged
-could not be readily employed outside them. It was so far successful, in
-that it drove De Wet into the Transvaal in October, but it failed to
-restrain his subsequent movements. It probably was the best that could
-have been devised for dealing with local _guerilla_, but its action
-being centrifugal and not circumferential, it was powerless to deal with
-a meteoric raid of well-mounted men. Although the British troops greatly
-outnumbered the Boers, yet in practice only the mounted details, which
-included no regular cavalry and were relatively weak, were directly
-effective against the enemy, and the movements of the divagating columns
-were sluggish.
-
-When De Wet left Bothaville on November 6, his arm was, metaphorically
-speaking, in a sling, and he was footsore; but ten days later he had
-brought together in the Doornberg a force of 1,500 men, with whom he
-proposed to cut his way into the Cape Colony. His movement south may be
-compared to that of a small swift steamer endeavouring to escape from a
-blockaded seaport. Ahead of him and on each beam were the slow-moving
-vessels of the blockading squadron, most of them hull down and with
-banked fires.
-
-He made at once for the scene of his April successes, the country lying
-between Bloemfontein and the Basuto border. The chief obstacles in his
-way were a line of posts running eastwards from Bloemfontein, and the
-town of Dewetsdorp, which was held by 500 British troops. The latter he
-might have avoided had he chosen to do so, but he seems to have been
-attracted to it because it was the home of his childhood, which it was
-incumbent upon him to redeem from bondage.
-
-The phenomenon of a Boer column marching through the heart of a country
-supposed to be effectively in the possession of the British Army was
-again witnessed. To borrow another metaphor, this time from Astronomy,
-De Wet throughout the greater part of his career was a telescopic star,
-invisible to the naked eye. General Officers and column commanders
-helplessly watched his course through the telescopes of the Intelligence
-Staff, and seemed to have as little power of influencing it as an
-observer at Greenwich has of changing the orbit of a planet. The
-astronomer can at least forecast with certainty the path which it will
-follow in the heavens, but there were no observations available from
-which the course of De Wet could be predicted for more than a few hours.
-He seemed to defy the laws of gravitation.
-
-On November 16, he easily rushed the Bloemfontein-Thabanchu line of
-posts at Springhaan's Nek, and three days later invested Dewetsdorp.
-Meanwhile the alarm had been given. Knox's force, which had been sent
-after him into the Transvaal, was now sent after him to Bloemfontein,
-and mobile columns were detailed. Dewetsdorp was doomed from the first
-unless assistance arrived from outside. The position could not be held
-effectively by a small force, One by one the scattered posts fell into
-the hands of De Wet, but the defence was maintained until the 23rd, when
-the white flag was hoisted. On the previous day two relieving columns
-had started from Edenburg, but they were checked near Dewetsdorp on the
-24th by De Wet, who shook himself free of them and was soon on his way
-to the south with 500 prisoners of war; and Knox with a third relieving
-column was marching from Edenburg.
-
-Thus almost within sight of Sannah's Post and Mostert's Hoek and after
-six months of apparently successful activity by the British Army, De Wet
-snatched away another garrison. After a repulse at Fredrikstad, soon
-followed by a severe mauling at Bothaville, from which he broke out as a
-fugitive, he placidly and confidently trekked southwards unopposed for
-150 miles, magnetically attracting to himself a force sufficient to blot
-out Dewetsdorp in the presence of a bewildered enemy, who, though in
-overwhelming numbers, was feebly strung out in lengths without breadth.
-The British Army had still to learn, not only in the Free State, but
-also elsewhere, the elemental fact in geometry that neither one straight
-line nor two, nor under certain conditions even three, can enclose an
-area.
-
-It was evident that De Wet was making for the Cape Colony, the
-disaffected northern districts of which were again giving cause for
-anxiety, and which at all hazards he must be prevented from entering.
-Lord Kitchener came down from the Transvaal to direct the operations;
-the Brigade of Guards on its way to Capetown and home, was de-trained to
-hold the line of the Orange; Knox's columns hurried forward. De Wet,
-after a slight encounter with Knox, who was marching south, turned
-adroitly to the west and did not resume the original direction of his
-march until he had put a considerable distance between himself and the
-columns, which were "running heel" and pursuing him almost in the
-opposite direction. Near Bethulie he was reinforced by Hertzog and other
-leaders, but by this time he had been headed by Knox at Bethulie and was
-compelled to draw off eastwards into the angle between the Orange and
-the Caledon. He left Hertzog with instructions to make his way across
-the river west of Norval's Pont, intending to cross with his own force
-higher up. He was, however, prevented by the forces of nature from
-carrying out the raid which the British military forces would probably
-have been unable to prohibit. Heavy rains had fallen in the Basuto
-Mountains, and the sudden rise of the Caledon and the Orange to flood
-level obliterated most of the drifts and entrapped him between them. He
-made one dash for the Orange at Odendaal, but found the drift in the
-possession of the enemy.
-
-De Wet now saw that he was not destined to enter the Cape Colony on this
-occasion, and that he would have much difficulty in saving himself. On
-December 6 he determined to retreat by the way he came. He did not,
-however, wholly abandon the scheme of a Cape Colony raid, for he
-detached Kritzinger and Scheepers with instructions to hover and watch
-their opportunity of breaking into it. The opportune falling of the
-Caledon opened to him a postern towards the north, and on December 7 he
-crossed the river and made for Helvetia, where again he was entangled.
-The line of least resistance seemed to run westwards towards the
-railway, and he put himself upon it, soon to find that Kitchener's
-dispositions had obstructed it. He doubled back, and trailing Knox after
-him in a night march, shook himself free. Knox, confident that the
-Bloemfontein-Ladybrand line of posts would be an effectual barrier to De
-Wet's retreat, had waited to pull his straggling columns together. De
-Wet, reinforced by a commando under Michael Prinsloo, who had been with
-him in his first Transvaal incursion when Steyn was put over the border,
-rushed at the blockhouse line and again cut it at Springhaan's Nek, for
-although it had been attended to recently, there was an aneurism in it
-which yielded at the critical moment, and on December 14 De Wet passed
-freely through the lesion. He arrived by way of Ficksburg at Tafelberg,
-S.E. of Senekal, on December 25.
-
-The failure of the raid was almost as disconcerting to the British plan
-of campaign as its success would have been. It showed that the troops
-were unable to prevent a mobile and well-led commando from traversing
-the Free State from end to end; it put new spirit into the burghers, and
-destroyed the hopes of peace which the operations of Lord Roberts in the
-Transvaal had kindled. De Wet was still at large, and although he had
-not accomplished all that he intended, he had good reason to be
-satisfied, and was stimulated for fresh efforts. He could boast that he
-was beaten not by columns but by two rivers in spate. His movements were
-so little obstructed that after reaching the Senekal district he was
-able to pay a flying visit to the railway at Roodeval, where he
-recovered the Lee-Metford ammunition which he had buried in June, and
-with which he hoped soon to have an opportunity of charging the rifles
-captured at Dewetsdorp.
-
-When De Wet, Hertzog, and Kritzinger parted company near the Orange
-early in December, their tracks formed the letter Y inverted. De Wet
-marched along the stem towards the N.E.; Kritzinger struck in the
-direction of the midland districts of the Cape Colony; Hertzog made for
-the west. Martial law was at last proclaimed in the Colony, the greater
-part of which was, in spite of innumerable columns slipped at them,
-traversed by Hertzog and Kritzinger. The former, after an adventurous
-march of over 400 miles, reached Lambert's Bay on the shore of the
-Atlantic, and gave to most of his men their first sight of the sea; and
-to all of them a unique experience in the war, for they were shelled by
-a British cruiser at anchor in the haven.[53]
-
-While Hertzog was watching the setting of the sun upon an Atlantic
-horizon, Kritzinger was at Willowmore, almost within sight of the Indian
-Ocean, having in spite of all the columns pushed his way from Rouxville
-down into the S.E. districts of the Cape Colony. Neither Kritzinger nor
-Hertzog, however, effected much by their raids except to show in the
-Colony what De Wet had already shown in the Transvaal and the Free
-State, the impotence of even the best-laid schemes of pursuit, and they
-returned towards the centre in February. De Wet and Hertzog had between
-them in the course of a few months succeeded in ploughing, through the
-heart of the country occupied by the British Army, a lonely furrow which
-stretched from the northward slopes of the Magaliesberg in the Transvaal
-through the Free State to a haven on the South Atlantic Ocean.
-
-Meanwhile De Wet was waiting until the moment should come for him to
-take part in the wide-reaching plan of campaign which had been devised
-by the Boer Governments. They saw the uselessness of attempting to
-withstand the British forces in the Republics, and they determined to
-bring the war back into the Cape Colony and Natal. The general idea was
-that L. Botha should march on Pietermaritzburg from the Eastern
-Transvaal, while De Wet followed Hertzog and Kritzinger across the
-Orange, and then, having effected a junction with them, should advance
-on Capetown. The scheme was not so extravagant and quixotic as it might
-appear to be, as recent events had shown the difficulty of restraining
-the movements of a Boer leader of dash and enterprise; and there was no
-reason why De Wet should not be as successful in eluding pursuit in the
-future as he had been in the past.
-
-Again the Doornberg, although within sight of the railway between
-Bloemfontein and Kroonstad, was available as a meeting place. Here on
-November 16, 1900, he had assembled his burghers for his first attempt
-on the Cape Colony; and here on January 25, 1901, he brought them
-together for his second. Steyn was with him, and all the available Free
-State commandants with more than 2,000 men mustered on the mountain
-unmolested. His intentions were not unknown to the British Intelligence
-Staff, and when he quitted the rendezvous he had a column under B.
-Hamilton on his right rear and a column under C. Knox on his left front.
-
-The situation was not novel, and he dealt with it with his customary
-good luck and success. He passed across Knox's front, who fortunately
-for him had been ordered not to act before Hamilton came up, and reached
-the Tabaksberg, between Winburg and Brandfort, next day. On the
-following morning he shook off an attack made by a portion of Knox's
-column, and went for the Bloemfontein Thabanchu line of posts, which he
-had already twice cut. Hamilton, distanced in the chase, had been put on
-the railway and sent to Bloemfontein to strengthen the line, but he
-arrived too late to prevent De Wet crossing it on January 30 at Israel's
-Poort. The sorely-tried pale had again failed.[54]
-
-De Wet, having shaken off the columns which had been pursuing him from
-the Doornberg, had now a free course of 100 miles to the next obstacle,
-the Orange. It was evident that the speed of the columns must be
-increased and Knox was put upon the railway for the first time and
-Hamilton for the second and dispatched to Bethulie. The energy of a
-considerable portion of the British Army was devoted to an attempt to
-make the barrier of the Orange impassable.
-
-North of the river was De Wet; south of it Hertzog and Kritzinger were
-waiting for him. There was every reason to fear that should he succeed
-in joining either of them, the smouldering embers of rebellion would
-again break out in the Cape Colony. Troops were hurried by train from
-the Transvaal, from Kimberley, and from Capetown. Lyttelton was brought
-down from the Delagoa Bay line to Naauwpoort to take general charge of
-the operations, and to build as rapidly as possible a wall that could
-not be scaled or breached.
-
-For some reason which is not apparent De Wet, although he had an open
-country in front of him in which not a single British column was
-operating, moved slowly, and thereby gave more time for the carrying out
-of Lyttelton's arrangements. Possibly he may have been delayed by
-trouble with his Free State commandos, some of which a few days later
-refused to cross with him into the Colony. On January 31 he passed
-through Dewetsdorp, gratified no doubt to find that since his capture of
-it in November his enemies had not ventured to set foot again in it. At
-that time he had not made up his mind whether to cross the Orange east
-or west of Norval's Pont. If the former, he would soon be able to join
-Kritzinger, who after the Willowmore raid had returned to the Zuurberg,
-between Stormberg and Naauwpoort; if the latter, he would be able to
-call up Hertzog, who had returned from the shores of the Atlantic and
-was hovering in the Carnarvon district west of De Aar.
-
-De Wet had from time to time to time been in communication with
-Kritzinger and Hertzog during their raids. His advanced patrols soon
-discovered that the section of the Orange lying eastward of Norval's
-Pont was very strongly held. The dispositions of Lyttelton's troops seem
-to have been made on the assumption that De Wet would endeavour to join
-Kritzinger, who was little more than one day's march from the left bank,
-rather than Hertzog, who was 150 miles away. The river section westward
-of Norval's Pont was therefore held lightly by a line of outposts at the
-drifts, thrown out from the main barrier based on Naauwpoort, nearly
-forty miles south of the river. Of this De Wet was at the time unaware.
-His information was that the eastward section was impassable. The
-westward section might possibly not be so, and he determined to make for
-it.
-
-He spread a report that he intended to cross the river at Odendaalstroom
-or Aliwal North, and paused to allow it time to reach the ears of Knox,
-who seems to have given some credence to it. A column was sent out to
-reconnoitre in the direction of Smithfield. When half-way between that
-town and Dewetsdorp, De Wet suddenly changed direction and made for
-Phillipolis, detaching a portion of his force under Froeneman, who on
-February 5 captured and burnt a train a few miles south of Edenburg and
-crossed the railway. On the following night, De Wet crossed it with the
-main body near Springfontein, while Knox was hunting for him near
-Bethulie.
-
-It was now evident that De Wet's objective was the Zand Drift on the
-Orange west of Phillipolis. He had had a long start, and the nearest
-troops available for the pursuit of him were the columns of Knox and
-Hamilton at Bethulie. Here the river bends round to the south, forming
-an arc through Norval's Pont towards Zand Drift; and the columns
-therefore crossed to the right bank and marched eighty miles along the
-chord, only to find when they reached the Drift on February 12 that De
-Wet had two days previously crossed by it into the Cape Colony.
-
-The operations of the next sixteen days were confined to a comparatively
-small rectangle of about 6,000 square miles lying on the left bank of
-the Orange, which bounded it from Norval's Pont to Douglas and thence to
-near Prieska. The S.E. side and half the S.W. side, namely from Norval's
-Pont to Naauwpoort and thence to De Aar, were formed by the railways,
-the remaining portion of the S.W. side being the river Brak, which flows
-into the Orange a few miles above Prieska.
-
-Owing to a sudden flood, which delayed Knox for two days, he was unable
-to follow De Wet across Zand Drift, but Plumer started from Naauwpoort
-with two columns, and on February 12 came in touch with De Wet and
-compelled him to change his course. Two days later De Wet crossed the
-railway between De Aar and Hopetown, after a rearguard action with
-Plumer, into whose hands fell next morning the transport which De Wet
-had been compelled by bad weather to leave behind him.
-
-De Wet now proposed to fetch a compass towards Prieska, where he hoped
-to effect a junction with Hertzog, but the driving power of the raid was
-slowly exhausting itself. The motive energy was stored up in
-accumulators, and when these were discharged in succession, there was no
-means of re-charging them. Hertzog and Kritzinger, who had been relied
-on for this purpose, were not at hand; more than a third of the force
-with which De Wet had originally left the Doornberg had declined to
-leave the Free State; and the transport had been lost.
-
-Plumer also was exhausted and unable to continue the pursuit, but
-fortunately Knox was close behind him. He doubled back towards Hopetown
-for supplies, leaving Knox to follow the trail. De Wet was now driven
-into the western corner of the rectangle where the Brak falls into the
-Orange, and where he found himself in a dilemma similar to that which in
-his first raid had cornered him between the Orange and the Caledon. The
-Brak was in spate, and he could not cross it to Prieska. All hope of
-joining Hertzog and of a successful raid into the Cape Colony was at an
-end; there was nothing to be done but make the best of his way back to
-the Free State. He reversed his course and made for the confluence of
-the Orange and the Vaal. His change of direction was not known to Knox,
-who, assuming that De Wet must have crossed the Brak, which fell as
-suddenly as it had risen, threw his columns across it and trekked for
-twenty miles towards the S.W. Hertzog was reported to be a day's march
-higher up the Brak.
-
-Up to this time the whole of the stress of the pursuit had fallen upon
-Knox and Plumer. As soon as the news of De Wet's entry into the Cape
-Colony reached Lord Kitchener, he hurried down from the Transvaal to De
-Aar to superintend the casting of the nets. His first dispositions were
-made with the object of preventing De Wet and Hertzog breaking away into
-the districts lying west of the railway to Capetown, and an ingenious
-and elaborate scheme of columns springing out from the line in
-succession from the north, was arranged. It was not, however, put into
-action, for Knox and Plumer had headed back De Wet, and for the time
-being had prevented a junction between him and Hertzog. It was no longer
-a case of a stern chase, but of the fencing in of a comparatively
-limited area, into which more than a dozen columns were thrown, and
-which by February 24 was reduced to the district bounded on three sides
-by the railways and on the fourth by the Orange.
-
-When on February 21 Plumer was able to resume the pursuit, Knox having
-discovered his mistake was recrossing the Brak, and De Wet on the left
-bank of the Orange was unsuccessfully searching for practicable drifts.
-He succeeded, however, in transferring a few of his men to the right
-bank in a boat at Makow's Drift, but was overtaken by Plumer before he
-could complete the movement, and forced to hurry on towards Hopetown. In
-the course of one week he had marched in the direction of almost every
-point in the compass, and was now heading E.S.E.
-
-When within fifteen miles of Hopetown he lost two guns, and on the same
-day ran up against a new obstacle, a column under Paris, which had come
-down from Kimberley and which had extended itself westward from
-Hopetown. He succeeded in wriggling through the line without detection
-during the night; while Paris, unaware of what had occurred and thinking
-that De Wet was still in front of him, pushed on next morning and came
-into action, not with De Wet, but with Plumer, who was pursuing De Wet
-in the opposite direction. On February 24 De Wet crossed the railway
-eastwards a few miles south of Orange River Station.
-
-As soon as Hertzog in the Carnarvon district heard of the approach of De
-Wet he trekked up towards the Brak to meet him, having first detached a
-portion of his command under Brand to make a circuit through Britstown.
-Brand was followed by B. Hamilton, who had been set on to his trail, but
-regained touch with his leader on February 20, when the news came that
-De Wet was in difficulties and that the raid must be abandoned.
-
-Hertzog and Brand joined forces across the river and trekked to the
-east, having thrown Plumer off the scent for a day. On February 25
-Hertzog crossed the railway. Three Boer leaders were now groping for
-each other in the Fog of War: De Wet, Hertzog, and Fourie, who had been
-left behind to do what he could to extricate the transport which De Wet
-had been compelled to abandon when he crossed the railway westwards on
-February 16, and who had been lost sight of by the British columns. The
-forces of gravitation are, however, irresistible, and as Hertzog and
-Brand could not be long kept apart, so also De Wet, Hertzog, and Fourie
-soon came together.
-
-De Wet trekked along the left bank of the Orange for nearly sixty miles,
-but found every drift impassable. On February 26 he reached Zand Drift.
-A fortnight previously a sudden flood had checked his pursuers, now
-another flood was checking his retreat from them at the same spot, and
-he was hemmed in by a swollen river and a dozen active columns. Most men
-would have yielded to the situation, but his tenacity of purpose never
-faltered. Early on the morning of February 27 Hertzog, who had picked up
-Fourie a few hours before, joined him.
-
-After crossing the railway Hertzog made for Petrusville, where he heard
-that De Wet had passed through the town on his way south, and followed
-him. About twenty miles away on Hertzog's right flank a column under
-Hickman was marching on Zand Drift, and had it not been suddenly
-diverted northwards by orders from Lyttelton, it must have forestalled
-him at the Drift, as it was working on interior lines. The change of
-direction was made before Hertzog's presence in the vicinity became
-known to Hickman, who on sighting a Boer column on February 26 again
-changed direction to pursue it. A second column was soon descried, and
-later in the day, about the time that De Wet reached the Drift, a
-considerable Boer force was sighted. It was composed of the two columns
-already seen under Hertzog and Brand, reinforced by Fourie, who had
-emerged from the Fog. Hickman's pursuit failed to prevent the three
-commandants joining De Wet at the Drift during the night.
-
-The _disjecta membra_ of the raid were now assembled, but the task of
-the British columns was, apparently, greatly facilitated. Instead of
-having to chase evasive and elusive commandos now in this direction and
-now in that, the leaders had but to pin De Wet down to the left bank of
-the Orange at Zand Drift and to leave him to gaze longingly at the
-further shore. Nothing could now save him but a sudden fall of the
-swollen river. Before De Wet's arrival at Zand Drift Lyttelton had put
-troops in motion, some of them from considerable distances, to enclose
-the area, but of the columns detailed three only had come up. Hickman
-was on the spot, Crabbe from Hopetown was in touch with him, and Byng,
-who had been hurried up from Victoria West, was at hand. None of the
-other columns were in position, owing mainly to delays on the railway.
-Thus the only effective force for the capture of De Wet was the three
-columns with Hickman, who was out of communication with Lyttelton.
-
-The troops had been disposed with the object of driving De Wet back into
-the Free State rather than of capturing him, and they were unable to
-concentrate themselves upon him. Norval's Pont, from which the line of
-the Orange might, perhaps, have been blocked in the direction of Zand
-Drift, was unoccupied. On February 27 Hickman pushed De Wet away from
-the Drift. Two columns were behind the Boer leader, but in front of him
-was a weak and thinly extended force under Byng, which De Wet cut
-through without difficulty, and next morning reached Botha's Drift. It
-was fordable, and after eighteen days' absence he re-entered his own
-country. He had not succeeded in raiding very far into the Cape Colony,
-but he had baffled and outwitted the most strenuous military effort of
-the war.
-
-Plumer, who had been ordered round from Orange River Station to
-Colesberg, arrived there too late. He was immediately sent on to
-continue the pursuit in the Free State in co-operation with a column
-under Bethune, which marched directly across the veld to Fauresmith.
-Bethune was soon compelled to fall out, but Plumer held on for five days
-more without, however, lessening the distance between him and his
-quarry. On March 11, after a trek of more than 800 miles, De Wet, having
-dismissed on his way up most of the commandos to their several
-districts, entered Senekal with Steyn, and returned to within a few
-miles of the Doornberg place of assembly which they had quitted
-forty-four days before.
-
-The lessons to be derived from the history of the three De Wet hunts are
-mainly of a moral character, and have only an indirect bearing upon the
-principles which guide the conduct of military operations in general. No
-such episodes could ever occur in a European War. Yet the Power which
-holds Hindustan cannot afford to forget them. Who can say that in the
-not distant future, which all the signs of the times seem to show will
-be marked by turbulence and disorder in India, a De Wet may not come
-forth out of the thousands of Sikhs, Ghoorkas, Pathans and Rajputs who
-have learnt the Art of War in the Native Army? The arena of the
-struggle, with its long lines of communication, all its chief towns held
-by British troops and its vast plains inhabited by a disaffected
-population, would be strikingly similar to that on which the Boer War
-was fought.
-
-Notes:
-
-[Footnote 52: De Wet says that he went at the request of Liebenberg, who
-was in charge of the commandos operating between the Vaal and the
-Magaliesberg, and who had previously been engaged in the Bechuanaland
-rebellion.]
-
-[Footnote 53: Twenty-three centuries previously, a Greek Army, after a
-march of many weeks, reached the sea. The emotion of the men at the
-sight has been thus described by their leader in a well-known passage
-which Hertzog might well have in substance incorporated in his reports
-to De Wet: "No sooner had the men in front caught sight of the sea than
-a great cry arose, and Xenophon with the rearguard, catching the sound
-of it, conjectured that another set of enemies must surely be attacking
-the front. But as the shout became louder and nearer, and those who from
-time to time came up began racing at the top of their speed towards the
-shouters and the shouting continually recommenced with yet greater
-volume as the numbers increased, Xenophon settled in his mind that
-something extraordinary must have happened, and mounted his horse and
-taking with him Lycius and the cavalry, galloped on. And presently they
-could hear the soldiers shouting and passing on the joyful word [Greek:
-Thalatta, Thalatta]"--_Anabasis_, IV, 7.]
-
-[Footnote 54: De Wet ascribes his success to a feint which he made in
-the direction of Springhaan's Nek, and which he asserts threw the
-columns off the scent; but it is improbable that the feint had anything
-to do with it. At the time of De Wet's crossing at Israel's Poort
-Hamilton had only reached Sannah's Post, nor was Knox marching on the
-Nek.]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI
-
-Lord Kitchener at Work
-
-
-The nation at home, which at the close of 1900 was confidently expecting
-the end of the war at an early date, was not long obsessed by its
-optimism. Efforts not less vigorous than patriotic were made not only by
-Great Britain, but also by the Colonies and South African Loyalists, to
-give Lord Kitchener the troops he needed.
-
-At the end of May, 1901, he had at his disposal a force which, including
-all classes of irregulars, semi-combatants, and non-combatants, was not
-less than 230,000; of whom more than one-third were mounted. The rule
-hitherto observed, that the native races were to be employed in servile
-capacities only, was relaxed, and in certain cases natives were allowed
-to carry arms when acting as scouts or patrols.
-
-It is impossible to ascertain with any degree of accuracy either the
-actual or the potential strength of the enemy at this period. It has
-been estimated that, excluding the burghers actually on commando, there
-were less than 30,000 Boers able to take up arms if inclined to do so;
-but this number must only be regarded as the maximum strength of a
-possible and to a great extent an unreliable reserve upon which the
-commandos in action, at no given moment much exceeding 12,000 burghers,
-could draw to supply the wastage of war.
-
-The war now entered fully into its "blockhouse and drive" phase. The use
-of these expedients in combination was, it is believed, new to military
-history. The principle of the blockhouse had already been tentatively
-adopted in South Africa without much success, notably between
-Bloemfontein and Thabanchu, where a line of posts was established which
-on three occasions was cut by De Wet.[55] The chief defect of the
-blockhouse is its vulnerability to shell fire; but by this time the Boer
-artillery was a negligible quantity. Its adoption on a large scale dates
-from the time of Lord Kitchener's taking over the command. The expedient
-was, in the first instance, applied to the railways as a protection
-against the raids to which they were subject; and after July, 1901, it
-was extended to the open veld. Subsidiary lines of blockhouses, which in
-general jutted out at right angles to the railways and in most cases ran
-along the cross-veld roads changing direction as circumstances required,
-were built. They acted as fences to obstruct or to deflect the movements
-of the enemy and enclosed areas greatly differing in size.
-
-The longest blockhouse line, which was, however, not completed until a
-few weeks before the end of the war, extended from Victoria Road Station
-to Lambert's Bay on the Atlantic, a distance of 300 miles. In the
-vicinity of Johannesburg, and in the Central districts of the Orange
-River Colony west of the railway, cordons of posts manned by the South
-African Constabulary took the place of blockhouse lines. These posts,
-which were established at wider intervals apart than the blockhouses,
-were intended to act as bases for minor clearing operations. They
-offered little or no obstruction to a Boer commando on trek. The
-blockhouse lines were resolutely extended by Lord Kitchener in every
-direction; and by the end of the war there was scarcely a district in
-the spacious area of hostilities that was not impaled upon them or
-helplessly clutched in their fatal grasp.
-
-The "Drive" as a military weapon is as old as the time of Darius. The
-first use of it in South Africa, on a large scale, was French's movement
-through the Eastern Transvaal in February, 1901.[56] The "Drive" has
-been criticized as an awkward attempt to perform, with one and the same
-force, two distinct operations of war; namely, the coercion of the
-non-military population and the defeat of the enemy's troops. The dual
-task deprives the force set to it of mobility and power of initiative.
-
-As a detail of abstract and orthodox military criticism the objection is
-sound; but it ignores the special local circumstances of the case. In
-the vast area on which the British Army was operating it was not
-possible to separate the two objectives. Moreover, the purely military
-resources of the enemy were waning; and the contest was resolving itself
-into an effort to put pressure on the country at large, rather than to
-smash the dwindling, evasive, and centrifugal commandos in the field.
-French's "drive," from a military point of view, was not a success; but
-it at least frightened Botha and the Transvaal Government. In May, 1901,
-there was a conference near Ermelo at which it was resolved that
-overtures should be made to Lord Kitchener; and but for Steyn, who was
-communicated with in the Orange River Colony, and who had had no
-experience of the "drive," it is probable that negotiations for peace
-would have ensued. On the other hand, the "drive" has been approved as a
-method of warfare particularly adapted for use by an army deficient in
-mobility and incapable of acquiring accurate intelligence of the enemy.
-
- * * * * *
-
-During the two months preceding Lord Roberts' departure from South
-Africa at the end of November, 1900, no events of great military
-importance occurred in the Transvaal, except De Wet's Fredrikstad raid.
-The opposition had, to all appearance, dissolved into impalpable matter.
-Here and there some Boer atoms coalesced and were not pulverized; but
-for many weeks there was little in the general situation to disturb the
-optimistic belief, which was held not only by the people at home but
-also by the Army in the field, that the end was not far off.
-
-Botha and Steyn reached Pietersburg in September, where they were joined
-by B. Viljoen, who arrived a few weeks later after a circuitous journey
-from Komati Poort through the low veld. An important detail of Lord
-Roberts' plan of campaign had not been carried out. He had hoped that
-the Northern Transvaal would be denied to the Boers by Carrington, who
-failed to carry out his part of the programme. Thus Pietersburg was a
-fairly secure eyrie in which plans could be devised and from which a
-swoop could be made either east or west of Pretoria.
-
-Botha and Steyn soon came to the conclusion that the situation, though
-serious, was by no means hopeless. Certain events of October and
-November were encouraging. They not unnaturally argued that the
-withdrawal of their two chief opponents, Lord Roberts and Sir Redvers
-Buller, indicated infirmity of purpose on the part of the British
-Government. The idea was mistaken, as the recall of these leaders, or at
-least of one of them, was due to the fact that the British Government
-was of opinion that the war was practically over. Again, they were
-relieved of the inconvenient and harassing presence of Kruger, the dour,
-reactionary old farmer, who had brought on the war and had now left his
-country to its fate; who had learnt nothing and forgotten nothing since
-he had set out on the Great Trek of 1836; and whose mind ran in a
-channel so shallow that it could almost be heard rippling over the
-stones. Also, it is probable that they had information that the majority
-of the men of the Colonial and Irregular Corps, whose term of service of
-one year would shortly expire, or had already expired, were declining to
-re-enlist--yet another sign of infirmity of purpose. Moreover, the Boer
-agents in Europe no doubt reported that all the regular infantry and its
-reserves in Great Britain had been exhausted.
-
-In November, 1900, the new plan of campaign was drawn up. L. Botha was
-to invade Natal, after a raid into the Cape Colony by De Wet, for whom
-Kritzinger and Hertzog would prepare the way and lay out the dâk. Steyn
-hurried southwards with the scheme, and was picked up at Ventersdorp by
-De Wet. Botha went to the high veld between the Natal Railway and the
-Delagoa Bay Railway, leaving B. Viljoen north of the latter railway.
-Beyers was ordered to join Delarey, who after the battle of Diamond Hill
-went into his own country near the Magaliesberg and was now lurking in
-the Zwartruggens.
-
-French, after his unhappy cross-veld march to Heidelberg, was placed in
-charge of the Johannesburg district. His passage had not overawed the
-local commandos, which, like the armed men from the teeth of Cadmus,
-soon sprang up out of the ground; and two attempts made by Smith-Dorrien
-to coerce them failed. Hildyard, after the departure of Buller and the
-dissolution of the Natal Army, was placed in charge of an extensive
-district which included not only Natal but also the S.E. corner of the
-Transvaal. Clery went home in October, 1900, and was succeeded in the
-charge of the Natal Railway in the Transvaal by Wynne. Lyttelton, with
-his Head Quarters at Middelburg, was posted on the Delagoa Bay Railway.
-
-Methuen alone of all the British leaders had an opportunity during this
-period of acting against definite objectives. Early in September he
-quitted Mafeking and zigzagged in the western districts. After a minor
-affair at Lichtenburg he was called south, and with the help of Settle,
-who sallied from Vryburg, relieved Schweizer Reneke. His next efforts
-were not so successful. A march to Rustenburg, with a view of
-intercepting the wandering President of the Free State, brought him to
-his destination early in October, only to find that Steyn was gone; and
-subsequently he was unable to tackle Delarey effectively in the
-Zwartruggens, a difficult district lying a day's march west of the
-Magaliesberg. When he reached Zeerust a considerable portion of his
-command was withdrawn under C. Douglas to reinforce French, and the end
-of November found him again at Mafeking, too weak to work outside his
-own district.
-
-The Magaliesberg was patrolled by Clements and Broadwood, who made some
-captures. Clements also was called on to furnish troops for French, who
-lay at Johannesburg, having under his command several mobile columns as
-well as the garrisons on the Klerksdorp railway and elsewhere.
-
-Paget, who since August had been operating north of Pretoria, made an
-attempt in the direction of Rustenburg to cut off Steyn, but was no more
-successful than Methuen. His next divagation was to Eerstefabriken, a
-few miles east of Pretoria, whence he was ordered away to see to B.
-Viljoen, who was harassing the Delagoa Bay Railway, and whom, without
-assistance from Lyttelton, he shifted from a strong position at
-Rhenoster Kop in an affair which has been termed the last orthodox
-pitched battle of the campaign.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Such, in brief, was the position in the Transvaal when Lord Kitchener,
-after a flying visit to Bloemfontein for the purpose of co-ordinating
-the activities against De Wet, returned to Pretoria on December 11,
-1900. It would have offered greater difficulties to a man who was a
-soldier first and an organizer afterwards than it did to the successor
-of Lord Roberts. It may be likened to an archipelago in a stormy sea
-infested by pirates who, though powerless to take possession of any of
-the islands, made communication between them always dangerous and
-sometimes impossible.
-
-[Sidenote: Map, p. 240.]
-
-Lord Kitchener's coming difficulties were heralded less than a week
-after the departure of Lord Roberts by the loss of a large convoy which
-was proceeding to Rustenburg, and for which Delarey, who was always to
-be found where weak detachments came his way, was waiting. Ten days
-later Clements suffered a disaster. He was based on Krugersdorp, but his
-command had been weakened and his transport was deficient. He received
-orders to act in the Hekpoort Valley, while Broadwood acted north of the
-Magaliesberg. When he reached Noitgedacht Nek he found Delarey a few
-miles away. At his urgent request a small portion of the troops which
-had been taken from him was restored, with a few wagons; but they left
-Krugersdorp too late to be of service.
-
-Clements was under the impression that he had only Delarey to deal with,
-and was unaware that Beyers was on his way to carry out the orders he
-had received from Botha. The withdrawal of Paget to Eerstefabriken
-cleared his front, and he marched on to the Magaliesberg. His movements
-were not unnoticed by the Intelligence, which, however, failed to notify
-them to Clements, who on December 11 was in presence of two Boer
-leaders, whose united forces were twice as strong as his own. Unknown to
-him they had met at Boschfontein near the southern approach to Breedt's
-Nek; for when a commando was reported to be at hand, he did not doubt
-that it was Delarey's force only.
-
-Noitgedacht was tactically an unsound position which Clements, assuming
-that his right was safe, had taken up in order to maintain heliographic
-communication with Broadwood on the other side of the Magaliesberg. The
-range rises more than a thousand feet above the camp selected by
-Clements and is accessible only by a rough track. The ground on either
-side of the Nek was occupied by pickets posted there mainly for
-signalling purposes. These posts, however, were helpless if attacked, as
-they were not only widely scattered, but could not be reinforced from
-the main body in the valley below. Thus they were little or no
-protection to the camp.
-
-In the direction from which an attack might be expected Clements' camp,
-which lay at the foot of the Nek, was protected by a low ridge jutting
-out from the main range and ending in a detached kopje. This ridge was
-held by mounted infantry. Another detached kopje, called Yeomanry Hill,
-was occupied towards the S.E.
-
-Delarey's general idea for the day's operation was simple: an advance by
-himself along the low ground upon the camp, coincident with an advance
-by Beyers on the other side of the range. Shortly before sunrise on
-December 13 Delarey endeavoured to rush the mounted infantry posts on
-the ridge, which in anticipation of an attack had been strengthened on
-the previous evening. Their vigorous resistance foiled the enterprise
-and Delarey was driven off.
-
-Soon, however, the sound of firing on the heights showed that the
-Northumberland Fusilier posts on each side of the Nek were in action.
-They had been attacked by Beyers, but fortunately not as had been
-intended by Delarey simultaneously with his own attack upon the ridge;
-otherwise it is probable that it would have been successful. After a
-desperate struggle, in which the Fusiliers lost heavily, they were
-overpowered, and Beyers was in possession of the high ground overlooking
-the camp. An attempt made by Clements to recover the Nek failed. Beyers'
-burghers came plunging down like a cascade and broke upon the camp
-itself.
-
-Clements anticipated that Delarey would soon return to the charge and
-ordered a retirement, which was effected under cover of the artillery
-and a rearguard of mounted infantry. Shortly before noon he formed up on
-Yeomanry Hill. Delarey renewed his attack, but met with such sturdy
-resistance that his men could not be induced to push it home. In the
-course of the afternoon Clements withdrew towards Rietfontein, having
-lost in killed, wounded and prisoners more than two-thirds of his 1,500
-men. An orderly retreat was effected, and the column, which had been
-surprised by Beyers and had seen its camp in the possession of the
-enemy, brought away, in the presence of superior numbers, all its ten
-guns.
-
-[Illustration: Noitgedacht Nek.]
-
-Broadwood on the other side of the range, to communicate with whom
-Clements had taken up an unsound position at Noitgedacht Nek, lost touch
-with him, and like many a British officer before him in South Africa,
-was groping in the Fog of War. Two days previously he had heard that
-Beyers was approaching, and he knew that Delarey was not far off; yet in
-his ignorance of the situation he allowed Beyers to wriggle in between
-him and Clements and to meet Delarey. At the time when Clements was
-defending himself against the combined attack of the two Boer leaders,
-Broadwood was seven miles away, placidly patching a field telegraph
-cable; and when at noon he discovered that Clements was in action he
-made no attempt to create a diversion.
-
-It would be inequitable to surcharge the Noitgedacht misadventure and
-other "regrettable incidents" to any individual: they should rather be
-surcharged, not to this or that responsible commander, but to
-irresponsible Human Nature. The British Army was, to a great extent,
-stale and veld-sick. It was informed that the war would soon be over,
-and it had become slack and careless. Convoys were sent afield with
-insufficient escorts to run the gauntlet of ever watchful and alert Boer
-commandants; Intelligence news qualified by the reports of untrustworthy
-native spies was transmitted circumferentially from column to column,
-with the result that the leader to whom it was of the most importance
-was sometimes the last to receive it; the scouting and patrol work was
-casual and rash. It is, however, but just to say that when the occasion
-called for it, the fighting qualities of the British soldier showed no
-signs of deterioration.
-
-The Boers, after their habit, were content with the tactical victory at
-Noitgedacht and refrained from endeavouring to improve upon it. French
-and Clements took the field without delay, and although they failed in
-their plan to pin Delarey and Beyers on to the wall of the Magaliesberg,
-the Boer leaders were compelled to separate. Their brilliant and brief
-co-operation did much to awake the British nation out of its torpor.
-There was no longer any talk of reducing the Army of occupation by
-one-half at the end of the year, and still more during the New Year; or
-of quenching the smouldering embers of the war with Baden-Powell's new
-South African Constabulary.
-
-Late in December the pursuit of Delarey, who had retired from
-Noitgedacht towards the S.W., was resumed. At Ventersdorp he and his 700
-men, after eluding a ponderous force of nearly 6,000 men with 40 guns,
-doubled back; and soon the same columns unsuccessfully encountered him
-at Cyferfontein, where he ambushed a mounted detachment and then
-disappeared.
-
-Beyers, who went into the west after he was wrenched apart from Delarey,
-soon reappeared upon the stage in the Hekpoort Valley with 1,200 men.
-His position was precarious. In front of him was Paget, who had been
-sent round to intercept him; while pressing on his heels was a
-newly-formed mounted force under Babington, 2,000 strong. He extricated
-himself cleverly by brushing past Paget and advancing boldly in what was
-apparently the line of greatest resistance.
-
-[Sidenote: Map, p. 240.]
-
-No one but a Boer leader with a supreme contempt for his enemy would
-have thought of placing himself within striking distance of Pretoria and
-Johannesburg. Yet on January 11, 1901, he audaciously laagered within a
-few miles of Johannesburg, unknown to the garrison. Next day he crossed
-the railway at Kaalfontein, half-way between the two cities, and
-disappeared in the Eastern Transvaal. That at this stage of the war it
-was possible for 1,200 men to cut the railway, and with scarcely the
-loss of a man to cross it, with guns and a long train of wagons, midway
-between the two chief cities of the Transvaal, showed how much still
-remained to be done.
-
-The disturbances in the Orange River Colony brought about certain
-changes and redistributions in the Transvaal commands, by which leaders
-were, as in the circuits of Wesleyan ministers, removed from spheres
-familiar to them. Clements went to Pretoria in succession to Tucker, who
-was sent to Bloemfontein; E. Knox, who, fifteen months previously, had
-been in command of the squadrons of the 18th Hussars which were not made
-prisoners of war at Talana, took command of the column of Broadwood, who
-was sent across the Vaal; Cunningham succeeded Clements in the
-Magaliesberg district; Hart quitted Klerksdorp for the Orange River
-Colony; and French went away into the west.
-
-On the Boer side a new name which was destined often to be on men's lips
-emerged from the crowd in January, 1901. A young lawyer named J.C.
-Smuts, who had received his legal education in England, and whom Delarey
-entrusted with a command, soon showed, and not for the first time, that
-a shrewd, resourceful, energetic and determined civilian was, at least
-in _guerilla_, more than a match for highly trained British officers.
-
-A movement towards the south by Cunningham, with a view of checking
-Delarey, soon brought Cunningham into trouble. After crossing the
-Magaliesberg he was entangled by the Transvaal leader, and had to be
-extricated by Babington before he could proceed to his destination at
-Krugersdorp.
-
-[Sidenote: Map, p. 292.]
-
-Smuts, the new leader, went to the Gatsrand. His first exploit was to
-snap up a weak and isolated British detachment at Modderfontein Nek, and
-to establish his own commando on the position. When Cunningham reached
-Krugersdorp he received orders to tackle Smuts. On February 2, having an
-overwhelming superiority in guns and a considerable advantage in
-numbers, he attacked Smuts; but the apprentice tactician had little
-difficulty in meeting the regulation frontal holding attack combined
-with a turning movement, and Cunningham withdrew.
-
-In the Western Transvaal there were now three Boer leaders to be dealt
-with: Smuts in the Gatsrand, Delarey in the Zwartruggens, and Kemp. The
-latter had come down from the north with Beyers and had been with him
-when the line was crossed at Kaalfontein. He had lately returned to his
-own district of Krugersdorp. With Botha threatening in the east and De
-Wet raiding in the south, few troops could be spared to help the columns
-on the spot; but two additional columns, under the command of Shekleton
-and Benson, and composed mainly of details, were assembled by Lord
-Kitchener. One of these went astray, but the other joined Cunningham and
-advanced against Smuts in the Gatsrand, only to find that he had escaped
-at first towards the south, and had then changed direction and had
-vanished in the N.W.
-
-Methuen, who towards the end of November, 1900, had gone south from
-Mafeking in order to deal with apprehended trouble in Griqualand West,
-pushed up from the S.W. corner of the Transvaal and on February 18,
-1901, came upon Delarey, who had escaped from Babington and had
-reinforced a gathering of weak commandos near Hartebeestfontein.
-Although outnumbered by more than 4 to 3, Methuen without much
-difficulty compelled Delarey to withdraw, and went on to Klerksdorp.
-Smuts reappeared and with Delarey made off to the N.W., the sanctuary to
-which each of them had in turn repaired. Methuen was sent south to
-Hoopstad in the Orange River Colony. He had hardly started when news
-came in that an isolated garrison seventy miles away in the N.W. was
-threatened.
-
-Delarey had a definite objective in view when he disappeared, his native
-town of Lichtenburg. The place was one of many for which Methuen, with
-an attenuated force, was responsible; and now he had been called away to
-a town in trouble in the opposite direction. Two columns nearer at hand
-were called upon to relieve Lichtenburg, but in the meantime it had
-relieved itself; for although Delarey succeeded in winning a footing
-within it, the obstinate resistance which he encountered disheartened
-him, and he withdrew on March 4 after twenty-four hours' fighting.
-
-The next three weeks were occupied in the pursuit of Delarey by two
-columns under Shekleton and Babington, at first in directions which he
-had not taken. They started westward from Ventersdorp, not conceiving it
-possible that, after the repulse at Lichtenburg, he would have the
-audacity to throw himself across their left front in an attempt to reach
-Klerksdorp. When the news that he had actually done so reached them they
-changed direction southwards, Delarey opening outwards to let them pass
-through towards Wolmaranstad, whither the Intelligence had in
-imagination waybilled him. The British columns, unaware that he was on
-either side of them, and still under the impression that he was on their
-front towards the south, passed on and halted at Hartebeestfontein, when
-a reconnoitring party sent out northwards discovered that he was in rear
-of the columns.
-
-The reconnoitring party had much difficulty in saving itself, as it was
-charged by mounted Boers in mass, a tactical movement which hitherto had
-not been tried by the enemy. Babington at once reversed the line of his
-march, and on March 24 came up with Delarey at Wildfontein, midway
-between Ventersdorp and Lichtenburg. Delarey was moving heavily and was
-compelled to jettison his guns and his transport. These were picked up
-by Babington, who, however, was not able to continue the pursuit and
-returned to Ventersdorp.
-
-The loss did not disconcert Delarey. He retired with Kemp to a position
-close to his lair in the Zwartruggens, where, however, he did not long
-remain. At the same time, he sent Smuts to the Hartebeestfontein
-district, out of which he had just been driven. The audacity of the act
-was justified, for Smuts maintained himself against Babington during the
-whole of April.
-
-Early in May a determined effort was made to clear the district. Methuen
-after he had relieved Hoopstad was recalled to Mafeking, and then went
-to Lichtenburg. The British force on the Magaliesberg, commanded first
-by Clements, then by Cunningham, and now by Dixon, was ordered to
-operate from the north, while a strong column under Ingouville-Williams
-was prepared at Klerksdorp. Thus each angle of the disturbed area was
-held by troops ready to converge; and within it were Babington's
-columns. Delarey was believed to be at Hartebeestfontein; but neither he
-nor any other Boers could be found there when the troops entered it on
-May 6. The Boer leaders had, as usual, adopted their usual strategy of
-spreading false reports, and of dispersing their commandos as soon as
-they were hard pressed. On the British side the subsequent operations
-were conducted without method. The columns, having effected little, were
-recalled to their bases; and the middle of May, 1901, saw Delarey, Kemp,
-and J.C. Smuts still at large.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The first offensive action taken by Botha after he came down from
-Pietersburg in November, 1900, was against Hildyard's posts in the angle
-adjoining Natal. His movements against the garrisons of Vryheid and
-other places in December failed, and he returned to the Central
-Transvaal in order to co-operate with B. Viljoen in worrying the Delagoa
-Bay Railway, on which Lyttelton's[57] force was strung out. Viljoen had
-already made a daring and successful raid on Helvetia, from which he
-brought away not only prisoners of war but also a heavy gun; although
-the town was by no means isolated, being one of a line of posts running
-from Belfast and Machadodorp to Lydenburg.
-
-The exploit encouraged Botha to plan a general attack, in co-operation
-with Viljoen, on a section of the railway each side of Belfast. It was
-made on January 7, 1901. The chief effort was against Belfast, where
-Smith-Dorrien was in command of a garrison too weak for effective
-resistance. Viljoen advancing from the north met with some preliminary
-success, but a fog prevented co-operation between him and Botha and the
-attack failed. The attacks on the other posts on the railway were
-repelled without much difficulty. The recrudescence of Botha, the
-intrusion of Beyers from the west, the hovering presence of Viljoen
-north of the Delagoa Bay Railway, and the rumour that an invasion of
-Natal was in contemplation to synchronize with raids beyond the Orange
-by De Wet, Kritzinger, and Hertzog, determined Lord Kitchener to try to
-sweep up and reduce the Eastern Transvaal.
-
-A force of five columns under the command of French was assembled a few
-miles east of the Elandsfontein-Pretoria Railway and began its advance
-on January 28. The general idea was that it should gradually extend its
-front, like the cone of dispersion of a shrapnel shell, between the
-diverging Natal and Delagoa Bay Railways, and then sweep eastward
-towards the Swaziland and Zululand borders; upon which Botha's
-commandos, if not already crushed by an enveloping movement on Ermelo,
-would be finally impaled. To assist French when he had traversed about
-one-half of the area, three columns were detailed to march southwards
-from the Delagoa Bay Railway on Ermelo. One of these columns was,
-however, sent away at the last moment under Paget to take part in the
-operations against De Wet in the Cape Colony. The combined strength of
-the seven columns against Botha was about 20,000 men, the majority of
-the combatants being mounted. A break back by Beyers and Kemp, who
-rejoined Delarey, was the opening incident of French's advance.
-
-The first objective of French's movement was the town of Ermelo, where
-Botha was acting as a sort of rearguard to cover the retreat of the
-fugitive burghers, who with their families and their stuff were
-endeavouring to escape from the Khakis. His contemplated attack on Natal
-was, at least for the time being, impracticable; and he set himself to
-the task of inflicting what damage he could on the threatening columns.
-He ascertained that Smith-Dorrien's column was approaching Lake Chrissie
-on February 5, and that the other column operating from the Delagoa Bay
-Railway under W. Campbell, was too far away to give it effectual
-support. The gap left by the withdrawal of Paget had not been filled up.
-
-When Smith-Dorrien reached the Lake, Botha had already started to meet
-him. Early in the morning of February 6 the British Camp was attacked,
-but although the attempt was furthered by a stampede of Smith-Dorrien's
-horses, Botha failed. He was compelled to draw off, but with the greater
-portion of his burghers wriggled round to the rear of the columns.[58]
-Thus when French reached Ermelo he found that he had nothing to strike
-at. The Boer commandos had passed away. After a short halt he changed
-direction half right, and projected his front on to a cross-veld line
-reaching from the Swaziland border to Amersfort; then bringing round his
-right he formed up his seven columns on February 18 along the Swaziland
-border, with an eastward front of nearly forty miles extending
-southwards from Amsterdam. Dartnell was on the right of the line and
-Smith-Dorrien on the left.
-
-Most of the fugitive commandos had, however, retired into the S.E.
-corner of the Transvaal; a movement which Hildyard, who was in charge of
-the district as well as of the whole of Natal, was not strong enough to
-check. French was now based on Natal for supplies, and arrangements had
-been made that two large convoys should be sent to him by way of
-Utrecht. Bad roads, bad weather, and submerged drifts impeded the
-progress of the painful trains, the first of which did not reach him
-until March 2, ten days after it was due. Meanwhile he subsisted on
-dwindled rations and on what he could pick up on the veld.
-
-When, owing to a change in the routes by which he was supplied, French
-was able towards the end of March to operate actively, he endeavoured to
-isolate the S.E. corner of the Transvaal by disposing his force in two
-lines. One line ran from Piet Retief to Vryheid and acted as the driving
-force, and the other ran from Piet Retief along the Swaziland border and
-acted as the stopping force. Within the angle enclosed by these lines
-were commandos under Grobler of Vryheid, Emmett, and other leaders; but
-all of them wriggled out with insignificant losses. The line along the
-Swaziland border was rendered immobile by difficulties of supply, and
-the driving line was exhausted. The closing incident of French's ten
-weeks' campaign, the chief harvest of which was the capture, surrender,
-wounding, or killing of 1,300 Boers, the seizure of a considerable
-amount of ammunition, and the taking of eleven guns, was the return of
-Smith-Dorrien to the Delagoa Bay Railway in the middle of April.
-
-Botha's projected invasion of Natal had indeed been frustrated and
-postponed, but he and all the other Boer leaders had escaped, unscathed
-and undismayed. French's ponderous columns had trudged painfully across
-the veld from Springs almost into Zululand, and had left things much as
-they were at the beginning of February.
-
-During the early months of the year 1901 Viljoen for the most part
-contented himself with frequent attacks on the Delagoa Bay Railway, and
-a vigorous effort to restrain his activity was not practicable. In March
-Lord Kitchener formulated a plan for the subjugation of the Northern
-Transvaal. His plan was to send a column with secrecy and dispatch to
-Pietersburg, which would be occupied as a base from which the column
-would work southwards along the line of the Olifant's River, in
-co-operation with columns acting northwards from the Delagoa Bay
-Railway.
-
-The force selected to proceed to Pietersburg was Plumer's Australian
-column, which sixteen days after it desisted from the chase of De Wet in
-the Orange River Colony was marching northwards out of Pretoria. Plumer
-entered Pietersburg on April 8 without opposition, Beyers, who had been
-falling back before him from Warmbaths, having evacuated the town.
-Plumer halted for a few days in order to secure the railway and to make
-arrangements for carrying out his orders to hold the line of the
-Olifant's River. Before the end of the month he was in possession of all
-the drifts from Commissie Drift downwards, and denied them to Viljoen.
-
-The country in which Viljoen was acting is hilly and intricate, and Lord
-Kitchener, by borrowing Sir Bindon Blood from the Indian Government, an
-officer of great experience in frontier _guerilla_, paid Viljoen and the
-Boer commandos the compliment of crediting them with the military
-qualities of the dangerous, predatory, and enterprising hill tribes of
-the underfeatures of the Himalayas. To Blood were given six columns
-which were to work from Lydenburg and the Delagoa Bay Railway.
-
-Viljoen was near Ros Senekal. He had three lines of retreat, northward
-or southward along the Steelpoort River, or down the Blood River.
-Blood's columns were disposed with the object of closing these exits.
-The Transvaal Government, which for some months had been sojourning in
-security at Paardeplatz, fled and joined Botha near Ermelo; but Viljoen
-stood fast.
-
-The total force under Blood exceeded 10,000 men. Three columns under
-Beatson, Benson, and Pulteney, who had joined from Vryheid where he had
-been serving under French's command, advanced northwards from the
-Delagoa Bay Railway. On their right front they were supported by three
-columns acting from Lydenburg, under Park, W. Douglas, and W. Kitchener.
-Douglas was the only leader destined to encounter Viljoen, who on April
-10 struck at him near Dullstroom, but was handsomely beaten and
-compelled to return to the place from which he came. He was hedged in on
-all sides; mutiny and disaffection were rife among his burghers; and he
-saw that there was nothing to be done but make his escape as best he
-could.
-
-He was headed off by Benson in an attempt to get away up the Steelpoort
-Valley, where next day 100 Boers gave themselves up to Blood. He next
-tried the Blood River, and passing down the valley crossed the Olifant
-on April 22, almost within sight of Beatson, who was watching the
-drifts. A few days later he crossed the railway and joined Botha at
-Ermelo. Early in May the active operations north of the Delagoa Bay
-Railway ceased. As in French's campaign, so also in Blood's, the results
-were chiefly negative. A glut of live stock was rounded up, a
-considerable amount of ammunition and all the guns known to be in the
-district were taken, and 1,100 Boers either surrendered or were made
-prisoners. The columns were withdrawn, as troops were in request in the
-districts lately driven by French; and Plumer, who had had no
-opportunity of engaging actively in the movement, was recalled. He was
-succeeded at Pietersburg by Grenfell.
-
-At the end of May Dixon set out westwards from Naauwpoort in the
-Magaliesberg district on a raiding expedition. He trekked for three days
-and then ran unexpectedly into a Boer column at Vlakfontein. He was
-attacked through a veil of smoke from a grass fire which the slim enemy
-had lit to windward. In spite of this disadvantage he held his own and
-compelled the Boers to retire, but soon, however, found it advisable to
-retire himself and returned to Naauwpoort.
-
-The column which had engaged Dixon was under the command of Kemp, whom
-the Intelligence had after the Hartebeestfontein operations despatched
-in imagination with Delarey to the south, where they were reported to be
-concentrating. Kemp, however, had returned to the Zwartruggens. After
-the Vlakfontein affair he found columns approaching him from all sides
-and dissolved his command. Delarey had gone south, and was now in the
-Orange River Colony.
-
-The northward retreat of De Wet through the Orange River Colony in
-March, 1901, drew in its trail a host of British columns, which plodded
-sturdily across the veld with scanty results. He endeavoured to
-systematize _guerilla_ by parcelling out the late Free State into
-districts under commandants acting locally: Lord Kitchener retorted by
-parcelling it out into a smaller number of districts, each district
-being in charge of a general officer armed with columns with which to
-worry the local commandants. Many divagations ensued; few profitable
-results were attained.
-
-Of these divagations the most conspicuous was a visit paid by Rundle to
-the Brandwater Basin, wherein the enemy was reported to be once more
-concentrated. There were, in fact, less than 1,000 burghers within the
-Basin, but these pressed severely on him when, at the end of May, he
-made his exit through the Golden Gate with one prisoner of war.
-
-Exigencies elsewhere compelled Lord Kitchener to allow the Cape Colony,
-to a great extent, to take care of itself. Some troops were sent down,
-but they were insufficient to control the disaffection which was active
-in the midland districts. Kritzinger remained in the Cape Colony;
-paying, however, a brief visit to the Orange River Colony in April.
-
-Early in June Delarey, De Wet, and Steyn met at Reitz, for the purpose
-of considering a communication lately received from the Transvaal
-Government, suggesting that overtures should be made to Lord Kitchener.
-To this Steyn had already returned an unfavourable answer; but he
-distrusted the wavering and wandering Transvaal Government, and he was
-desirous of obtaining the support of Delarey, whom he knew to be the
-most stalwart and implacable of the Transvaal leaders. It was arranged
-that Steyn, Delarey, and De Wet should go north and meet Botha at
-Ermelo.
-
-Meanwhile Elliott, who was in charge of one of the districts parcelled
-out by Lord Kitchener in the Orange River Colony, was engaged in a drive
-from Vrede to Kroonstad. On June 6 he sent on a weak column under Sladen
-to capture a Boer convoy near Reitz. It was taken without trouble, but
-the news soon reached the triumvirate in camp not far off and they
-determined to make an effort to recapture it. A small commando was
-quickly mustered and Delarey and De Wet attacked Sladen, who after
-several hours' hard fighting was relieved by another column from
-Elliott's force. The prize was retained, but Delarey and De Wet got
-away. They waited until Elliott had passed by, and then made for the
-north with Steyn, crossing into the Transvaal near Standerton.
-
-Meanwhile the Transvaal Government which they had gone to meet had been
-again sent on its journeyings. The effects of French's drive had soon
-passed away, and Lord Kitchener found it necessary to resume active
-operations in the Eastern Transvaal, the chief object of which was the
-capture of the Transvaal Government. It was hustled out of the Ermelo
-district and pushed down towards Piet Retief, from which it returned to
-Ermelo in the middle of June. Its drooping spirits were revived by an
-affair at Wilmansrust, where a wandering Australian column was
-overwhelmed by a commando under Muller which was lurking in the
-district. On June 20 Steyn, Delarey, and De Wet met the Transvaal
-Government in a Council of War near Standerton.
-
-The allies at once determined to continue the war. Lord Kitchener had
-permitted a communication to be sent to ex-President Kruger asking his
-advice. Kruger's reply, as might have been anticipated, was in favour of
-continuing the war. In his comfortable sanctuary in Holland he had
-nothing to lose by urging those whom he had left behind to carry on the
-struggle. In view of the tentacles with which Great Britain was grasping
-South Africa and of the general situation, the decision of the Council
-of War was a morally courageous act. There was in it, moreover, a
-special as well as a general idea. Particular attention was to be given
-to the cultivation of the numerous germs of mischief in the Cape Colony,
-and this part of the plan was entrusted to the brilliant young lawyer,
-J.C. Smuts, who returned with Delarey to the Western Transvaal.
-
-An almost complete reconstruction of the Free State Government was
-rendered necessary by an episode which occurred soon after Steyn's
-return to his own country. When he and his colleagues crossed the Vaal
-they found Elliott again engaged on a drive. On the night of July 10
-they were surprised at Reitz by Broadwood, who had joined Elliott's
-command, and all except Steyn were captured. De Wet was away, otherwise
-it is improbable that a man of such infinity of resource and strength of
-will would have allowed his friends to be taken tamely in their
-slumbers.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The task set to Smuts was, to all appearance, impossible of fulfilment.
-Not only had he to collect a sufficient force in the Gatsrand under the
-eyes of British columns, but he had also to conduct it through the whole
-length of the Orange River Colony, and run the gauntlet of Elliott, C.
-Knox, Rundle, and Bruce Hamilton. By the middle of July he had recruited
-340 burghers, who travelled south in four parties with British columns
-at their heels and mustered near Hoopstad on August 1.
-
-Here they entered the precincts of the area into which Lord Kitchener
-was endeavouring in one grand drive to sweep the Boer remnants of the
-S.W. Transvaal and the Orange River Colony. Elliott was wheeling round
-from Reitz through Vredefort and Klerksdorp and advancing on the line of
-the Modder River, behind which stood Bruce Hamilton.[59] A considerable
-amount of transport and live stock was taken; also 500 Boers, among whom
-Smuts and his commando were not.
-
-He had succeeded on August 3 in wriggling by night through Elliott's
-driving line and was now in rear of it. He now divided his force into
-two commandos, one of which, under Van der Venter, made for the south by
-way of Brandfort. With the other he boldly trailed behind Elliott and
-followed him to the Bloemfontein-Jacobsdal line of Constabulary posts,
-through which he passed without injury. He then found himself entangled
-in Bruce Hamilton's columns, and although he succeeded in reaching
-Springfontein, he was soon forced to retreat nearly seventy miles in the
-direction of Bloemfontein. Nothing daunted, he made another dash for the
-south, and having evaded two pursuing columns entered Zastron on August
-27, where he found Van der Venter waiting for him. His daring and
-adventurous ride ranks as one of the most notable personal exploits of
-the war. He had not only cut Elliott's line from front to rear, but had
-afterwards enfranchised himself amid the swarm of Bruce Hamilton's
-columns. The lawyer Smuts was the De Wet of the Transvaal.
-
-Kritzinger after fifteen weeks' activity in the Cape Colony had returned
-to Zastron a few days before Smuts' arrival. His incursion into the
-Colony in May occurred at an opportune moment, for the local rebels were
-being severely worried. He made at first for the Zuurberg, but being
-soon expelled from it and from the adjacent mountainous district north
-of Sterkstroom, circled back to the Orange and snapped up Jamestown. He
-now flung his grenades on all sides. One rebel leader reached the
-Transkei districts; others prowled between Graaff Reinet and the
-Capetown Railway. Kritzinger himself captured a small British detachment
-near Maraisburg.
-
-As in February when Lyttelton was brought down, so again in July the
-situation in the Cape Colony was sufficiently serious to call for
-outside assistance. French was sent down from the Transvaal; Lord
-Kitchener himself came to Middelburg. The measures concerted between
-them, a series of northward drives by the operation of which the rebels
-would be plastered against the railways, which were rapidly blockhoused
-for the purpose, met with indifferent success. The disaffected midland
-districts were swept, but the leaders escaped. Kritzinger crossed the
-Orange in August, and at Zastron awaited the arrival of J.C. Smuts with
-new schemes for mischief.
-
-The presence of these leaders attracted columns from several quarters
-and they were betimes theoretically surrounded. Kritzinger, however,
-refused to consider himself surrounded and even worked freely in
-co-operation with Brand: nor had J.C. Smuts any intention of resigning
-his commission. He crossed the Orange on September 3. A fortnight later,
-Kritzinger and Brand parted company. Kritzinger marched on the Orange,
-and near a drift of that river pounced upon and overwhelmed a weak
-detail of the force under Hart, who was acting as warden of the Cape
-Colony marches. Brand made for the Bloemfontein-Thabanchu line of posts,
-which was the sport of every Boer leader who chose to hack at it, and
-which recently had scarcely impeded the progress of Van der Venter to
-the south for an hour. On September 19, near Sannah's Post, he ambushed
-and destroyed a party of mounted infantry engaged in raiding a farm. Two
-guns and nearly 100 prisoners of war were taken by Brand.
-
-Smuts' arrival in the Cape Colony, like Kritzinger's four months before,
-stimulated a waning cause. Lotter, who had escaped French's drives, had
-just been taken; the other rebel leaders were isolated and comparatively
-innocuous. Fresh hopes were kindled, activities were renewed, when it
-was noised among the rebel bands that Smuts the Transvaaler had swooped
-down like an eagle from the north.
-
-These hopes were not delusive. Smuts made for the south, pursued by some
-of French's columns. Near Tarkastad on September 17 he ambushed and
-overwhelmed a detachment of regular cavalry and won a footing in the
-midlands, where rebellion again raised its head from the ground.
-
-Smuts noticed and encouraged the promising movement and returned to the
-Zuurberg, out of which, however, he was soon hustled. He went away to
-join a rebel leader named Scheepers, who had been working freely 200
-miles away to the S.W. in the districts bordering the sea. Scheepers,
-however, was taken prisoner near Prince Albert Road Station on the
-Capetown Railway before Smuts reached him; but Smuts continued his
-movement. Smuts had entrusted the inflammatory work in the midlands to
-local leaders before he left the district, and now set himself to
-trespass beyond the furthest point reached by Scheepers, and to make a
-bold entry into the extreme S.W. corner of the Cape Colony. Early in
-November he penetrated into the Ceres district, where he was less than
-100 miles in a direct line from Capetown. He had brilliantly performed
-the task set to him by Botha and Steyn at Standerton in June. He had
-been in contact with and had evaded the majority of the units of Lord
-Kitchener's widely disseminated army at one time or another during his
-ride of 1,100 miles, and in fourteen weeks had passed from the Gatsrand
-in the Transvaal to within a few days' march of Capetown.
-
-Meanwhile Lord Kitchener was doing his best to deal with the accruing
-winter discontent. He had a plan of his own; and he was also furnished
-with a plan that had been drawn up by the civilian authorities in
-Downing Street and South Africa, who thought that the walls of Jericho
-would fall to the sound of a Proclamation. In August, 1901, a legal
-document was served on the Boers, much in the same way that a writ is
-served upon a debtor. In it they were declared to be helpless and
-incapable of carrying on the struggle, and their leaders were threatened
-with perpetual banishment. It had little effect on the enemy, except to
-brace him up for further efforts; and Lord Kitchener, it is believed,
-had no faith in it.
-
-Lord Kitchener's plan was the extension across the veld of the system of
-blockhouse lines which at first ran only along the railways, and the
-formation of pens or enclaves into which the attenuated roving bands of
-Boers were to be herded and dealt with severally and severely. The work
-of extension was taken in hand in July, 1901. The Boers in the veld
-watched it with the detachment and unconcern of a wild bird on the
-branches looking down upon the fowler laying his snares in the field
-below.
-
-Another drive by Elliott during August and September, this time through
-the eastern districts of the Orange River Colony, affected little.
-Kritzinger remained in his corner between the Orange and the Caledon and
-could not be extracted from it; De Wet was still at large. In the
-Transvaal the leaders were marking time. Viljoen after the Standerton
-conference withdrew beyond the Delagoa Bay Railway, but was soon driven
-out of the mountains. He lost heart, handed over his command to Muller,
-and went down to the low veld adjoining the Pietersburg Railway.
-
-In the Western Transvaal Delarey and Kemp were alert. Kemp in the
-Zwartruggens foiled an attempt to cast a net around him, and in
-conjunction with Delarey attacked Methuen on the Marico River without
-success on September 5. A pale of blockhouses denied them access to the
-"protected area."[60] Muller effected a trifling success in the middle
-north. Beyers in the Pietersburg district was unable to prevent Grenfell
-reaching a point but sixty miles from the Limpopo and there making
-prisoners of a local commando.
-
-No organized attempt was made to disturb Botha in the Ermelo district. A
-column under Benson did indeed set out from the Delagoa Bay Railway in
-August, but it was recalled by the alarm of a Boer raid on the line at
-Bronkhorst Spruit. Benson subsequently did useful raiding work in the
-Carolina district, but was not strong enough to tackle Botha.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Botha had never abandoned the scheme of an invasion of Natal which was
-drawn up at the end of 1900. His first attempt to carry it out was
-frustrated by French, but it was uppermost in his mind during the winter
-of 1901. Early in September he left the Ermelo district, in which Lord
-Kitchener had never been able to operate effectively, and made for Piet
-Retief with 1,000 men. Columns, faint yet pursuing, started from each
-railway, and ignorant of his movements trudged wearily across the veld
-to the S.E. Botha, after passing through the defile between the
-Swaziland border and the Slangapiesberg, turned to the south, his
-ultimate objective being Dundee. In the corner abutting on Zululand were
-commandos under Emmett and Grobler of Vryheid.
-
-Lyttelton on his return from leave took over the Natal command from
-Hildyard. He disposed his columns as best he could, having regard to the
-contradictory reports which reached him of Botha's movements and
-intentions. The first encounter occurred on September 17 at Blood River
-Poort. A mounted column under Gough and Stewart had been sent out from
-Dundee across the Buffalo to bring away a convoy from Vryheid. Gough
-soon came into touch with a body of the enemy. It was, he thought, only
-a local commando, and when he saw it off-saddle he left Stewart in
-support and went out to surprise it. The nature of the ground prevented
-a complete surprise, but he partially effected it, only to be surprised
-himself by the sudden charge of Botha's main body, which was supposed to
-be a day's march distant. After a brief combat, in which Stewart was
-unable to intervene, Gough lost the whole of his command of nearly 300
-men in killed, wounded, and prisoners, as well as three guns. Stewart
-escaped to the Buffalo.
-
-The crick-crack of Botha's Mausers at Blood River Poort echoed
-throughout South Africa. Troops from all quarters were hurried to the
-spot; search parties discovered some columns under W. Kitchener which
-had lost themselves on the high veld; and so rarified was the military
-atmosphere, that not only columns but even general officers were scarce.
-Bruce Hamilton and Clements were brought in.
-
-Botha seems to have regarded his success as unreal. He hesitated to
-follow it up, and soon the Buffalo in flood effectually barred the way
-to Dundee. He now proposed to enter Natal through Zululand, below the
-junction of the Tugela and the Buffalo. On the point of the angle which,
-at that time, the Transvaal thrust into Zululand were two British posts,
-Forts Prospect and Itala. Botha was beginning to be doubtful about the
-eventual success of his Natal raid, but thought that as he was on the
-spot he might as well be doing something. He therefore ordered these
-posts to be taken, entrusting to his brother C. Botha the attack on
-Itala, and to Emmett and Grobler the attack on Prospect. The failure of
-each attack with considerable loss on September 26 made Botha reconsider
-his position. There was no more thought of another campaign on the
-Tugela, and he determined to retire.
-
-Lyttelton's dispositions continued for some days to be directed against
-the Natal raid upon which Botha was supposed to be still engaged, and
-the discovery that he had abandoned it was not made until October 1. His
-capture did not seem to be a very difficult task, as his only way of
-escape was the Piet Retief defile by which he had entered the district
-three weeks before.
-
-There was, however, an intermediate barrier, the irregular Pondwana
-range lying eastward of Vryheid, where he might be arrested. Lyttelton's
-plan was that Clements and B. Hamilton should press towards this barrier
-from the S.W., while W. Kitchener acted as a stop on the north side of
-it. The range is pierced by several neks, at one of which, lying between
-the main heights and the Inyati spur, Botha was checked by Kitchener on
-October 2. He then made a cast eastward to another nek and by abandoning
-his transport succeeded three nights later in getting round Kitchener's
-left. He easily kept Kitchener off in a rearguard action and made for
-Piet Retief. Neither Clements nor B. Hamilton was ever in the running,
-and Kitchener was hampered by the necessity of watching several neks
-along a front of twenty miles.
-
-There was, however, one more barrier for Botha to cross or to turn, the
-Slangapiesberg between Wakkerstroom and Piet Retief; but it scarcely
-delayed him for an hour. Except one column, which was covering the
-building of a blockhouse line and which he evaded without difficulty,
-there was nothing to oppose him. When a column under Plumer came upon
-the scene he had passed away on October 11 through Piet Retief towards
-Ermelo. His movements had bewildered his opponents, who intent on
-frustrating a raid on Natal, had omitted to bar and bolt the door by
-which he had entered. His capture would, in all probability, have ended
-the war.
-
-When Botha left for the south he instructed B. Viljoen to carry on for
-him; but when he joined the itinerant Transvaal Government at Amsterdam
-he was disappointed to find that little or nothing had been done in his
-absence, thanks chiefly to the mobile energy of Benson, who hovered like
-a hawk over the terrorized laagers. Moreover, the pale of Constabulary
-posts which formed the eastward section of the great ring fence
-enclosing the "protected area" had been advanced. It now ran from
-Greylingstad to Wilge River Station on the Delagoa Bay Railway, and
-encroached upon the area in which Botha could act with reasonable hope
-of success.
-
-The return of Botha, however, infused some spirit into the hustled
-commandos of the high veld, and he gladly accepted a suggestion that
-Benson should be attacked. The Ermelo and Carolina men who had
-accompanied him to Natal returned to find that their districts had been
-roughly handled by Benson and were eager for reprisals. On October 25
-Botha narrowly escaped capture by two columns which had been sent after
-him from Standerton.
-
-Benson left Middelburg, the base to which he returned from time to time,
-on October 20, with a column 1,600 strong, to renew his operations on
-the high veld. When he reached the Bethal district he noticed ominous
-signs of the revived spirit. He was hampered with a considerable
-transport, his supplies were dwindling, and he did not think himself
-justified in risking an encounter. He therefore decided to return to the
-Delagoa Bay Railway. H. Grobler of Bethal, who had suggested to Botha
-the attack on Benson, was in the vicinity with 700 burghers, and Botha
-himself was again in the field.
-
-Benson began to retire before sunrise on October 30. Bad weather and
-Grobler pressing in rear worried the forenoon march, and ere the midday
-halt had been called Botha came up with 500 men after a forced march.
-While the convoy was being parked at Bakenlaagte, the pressure on the
-rearguard increased, and it was forced back to a ridge about two miles
-S.E. of the park. Benson came up and ordered a second retirement of the
-rearguard to a position, to which the name of Gun Hill has been given,
-nearer the park, and posted two field guns on the hill.
-
-Botha soon occupied the ridge, and then charged Gun Hill with his main
-body under Grobler, at the same time sending parties to attack the
-flanking posts. Two detachments of British infantry stranded between the
-ridge and the hill were overwhelmed by the charge. Most of the mounted
-sections got away to the hill, hotly pursued by the Boers, who leaving
-their horses at the foot, at once began to climb the slope. They
-clutched each shoulder of the hill, swarmed up the front, and soon
-silenced the guns. An attempt to bring up the teams from the reverse
-slope failed.
-
-In less than half an hour Grobler had won Gun Hill with a loss of 100
-men. Benson was mortally wounded. The flanking posts were too much
-engaged in defending themselves to be able to assist the defenders of
-Gun Hill. An attempt to intervene made by a few companies on the march
-to the camp where the convoy was parked was unsuccessful. The Boers, as
-usual, were satisfied with a casual tactical success, and made no effort
-to follow it up strategically. They were soon driven off Gun Hill by
-shell fire from the camp, but after nightfall returned to bring away the
-guns. In the British casualties were 120 prisoners of war.
-Wools-Sampson, who succeeded Benson in command, maintained himself for
-two days, and was then relieved by columns from the south. He returned
-to the Delagoa Bay Railway.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The exigences of the military situation called for the withdrawal of
-most of the troops operating against Kemp and Delarey in the Western
-Transvaal; and by the middle of September, 1901, these leaders had
-practically but one column to evade, namely the force formerly commanded
-by Dixon and now by Kekewich. He left Naauwpoort on September 13, and
-after some preliminary work on the Magaliesberg passed through Magato
-Nek, and with a force of less than 1,000 men advanced into the
-Zwartruggens, a wild, difficult, and confusing district admirably
-adapted to Boer _guerilla_.
-
-On September 29 Kekewich took up a position at Moedvil near the right
-bank of the Selous River. He was compelled to place all his westward
-outposts, except one double picket, on the right bank, as the veld on
-the left bank was bushy and rose gradually from the river and would have
-absorbed more men than he could spare for outpost duty.
-
-Delarey was accurately informed of Kekewich's movements, and it is said
-had actually reconnoitred the camp unobserved a few hours after
-Kekewich's arrival. He quickly formulated his plan of attack, in which
-he seems to have followed, on a smaller scale, the familiar tactics of
-the British leaders whom he had met in battle, notably at Diamond Hill,
-but with a certain innovation of his own.
-
-He divided his force into four columns, two of which were told off to
-grapple Kekewich's flanks and command his line of retreat, and two to
-make a frontal but not merely holding attack on his centre. Early in the
-morning of September 30 Delarey put his columns in motion. He started
-with certain points in his favour. All Kekewich's outposts save one were
-on the right bank and in the vicinity of the camp, and in fact Delarey
-took him by surprise. The movements of the Boer columns were, however,
-not well co-ordinated. The flanking columns were not in position when
-the centre columns, which do not seem to have been challenged by the
-post on the left bank, reached the river and concealed themselves in the
-deep bed. This might not have marred the success of Delarey's plan if
-the columns in the river-bed had not been discovered by a patrol which
-gave the alarm and brought them prematurely into action.
-
-The situation now resolved itself into an attempt to storm the position.
-The centre columns sprang out of the river while it was still dark,
-mounted the steep bank and opened fire up the slope on to the camp on
-the skyline above. A stampede of the horses ensued, but a resolute front
-was quickly formed and the attack was checked. An alarm that the enemy
-was threatening the rear of the camp was proved to be unfounded by a
-scratch gathering of details which was hastily mustered; it then wheeled
-round, and picking up reinforcements on the way charged the Boer left at
-the river. The charge was irresistible, and the sun had hardly risen
-when Delarey's whole line fell away.
-
-No limit can be assigned to the British soldier's power of resistance
-when he finds himself in a tight place, but it would probably have gone
-hard with him if Delarey's tactical scheme had been accurately carried
-out, and if the flanking columns, one of which was under the command of
-Kemp, had been further in advance when the centre columns were
-discovered. A panic among the horses which threw the camp into
-confusion, supervening on an unexpected attack while the dawn had
-scarcely shown above the Magaliesberg, was soon followed by a cry that
-the position had been turned. Yet at that critical moment of the dark
-hours, when animal courage is supposed to be at its lowest ebb,
-Kekewich's men never wavered, and although they were only called upon to
-deal with a blundered manoeuvre, yet it exacted from them a toll in
-casualties of nearly one fourth of their strength. Kekewich was wounded,
-and the loss of horses and transport pinned him to the ground until he
-was relieved by a column from the south, which had marched to the sound
-of the battle.
-
-A few days later Kekewich went to Rustenburg, out of which he again
-sallied forth on October 13 into the Zwartruggens in search of Delarey.
-Methuen had already left Mafeking on the same errand. On October 24
-Delarey fell in with one of Methuen's columns on its way to Zeerust. The
-column, which was impeded by wagons slowly progressing along a bad road
-in a defile, was pounced upon unexpectedly and hewn in twain; but if, as
-usual, the scouting was poor the defence was excellent. After a struggle
-which lasted two hours Delarey was driven off, the severed portions of
-the column were re-united, and not one of the seven guns was lost.
-
- * * * * *
-
-By the end of 1901 all the precedents of European warfare had been
-discredited. Tactics and strategy, as practised by the experts, had done
-their best, and were now in bankruptcy. The war had drifted into its
-final mechanical phase: the coercion of brute force by brute force of
-higher potential. It was now mainly a question of putting as many men as
-possible on horseback to ride down the enemy. Field guns not being
-needed, the Royal Artillery was formed into a corps of Mounted Rifles.
-
-Ian Hamilton, who had gone home with Lord Roberts, returned to South
-Africa a year later as Chief of the Staff to Lord Kitchener.
-
-Notes:
-
-[Footnote 55: These posts, however, were small entrenched forts at
-considerable distances apart for the protection of the road to
-Basutoland, rather than blockhouses.]
-
-[Footnote 56: See p. 326.]
-
-[Footnote 57: Lyttelton went to the Cape Colony in February, 1901, to
-direct the operations against De Wet, and was subsequently sent into the
-Orange River Colony. After a few months' leave he returned to South
-Africa in September and took over Hildyard's command in Natal.]
-
-[Footnote 58: He was next heard of at the abortive peace conference held
-at Middelburg, where he met Lord Kitchener at the end of February.]
-
-[Footnote 59: Bruce Hamilton succeeded Lyttelton in the Orange River
-Colony when the latter went home on leave.]
-
-[Footnote 60: The "protected area" was a district round Pretoria and
-Johannesburg which was enclosed by a ring of blockhouses and
-Constabulary posts in August, 1901.]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII
-
-The Mechanical Phase
-
-I. ORANGE RIVER COLONY
-
-
-The year 1901 was drawing to its close, and the three chief Boer leaders
-were still at large. Delarey was lurking in the difficult kloofs of the
-Western Transvaal; Botha was on watch in the high veld of the Eastern
-Transvaal, just outside the "protected area"; and De Wet was awaiting
-his opportunity in the N.E. of the Orange River Colony.
-
-De Wet, who had been lying low for some months, was roused by a certain
-communication from Botha as well as by action taken against him by Lord
-Kitchener. A carefully devised and accurately carried out centripetal
-drive of fourteen columns converging, like meridian lines on the Pole,
-on a certain point ten miles N.E. of Reitz, was abortive. When the
-columns reached it on November 12 they found that the enemy had wriggled
-through the intervals, leaving scarcely a burgher at the place of
-meeting; and while they were blankly staring at each other, De Wet at
-Blijdschap, only twenty miles away, was in conference with Steyn and
-discussing with him a suggestion made by Botha that peace negotiations
-with Lord Kitchener should be opened.
-
-To this an answer similar to that which had been given to Botha in May
-was returned. De Wet and Steyn scouted the idea of reconciliation with
-the enemy. A Council of War was summoned and a concentration of burghers
-ordered. By the end of November De Wet had collected at Blijdschap a
-force of 1,000 men undetected by Elliott's columns, which, having taken
-part in the centripetal failure, were again on the move after a brief
-rest at Harrismith. Elliott, while on the march to Kroonstad, actually
-brushed past De Wet.
-
-A column under Rimington then came upon the scene. He had heard of the
-Council of War from a captured Boer, who probably with intent refrained
-from reporting the concentration. Thus when Rimington expected that the
-easy task before him was the capture of De Wet and Steyn and the units
-of a Council of War, he suddenly found himself opposed by a considerable
-force, a detachment of which passed by him and attacked his train in
-rear. After an encounter in which a gallant young cavalry subaltern,[61]
-who but a few weeks before had joined the Inniskilling Dragoons from the
-Militia, laid down his life for his country, Rimington extricated his
-convoy, but refrained from attacking De Wet's main body, which was
-reported to be strong.
-
-Each side thereupon withdrew, Rimington to Heilbron and De Wet to
-Lindley, from which he found it advisable to retire on coming into
-contact with a column forming part of another Elliott drive, the second
-of the series, suggested by Rimington on his return to Heilbron. De Wet
-then trekked towards Bethlehem, halting at Kaffir Kop, where, nine days
-later, he foiled a third Elliott drive by promptly dispersing his
-burghers, who soon reassembled on a range of hills beyond Bethlehem.
-
-Elliott's units then returned to their respective bases to refit. A
-column under Dartnell at Bethlehem, which had recently been reinforced
-from Rundle's command by a strong detachment under Barrington Campbell,
-was on the point of returning to Harrismith, when it was informed that
-De Wet's re-united commandos were lying in wait at a spruit about twenty
-miles out on the road to Harrismith. Dartnell marched on and maintained
-himself without much difficulty when he arrived at the spruit. Campbell
-came up, and De Wet's commandos withdrew without orders; but no attempt
-was made to convert their retirement into a rout. Dartnell continued his
-march to Harrismith.
-
-After the affair at the spruit De Wet again dispersed his burghers, with
-orders to hold themselves in readiness to muster at short notice. He had
-not long to wait before he saw another opportunity of employing them.
-
-A small force, less than 1,000 strong, was covering, half-way between
-Harrismith and Bethlehem, the construction of the main blockhouse line
-to Kroonstad, under the personal superintendence of Rundle. The force
-was broken up into three detachments, which were too far apart to render
-each other effective support in case of a sudden attack.
-
-The strongest detachment, consisting, however, entirely of Yeomanry, was
-posted on Groen Kop, three miles distant from Rundle's Head Quarters.
-The position is fairly strong, and resembles a wedge lying on the veld,
-with a gentle ascent from the east to a plateau to which the normal
-level rises steeply on three sides. A mile or two to the S.E. it is
-commanded by a higher eminence, from which a party of Boers had already
-been expelled. It was not, however, occupied, and De Wet promptly made
-use of it as an observation post, for which it was admirably adapted, as
-it looks down into the British position on Groen Kop. Moreover, the
-customary movements for protection, such as the relief of outposts, were
-carried out with such extraordinary laxity and neglect that De Wet was
-soon able to acquaint himself with almost every detail of the defence.
-Even the emplacements of a field gun and a pom-pom were disclosed by
-shots casually fired for range-finding purposes.
-
-On Christmas Eve De Wet saw that he had before him a prey that would
-fall into his hands as easily as Sannah's Post or Waterval Drift, and he
-resolved to clutch it at once. His burghers, though dispersed, were
-within call, and a force of over 1,000 was quickly assembled. With
-unerring instinct he selected the steep N.W. corner of the Groen Kop
-wedge as the point of attack, reasoning that the defenders would think
-themselves adequately protected in that direction by the nature of the
-ground. On Christmas morning, soon after midnight, over 1,000 Boers were
-in position under the broad end of the wedge. They were not discovered,
-as no patrols had been sent to watch the ground beneath, and the
-sentries on the crest gave no sign.
-
-The pioneers of the storming party attained the crest at 2 a.m.; and not
-until then was the alarm given to the dormant camp. The position, after
-a struggle which lasted but an hour and a quarter, was captured by De
-Wet, who, ere the midsummer sun had risen, was hurrying away with
-British prisoners of war, guns and wagons, which neglect of the ordinary
-precautions by a body of unprofessional troops had delivered into his
-hands.
-
-At Rundle's Head Quarters, only three miles away, the sound of the
-firing had attracted attention, and a weak body of Mounted Infantry, the
-only mounted force at his disposal, was sent out to see what was the
-matter. It was unable to intervene with effect, and returned to report
-the situation.
-
-The remaining detachment of Rundle's force, consisting of two companies
-of slow-moving Infantry only, was still further from his Head Quarters;
-but thirteen miles away in the direction of Harrismith lay a force of
-Colonial Horse. When a telegram from Rundle to summon them to the rescue
-miscarried, his staff-officer galloped away in the dawn and put them on
-the trail of De Wet; but he had had a long start and escaped into the
-hills near Bethlehem. Here he remained for a few hours, and then went
-towards Reitz.
-
-During a temporary absence for the purpose of conferring with Steyn he
-left his commandos in charge of Michael Prinsloo, who on December 28 was
-engaged in a rearguard action with Elliott, who was conducting yet
-another drive and whom he easily evaded.
-
-On the last day of the year De Wet disbanded his commandos a few miles
-from the spot on which he had assembled them at the end of November. In
-the interval he had evaded all the Elliott drives; he had captured a
-strong British post; he had marched without damage along the sides of a
-triangle on which lay the towns of Reitz, Lindley, and Bethlehem, each
-of which was from time to time in the possession of his enemy; and had
-never been more than thirty miles distant from the central point of the
-triangle. The captured guns were sent away beyond the Wilge River under
-Mears.
-
-No blame can be imputed to Rundle for the unsatisfactory issue of the
-operations. He had little reason to suspect that any considerable force
-of the enemy was in his vicinity. He was engaged in mechanical work, the
-laying out of a blockhouse line. It was the immediate task before him,
-and to the best of his ability he used the untrustworthy and meagre
-instruments at hand. It would, however, have been more in accordance
-with military principles if he had employed his mounted troops in duties
-more suited to their arm, instead of holding with them the infantry
-position of Groen Kop.
-
-Only a few days before, a similar misadventure had attended the
-construction of the Heilbron-Vrede blockhouse line. Rimington and Damant
-had hardly returned to Heilbron after Elliott's third drive when they
-were ordered out beyond Frankfort, to the assistance of the blockhouse
-builders, who were being worried by a commando under Wessels, which De
-Wet had sent out after the Council of War. Near the Wilge River they
-acted on a front too extended; and a portion of Damant's force was
-deceived by the slim tricks of a party of Boers working in cavalry
-formations and many of them dressed in khaki uniforms. In order to keep
-up the illusion they fired at detached parties of their own side, and in
-the end Damant was overwhelmed on a hill, with a loss of nearly 90 per
-cent. of casualties, before the rest of his command came up and drove
-away the assailants. Rimington was too far away either to prevent or to
-retrieve the disaster.
-
-When the "drives" were renewed in the northeastern districts of the
-Orange River Colony at the end of January, 1902, the experience of the
-last few months had shown that they must be conducted on new methods.
-Hitherto the typical "drive" had been a net or nets cast too often
-hastily and at random, the meshes of which were large, irregular, and
-easily cut. The new "drive" was a bar of steel pushed steadily forward
-by simultaneous action throughout its length, and with its ends resting
-on the two completed blockhouse lines running eastward from Heilbron and
-Kroonstad.
-
-[Sidenote: Map, p. 260.]
-
-The Drive, Mark II, was inaugurated on February 3. De Wet, who on
-January 10 had had a hurried interview with Steyn near Reitz, was lying
-at Elandskop between Heilbron and Reitz, and again concentrating his
-scattered burghers and planning an escape with them to the south across
-the Kroonstad-Bethlehem blockhouse line. Mears, on his way to rejoin De
-Wet, ran into a column under Byng, to whom he lost the guns captured by
-De Wet at Groen Kop.
-
-On February 5 a force of 9,000 men under Elliott, Rawlinson, Byng, and
-Rimington formed up on a line stretching from Frankfort to Kaffir Kop.
-The composition of this force showed the altered conditions of warfare.
-It included very few field guns, but no less than 2,200 horse and field
-gunners acting as Mounted Riflemen.
-
-Next day the first impulse was given to the Bar, the blockhouse lines
-north and south, as well as the railway, having been strengthened. The
-whereabouts of De Wet were approximately known.
-
-The first drive of the new pattern lasted three days, the columns
-reaching the railway on February 8. It was so far effective that none of
-the enemy broke back through the advancing line, which was vigorously
-maintained in continuity of pickets by night and of scouts by day; but
-De Wet was not on the roll of nearly 300 Boer casualties. Although
-hampered with live stock from which his followers refused to be parted,
-and in spite of two hovering columns which were acting in support of the
-southern blockhouse line, he not only broke through it owing to its want
-of vigilance, but even succeeded in dragging the cattle across it after
-him. He then retired as usual to the Doornberg. Other parties of Boers
-broke through the northern blockhouse line; and thus the first of the
-new drives ended with poor results. As soon as the trouble was over De
-Wet with his followers again crossed the southern blockhouse line and
-quietly returned to Elandskop, where he dispersed them.
-
-A second drive to sweep those districts which had not been touched by
-the first drive was soon put in hand. It was to be performed in two
-movements by two sets of columns. A force under the Driver-in-Chief
-Elliott starting eastwards from Kroonstad and the Doornberg would
-advance in line, resting its right first on Lindley and then on
-Harrismith, in the vicinity of which it was proposed that it should meet
-the other set of columns, under Rawlinson, Byng, and Rimington. These,
-starting on an extended front which ran from near Johannesburg to within
-a few miles of Heilbron with their centre astride the Vaal and their
-right touching the Natal Railway, would advance S.E. to near Vrede; then
-wheeling to the right march southwards with their left on the
-Drakensberg; finally, in conjunction with Elliott, pushing the fugitives
-on to the eastern section of the Harrismith blockhouse line. The
-operation may be likened to the sweep of two brooms, one acting with a
-semicircular and the other with a forward movement.
-
-It was begun by Elliott, who started on February 13, and after an
-abortive attempt to snap up De Wet reached Wilge River on February 22
-and awaited the arrival of the other columns; his left being near
-Tafelkop.
-
-Rawlinson and Byng meanwhile were advancing. On February 19 they wheeled
-to the right and with their centre near Vrede were now wholly within the
-Orange River Colony. The two forces were now disposed at right angles to
-each other, one of the lines containing the angle being the Wilge River,
-which Elliott was unable to hold in sufficient strength as his front was
-widely extended. In the vicinity of Harrismith the southern blockhouse
-line was reinforced by Brook, who succeeded Rundle in the command of the
-district.
-
-The northern blockhouse line was unable to stem the tide of fugitives
-flying before Rawlinson and Byng, whose columns were now strung out on a
-much wider front than that on which they had begun their march. The
-advance of Elliott had also driven various Boer details into the right
-angle, in which were now conglomerated not only combatants, but women,
-children, stock, and transport. Included among the fugitives from
-Elliott were De Wet and Steyn, who had again come together. With Elliott
-at their heels, their only chance of escape was to break through the
-attenuated line of Rawlinson's columns. De Wet's good fortune did not
-fail him, and with Steyn and a few hundred burghers he severed it at
-Langverwacht at midnight on February 23 and was again at large. The
-remnant of the commandos was left behind within the pale with their
-women, children, cattle, and stuff; and these, augmented by the
-Harrismith commando, were the prisoners of Elliott and Rawlinson when
-the drive, in which 30,000 British troops were directly or indirectly
-engaged, completed its task.
-
-Yet another drive, the third of the new series, ensued. It had, of
-course, for its objective the capture of De Wet, as well as the "tidying
-up" of the district, in which certain commandos, which had not been
-netted in former drives, still lurked. It was composed, like the second
-drive, of two sets of converging columns and traversed the terrain of
-the first drive.
-
-It happened that the point of convergence lay near the spot, not far
-from Reitz, where De Wet and Steyn were in hiding. The propinquity of
-the columns drove them out of their retreat, and taking a circuitous
-route past Heilbron and thence along the left bank of the Vaal they
-crossed the river near Commando Drift, and on March 17 joined Delarey
-near Wolmaranstad in the Transvaal. Little was done after the junction
-of the two sets of columns, and they returned to the railway on March
-11, with a stray commando in front of them, which easily rushed the
-blockhouse line near Heilbron. A portion of the troops was hastily
-withdrawn to deal with the crisis in the Transvaal.
-
-Hardly had the dust raised by the trampling of the third drive settled
-down upon the veld when the fourth drive was in progress, and 14,000 men
-on a front which stretched from one blockhouse line to the other were
-plodding eastward to the Drakensberg. It was held up for a time by two
-rivers in spate, the Wilge and the Liebenberg's, and when released it
-trudged on to the mountain range, where on April 5 its components were
-dissolved, having disposed of less than 100 of the enemy.
-
-Yet one more drive, the fifth and last of the series, was called for.
-Early in May Bruce Hamilton swooped down from the Eastern Transvaal upon
-the harassed land, and in co-operation with Elliott worried it for the
-space of ten days. Many small parties of Boers broke through--the last
-wriggle in the Orange River Colony.
-
-
-II. EASTERN TRANSVAAL
-
-
-[Sidenote: Map p. 292]
-
-The episode of Bakenlaagte called for vigorous measures to be taken
-against Botha and the men of the high veld in the Eastern Transvaal; and
-in November, 1901, a second and revised edition of French's programme at
-the beginning of the year was issued.
-
-The new campaign was placed in charge of Bruce Hamilton, and the general
-idea, at least in its earlier movement, was the same as that furnished
-to French, namely the outward sweep of columns having for its object the
-rounding-up, pursuit towards the Swaziland border, and capture of the
-various _guerilla_ commandos, which with the Transvaal Government in
-their midst haunted the Ermelo and Bethal districts.
-
-Bruce Hamilton, with 15,000 men in twelve columns, either under his
-immediate command or co-operating with him, started on November 16, his
-immediate objective being the same as French's ten months before,
-namely, Botha on the high veld. He advanced the Constabulary posts
-fifteen miles, so that the line now ran between Brugspruit and Waterval;
-and proceeded to carry out a movement on Ermelo, in which he was
-supported on either flank by columns acting from the Natal and Delagoa
-Bay Railways. Botha, however, had had warning of his approach, and
-having conducted the Transvaal Government out of the area of immediate
-danger and dispatched it to its old seat at Paardeplatz, returned to
-deal with Bruce Hamilton, who, on reaching Ermelo on December 3, found,
-as French had found in February, that he had nothing to strike at. The
-Transvaal Government had vanished, and Botha and his chief lieutenant,
-P. Viljoen, instead of being on the run towards Swaziland, had broken
-back and were now behind him.
-
-In order to deal with them, a pause in the operations became necessary.
-A series of night raids was instituted. In the first of these Botha, who
-was lying twenty miles west of Ermelo, was nearly taken. He succeeded in
-escaping towards the S.E., but was headed by a column under Pulteney
-operating from Wakkerstroom and was forced towards the upper waters of
-the Vaal. The raid upon P. Viljoen in the Bethal district was so far
-successful that in it 200 of his burghers were made prisoners, and one
-of the guns taken at Bakenlaagte was recovered: while he himself not
-only escaped, but succeeded in putting 300 of his followers under J.
-Prinsloo across the recently established Brugspruit-Waterval line of
-Constabulary posts and in planting them in the "protected area" as seeds
-of future mischief.
-
-Bruce Hamilton now resumed the general operation eastwards with fair
-success. Botha at Beginderlyn was faced by the columns supporting the
-right flank of the advance, and had the Ermelo-Standerton blockhouse
-line behind him. One of his lieutenants named Britz went out and
-ambushed a night raid sent out from the line on December 19 at Holland,
-making nearly 100 prisoners; and a few days later he squeezed through an
-enveloping movement in which he lost somewhat heavily, but he eventually
-succeeded in rejoining Botha.
-
-It was now necessary to drive on to Bruce Hamilton a compact little
-force of over 800 burghers, which on New Year's Day, 1902, Botha had
-under his command; and this task devolved upon Plumer and the other
-column commanders operating from the S.E. corner of the Transvaal. Botha
-was engaged at Bankkop, between Ermelo and Amsterdam, by a strong
-scouting party acting in advance of the main columns, which he was on
-the point of overwhelming when it was reinforced. He escaped without
-difficulty, taking with him eighty prisoners. The plan of throwing him
-into Bruce Hamilton's arms had failed.
-
-Bruce Hamilton returned to Ermelo, and late in January again swept the
-country, with scanty results. His operations had been successful to the
-extent that they finally denied the high veld to Botha, who in February
-withdrew to the Vryheid district, and secreted himself among the
-mountains. Bruce Hamilton was sent after him and hunted him for a month.
-His next appearance was neither as a prisoner of war nor as an opponent
-in battle, but as the representative of his country on the way to attend
-the Peace Conference which assembled at Pretoria on April 12.
-
-P. Viljoen, as soon as Bruce Hamilton was out of the way, discussed the
-situation with his followers. It was decided that he should take action
-in what was apparently the direction of greatest risk. With 400 men he
-burst through the line of Constabulary posts, and on January 24 joined
-J. Prinsloo in the Wilge River Valley, within the so-called "protected
-area." Prinsloo, even before Viljoen's arrival, had maintained himself
-without difficulty; and for some weeks after February 24, when an
-unsuccessful effort was made at Klippan to crush them, they were
-practically left to roam as they willed, no British troops being
-available to deal with them effectively.
-
-In the N.E. Transvaal B. Viljoen and Muller had been quiescent
-throughout the summer. The former lay usually at Pilgrim's Rest; the
-latter haunted the hilly country west and S.W. of Lydenburg; neither
-leader being able to get much work out of passive and spiritless
-followers. When Schalk Burger, the Acting President of the Transvaal,
-and the rest of the Government were driven across the Delagoa Bay
-Railway by Bruce Hamilton in December, Park, who was in command of the
-solitary British force north of the line, aided by a column from
-Belfast, made an unsuccessful attempt to capture the wandering
-Government.
-
-B. Viljoen was anxious for its safety and persuaded it to take refuge
-with him at Pilgrim's Rest. It started on the journey with him; but
-fortunately its courage failed it, and Viljoen was left to return alone
-and to be taken prisoner near Lydenburg on January 25. Troops were
-slipped at it but were evaded; and it withdrew to the west across the
-Olifant's River. It maintained itself until March 12, when by leave of
-Lord Kitchener it passed through Balmoral into conference with Steyn and
-the remnants of the Orange Free State Government at Kroonstad and thence
-to Klerksdorp.
-
-In the "protected area" P. Viljoen had perforce to be left unmolested
-until the end of March, when the conclusion of the third drive in the
-Orange River Colony set some troops free for work elsewhere. His
-commandos, about 800 strong, were discovered in laager twenty miles east
-of Springs by a cavalry column under Lawley during a night raid on April
-1. After a temporary panic they not only rallied, but drove away the
-attacking force and pursued it until restrained by the intervention of
-another portion of Lawley's command which had remained in camp. The
-incident called for strenuous measures. During the last three weeks of
-April the whole district was driven by Bruce Hamilton; at first from
-north to south starting from the vicinity of Carolina, then by a counter
-march from south to north through the "protected area," the latter
-movement being repeated in the reverse direction. P. Viljoen was not
-found in the wilderness, while his colleague Alberts escaped with 500
-burghers into the Orange River Colony, whither he was followed by Bruce
-Hamilton.
-
-
-III. WESTERN TRANSVAAL
-
-[Sidenote: Map. p. 292.]
-
-Meanwhile in the Western Transvaal Delarey had remained undisturbed save
-by the building of blockhouse lines. The situation elsewhere had not
-suffered active measures to be taken in the district controlled by him,
-which extended from the corner between the Vaal and the Western Railway
-almost to the Magaliesberg, and for which on the British side Methuen
-and Kekewich were the commanders chiefly responsible. During the earlier
-summer months some small incidents occurred which were usually
-favourable to the British cause.
-
-In February, however, the tide of fortune turned. Delarey came down from
-the north, apparently to watch his chance of intervening on behalf of De
-Wet in the Orange River Colony, and heard from Liebenberg that a convoy
-was on its way from Wolmaranstad to Klerksdorp. On February 25 the
-convoy, which was escorted by 700 men and two guns, was near Yzer Spruit
-within a day's march of its destination, when it was ambushed in the
-dawn and captured by Delarey, Kemp, and Liebenberg, who thus easily
-obtained what they were most in need of, namely transport animals, guns,
-and ammunition to the amount of half a million rounds.[62] The capture
-was effected within hearing not only of Klerksdorp, but also of a small
-column on the march from Klerksdorp to Hartebeestfontein. Kekewich, who
-was near Klerksdorp, then left for Wolmaranstad and sent a column under
-Grenfell in pursuit of Delarey; but the column failed to find Delarey.
-
-Methuen at Vryburg promptly set himself to work, with such tools as he
-could lay his hands on, to avenge the disaster. He put together a column
-of which about one-third was regular infantry with four field guns, and
-the remainder samples of almost every irregular corps that had been
-raised during the previous twelve months; and he set out at the head of
-it to intercept Delarey, who was reported to be making for the Marico
-River. He ordered Kekewich to co-operate with him from Klerksdorp.
-
-Grenfell's column was accordingly ordered to meet Methuen at
-Roirantjesfontein seventeen miles south of Lichtenburg. He arrived there
-on March 7; Methuen, who was delayed by the difficulty of finding water,
-having reached Tweebosch on the previous day.
-
-It was now incumbent on Delarey, who was marching up from the south with
-1,100 burghers, to attack either Methuen or Grenfell before they could
-join hands. He chose the former's heterogeneous host as the easier prey,
-and fell first upon his rearguard soon after he left Tweebosch at dawn
-on March 7, and then upon his right flank. The mounted troops, which
-were promptly disposed as a screen, failed ignominiously, the greater
-part of them leaving the field in disorder. The regular infantry stood
-fast with the guns, but were soon overwhelmed. Grenfell was unable to
-intervene, but he strengthened Lichtenburg in case Delarey should come
-that way. Delarey, however, went to the south to meet De Wet and Steyn,
-whom he cheered with the news of the capture of four British field guns
-and of 600 prisoners of war, among whom was Methuen, severely wounded.
-Steyn remained with Delarey; De Wet returned to the Orange River Colony.
-
-Yzer Spruit and Tweebosch introduced the Drive into the Western
-Transvaal. Troops from all quarters reinforced Kekewich at Klerksdorp,
-and soon a force 14,000 strong was assembled there and elsewhere. The
-difficulty of the task before it was enhanced by the absence of a
-network of blockhouse lines, which had only been laid out along the
-Schoon Spruit and thence to Lichtenburg and Mafeking, and also along the
-Vaal.
-
-The troops had to begin operations from a faulty strategical base, as
-they were aligned along or near the Schoon Spruit blockhouse line, and
-between the Boers and that line. To drive Delarey on to it, they must
-rapidly place themselves west of him; and this could be done only by a
-night march of mounted men darting through his commandos and then
-pressing him on to the Schoon Spruit in the opposite direction.
-
-The operation, which was of spirited and ingenious conception, was
-carried out on March 23. In proportion to the effort--the force engaged
-in it numbered 11,000 mounted men--the results were paltry. A few score
-prisoners and three guns were taken. As in the earlier drives in the
-Orange River Colony, the meshes of the net were spacious and fragile.
-Delarey, Kemp, and Steyn escaped; and even Liebenberg, when about to
-suffer the _peine forte et dure_ upon the Schoon Spruit blockhouse line,
-found a discontinuity through which he wriggled at midnight. Delarey
-mustered his burghers to the number of over 2,000 on the Hart's River.
-
-To deal with the embarrassing situation the British columns were again
-marched to the west, with instructions to form a line of three
-entrenched camps distant one or two days' march from the Schoon Spruit.
-
-The centre column under the command of W. Kitchener having reached its
-destination, made a reconnaissance in force still further to the west on
-March 31. Cookson, who was in charge of the expedition, at the end of a
-march of thirty-five miles, during which he had pushed back small
-parties of the enemy, halted at Boschbult, where two farms lay on the
-banks of the Brak River.
-
-Cookson soon found himself in presence of 2,500 Boers with four field
-guns, his own strength being 1,800 with the same number of guns. The
-position was a bad one as the ground rose on each side of the river; the
-bush offered cover to the attack, and the only cover available to the
-defence was the almost dry bed of the river. He threw out screens and
-proceeded to entrench and form a laager; while the screens faced in the
-open the fire of the enemy under cover in the bush on the high ground.
-Liebenberg made one attempt from the south to charge the main position,
-but was driven back by the southern screen which had been brought into
-the river bank; and after a second unsuccessful attempt, this time from
-the east, withdrew to the high ground on the north.
-
-When the work at the laager at the farms, which was impeded by artillery
-fire from the S.W., was sufficiently advanced, the northern screen was
-withdrawn. Some confusion ensued, as the Boers in the bush immediately
-fell upon it, but their attempt to get at the main position on the
-river, though supported by artillery, failed. It never attained the
-crisis of an assault; and late in the afternoon it was called off by
-Delarey, who arrived from his Head Quarters near Hart's River.
-
-Meanwhile the sound of the action had reached the ears of W. Kitchener,
-who twenty miles away was laying out his entrenched camp. He hurried to
-the rescue, but the cessation of the firing and the reports of
-stragglers led him to the conclusion that Cookson had been annihilated.
-He reported to that effect to his brother, Lord Kitchener, and returned
-to camp. Next day he again went out, and found to his satisfaction that
-Cookson was still a military asset.
-
-Kekewich, meanwhile, was searching for Delarey elsewhere. He had
-bespoken at Head Quarters W. Kitchener's co-operation in the quest and
-was relying on it; but a column commander on trek _in partibus Boerum_
-is hard to find, and no instructions reached Kitchener.
-
-The need of a General Manager on the spot to co-ordinate the activities
-of the syndicate of column commanders who had so signally failed to
-bring Delarey to book was now manifest; and Ian Hamilton, who had
-greatly distinguished himself in two of the early combats of the war,
-was now chosen to bring it to an end. On April 8 he joined Kekewich at
-Middelbult.
-
-Ian Hamilton quickly formulated a plan of using the three columns,
-11,000 strong, of Kekewich, W. Kitchener and Rawlinson, who had lately
-been in pursuit of De Wet in the Orange River Colony, as a scythe to
-sweep over the country with a swing at first grazing Hart's River, then
-the Vaal, and finally coming to rest at Klerksdorp. Only four days were
-allotted to the movement, which began on April 10 and called for a daily
-march of more than forty miles. Delarey had been summoned to take part
-in the negotiations for peace, and Kemp was in charge of the Boer
-commandos, which numbered about 2,600 burghers.
-
-It happened that Kekewich, whose force was detailed as the right of the
-advance, bore too much to the left on the first day's march, and found
-himself in rear of Rawlinson. Kemp was observing the movement, and
-assumed that he had located the British right, whereas Kekewich had
-partly regained his position by moving towards Roodeval, where Kemp was
-hovering for a chance to fall on the rear or the flank of Ian Hamilton's
-columns.
-
-Kekewich reached Roodeval early on April 11, and at once pressed forward
-to Hart's River. His advanced guard almost immediately discovered a
-large body of mounted men on the left front, who, until they opened
-fire, were by some strange misconception taken to be a portion of
-Rawlinson's column. They were in fact more than a thousand Boers under
-Potgieter, who as soon as he had disposed of the advanced guard, made
-for the main body, which was not yet formed up, and by which Potgieter's
-men were again mistaken for a portion of Rawlinson's column. The error
-was discovered, but not too late. The Boer attack, which for sheer
-reckless bravery could hardly be surpassed, and which has been compared
-to the Dervish charge at Omdurman, was made in the open against a
-considerable force, was repelled; and Potgieter fell dead at the head of
-his commandos. Rawlinson hurried up to the sound of the firing and drove
-away the enemy, who retired, but not in disorder, to the south. A
-remnant, however, broke back and even sniped the main body. In less than
-three hours after the first shot had been fired by Potgieter, Kekewich
-and Rawlinson started in pursuit. Kemp, however, saved himself, and
-escaped with what was, under the circumstances, the inconsiderable loss
-of the two field guns which Delarey had taken from Methuen at Tweebosch.
-
-The two Hamiltons rang down the curtain of the War Tragedy. While Bruce
-Hamilton was driving for the last time through the Orange River Colony,
-Ian Hamilton with Kekewich, W. Kitchener, and Rawlinson, assisted by a
-column from the Vaal under Rochfort, began a westward drive in the
-Transvaal, with 17,000 men. Kemp followed the usual practice of Boer
-commandants when hard pressed by the enemy, and scattered his commandos;
-thus when Ian Hamilton's 17,000 crossed the border and reached the
-Western Railway on May 11, they found less than 400 Boers, among whom
-Kemp was not, impaled upon the barrier of blockhouses and armoured
-trains.
-
-
-IV. CAPE COLONY
-
-
-During the early part of the summer of 1901-2 the Cape Colony was,
-comparatively speaking, quiet, though dormantly rebellious. Little
-positive progress was made, either by French or by the inflammatory
-elements opposed to him, of which the leader was J.C. Smuts. These were
-for the most part acting in a spacious and inaccessible area, which
-included the districts of Kenhart, Carnarvon, Sutherland, Fraserburg,
-and Calvinia. A blockhouse line, which when completed would stretch from
-Victoria West to Lambert's Bay, was in course of construction through
-these districts.
-
-In December Kritzinger headed a raid from the Orange River Colony; but
-although he was soon captured near Hanover, the greater portion of his
-followers escaped to the south and infested the districts of Cradock and
-Somerset East. Stephenson was put in immediate charge of the operations
-against Smuts, who had established himself on the Zak River between
-Kenhart and Calvinia, and who in January moved eastward. It was a false
-move, because it brought him into the Fraserburg district, and made him
-more accessible to the columns opposed to him. It was made apparently
-with the intention of breaking across the railway in the vicinity of
-Beaufort West.
-
-The operations against Smuts, the flank bases of which, Beaufort West
-and Lambert's Bay, were over 300 miles apart, attained only negative
-success. A large convoy drawn by donkeys fell into the hands of the
-rebels between Beaufort West and Fraserburg, and a smaller convoy in the
-Sutherland district.
-
-French now took in hand the Drive, the last weapon left in the British
-Armoury, which his colleagues in the Transvaal and the Orange River
-Colony had been wielding for some months. It was brandished northwards
-from Beaufort West on February 17; but it only dispersed without
-destroying the rebels, most of whom had retired to the north and N.W.
-Not a few scraped round the right flank of the drive, crossed the
-railway, and plunged into the Graaff Reinet and Aberdeen districts,
-where they were joined by a band under Fouché, which had been lurking
-and conniving far away to the N.E. between Dortrecht and Aliwal North.
-
-Smuts withdrew to the N.W. and laid siege to Ookiep, which was relieved
-on May 3 by an expedition sent from Capetown through Port Nolloth; Smuts
-having in the meantime retired in order to attend the Peace Conference.
-He had done his best to carry out the instructions given to him by the
-Boer Council of War held in June, 1901, to foment a general insurrection
-in the Cape Colony, but he had failed.
-
-Notes:
-
-[Footnote 61: L.M.O. _Requiescat in pace_.]
-
-[Footnote 62: It is not easy to understand why an empty convoy on the
-march, not from, but to a base of supplies, should have taken over 700
-rounds per man.]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII
-
-The End
-
-
-Nearly two years had passed by since the negotiations for peace between
-Lord Roberts and L. Botha and between Sir Redvers Buller and C. Botha
-had fallen through shortly before the battle of Diamond Hill. In
-February, 1901, another conference for peace was held at Middelburg in
-the Transvaal between Lord Kitchener and L. Botha, who after parleying
-for a fortnight, abruptly broke off the negotiations. If, as seems
-probable, he was led to adopt that course by the news of the escape of
-De Wet from the Cape Colony, a historical parallel may be found in the
-sudden dissolution of the Congress of Vienna, when the courier brought
-the news of Napoleon's escape from Elba.
-
-In January, 1902, an offer made by the Government of the Netherlands to
-mediate between the combatants was declined by the British Government.
-The incident of the offer was, however, communicated to the Transvaal
-Government, which was then lying north of Balmoral, and which asked for
-and received permission to discuss proposals for peace with the Free
-State Government at Kroonstad. Schalk Burger, the Acting President of
-the Transvaal, arrived at Kroonstad on March 22. Steyn, who was with
-Delarey, was sent for; De Wet was searched for, and for the first time
-found; and the allied Governments, the chief members of which were, on
-the one side, Schalk Burger and Delarey, and on the other De Wet and
-Steyn, met in conference on April 9 at Klerksdorp, which was, at Steyn's
-suggestion, chosen as a more convenient place of meeting than Kroonstad.
-
-It was soon decided to open negotiations with Lord Kitchener, at whose
-invitation the Governments proceeded to Pretoria, where they met him and
-Lord Milner. The Boer proposals, which postulated the continued
-independent existence of the two shattered Republics, were rejected; it
-seemed that the war must be fought to a still bitterer end. Finally, it
-was agreed that the negotiations should be adjourned for a month, in
-order to allow the feelings of the burghers at large to be ascertained,
-and reported at a Convention to be held at Vereeniging on May 15. In the
-meantime the military operations were to be continued, subject to the
-permission to be given to the Boer leaders to go freely among and
-consult their people.
-
-When the Convention assembled it was found that while the Transvaal was
-generally in favour of submission, the Orange River Colony was still
-implacable. A compromise was effected between them, and the heads of a
-treaty, of which the chief clause ensured a qualified independence to
-the late Republics, under the guise of British Protectorates, were drawn
-up by J.C. Smuts, who had come from Ookiep to resume his former
-profession and to act as legal adviser to his colleagues. It was
-submitted to Lord Kitchener at Pretoria, who, as the delegates might
-have foreseen, refused to consider it and handed to their counsel Smuts
-a document, in which the Boer leaders were required, on their own behalf
-as well as on their followers' behalf, to acknowledge themselves as
-British subjects.
-
-The negotiations at Pretoria were conducted by a deputation from the
-Vereeniging Convention: Delarey, Botha, Smuts, De Wet, and Hertzog.
-These did their best, and even obtained some verbal changes of
-phraseology which made Lord Kitchener's terms less unpalatable. The
-question of British nationality was waived for the moment to allow of
-the other stipulations of the document being discussed; and the general
-subject was referred to a minor convention consisting of Lord Milner and
-his legal adviser on one side, and of Smuts and Hertzog on the other.
-
-A proposal for a final settlement was drawn up, which, with certain
-alterations insisted on by the Colonial Office, was presented by Lord
-Kitchener as his ultimatum, to be accepted within three days by the
-Vereeniging Convention. Botha and his colleagues returned to Vereeniging
-and laid it before the delegates. Steyn refused to entertain it and
-immediately resigned his titular office of President of the Orange Free
-State; De Wet, implacable almost to the last, protested against its
-terms. The hopelessness of the Boer cause in South Africa was, however,
-manifest. Even De Wet yielded, and voted with the majority in favour of
-accepting the British terms of peace.
-
-On May 31, 1902, the Treaty of Vereeniging brought to an end the War of
-960 days.
-
-
-FINIS
-
-
-
-
-COMMANDERS OF DIVISIONS AND BRIGADES,
-OCTOBER 1899-JUNE 1901
-
-CAVALRY.
-
-DIVISION--French.
-
-BRIGADES.
-
-1 Babington, Porter, Gordon 1 (Natal) Burn-Murdoch
-2 Broadwood 2 (Natal) Brocklehurst
-3 Gordon, Little 3 (Mounted Brigade, Natal)
-4 Dickson Dundonald
-
-MOUNTED INFANTRY BRIGADES----Alderson, Le Gallais, Martyr,
-Ridley, Hutton
-
-INFANTRY.
-
-DIVISIONS.
-
-I Methuen 5 (Irish) Hart
-II Clery, Lyttelton, Clery 6 (Fusilier) Barton
-III Gatacre, Chermside 7 I. Hamilton, W. Kitchener
-IV White (troops in Ladysmith), 8 Howard
- Lyttelton 9 Featherstonehaugh, Pole-
-V Warren, Hildyard Carew, C. Douglas
-VI Kelly-Kenny 10 Talbot Coke
-VII Tucker 11 (Lancashire) Woodgate,
-VIII Rundle Wynne, W. Kitchener,
-IX Colvile Wynne
-X Hunter 12 Clements
-XI Pole-Carew 13 C. Knox
-Colonial: Brabant 14 Chermside, Maxwell
- 15 Wavell
-BRIGADES. 16 B. Campbell
- 17 Boyes
-1 (Guards) Cplvile, Pole- 18 Stephenson
- Carew, Inigo Jones 19 Smith Dorrien
-2 Hildyard, E. Hamilton 20 Paget
-3 (Highland) Wauchope, 21 B. Hamilton
- MacDonald 22 Allen
-4 Lyttelton, Norcott, Cooper 23 W. Knox
-
-
-
-
-INDEX OF PERSONS AND PLACES
-
-(It has not been thought necessary to include in the Index names of
-towns or of physical features which constantly occur in, or are not
-material to the narrative; and incidental or unimportant references and
-allusions have also been generally omitted.)
-
-
-Abon's Dam, 56, 165
-Abraham's Kraal, 187-190
-Acton Holmes, 99, 100
-Airlie, Lieutenant-Colonel the Earl of, 244
-Alberts, 357
-Alderson, Brigadier-General E.A.H., 202, 203
-America Siding, 233
-Amersfort, 272
-Amphlett, Major C.G., 198-200
-
-Babington, Major-General J.M., 321-324
-Baden-Powell, Major-General R.S.S., 4, 34, 213-222, 224, 273-277, 280-282,
- 320
-Bakenlaagte, 341
-Balmoral, 283, 284, 291
-Bankkop, 355
-Barberton, 289
-Barton, Major-General G. 53, 69, 73, 76, 132-135, 294
-Bastion Hill, 100, 101
-Battles, Sieges and Engagements, chief--
- Alleman's Nek, 269, 270
- Belmont, 55
- Bergendal, 286-288
- Botha's Pass, 268
- Caesar's Camp, 141, 143, 145-149
- Colenso, 69-78
- Dewetsdorp, 297, 298
- Diamond Hill, 241-245
- Doornkop (Transvaal), 237
- Driefontein, 189-191
- Elandslaagte, 42-44
- Graspan, 56
- Kimberley, 87-92
- Ladysmith, 140-155
- Lindley, 247-252
- Lombard's Kop, 49-50
- Mafeking, 212-221
- Magersfontein, 58-63
- Modder River, 56-57
- Paardeberg, 172-183
- Pieter's Hill, 133-135
- Poplar Grove, 185-188
- Rhenoster Kop, 316
- Rietfontein, 45
- Sannah's Post, 198-206
- Six Mile Spruit, 239
- Spion Kop, 102-115
- Stormberg, 65-69
- Talana, 39-41
- Vaalkrantz, 116-120
- Wepener, 209, 210
- Zand River, 233
-Beatson, Brigadier-General S.B., 329
-Belfast, 272, 285, 286, 325
-Bell's Kopje and Spruit, 144
-Benson, Colonel G.E., 322, 329, 337, 340-342
-Bethlehem, 249, 252, 256-258
-Bethune, Colonel E.C., 265, 309
-Beyers, General C., 315, 317-322, 325, 326, 328, 337
-Biddulphsberg, 252
-Blijdschap, 345, 346
-Bloemfontein, surrender of, 191
-Blood, Lieutenant--General Sir B., 329, 330
-Blood River Poort, 338
-Boekenhoutskloof Ridge, 241, 242
-Boesman's Kop, 199-204
-Boschbult, 360
-Boschrand (Driefontein), 189
-Boschrand (Kroonstad), 234
-Bosjespan, 164
-Botha, General C., 254, 264, 266, 270, 272, 339, 365
-Botha, General L., 52-54, 70, 75, 78, 100, 112, 117-119,
- 126, 128, 132, 193, 196, 232-242, 245-247, 254,
- 264, 283-291, 314, 315, 322, 325-327, 337-341,
- 345, 354, 355, 365-367
-Botha, P., 232
-Bothaville, 295, 296, 298
-Brabant, Brigadier--General Sir E.Y., 194, 206, 207, 209, 210, 230, 247,
- 252, 256
-Brakfontein (Natal), 97, 106, 116-119
-Brakfontein (Transvaal), 277, 278
-Brak River (Cape Colony), 305-307
-Brak River (Transvaal), 360
-Brand, 307, 308, 335
-Brandfort, 197, 198, 232, 233
-Brandwater Basin, 257-261, 271, 278, 280, 295, 331
-Britz, 355
-Broadwood, Brigadier-General R.G., 198-205, 244, 245, 259, 278, 316,
- 317, 319, 321, 333
-Brocklehurst, Major-General J.F., 269-271
-Brook, Major-General E.S., 352
-Buller, General Sir Redvers, 51, 53-55, 69-79, 86, 89,
- 90, 96-103, 107, 112-127, 131-133, 136, 140, 152-155,
- 231, 240, 254, 256, 262-272, 284-291, 365
-Bulwana, 122, 123, 125, 135, 136, 142, 145, 147, 148
-Burger, Schalk, Acting President of the Transvaal, 100, 103, 105, 112, 117,
- 142, 356, 365
-Burn-Murdoch, Brigadier-General J.F., 135, 136
-Byng, Colonel the Hon. J.H.G., 350-352
-
-Campbell, Colonel W.P., 326
-Campbell, Major-General B., 346, 347
-Carleton, Lieutenant-Colonel F.R.C., 47-49
-Carolina, 272
-Carrington, Lieutenant-General Sir F., 274, 277, 278, 290, 314
-Chermside, Lieutenant-General Sir H., 230, 232
-Chieveley, 53, 76, 97, 121
-Chrissie, Lake, 326
-Christiana, 226, 235
-Cingolo, 123, 124
-Clements, Major-General R.A.P., 81, 194, 195, 206, 227, 252, 256, 257,
- 316-321, 324, 339, 340
-Clery, Lieutenant-General Sir C.F., 72, 77, 101, 103, 107, 113, 124, 143,
- 264, 267, 268, 270, 315
-Clump Hill, 132
-Coke, Major-General J. Talbot, 102, 103, 106-111, 113, 114, 127, 128, 269
-Colenso Kopjes, 127-129
-Colesberg, 64, 80, 81, 145, 157, 309
-Colvile, Lieutenant-General Sir H.E., 62, 63, 166, 167, 170, 171, 175, 177,
- 178, 180, 198, 202-206, 216, 232, 233, 247-253, 255, 256
-Conical Hill, 102, 105
-Cookson, Colonel G.A., 360, 361
-Council of War, _see_ Krijgsraad
-Crabbe, Lieutenant-Colonel Eyre, 309
-Crofton, Colonel M., 106, 108, 109, 113
-Cronje, General A.P., 46, 140, 167
-Cronje, General A.P.J., 163
-Cronje, General P., 56-58, 61, 63, 81, 126, 131, 133, 141, 145, 158-164,
- 166-175, 179, 181-185, 192, 193, 213-217, 219, 220, 223, 281
-Cunningham, Brigadier-General G.G., 321, 322, 324
-Cyferfontein, 321
-
-Dalgety, Colonel E.H., 209
-Damant, Lieutenant-Colonel J.H., 349, 350
-Damvallei, 189
-Dartnell, Brigadier-General Sir J., 327, 346, 347
-De Beer, 172, 179, 182
-Delarey, General, 55-58, 61, 81, 189, 190, 194, 221, 232, 239, 241, 242,
- 245, 274, 275, 282, 283, 315-326, 330, 332, 337, 342-345, 353, 357-362,
- 365, 366
-De Lisle, Colonel H. de B., 245
-De Wet, General C., 47, 151, 152, 162, 163, 167, 168, 170, 171, 173,
- 178-182, 185-191, 198, 200-204, 207-211, 232, 241, 247, 252-256, 258,
- 259, 274, 278-282, 294-310, 322, 330, 332, 337, 345-353, 358, 359,
- 365-367
-De Wet, General P., 188, 198, 199, 202-204, 230, 254
-Dickson, Major-General J.B., 242
-Dixon, Brigadier-General H.G., 324, 330, 342
-Donkerhoek Range, 241, 245
-Donkerpoort, 245
-Doornberg, 297, 302, 303, 305, 310, 351
-Doornkop Natal, 97, 119
-Doornkop Spruit, 74
-Douglas, Lieutenant-Colonel W., 329
-Douglas, Major-General C.W., 316
-Drifts--
- Bosman's, 57
- Botha's, 309
- Brandvallei, 169
- Bridle, 74
- Brown's, 56, 61, 161, 164
- Commando, 353
- Commissie, 329
- De Kiel's, 162, 163, 166
- East, 74
- Jager's, 39
- Klip, 163, 164, 166, 168, 169, 171, 174, 192
- Klip Kraal, 163, 164, 169, 171
- Koedoesberg, 159, 167
- Koodoos, 171, 173, 179
- Makow's, 307
- Munger's, 117, 118
- Oertel's, 190
- Old Viljoen's, 235
- Paardeberg, 169-171, 173, 176, 178
- Potgieter's, 54, 55, 96, 97, 99, 103, 106, 108, 116, 121, 146, 151
- Rondeval, 163
- Schoeman's, 278, 279, 294
- Trickhardt's, 97, 99-102
- Vanderberg's, 176
- Vendutie, 169, 171-173, 178, 180, 184, 192
- Viljoen's, 236
- Waterval (near Koffyfontein), 91, 132, 162, 166, 167, 171, 179
- Waterval (near Sannah's Post), 204, 205
- Wegdraai, 166, 167
- West, 74
- Wonderwater, 235
- Zand, 304, 305, 308, 309
-Du Cane, Lieutenant-Colonel H.J., 191
-Dullstroom, 329
-Dundee, 37, 39
-Dundonald, Major-General the Earl of, 76, 99-101, 109, 123-125, 135, 153,
- 154, 265, 266, 268, 269, 271
-Du Plooy, 64
-Dwarsvlei, 276
-
-Elandsfontein, 237
-Elandskop, 350, 351
-Elliott, Major-General E. Locke, 331-334, 337, 346, 349-353
-Eloff, 219, 220
-Emmett, 328, 338, 339
-Ermelo, 272, 326, 327, 330, 332, 354
-Erasmus, 40-42
-Estcourt, 52, 53, 79
-
-Faber's Put, 228
-Fairview, 100, 102
-Ferreira, 165, 172, 173
-Florida, 237
-Forestier-Walker, Lieutenant-General Sir F., 63
-Fort Itala, 339
-Fort Prospect, 339
-Fort Wyllie, 73, 76, 77
-Fouché, 364
-Fourie, 100, 307, 308
-Frankfort, 234
-Fredrikstad, 294, 298
-French, Lieutenant-General Sir J.D., 48-50, 52, 64, 65, 80, 91, 141,
- 157-159, 162-168, 171, 172, 182, 183, 186, 187, 189-192, 195, 197,
- 198, 205, 230, 232-239, 242, 245, 272, 277, 283-291, 313, 315, 320,
- 321, 326-328, 334, 364
-Frere, 53, 76, 96
-Froeneman, 304
-Fuzzy Hill, 132
-
-Gansvlei Spruit, 269
-Gatacre, Lieutenant-General Sir W., 52, 55, 64-68, 80, 81, 157, 194, 195,
- 206-208, 216, 230, 251, 257, 262
-Gatsrand, 279, 322, 333, 336
-Glencoe, 42, 44, 136
-Gordon, Brigadier-General J.R.P., 179, 244
-Gough, Major H. de la P., 338
-Green Hill (near Colenso), 123-125
-Green Hill (near Spion Kop), 100, 105
-Green Hill (near Vaalkrantz), 116, 119, 120
-Grenfell, Lieutenant-Colonel H.M., 330, 337, 358, 359
-Grimwood, Colonel G.G., 48, 49
-Grobelaar Slopes, 128, 129
-Grobler, E.R., 68, 69, 195
-Grobler, F.A. (Marico), 222
-Grobler, H. (Bethal), 341
-Grobler of Vryheid, 328, 338, 339
-Grobler of Waterberg, 274, 276, 282, 284
-Groen Kop, 347-350
-Gun Hill (Bakenlaagte), 341
-Gun Hill (near Ladysmith), 143
-Gun Hill (near Paardeberg), 177
-
-Haasbroek, 261
-Hamilton, Lieutenant-General Sir Ian, 43, 44, 49, 147, 149, 231-240,
- 242-245, 247, 256, 276-278, 280, 284, 285, 288, 290, 344, 361-363
-Hamilton, Major-General Bruce, 244, 245, 302-304, 307, 333, 334, 339,
- 353-357, 363
-Hamilton, Brigadier-General E., 269
-Hannay, Colonel O.E., 162, 174-177
-Hartebeestfontein, 323, 324, 330, 358
-Hart, Major-General A.F. 71-75, 78, 99, 101, 120, 129-132, 135, 210, 230,
- 321, 335
-Hart's Hill, 129, 130, 132-135
-Hart's Loop, 127
-Hattingh, 261
-Heilbron Road Station, 253
-Hekpoort Valley, 317, 321
-Helvetia (Transvaal), 287, 325
-Hertzog, General, 299-301, 303-308, 315, 326, 366, 367
-Hickman, Colonel T.E., 308, 309
-Highlands, 53
-Hildyard, Lieutenant-General Sir H., 52, 53, 71-73, 75, 76, 120, 264, 265,
- 268, 270, 315, 325, 327, 338
-Hill, Colonel A.W., 109-111
-Hlangwhane, 69-71, 76, 96, 120, 122, 123, 125-127, 131-133
-Holdsworth, Lieutenant-Colonel G.L., 223
-Holland, 355
-Hoopstad, 323, 324
-Hore, Lieutenant-Colonel C.O., 214
-Horseshoe Hill, 125, 129, 131
-Houtnek, 230, 232
-Hughes-Hallett, Colonel J.W., 62, 63
-Hunter, Lieutenant-General Sir A., 225, 226, 231, 232, 256-261
-Hunter-Weston, Lieutenant-Colonel A.G., 191, 234, 239
-Hussar Hill, 123, 124
-Hutton, Major-General Sir E., 283, 284
-
-Impati, 40-42
-Ingouville-Williams, Lieutenant-Colonel E.C., 324
-Inkwelo, 267
-Inkweloane, 267, 268
-
-Jacobsdaal, 56-58, 163, 168, 170, 171, 173, 179, 181, 183
-Johannesburg, Surrender of, 239
-Joubert, General P., 38, 49, 53, 54, 69, 105, 117, 118, 135, 140, 142, 143,
- 145, 185, 193, 194, 196
-
-Kaalfontein, 321, 322
-Kaffir Kop, 346, 350
-Kainguba Hill (Nicholson's Nek), 47, 49
-Kameelfontein Ridge and Valley, 241, 242
-Kanya, 224
-Karee Siding, 197, 198, 205, 232
-Kekewich, Colonel R.G., 86, 87, 89-91, 215, 342-344, 357-359, 361-363
-Kelly-Kenny, Lieutenant-General T., 81, 158, 159, 166, 168-171, 173-178,
- 180, 181, 186, 187, 190, 232, 254
-Kemp, 322, 324-326, 330, 337, 342, 343, 358, 360-363
-Kissieberg, 66-69
-Kitchener, General Lord, 156, 160, 166, 170, 171, 173-178, 180, 181, 183,
- 184, 188, 194, 227, 229, 241, 246, 247, 254, 255, 278-280, 292, 298,
- 299, 306, 312, 316, 326, 328, 331-334, 336, 345, 365-367
-Kitchener, Major-General W., 132-134, 329, 338, 339, 360, 361, 363
-Kitchener's Kopje, 178-182, 185
-Kleinfontein Ridge, 244
-Klipfontein, 237
-Klippan, 356
-Klip River, 123, 125, 150
-Knox, Colonel E.C., 321
-Knox, Major-General C., 168, 177, 254, 294, 295, 297-299, 302-306, 333
-Knox, Major-General W., 49
-Kock, 42
-Koetzee, 289, 290
-Koffyfontein, 162, 179
-Korn Spruit, 199, 200, 202, 203, 207
-Krijgsraad, 143, 188, 194, 196-198, 207, 209, 210, 240, 258, 260, 332, 345,
- 346, 349, 364
-Kritzinger, 299-301, 303-305, 315, 326, 331, 334, 335, 337, 363
-Krokodil Spruit and Hill, 241, 242
-Kroonstad, 191, 234, 247-250, 258, 357, 365
-Kruger, President Paul, 11, 69, 95, 105, 118, 126, 128, 136, 184, 185, 188,
- 196, 2O7, 213, 220, 239-241, 289, 295, 314, 332
-
-Lancer's Hill, 155
-Langewacht Spruit, 125, 130, 132
-Langvervacht, 352
-Lawley, Lieutenant-Colonel the Hon. R., 357
-Le Gallais Kopje, 187
-Le Gallais, Lieutenant-Colonel P.W., 197, 295
-Lemmer, 195
-Lennox Hill, 39, 40
-Lichtenburg, 226, 315, 323
-Liebenberg, 294, 358, 361
-Liebenberg's River, 353
-Lieuw Kop, 187
-Lieuw Spruit, 255
-Limit Hill, 144
-Little Knoll, 105, 106
-Little, Colonel M.O., 278
-Long, Colonel C.J., 73, 75, 77
-Long Hill, 46, 48, 49
-Lotter, 335
-Louwbaken, 242
-Lubbe, 163, 164
-Lydenburg, 288
-Lyttelton, Lieutenant-General the Hon. N.G., 99, 106, 108, 109, 119, 120,
- 124, 135, 264, 265, 268, 270, 271, 303, 308, 309, 315, 316, 325, 333,
- 334, 338, 339
-
-MacDonald, Major-General Sir H.A., 256, 257
-Machadodorp, 239, 282, 283, 287, 295
-Mahon, Brigadier-General B.T., 221, 222, 224-226, 232
-Maiden's Castle, 145, 146
-Majuba Hill, 36, 266, 267
-Martyr, Lieutenant-Colonel C., 198, 202-206
-Mears, 349, 350
-Metcalfe, Colonel C.T.E., 144
-Methuen, Lieutenant-General Lord, 52, 55-59, 62, 63, 79, 80, 89-92, 123,
- 157, 159, 168, 172, 184, 225, 228, 231, 232, 247, 250, 253, 254, 256,
- 276-280, 315, 323, 324, 337, 344, 357-359, 362
-Meyer, L., 39, 40
-Meyerton, 235, 236
-Middle Hill, 147
-Milner, Lord, 51, 86, 160, 228, 367
-Moedvil, 342
-Monte Cristo, 123-126
-Mors Kop, 242, 244
-Mostert's Hoek, 208
-Mount Alice, 97, 102, 106, 107
-Muller, 332, 337, 356
-
-Naval Gun Hill, 75
-Naval Hill, 123, 129, 131, 132
-Neks
- Breedt's, 317
- Cingolo, 125
- Commando (Orange River Colony), 258-260
- Commando (Transvaal), 274-276, 278, 280, 282
- Laing's, 36, 38, 254, 262, 264, 266-268, 270, 272
- Magato, 280, 342
- Modderfontein, 322
- Naauwpoort, 258, 260
- Nicholson's, 46-49, 167
- Noitgedacht, 317-320
- Olifant's, 274, 276-278, 280, 281
- Retiefs, 258, 260
- Slabbert's, 258-261
- Springhaan's, 297, 299, 302
- Zilikat's 11, 239, 274, 275, 277, 278, 283
-Nelspruit, 287, 289
-Nicholson, Colonel J.S., 223
-Noitgedacht (Delagoa Bay Railway), 287
-Norcott, Colonel C.H.B., 132, 133
-
-Observation Hill, 142
-Olivier, General J.H., 64, 66, 68, 195, 198, 200, 259, 261
-Onderbroek, 125, 127
-Onderste Poort, 276, 283
-Ookiep, 364, 366
-Orange Free State, Annexation of, 236
-Osfontein, 184, 186
-
-Paget, Major-General A.H., 256, 257, 291, 316, 317, 321, 326
-Paris, Major A., 307
-Park, Colonel C.W., 329, 356
-Penn-Symons, Major-General Sir W., 37, 39, 41, 45
-Pepworth Hill, 46, 48, 49, 142
-Phipps Hornby, Lieutenant-Colonel E.J., 203
-Pienaar's Poort and River, 241, 242, 244
-Pietersburg, 292, 314, 328
-Pilcher, Lieutenant-Colonel T.D., 195, 198
-Pilgrim's Rest, 356
-Platrand, 143, 145, 147, 150
-Plumer, Brigadier-General H.C.O., 214, 221-225, 274, 305-307, 309, 328,
- 330, 340, 355
-Pole-Carew, Lieutenant-General Sir R., 62, 195, 230, 242, 244, 245, 272,
- 283-290
-Porter, Colonel N.C., 242
-Potgieter, F., 362
-Potgieter, H., 16
-Pretoria, surrender of, 239
-Prieska, 184, 194, 196, 227, 305, 306
-Prinsloo, Jacob, 55, 355, 356
-Prinsloo, Martin, 38, 118, 119, 250, 259-261
-Prinsloo, Michael, 249, 250, 299, 349
-"Protected Area," 337, 340, 345, 355, 357
-Pulteney, Colonel W.P., 329, 355
-
-Railway Hill, 131, 133, 134
-Ramdam, 162, 166
-Rangeworthy Heights, 100-102, 107
-Rawlinson, Colonel Sir H., 350-352, 361-363
-Reddersburg, 207-209
-Reitz, 333
-Rhenosterfontein Heights, 245
-Rhenoster River Bridge, 253
-Rhodes, Right Hon. Cecil, 83-95, 214
-Rifleman's Ridge, 143, 147
-Rimington, Colonel M.F., 346, 349, 351
-Roberts, Field-Marshal Lord, 79, 114, 120, 132, 153, 154, 156, 158, 160,
- 161, 167, 168, 170, 171, 173, 179, 181, 183, 184, 186, 189, 191, 194,
- 195, 219, 226, 228, 229, 231, 232, 234, 236, 239, 241, 246, 254, 256,
- 262, 264, 271-273, 280-282, 284, 286, 288, 292, 296, 313, 314, 365
-Rochfort, Colonel A.N., 363
-Roirantjesfontein, 358
-Roodeval (Orange River Colony), 252, 253, 300
-Roodeval (Transvaal), 362
-Rooi Kop, 66
-Rosmead (on Riet River), 57
-Roux, General P.H., 256-260
-Rundle, Lieutenant-General Sir Leslie, 230, 232, 247-250, 252, 256, 259,
- 260, 331, 333, 347-349, 352
-Rustenburg, 273-278, 281, 316, 317, 344
-
-Scheepers, 299, 336
-Schiel, 43
-Schoeman, 64, 80, 81
-Schoon Spruit, 359
-Schweizer Reneke, 315
-Sefetili, 224
-Settle, Major-General Sir H., 315
-Seven Kopjes, 186, 187
-Shekleton, Lieutenant-Colonel H.P., 322, 323
-Sladen, Lieutenant-Colonel J.F.R., 331, 332
-Slapkranz, 260
-Smith-Dorrien, Major-General H.L., 177, 178, 275, 276, 278-280, 315,
- 325-328
-Smuts, General J.C., 322, 324, 325, 332-336, 363, 364, 366
-Smuts, General T., 197, 198, 290, 291
-Snyman, General, 217, 219, 220
-Spitz Kop (Natal), 267, 268
-Spitz Kop (Transvaal), 288
-Spragge, Lieutenant-Colonel B.E., 248-252
-Spytfontein, 56-58
-Steenekamp (of Heilbron), 282
-Steenkamp, L.P., 68
-Stephenson, Major-General T.E., 176, 177, 183, 363
-Stewart, Lieutenant-Colonel H.K., 338
-Steyn, Commandant, of Bethlehem, 175, 176, 179, 182
-Steyn, M. President, Orange Free State, 52, 118, 185, 191, 196, 257, 258,
- 278-280, 282, 290, 291, 295, 302, 310, 313-316, 331-333, 345, 346, 350,
- 352, 353, 357, 359, 360, 365-367
-Stinkfontein, 173, 175
-Surprise Hill, 144
-
-Table Mountain (on Modder), 186
-Theron, 279, 281
-Theunissen, 182
-Thorneycroft, Colonel A.W., 104, 107-115
-Thornhill's Kopje, 144
-Three Tree Hill, 100, 101, 106
-Transvaal, Annexation of, 288
-Tucker, Lieutenant-General Sir C., 166, 168, 171, 191, 197, 198, 321
-Tweebosch, 358, 359
-Twin Peaks, 100, 105, 106, 109-112, 119
-Tygerpoort, 241, 242, 244
-
-Utrecht, 266, 327
-
-Van der Venter, 333-335
-Van Reenen's Pass, 263, 267
-Van Tender's Pass, 45, 265
-Van Wyk's Hill, 267, 268
-Van Zyl's Farm, 67
-Venter's Spruit, 100
-Vereeniging, 235, 236, 366, 367
-Viljoen, General B., 6, 117, 118, 284, 290, 291, 315, 316, 325, 328, 329,
- 340, 356
-Viljoen, P., 354-357
-Virginia Siding, 255
-Vlakfontein, 330
-Volksrust, 266, 268-270
-Vryheid, 266, 325
-
-Wagon Hill and Point, 142-151
-Wakkerstroom, 270
-Warren, Lieutenant-General Sir C., 79, 80, 93, 96, 97, 99-1O3, 1O5-115,
- 120, 128, 129, 132, 213, 228, 264
-Waterval (near Pretoria), 239
-Waterworks, 198-200, 202, 203, 205
-Wauchope, Major-General A.G., 59-62
-Wavell, Major-General A.G., 238
-Wessels, 349
-White, Lieutenant-General Sir George, 37, 38, 42, 43, 45, 46, 49, 51, 72,
- 79, 96, 100, 102, 116, 122, 125, 126, 128, 132, 137, 140-143, 147-151,
- 153-155, 263
-Wildfontein, 324
-Willow Grange, 53
-Willowmore, 301
-Wilge River (Orange River Colony), 349, 352, 353
-Wilge River (Transvaal), 356
-
-
-
-
-
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