summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
path: root/41788.txt
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
authornfenwick <nfenwick@pglaf.org>2025-03-08 10:14:43 -0800
committernfenwick <nfenwick@pglaf.org>2025-03-08 10:14:43 -0800
commit6e23eaf78cdc1cb79760f4e5fc1d09e391885e53 (patch)
tree1b0c8c15f3ac697c8676eb5efc50b3c9384ba1b3 /41788.txt
parenta870f20c69b79f711a101cff2b611bb753e39dd5 (diff)
Add files from ibiblio as of 2025-03-08 10:14:43HEADmain
Diffstat (limited to '41788.txt')
-rw-r--r--41788.txt10272
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 10272 deletions
diff --git a/41788.txt b/41788.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index 371896c..0000000
--- a/41788.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,10272 +0,0 @@
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of General Gatacre, by Beatrix Gatacre
-
-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: General Gatacre
- The Story of the Life and Services of Sir William Forbes
- Gatacre, K.C.B., D.S.O., 1843-1906
-
-Author: Beatrix Gatacre
-
-Release Date: January 6, 2013 [EBook #41788]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ASCII
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK GENERAL GATACRE ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Al Haines
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: Cover]
-
-
-
-
-
-[Frontispiece: Major-General Sir William Gatacre, K.C.B., D.S.O.]
-
-
-
-
-
- GENERAL GATACRE
-
- THE STORY OF THE LIFE AND SERVICES OF
- SIR WILLIAM FORBES GATACRE, K.C.B., D.S.O.
- 1843-1906
-
-
- BY BEATRIX GATACRE
-
-
-
- WITH PORTRAITS, MAPS, AND ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
-
- What I aspired to be
- And was not, comforts me.
- R. B.
-
-
-
-
-LONDON JOHN MURRAY, ALBEMARLE STREET, W. 1910
-
-
-
-
- PRINTED BY
- HAZELL, WATSON AND VINEY, LD.,
- LONDON AND AYLESBURY.
-
-
-
-
- THIS BOOK IS DEDICATED TO
- TWO FRIENDS
- WITHOUT WHOSE SYMPATHY AND ASSISTANCE
- IT WOULD NEVER HAVE BEEN WRITTEN
-
-
-
-
-{vii}
-
- Assured of worthiness, we do not dread
- Competitors; we rather give them hail
- And greeting in the lists where we may fail:
- Must, if we bear an aim beyond the head!
- My betters are my masters; purely fed
- By their sustainment I likewise shall scale
- Some rocky steps between the mount and vale;
- Meanwhile the mark I have, and I will wed.
- So that I draw the breath of finer air,
- Station is naught, nor footways laurel-strewn,
- Nor rivals tightly belted for the race.
- God-speed to them! My place is here or there;
- My pride is that among them I have place:
- And thus I keep the instrument in tune.
-
- GEORGE MEREDITH.
-
-
-
-
-{ix}
-
-PREFACE
-
-The main object in laying this book before the public is to provide an
-authentic narrative of Sir William Gatacre's work in South Africa. At
-the time of his recall no despatch giving the reason for this step was
-published, but a letter dealing with this matter has since appeared as
-an Appendix in the _Official History_ of the war; it is with reluctance
-that I have been persuaded to reprint this letter at the end of this
-volume. It seemed, however, that Sir William's previous career was
-such a large factor in determining any opinion regarding his later work
-that some account of the man and his surroundings from the beginning
-would not be without interest.
-
-In preparing the first half of this story I have been entirely
-dependent on the recollections of others, and have studiously avoided
-any attempt to eke out the material with an imaginary amplification; in
-the latter half my own personal knowledge of himself and his affairs
-has enabled {x} me to seek my information from numerous sources, and to
-draw the portrait in richer colours on a more suggestive background.
-
-I wish to acknowledge in full the loyal assistance afforded me by my
-husband's friends. In every case I have received the most cordial
-response and co-operation. I am sincerely grateful both to those who
-have asked me to refrain from naming them and to those who have given
-me the support of their names. Through the courtesy of these officers
-and others, I am able to say that every word has been read by one who
-has personal knowledge of the incidents recorded. In this way I trust
-that this narrative will have acquired an unimpeachable accuracy.
-
-I am also deeply indebted to the _Official History of the War in South
-Africa_. Indeed, before the publication of this authoritative
-statement my task would have been impossible.
-
-To the facts therein recorded I have added extracts from officers'
-reports, and from Sir William's own letters, and also the words of
-certain important telegrams which I had found amongst his papers, and
-for the reproduction of which official permission has been graciously
-accorded.
-
-{xi}
-
-I beg the indulgence of the reader for faults of literary inexperience,
-and trust that he will recognise my honest endeavour to handle the
-facts fairly and dispassionately.
-
-BEATRIX GATACRE.
-
-_April_ 8, 1910.
-
-
-
-
-{xiii}
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-GATACRE . . . 1
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-TO INDIA AND BACK . . . 13
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-RANGOON . . . 38
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-SECUNDERABAD . . . 52
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-BLACK MOUNTAIN EXPEDITION . . . 63
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-MANDALAY . . . 82
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-POONA . . . 98
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-BOMBAY . . . 110
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-CHITBAL . . . 127
-
-
-{xiv}
-
-CHAPTER X
-
-QUETTA . . . 145
-
-
-CHAPTER XI
-
-THE PLAGUE . . . 161
-
-
-CHAPTER XII
-
-FROM ALDERSHOT TO BERBER . . . 184
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII
-
-ATBARA AND OMDURMAN . . . 198
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV
-
-COLCHESTER . . . 214
-
-
-CHAPTER XV
-
-CAPE COLONY . . . 221
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI
-
-ORANGE FREE STATE . . . 239
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII
-
-BACK TO COLCHESTER . . . 261
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII
-
-ABYSSINIA . . . 273
-
-
-DESPATCH, APRIL 16, 1900 . . . 286
-
-INDEX . . . 289
-
-
-
-
-{xv}
-
-ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
-MAJOR-GENERAL SIR WILLIAM GATACRE, K.C.B., D.S.O.
- (_Photogravure_) . . . _Frontispiece_
-
-
-COLONEL W. F. GATACRE, D.S.O., 1888 . . . 74
-
-KACHIN BRIDGE, OVER WHICH 500 MEN CROSSED IN ONE DAY . . . 90
-
-GOORKHAS CROSSING THE LOWARI PASS . . . 134
-
-ON THE ROAD TO CHITRAL . . . 138
-
-GENERAL GATACRE AND HIS FAVOURITE PONY . . . 142
-
-BELUCHI MURDERERS . . . 158
-
-HINDU BURNING-GHAT . . . 162
-
-HOUSE-TO-HOUSE VISITATION . . . 172
-
-INVASION OF CAPE COLONY: THE BOERS MARCHING SOUTH OVER
- THE ORANGE RIVER AT ALIWAL NORTH . . . 224
-
-
-MAPS
-
-_At the end_
-
-
-MAP I. INDIA [Transcriber's note: this map was omitted, being too large
-to scan.]
-
-MAP II. EGYPT AND THE SOUDAN
-
-MAP III. EASTERN CAPE COLONY AND PART OF THE ORANGE FREE STATE
-
-MAP IV. ABYSSINIA
-
-
-
-
-{1}
-
-GENERAL GATACRE
-
-1843-1906
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-1843-1862
-
-GATACRE
-
-According to a venerable Shropshire antiquarian, that county "has ever
-been inhabited by a race of men characteristic for uniformity of
-principle and energy of action."[1] Mr. Eyton goes on to tell of
-various places mentioned in the Domesday Book, and among these of the
-Manor of Claverley, which included a very large tract of country, and
-is described as an "ancient demesne of the Crown." The Manor of
-Claverley was broken up into various townships, to three of which he
-accords special notice, "in regard that the King's Tenants thereof were
-of a rank superior to that of the average class of Freeholders in Royal
-Manors. These Townships were Broughton, Beobridge, and Gatacre."[2]
-
-
-[1] _Antiquities of Shropshire_, by R. W. Eyton, 1854, preface.
-
-[2] _Ibid._, vol. iii. p. 77.
-
-
-{2}
-
-[Sidenote: Ancestors]
-
-There is a well-authenticated tradition that the family established at
-Gatacre at the time of the Conquest held their lands by tenure of
-military service, under a grant from Edward the Confessor. Eyton
-speaks of them as "a family of knightly rank, which, having early
-feoffment in Gatacre, took its name from the place. The period of such
-feoffment it is vain to conjecture, as being beyond all record of such
-matters."[3]
-
-
-[3] Eyton's _Antiquities of Shropshire_, vol. iii. p. 86.
-
-
-In the reign of Henry II., Sir William de Gatacre had a suit with one
-Walter, about half a hide of land in Great Lye: this was subject to a
-Wager of Battle, and apparently Gatacre proved himself the better man,
-for Great Lye is even now held by his descendant. This same William
-appears in another record as one of the four "Visors," who in July 1194
-had to report to the Courts of Westminster on the validity of the
-"essoign of Cecilia de Cantreyn, a litigant. Gatacre's associates in
-this duty--to which knights only were usually appointed--were Henry
-Christian, Philip Fitz Holegod, and William de Rudge, all his
-neighbours and of equal rank with himself."[4]
-
-
-[4] _Ibid._
-
-
-He was succeeded by Sir Robert, his son; who sat on a Jury of Grand
-Assizes in April 1200, to try a question of right in relation to lands
-at Nordley Regis, at the "Iter of the King's Justices."[5]
-
-
-[5] _Ibid._
-
-
-The tenure of the estates was in great jeopardy {3} in the life of
-Thomas de Gatacre; for it is told how a certain Philip de Lutley, the
-King's Escheator, did "seize the estates of Gatacre, Sutton, and Great
-Lye into the King's hand, on the ground that Thomas de Gatacre had
-entered upon these estates without doing homage and fealty to the
-Crown, and without paying his relief, so that he had occupied the same
-unjustly for twenty-two years and more."[6] At this unfortunate moment
-Thomas died, leaving Alice, his widow, to fight for herself and their
-son Thomas. She appealed to the King (Edward III.) in Chancery, in the
-Michaelmas Term 1368. There was a trial by twenty-four jurors, being
-knights and others in the visnage of Sutton not being kin to Alice.
-She herself appeared in person at Westminster, and won her cause, for a
-"King's writ of the same year commits to the same Alice, widow of
-Thomas de Gatacre, custody of the Manor of Gatacre and the hamlet of
-Sutton with their appurtenances."
-
-
-[6] See Eyton's _Antiquities_, vol. iii. pp. 90, 91,
-
-
-The grandson of the younger Thomas was called John; he flourished in
-the reigns of Henry IV., Henry V., and Henry VI., and was High Sheriff
-of Shropshire in 1409. In a contemporary stained-glass window now in
-the hall at Gatacre there is a portrait of the same John, who is
-described as "Groom of the body to Henry VIth." He was succeeded by
-his son John, who was Member of Parliament for Bridgnorth in the
-twelfth year of Edward IV.
-
-{4}
-
-[Sidenote: The ancient house]
-
-The house at Gatacre stands in the parish of Claverley, and is about
-two miles distant from this village. Inside the church--a red
-sandstone building full of interest to the archaeologist--are many
-monuments, of which the most ancient are two incised marble slabs
-inlaid in the eastern wall; these are about six feet high. On one is
-shown a man in armour, elaborate and perfect in all its detail,
-commemorating William Gatacre, who died in 1577, and his wife and
-eleven children; and on the other his successor Francis, 1599, is
-depicted in civilian dress with his wife at his side.
-
-Close by is a very fine alabaster tomb on which lie three full-length
-recumbent figures, being the effigies of Robert Brooke of Madeley
-Court, who is described as "Recorder of London, Speaker of P'lyament,
-and Chiefe Justice of Com'on Pleace," and his two wives, one of whom
-was a daughter of Gatacre.[7]
-
-
-[7] See _Shropshire_, by A. C. Hare, p. 319.
-
-
-Thomas, brother to Francis named above, was destined by his parents for
-the law; but he "diverted his mind from the most profitable to the most
-necessary study, from law to divinity," and, much to the grief of his
-parents, who were of the old persuasion, embraced the Reformed Faith,
-and became Rector of St. Edmond's, Lombard Street. He died in 1593;
-but his son and grandson followed the same profession. The former,
-Thomas (1574-1654), was a friend of Archbishop Ussher, and a member of
-the Westminster Assembly of Divines. {5} He took part in preparing the
-annotations to the English Bible, and published a work on Marcus
-Aurelius; in 1648 he subscribed the Remonstrance against the trial of
-Charles I. His son, Charles, was Chaplain to Lucius Gary, Viscount
-Falkland, and was also the author of many books.[8] This younger
-branch of the family settled at Mildenhall, in Suffolk, and has always
-spelt the name Gataker. Though there has never failed a male heir to
-the senior line, this is the only cadet branch that has survived.
-
-
-[8] See quotation by A. C. Hare, from Thomas Fuller, 1662.
-
-
-The house inhabited by this ancient family was a unique survival of
-very early times.[9] Where we should now use iron girders our ancestors
-used oak-trees; they erected them upside-down, so that the roots made
-arches on which to lay the roof. Large stones were hewn to fill in the
-walls, and in this particular building the outer surface of the stones
-was incrusted with a transparent green glaze, very similar to what is
-now seen on rough pottery. This curious specimen of domestic
-architecture survived in a habitable condition till the early part of
-the eighteenth century, when it was wantonly destroyed, and replaced by
-a brick mansion of the dark and uninteresting type of the early
-Georges. Portions of the glazed stones are still preserved in the
-house amongst many other relics of more obvious value.
-
-
-[9] See _The Severn Valley_, by John Randall, 1882, and _Archaeologia_,
-iii. 112, quoted by him.
-
-
-{6}
-
-Colonel Edward Gatacre and his only son, born in 1806 (who figures as
-the Squire in this narrative), were specimens of the best type of
-country gentleman of their day. The former was twentieth in direct
-descent from Sir William de Gatacre of the twelfth century, and was
-grandfather to Sir William, the hero of this story. The pedigree shows
-that through the centuries the family had maintained their status as
-gentle-folk, and had allied themselves with other families of the same
-standing in the neighbouring counties. Both were men of remarkable
-activity and considerable cultivation. With the advent of railways
-came the facility for travel, of which the younger man was quick to
-avail himself. He visited London every year, and among other men of
-renown knew Sir Francis Grant, P.R.A., and persuaded him to come and
-paint the portrait of his father that still hangs at Gatacre--a
-beautiful picture. He also went abroad, and made a pilgrimage to Rome
-in the old days when people travelled in their own carriages, making a
-long stay at many places of interest in Switzerland and Italy.
-
-[Sidenote: Forbes]
-
-At the age of eighty-one the Colonel died, sincerely mourned throughout
-the county; and thus in 1849 the young Squire came into his
-inheritance. About ten years earlier he had married Jessie, second
-daughter of William Forbes of Callendar, in the county of Stirling.
-Mr. Forbes, who sprang from a cadet branch of the family of that name,
-started his career in a shipping office; by his enterprise and
-inventions {7} he built up a considerable fortune, with which he bought
-the Callendar estate. His elder son, William Forbes, who succeeded
-him, represented Stirlingshire in Parliament for many years; and his
-younger son became Colonel John Forbes of the Coldstream Guards. Their
-sister Jessie must always have been a beautiful woman, rather Scottish,
-perhaps, in the vigorous outline of her face, with a depth about her
-blue eyes and a symmetry of feature that reappeared in her third son; a
-look of "all-comprehensive tenderness" is the dominant note of the
-portrait. Indeed, we are told that while Mrs. Gatacre was a very able
-woman, she had a singular gentleness of manner.
-
-The family already numbered two sons and a daughter when in 1843 Mrs.
-Gatacre went on a visit to her widowed mother, who was then living at
-Herbertshire Castle, near Stirling: and so it came about that when a
-little boy was born on December 3, he was given the names of his uncle
-and godfather, William Forbes.
-
-Perhaps it is to his Scottish descent that we may trace some of the
-qualities that became most marked when the child, grown to perfect
-manhood, had evolved that balance of innumerable strains that go to
-make the individual--had, as it were, tuned the manifold strings of his
-lineage to a chord of his own finding. Did he draw his habit of
-concentration on the matter in hand, his painstaking attention to
-detail, from the inventor-engineer of Aberdeen? Did he draw his
-fervent notions of duty {8} and his stern disregard of personal
-considerations from the blood of the Covenanters that ran in his veins?
-My own father was heard to say that this son-in-law of his was born out
-of due time, that his right place would have been at the head of
-Cromwell's Ironsides.
-
-In course of time another son, Stephen, completed the family. The
-children were a great source of pride and pleasure to their parents,
-and had the benefit of all that loving early training could do for
-them. In this wholesome atmosphere of parental affection and brotherly
-competition the four boys grew up straight and strong. They vied with
-one another in childish feats and manly sports, but in all these Willie
-was the keenest and the most daring.
-
-Even in these latter days the house at Gatacre seems difficult of
-access, for the nearest railway station (unless you cross the Severn in
-a ferry) is at Bridgnorth, six miles away; but sixty years ago there
-was no railway nearer than Wolverhampton, a good ten miles' drive. The
-eldest son well remembers his father driving his coach-and-four to and
-fro. The Squire was a famous whip, and maintained this practice far
-into the sixties. But as the boys grew older they thought nothing of
-doing this journey on foot at any hour of the day or night; perhaps it
-was the remoteness of the country in which they were nurtured that had
-endowed this family for generations back with powers of physical
-endurance and enterprise beyond the common.
-
-{9}
-
-[Sidenote: At school]
-
-The elder brothers Edward and John[10] were sent to Mr. Hopkirk's
-school at Eltham, in Kent; and both were still there when Willie joined
-them a year or two later. Some of Willie's letters from school are
-still to be seen; and if handwriting is any sign of character, he must
-have been an exemplary boy at his lessons, for his letters are so
-exquisitely written that were it not for the dates duly recorded one
-could scarcely believe them to be the work of a high-spirited boy of
-thirteen. Writing to his mother in March 1857, he says: "Did you see
-in the papers that peace had been made with Persia?"
-
-
-[10] Now Major-General Sir John Gatacre, K.C.B.
-
-
-The interest in Persia had been aroused by the approaching departure of
-his brother John to India, where he was to join a regiment that was at
-that moment fighting in Persia. Though loth to part from one who was
-said to be his father's favourite son, the Squire had thought the offer
-of a commission in the East India Company's army too good an opening to
-refuse. In May 1857 he accompanied the boy, who was then only sixteen
-and a half, as far as Marseilles, and did not see him again for nearly
-twelve years.
-
-At Gatacre there was a famous kennel of setters, and also some good
-retrievers. A puppy of the latter breed was given to Willie for his
-own, and he broke and trained it so skilfully, when only fifteen, that
-the dog was sold for fifteen guineas, and eventually became celebrated
-in the canine world.
-
-{10}
-
-[Sidenote: In the holidays]
-
-There are many excellent fox-holding coverts in that part of the
-country; the Albrighton Hounds still draw them regularly. Such visits
-were great events to the boys; and we can well believe that Willie
-would always be out, mounted on whatever he could get, big or small,
-old or young. One day he was riding a mare who was known to be
-twenty-two years old, and had all her life been used for harness work;
-but nothing stopped Willie. When a fox was found close to the house,
-away he went, and it is still told how Rushlight led the field for
-miles. Willie seems to have shared more intimately than any of his
-brothers the Squire's love for horses. He had a vivid recollection of
-journeys to Birmingham with his father, when he visited the big stables
-there to search for horses, either for himself or a friend; the elder
-man taught his son what points to look for and what to avoid. Willie
-thus acquired a certain confident genius for judging a horse, and all
-his life took a pleasure in exercising this quality; like his father
-before him, he was never afraid to buy horses at their request for
-friends who had more confidence in his judgment than in their own.
-
-One summer holiday the boy found for himself a new recreation. In a
-letter to Stephen, dated from Gatacre, July 20, 1860, we find the
-following passage:
-
-
-"Did you know that there was an Alderney bull come? I have begun to
-work him every {11} day, but he does not like it, and he fights with me
-a great deal. But I find a good stick the best remedy; sometimes I
-have to bate him a good deal."
-
-
-The brothers and sister clearly recall seeing Willie ride this animal
-day after day in the park.
-
-It is evident that Number Three must often have been a source of
-anxiety to his parents. One evening in February he gave his mother a
-most horrible fright. The boys had arranged to go out after
-wood-pigeons in the spinneys round the house; as there was snow on the
-ground they slipped a night-shirt over their clothes to make themselves
-less visible. The three guns posted themselves in three coverts some
-distance apart, and then lay in wait for the birds as they came in to
-roost. Willie, who was then sixteen or seventeen, was in a lucky
-corner: he shot so many that he was at a loss how to bring the birds
-in. Slipping off his white covering, he made a bag of it and gathered
-up his spoils. By the time he reached the house he presented such an
-alarming appearance that his mother naturally imagined him the victim
-of some terrible accident. With great pride the boy counted out
-forty-two birds.
-
-In 1856 the Squire was pricked for High Sheriff. There is an ancient
-custom by which all the sons of Gatacre are enrolled as Freemen of the
-Borough of Bridgnorth; and on June 25, 1860, William Forbes was duly
-sworn and inscribed on the rolls.
-
-{12}
-
-In the same year, on August 1, he was admitted to the Royal Military
-College; he was then only sixteen and a half, and measured five feet
-seven and a quarter inches in height. Ultimately he reached five feet
-eleven inches in his socks.
-
-Except in the riding-school he does not seem to have made much mark at
-Sandhurst, but when he left in December 1861 he had earned the college
-"Recommendation," and on February 18 following was gazetted an ensign
-in the 77th Foot, now the 2nd Battalion (Duke of Cambridge's Own)
-Middlesex Regiment.
-
-
-
-
-{13}
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-1862-1880
-
-TO INDIA AND BACK
-
-[Sidenote: 1862]
-
-The 77th Regiment was raised in 1787, and for twenty years served in
-India, taking part in the fierce campaigns against Tippoo Sahib in
-1790-91, in the storming of Seringapatam in 1799, and in many minor
-operations. On their colours are also recorded the suggestive names,
-Albuhera, Ciudad Rodrigo, Badajoz, Vittoria, Pyrenees, Nivelle, Nive,
-Peninsula. In the Crimea they had charged at the Alma and at Inkerman;
-they had shivered in the trenches before Sebastopol, and had taken part
-in the final assault of the Redan. There were many officers and men
-still with the colours in 1862 who had three clasps to their medals,
-and also wore the French medal, and in the ranks there was an
-exceptional number of Gallant Conduct medals.
-
-Without doubt the fine record of the regiment and the fact that all the
-senior officers had been proved in actual warfare, as their medals so
-brilliantly testified, had a stimulating effect on the juniors.
-
-{14}
-
-Unfortunately the 77th sailed for Sydney, New South Wales, just before
-the news of the Indian Mutiny reached England; and being detained
-there, they did not reach India till June 1858, too late to take a
-share in any but the minor operations incident to the disturbed state
-of the country.
-
-[Sidenote: As subaltern]
-
-The regiment was at Hazaribagh, in Bengal, when Ensign William Gatacre
-joined on June 5, 1862, but was shortly afterwards moved to Allahabad.
-It was while Gatacre was doing duty with a detachment in the Fort that
-Major Henry Kent (now Colonel-in-Chief of the Middlesex Regiment) first
-saw the new subaltern; he describes him as good-looking, thin, smart,
-and gentlemanly, adding that he took an immediate fancy to him.
-
-It is to General Kent, who still speaks of Gatacre with great
-affection, that I am indebted for the following story.
-
-Sir Robert Napier, who at that time was Military Member of Council, was
-passing through Allahabad on tour that winter, and took a walk round
-the Fort one evening. Seeing a smart young officer with the famous
-77th on his cap, he accosted him.
-
-"Ah," he said, "I see you belong to the 77th, which Lord Gough
-commanded at the battle of Barrosa."
-
-"Yes, sir."
-
-"And you captured a French Eagle there?"
-
-"Yes, sir, we did."
-
-"Well," said Napier, "what have you done {15} with the French Eagle?
-Have you got it out here?"
-
-"Not at present, sir," came the audacious reply: "we are putting up a
-memorial in St. Paul's Cathedral to all our poor fellows who fell in
-the Crimea, and we have sent the Eagle home to have a model taken of
-it."
-
-Now all this was an imaginary story invented to ease the situation, for
-Napier was wrong in his facts. It was the 87th that Lord Gough had
-commanded, and the 87th who had captured the French Standard; but
-Gatacre's intuitive sense of discipline, even at nineteen, led him to
-try any way of escape before putting his senior in the wrong.
-
-Major-General Sir Harcourt Bengough, who was a few years senior to
-Gatacre in the regiment, writes thus:
-
-"The impression I retain of him as a young soldier is that of a strong
-will and a quick determination to succeed, combined with a very kindly
-disposition and a great charm of manner."
-
-Another officer tells us that in the hottest weather Gatacre was always
-cool, smiling, and good-tempered. He was noticeably abstemious and
-frugal, and very careful of his appearance. At one time he used to
-clean his own boots because he was too hard up to pay for this service.
-When he related this in after-life he added, with the pride of
-efficiency, "And they did shine!"
-
-An officer's wife who knew Gatacre in these early days, and saw him at
-intervals throughout {16} his career, tells us that there hung about
-him when he first joined a certain countrified simplicity of mind and
-manner, as opposed to the conventionality of a town-bred man. Though
-he enjoyed society, social distractions got little hold on his
-self-contained nature, and it was rarely that any of his friendships
-developed into intimacy. He had, however, a ready sympathy, was easily
-interested in whatever went on around him, and, being very unselfish,
-was always prepared to do any one a service.
-
-[Sidenote: 1865]
-
-Young Gatacre's letters to his mother from Allahabad disclose a
-reasoned industry inspired by ambition. The reiteration of the
-recurring features of his life, cholera, rain, and work, is suggestive
-of the monotony of existence in the summer months. But his experiences
-and his surroundings differ in nothing from that of every other
-subaltern in the Plains. That he worked with assiduity at acquiring
-the language is shown by his having been placed first out of twenty-two
-in the Higher Standard, after only two years' study. When the 77th
-moved to Bareilly, Gatacre was made secretary to the Mutton and Poultry
-Club, and kept a quailery, which was a venture of his own. The
-following letter shows the real interest that he took in his charges:
-
-
-_July_ 31, 1865.
-
-"When the musketry instructor comes down from leave on September 30, I
-shall try for fifteen days' leave. I cannot get more, as the {17}
-course begins on October 15, with all its hard work. It is raining
-very hard here, and I am sitting in the verandah watching all my ducks
-and geese enjoying themselves. I have both my horses in the field
-round the house: one of them has a peculiarly unpleasant temper with
-strangers. The other day the doctor was breakfasting with us; when he
-went away and had got a short distance, he saw this animal coming at
-him open-mouthed, but he turned and ran for my room, and both the
-doctor and horse came into the room together. He does not run at me,
-as he knows me so well, but I never trust him much; they are very
-uncertain in India."
-
-
-[Sidenote: On leave]
-
-In November 1866 the 77th was sent to Peshawur, and in the following
-May young Gatacre took six months' leave to Kashmir. But he did not
-confine himself to shooting in the Happy Valley; he was filled with an
-adventurous curiosity to see the temples and wild scenery of the
-mountains beyond. He felt that his pleasure in the trip would lie in
-his freedom to go where he chose, and when he chose, and as fast as he
-chose. He knew that his mobility would outstrip that of any companion,
-and so decided to go alone. In this decision, in which we see the
-first indication of originality, Gatacre showed a fearlessness, a
-confidence in his own resources, and a willingness to sever
-communications with all external support that are remarkable in a lad
-of only twenty-three. These characteristics never faded; they may be
-traced throughout the record of his life {18} whenever occasion arose
-for his individuality to take action. What other man would have
-attempted to explore the forests of Abyssinia unaccompanied at the age
-of sixty-one! His fearlessness and his confidence were with him to the
-end, and to the end he preserved a mobility that preferred to be
-unhampered.
-
-[Sidenote: 1867]
-
-Young Gatacre's first objective was Leh. He left Srinagar on May 2,
-and halting at Manasbal Lake one night, reached Kangan. Here he learnt
-that the road over the Zoji-La between Sonamarg and Dras was still
-blocked with snow, and so made up his mind to halt for a time. His
-diary during this fortnight's halt shows that he was more interested in
-what he saw than in what he shot. This is the feature of his trip; he
-writes much more of the temples that he has sketched than of the game
-that he has killed. One day when he had run across some friends he
-writes: "Saw a gerau deer that Troop had killed; would like to get one
-to make a sketch of." He subsequently collected many of his sketches
-in a book; and these early water-colours are quite surprising in their
-freshness and finish. They are not pictures, but most painstaking
-studies of what he saw--picturesque men and women, animals, temples,
-idols, and occasionally the detail of some designs from the temples.
-He records with the greatest interest the flowers and birds that he
-sees, and speaks of its physical features if the country he was passing
-through was of special interest. It is clear that he had at some time
-studied the elements of geology, {19} for he writes of the Zoji-La:
-"Rocks very barren, and look very old--no sharp points."
-
-[Sidenote: Goes after bear]
-
-After ten days he moved one march up the road to Reval, and spent ten
-days there shooting, whenever the rain and the snow allowed. On May 16
-he writes:
-
-
-"Fine morning at last; put everything in the sun to dry. Went out
-shooting after breakfast, and had a good day; killed a black bear about
-200 yards from camp. Had a shot at an ibex; saw nine, but did not hit
-one. Slept under a tree for about an hour; on my way back killed a
-brown bear with a beautiful silvery skin, and hit a barrasingh buck in
-the chest; tracked him a long way, found some blood. Night was coming
-on and it began to rain, so had to give up the search or should
-probably have got him--a magnificent beast, horns about a foot high,
-just beginning to grow. In jumping across the stream I fell in and got
-wet through; water very strong, was carried down like an arrow; caught
-hold of a stone and came ashore, took off my things and stood in the
-sun to dry: sketch reserved."
-
-
-There is a pleasant vein of boyish humour in some of the entries.
-
-
-"Went after a huge black bear that we saw on the hill-side, but could
-not find him. Climbed one of the stiffest and most slippery hills that
-I ever was on after the aforesaid bear, and found his cave. Thought
-him a fool for selecting such a spot; going up there once was bad
-enough, but to have such an ascent to one's residence was absurd.
-Found some one of the name of {20} Thorpe had arrived at the
-camping-ground, asked him to dinner, but he refused as he was so tired;
-could not understand his reason--the very one why I should have
-accepted, as he could have gone to bed directly afterwards, my dinner
-being ready and his not.
-
-
-It was not till May 23 that he got really started, and even then the
-road was still deep in snow, or the melting snow was flooding over the
-road in many places. Under date May 25 we read:
-
-
-"Passed some dead men in the pass; they were men going to Yarkand
-(eight men and a woman) several days ago, when they were overtaken with
-snow and smothered, all their bedding, clothes, etc., lying about."
-
-
-Next day, writing from Dras, he notices the great change that has come
-over the country; and here he spent three days, partly because his
-servant had fever, and partly because he finds so much to sketch that
-he cannot tear himself away. The same motive kept him at Lama Guru, of
-which he gives an excellent description. He reached Leh on June 9,
-having accomplished the 250 miles from Reval in seventeen days, or
-deducting four halts, thirteen days; which works out at an average of
-over nineteen miles every marching day.
-
-[Sidenote: At Hemis]
-
-The following day he started off for Hemis, where there was a great
-gathering for the visit of the Burra Lama: this involved a stony and
-arduous march of twenty-four miles, but he was {21} up early next
-morning and was very much interested in what was going on.
-
-
-_June_ 11, 1867.
-
-"Went all over the Monastery and gained a little information--not much,
-as the monks keep no records, only from year to year. The place is
-about 1,300 years old, well built of stone with a whitening on it, on
-the side of a rock. There are several halls of worship (Gompas) hung
-round with splendid silk flags and banners, all Chinese silk. There
-are a few idols, but very small ones, magnificently woven pictures of
-gods on silk being the chief things. About 10 o'clock the tamasha
-began, monks dressed in the most magnificent silk garments and quaint
-tall hats and masks dancing; the costumes were varied about every
-quarter of an hour and every one equally grand as the former. They
-each held in their hands a drum like a warming-pan and either a bell or
-a rattle. They danced a sort of war-dance in a circle, occasionally
-singing and drumming. Under the verandah of the Quadrangle were seated
-about thirty monks dressed in red and yellow silk gowns, with
-fan-shaped hats on their heads; some with drums, some with cymbals, and
-some with long trumpets, silver and copper, formed the band; they
-played from music and it went very well with the wild dance. One dance
-was performed with bears, another was supposed to be a wild man's
-dance: about ten monks--dressed in hideous masks, yellow embroidered
-silk jackets, on the shoulders of which tigers' heads were embroidered,
-and round whose waists were strings of bells, from which were suspended
-strips of tiger skins--danced in a circle, beating drums and ringing
-bells. The figure of a man {22} bound hand and foot was placed in the
-centre. After they had danced round the figure some time, one of them
-cut off his head with a sword. One of the side walls of the
-Quadrangle, about 30 ft. high and 12 ft. broad, was covered with a
-single cloth or flag on which was most beautifully woven the figure of
-one of their gods and other subjects--worth about 5,000 or 6,000
-rupees. This was at first covered with long silk streamers, which were
-removed; and when the large banner had been duly worshipped and
-admired, it was rolled up and replaced by another equally splendid, but
-not so large, by a third and by a fourth. Each dress could not have
-cost less than L80 or L100--I never saw anything so magnificent; the
-whole Quadrangle was hung round with silk streamers too. Round the
-Quadrangle, the prayer-books--viz. rollers of wood with the prayers
-written on them--are placed, one turn of which is equal to saying a
-prayer. All the villagers have them at their doors; at one corner of
-the Quadrangle there is a room in which there is a huge prayer roller.
-They are called Marni-prayer."
-
-
-Gatacre was determined to make the most of his opportunities, and
-insisted on seeing the Burra Lama, whom he thus describes:
-
-
-"He is a short, stout, middle-aged man, clothed in fine scarlet cloth,
-sitting on a throne on which incense was burning; he is never seen by
-any one except on the occasion of the festival, when he comes and sits
-on a platform in the Quadrangle for about half an hour. I could not
-wait till evening to see him, so as a special favour was allowed to see
-the mortal whom no vulgar European eye had seen before. He {23}
-received me graciously, and asked me to be seated and how I was; asked
-me if I had anything to give him. I had brought nothing from Ladak
-with me, but had some matches with me, which I gave him. He comes from
-Lhassa; it is three months' journey from here, and he comes once in
-every five or six years. It was great luck my seeing this festival, as
-occurring so early in the year it is seldom or never seen."
-
-
-[Sidenote: The Salt Lakes]
-
-On his return to Leh, Gatacre was horrified at getting letters telling
-him to hurry back to Peshawur, as cholera had broken out. But he was
-too cunning to take this very literally, and at once got his friend the
-Wazeer to lend him ponies to ride to the Salt Lakes; he adds most
-sapiently: "If I don't see them now, probably never shall."
-
-It was, however, a very long way (ninety-eight miles) to the Salt Lakes
-at Rupshu; he did this journey in two days, and on the second day
-writes:
-
-
-"The distance I came to-day was fifty-eight miles; I was nearly dead
-with fever, and sun and cold, and walking, and riding in a wooden
-saddle all day."
-
-
-He spent one day in his tent with fever on the snow-covered plain, but
-was better next morning and able to get about, and on the following day
-he started on the return journey, which he accomplished in two marches
-as before.
-
-After four days spent at Leh with some friends who had turned up, he
-marched back by the same {24} route, covering 265 miles from Leh to
-Kangan in twelve days, one of which was a halt at Lama Yuru, where he
-"slept nearly all day."
-
-[Sidenote: Off again]
-
-Writing from Baltal on July 1, he comments on the change that has taken
-place in the Zoji-La in his absence:
-
-
-"The Pir is a very different-looking place from what it was when I came
-through it before. Then it was a wilderness of snow, ice, and rocks;
-now it is the most beautiful pass, hills covered with grass and flowers
-and shrubs and trees that were before buried in the snow. The snow
-rivers are very full and furious; nearly lost a pony in one of them;
-drove him through it and carried saddles, etc., over the snow some way
-higher up; the pony was rolled over and over and with difficulty came
-to land. Now that the snow has disappeared, one sees what a quantity
-there must have been in the pass when I went through, at least 70 or 80
-ft. in some places. The Pir is covered with sweet peas and flowers of
-all colours and shapes, excessively pretty.
-
-"The hills wear a quite different aspect to what they did when I came
-up. The snow has melted except on a few of the highest peaks, and the
-grass has grown, likewise the shrubs. The barley and all the corn is
-in the ear; it was hardly sown when I came, just a month ago. There
-are waterfalls from nearly every rock, which looks very pretty and the
-water is such as 'only teetotallers desire or deserve.' The wild
-roses, white, red, and yellow, are covered with blossoms, and their
-smell is delicious."
-
-
-But before he reached Srinagar the orders for his return were
-cancelled, and we find him shooting in his old haunts round Kangan.
-
-{25}
-
-It is clear that he was enjoying himself thoroughly, that he felt no
-impatience to return to civilisation, and that he considered his march
-to Leh and back very much worth doing, for at the end of July he
-started on another extended tour. It is about 120 miles from Kangan to
-Skardo, about 200 thence to Leh, and about 250 from Leh to Srinagar, so
-that he added another 570 miles to his score in the fifty days between
-July 28 and September 15. Leaving the Sind River by the tributary
-valley to the north called Wangat, he crossed into the valley of Tylel
-by a little-known route "said to have been a track made by a gang of
-horse dealers who came from Tylel into Kashmir years ago." There were
-two very steep hills, of which the coolies only managed to accomplish
-the first.
-
-Turning north-east, he made his way across the plains of Deosai, but
-there was a difficult pass to negotiate before he descended into the
-valley of the Indus. On August 7 he writes:
-
-
-"Got up early and started for Skardo. Got to the top of the ridge in
-about an hour, all snow and ice, great trouble to get the ponies over
-the glacier, as it was a nearly perpendicular sheet of ice--they slid
-down most of the way. From the bottom of the glacier there is a
-descent of about eight miles down the valley, which opens out into the
-plain of Skardo. Skardo consists of a number of villages scattered
-over a stony plain covered with apricot-trees which yield great
-quantities of fruit. The plain is surrounded with high rocky hills, no
-grass or trees on them. The Wazeer is an old man with long {26} grey
-beard, uncle to the present Wazeer Labjar of Ladak, who was formerly
-Wazeer here. His name is Myraram, he came to see me on my arrival,
-bringing a large basket of apricots as a present."
-
-
-[Sidenote: A snow pass]
-
-The last sentence is a sample of many entries, for wherever he went he
-made friends with the headmen of the village, and he seems nowhere to
-have been in difficulties about supplies. As it is unlikely that the
-Hindustani of the plains of India would be understood in Thibet, he
-must either have mastered working fragments of the dialect, or he must
-have talked Persian with the more educated natives. Later on he says:
-"Met some Tartars who had been to Simla, and had a long talk with
-them." And in another place: "Had a long talk with a Sepoy who was in
-one of the four regiments sent by the Maharajah to assist in the
-capture of Delhi, and saw General Nicholson fall."
-
-Three officers of the 11th Hussars came in to Skardo the day after
-Gatacre's arrival, and fired him with the desire to see Shigar, a town
-a few miles higher up the Indus, where they had seen the original game
-of polo.
-
-After five days' halt at Skardo, Gatacre started on his return journey,
-via Leh. Both Skardo and Leh are on the Indus: he did not, however,
-follow the course of this river, but chose to make his way up the
-valley of the Shyok. This necessitated a passage over the Indus at the
-junction of the two streams on the second day's march, which he thus
-describes:
-
-
-{27}
-
-"Started at daybreak, and reached this at 6 o'clock. Crossed the river
-at Kiris on twelve mussocks fastened together by eight bamboos or thin
-sticks--the luggage in the centre, I on one side, Collassie on the
-other, and two steerers at one end, who steered with long sticks. When
-they got into the middle of the stream they began their tarnasha,
-namely, turning the raft round and round like a top by digging their
-sticks deeply into the water."
-
-
-Two days later he crossed the Shyok in the same manner, and found the
-stream "very fast and furious," although it was half a mile across. It
-is difficult to picture these watercourses, which, with the manners and
-appearance of mountain-torrents, have the volume and grandeur of mighty
-rivers. After following the Shyok for about fifty miles, he left it at
-Paxfain, and turned southwards along the side-stream which leads up to
-the Chorbat-La, a pass 16,696 ft. above the sea. Writing that evening,
-he says:
-
-
-"Marched at break of day and walked on steadily till the sun went
-down--a very long march; the first four or five hours were occupied in
-getting to the top of the pass--a terrible climb--after that it is all
-down-hill. The Pir was covered with snow, with an immense glacier
-reaching right across it for about 200 yards."
-
-
-The next day he struck into the valley of the Indus once more, and
-reached Leh in six marches on August 26. On the way "a very civil {28}
-Sepoy turned up," who was also on his way to Ladak. While in his
-company Gatacre found that he met with unusual politeness and
-attention, which was accounted for later when "the Sepoy turned out to
-be the new Thanadar of these parts."
-
-On September 1 he started back on the direct route to Srinagar, which
-must have seemed quite familiar to him on this, his third journey. On
-the Zoji-La he notes that "all the grass that was so beautifully green
-is now withered up." At Sonamarg he found it "very cold," and writes
-of his blankets being frozen hard in the morning, and quite white. On
-September 15 he reached Srinagar, having marched the 285 miles from Leh
-in sixteen days, making an average of eighteen miles a day. He seems
-to have done most of his travelling on foot, though it is clear that he
-sometimes had ponies for his baggage, and that he sometimes rode them.
-When he was making long marches he had great sympathy for his beasts,
-and often notices that the ponies were very tired. The rate at which
-he travelled would, of course, be nothing exceptional on made roads,
-but it must be remembered that in no case was there any road at all, as
-we understand the word, and that he habitually moved by double marches.
-
-He found several friends at Srinagar whom he had come across in his
-travels, and enjoyed an easy fortnight with them there before rejoining
-at Peshawur.
-
-[Sidenote: On sick leave]
-
-This season had proved itself a very trying {29} and unhealthy one for
-the 77th; the regiment had been attacked with cholera and Peshawur
-fever, and had lost five officers and forty-nine men. Colonel Kent
-tells us that on his return Gatacre had a sharp attack of fever, and
-that he and another subaltern had been so very ill when they were sent
-off home that it was feared they would never again be able to serve in
-India.
-
-Even after his arrival in England Gatacre had severe recurrences of
-fever, but home nursing triumphed; and before long he was posted to a
-depot battalion then commanded by Colonel Browne of the 77th, and
-stationed at Pembroke Dock. Writing on August 13, 1909, Colonel Browne
-says:
-
-
-"Gatacre's relations with his brother officers were always very smooth,
-and I cannot recall to mind his ever exchanging an angry word with any
-one of them, but as a rule he did not encourage intimacy.
-
-"Whatever Gatacre was asked or had to do he did well and thoroughly.
-Whilst he joined heartily in whatever socially was going on, he never
-in the days I speak of put himself prominently forward; but there was
-something about him which I at least recognised as showing a dormant
-power which only awaited opportunity to exert itself, and this view of
-him has been fully borne out by his later career."
-
-
-When Colonel Kent brought the battalion home in March 1870, Lieutenant
-Gatacre was on the quay to greet his regiment on its arrival at
-Portsmouth.
-
-{30}
-
-The Clarence Barracks in which the regiment was first quartered were at
-that time old and dilapidated, and have since vanished. In those days
-every officer who took part in a route-march had to send in a report to
-the General Officer Commanding. The opening sentence of one of
-Gatacre's reports amused his wing-commander so much that it survives:
-"Starting from the Clarence Barracks, long since condemned as unfit for
-habitation by the Royal Marines, etc."
-
-[Sidenote: 1870]
-
-The events of 1870 on the continent were of course followed with
-breathless interest by all intelligent Englishmen, and many soldiers
-must have longed to go and see the ground on which these sanguinary
-contests had been fought out. This desire was anticipated by the War
-Office, and special regulations were issued forbidding such an attempt.
-But to Gatacre the call was irresistible. Having taken first leave
-that autumn in order to see something of his brother John before his
-return to India, he slipped away via Harwich and Antwerp to Brussels,
-which he reached on November 6. He seems afterwards to have followed
-the route taken by the First German Army under Steinmetz in early
-August--in fact, Saarbrucken was the scene of the first encounter.
-Gravelotte had been fought on August 18, but doubtless to a soldier's
-eye the ground occupied by the combatants could still be identified.
-Metz had capitulated on October 27, so that the state of a city in
-which 150,000 men had been blockaded {31} for three months was
-exhibited in all its horrors.
-
-[Sidenote: Continental battlefields]
-
-Writing from Luxembourg on Sunday, November 6, 1870, he says:
-
-
-"I started again at 6.30 this morning, and got here, without stopping,
-at 1 o'clock; nothing but soldiers, horses, and baggage, besides sick
-men by the hundreds, hospitals filled. I never saw such a sight.
-To-night I am going to Treves, and then on to Metz, via Saarlouis and
-Saarbruck, as the road via Vionville is not open on account of the
-French holding it. I will write from Metz and let you know my
-movements. I mean to attach myself to the English Ambulance, if
-possible, for a while, if I can see anything more by doing so."
-
-
-And again on November 13, from Brussels:
-
-
-"From Luxembourg I went on to Treves, Saarbruck, Metz, and then round
-by Ottange, through Belgium to Brussels again. I went to Gravelotte
-and several battlefields, and picked up heaps of things, most of which
-I have got with me; but as nothing is allowed to go over the French
-frontier, there was a difficulty about passing. I met a man named
-Caldecott in the service, and he and I travelled together all the way;
-we drove across the frontier with our things, and so got them through.
-Metz is in a terrible state; nothing to eat or drink, or place to
-sleep. I could not write, as all postal communication is stopped, and
-most of the country round Metz a desert.
-
-"I shall come by the coach Thursday night, so if you could send the
-cart to Shipley to fetch my things, I will just walk over."
-
-{32}
-
-[Sidenote: 1871-3]
-
-Writing on the day following his return, his sister gives Stephen a
-rchauffe of the traveller's tales:
-
-
-"Metz is not injured in the least, but is full of soldiers, and that is
-why there was no place to sleep in there. When Willie left, the shops
-were open and provisions coming in. Willie travelled with another
-Englishman in a waggon with a poor starved horse, and was going about
-in this way for four or five days. The cold intense; deep snow. He
-saw 25,000 prisoners going into Germany, packed in trucks, forty
-officers and men in a truck like cattle, and snow among them. He slept
-in a hospital three nights, 1,700 men in it.
-
-"I do not think, from what he says, that travelling is over safe--that
-is, on the French side. The sentries are very sharp; an Englishman who
-was foolishly travelling by himself, and at night, and could speak no
-language well, was shot a month ago.
-
-"Willie is glad he went; he met an old gentleman who knew grandpapa at
-Saarbruck."
-
-
-It is much to be regretted that the daily impressions of this tour were
-not recorded with the accuracy of the Kashmir trip, but 1867 seems to
-have been the only year in which he kept a journal. We hear nothing of
-how he contrived to get anything to eat, or to get about at all, in a
-region stripped of supplies by the armies that had passed through; but
-the interesting fact remains that he did visit this ground, and
-reappeared at home on Thursday, November 17.
-
-Colonel Henry Kent was very popular in the 77th regiment, which he had
-first joined in 1845. He held the command for twelve years, and {33}
-had brought the battalion into a very high state of efficiency when he
-resigned in 1880. It is notified in General Orders of that year that
-for the third time in succession the 77th was the best shooting
-regiment, and that Private H. Morgan, of this corps, was the best shot
-in the army.
-
-[Sidenote: Staff College]
-
-In February 1873 Captain Gatacre was admitted to the Staff College. He
-had worked hard to prepare himself for the entrance examination, had
-taken private lessons to rub up his mathematics, and had been abroad to
-polish his French; for not only had he to secure a vacancy in open
-competition, but he had to dispute the place with another officer in
-the same corps.
-
-It is clear that even in these early days Gatacre had acquired the art
-of making himself valued among his fellows. Colonel Kent was dining
-with the Rifle Brigade at Aldershot one evening when he had the
-gratification of hearing the laments of some of his contemporaries at
-the Staff College at the prospect of losing Gatacre. But the Colonel,
-highly delighted at the success and popularity of his young friend,
-reassured them, saying:
-
-"Never mind, I have another quite as good to send in his place. I am
-sending Bengough next term."
-
-"Ah, yes," they said, "but we shall never have another like Gatacre; we
-shall miss him dreadfully. Why, what can the 77th be made of!"
-
-"Gatacres and Bengoughs," was the proud reply. General Kent affirms,
-moreover, that {34} His Royal Highness the Duke of Connaught was
-present on this occasion.
-
-[Sidenote: 1873-4]
-
-During these two years Captain Leir[1] was Master of the Staff College
-Drag-hounds. He speaks of Gatacre, who acted as his Whip, as "the best
-who ever turned them for me"; and tells us that he was quite the most
-accomplished horseman of his day--that he used to ride all sorts of
-horses, made and unmade, that he had wonderful patience and nerve, and
-was always in the front.
-
-
-[1] Now Major-General Leir-Carleton.
-
-
-Captain Leir writes that the only fuss he ever had with his colleague
-was over a hound, called Bellman, who had been given to him by the late
-Lord Cork when master of the Queen's Buckhounds. Bellman was a great
-favourite, being very companionable, which is unusual with fox-hounds.
-Gatacre begged leave to take him home and summer him in Shropshire, but
-having got him there the Squire took such a fancy to Bellman that his
-return was delayed till the following January. On another occasion,
-however, the Master had every reason to be grateful to his friend, as
-he tells us in the following story.
-
-[Sidenote: Indefatigable]
-
-For drag-hounds the scent is laid by a man who runs with aniseed half
-an hour before the hounds start; but as it is imperative that he should
-thoroughly know his line, he must walk it first, carefully selecting a
-track which avoids risk of damage to growing crops and affords suitable
-fences for the field. On one occasion when {35} Captain Leir's runner
-(or fox as he was familiarly termed) was _hors de combat_ from a fall,
-he sent for a noted runner from Reading to take his place. But when
-the Master had shown this man half the course, he suddenly threw up the
-job, and after that no bribe would induce him to go a yard farther.
-The meet was advertised for the following day, but there was no fox,
-and Leir, vexed and despairing, now turned to his Whip, who was noted
-for his resource in all difficulties.
-
-At 6 a.m. the next morning Gatacre started to walk the line by the aid
-of a map, drove back, did his morning's work on the heath with his
-class, and ran the line again in the afternoon. The runs varied from
-four to six miles, according to the season and the condition of hounds
-and horses, with a ten minutes' check in the middle. The fox on this
-occasion, however, was a long-winded one; he ran a bit farther than his
-instructions warranted, in order to enjoy the sight of half the field
-struggling on the banks of a big brook.
-
-At the final examination in December 1874 Gatacre passed out of the
-Staff College with special honours in military drawing and surveying,
-and was at once offered the post of Professor in these subjects at the
-Royal Military College; he took up this appointment early in 1875.
-
-In the following year, being then thirty-two, he was married to a
-charming and beautiful girl of Irish descent. Early in the year 1878
-their {36} eldest son, William Edward, who is now a Captain in the
-Yorkshire Light Infantry, was born at Yorktown.
-
-[Sidenote: 1875-9]
-
-A few months later Gatacre was to know the first great grief of his
-life in the loss of his mother. Willie had always proved intensely
-lovable, and had also his own graceful and attentive ways of returning
-the love which he received from his parents. There was, moreover, a
-strong vein of sentiment in him which led him throughout his life to
-cling to souvenirs and relics of the past.
-
-[Sidenote: As professor]
-
-It is evidence of the strength and the simplicity of Gatacre's
-character that his charm of manner was felt equally by men older and
-younger than himself. "Manners impress as they indicate real power.
-And you cannot rightly train one to an air and manner except by making
-him the kind of man of whom that manner is the natural expression.
-Nature ever puts a premium on reality."
-
-The cadets in his class were fascinated by this singular and brilliant
-personality, and loved him with a "schoolboy heat." One of them tells
-how he seemed more one of themselves than the other professors; another
-remembers how he treated them as gentlemen, instead of regarding them
-as schoolboys; another that he was full of sympathy when anything
-needed explanation; another that if he found out and fell upon some
-little meanness with the weight of his own uprightness, he would gave
-the culprit from official correction {37} thus win him as a disciple;
-another, writing at the time of his death, speaks of Gatacre's
-influence for good throughout his career. Another, who has afforded me
-very real assistance in this narrative, tells us that he felt such a
-genuine hero-worship for Captain Gatacre that he applied for the 77th
-Regiment in order to serve under him. This cadet not only passed well,
-but, being a protege of General William Napier, who was then Governor
-of the College, might have got himself gazetted into any regiment that
-he liked to name.
-
-After serving four years as a military instructor, Gatacre was
-appointed temporarily to the post of Deputy Assistant
-Quarter-Master-General on the Headquarters Staff at Aldershot. This
-was his first experience of staff work. The following winter a new
-field-service equipment was engaging much attention; this was, of
-course, worked out in the office in which Gatacre was employed. He
-writes with some satisfaction of the "mess-tin invented by me" being
-approved and adopted.
-
-
-
-
-{38}
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-1880-1883
-
-RANGOON
-
-[Sidenote: 1880]
-
-At the expiration of his term of office at Aldershot, in May 1880,
-Captain Gatacre took short leave home, and then rejoined the 77th at
-Dover. The regiment had been already warned for India in the next
-trooping season, but the news of our misfortune at Maiwand hastened
-their departure, and in August 1880 they were hurriedly embarked at
-only a fortnight's notice. To Gatacre the hope of seeing active
-service must have more than compensated for a disappointment he had
-expressed at not getting another staff billet. This hope, however,
-vanished on their arrival at Bombay, where the regiment learnt that the
-defeat of Ayub Khan outside Khandahar on September 2 had brought the
-campaign to a conclusion. The battalion was landed at Bombay on
-September 10, and made its way by road to Madras.
-
-[Sidenote: On the staff]
-
-It is evident that Gatacre's reputation as a {39} zealous and efficient
-officer had preceded him, for within one month of his arrival in India
-he was seconded for service on the staff of the Hyderabad Subsidiary
-Force, which had its headquarters at Secunderabad. All keen soldiers
-are pleased to be in India, for there is more chance of active service
-there than at home, and it was in the hope of getting this opportunity
-that Gatacre lived and worked. In the meantime his selection for staff
-work, although the post was only "temporary," was sufficiently
-complimentary to satisfy all his aspirations. His qualities and
-temperament had greater scope to expand in such a post than in the more
-rigid routine of a regiment; his previous experience of India added
-discernment to his enthusiasm in dealing with all the manifold
-interests with which he came in contact.
-
-But there was a cloud on the horizon which rapidly grew until the whole
-sky was for the moment overcast. Early in the New Year his little son,
-born at Aldershot and aged only fifteen months, fell sick with cholera,
-and died on January 18. Both parents felt the blow terribly: the
-mother took fright for the elder boy, and decided to carry him off
-home. Several touching relics, in the way of a lock of hair, etc.,
-that Gatacre, in spite of his many changes of residence, never
-afterwards cared to destroy, show how deeply he was moved by this loss.
-He had a spontaneous fondness for children that led him all his life to
-accost them; and his attentions to them invariably met with that {40}
-quick response which is in itself a sign of grace in the recipient.
-
- A manhood fused with female grace,
- In such a sort, a child would twine
- A trustful hand, unasked, in thine,
- And find his comfort in thy face.
-
-
-He looked forward with pleasure to getting a change when he should be
-relieved in June by the officer whose post he was holding, and soon had
-the satisfaction of accepting an offer from General the Honourable
-Arthur Hardinge, Commander-in-Chief of the Bombay Army, to take the
-place of his Military Secretary, who was for the moment employed
-elsewhere.
-
-[Sidenote: 1881]
-
-This appointment was even more congenial than the last: for to be on
-the personal staff of the Commander-in-Chief of a province meant
-accompanying him on all his tours of inspection. Like the former, this
-appointment was an eight months' business, for staff officers in India
-get sixty days' short leave every year, and eight months' long leave
-occasionally; for the latter period it was usual to appoint some
-officer to carry on, and it was Gatacre's good fortune throughout his
-career to be constantly selected for such temporary tenure of office.
-In this way he gained an acquaintance with all the provinces of India,
-and with all arms, British and Native, such as rarely falls to the lot
-of one man. When he left India, seventeen years later, there was
-hardly a station in all the four provinces which he had not visited.
-
-[Sidenote: Military Secretary]
-
-In the course of the winter, 1881-2, General {41} Hardinge paid an
-official visit to Sir Robert Phayre, at Mhow. One of his daughters
-well remembers Major Gatacre on this occasion. His handsome bronzed
-face, his slight athletic figure, and keen but kindly blue eyes
-arrested the attention; and then on further acquaintance, his
-indefinable charm of manner, his courtly way of devoting himself to his
-companion for the moment, his curious mixture of modesty and power left
-an impression which later years exaggerated as his name became
-identified with all the soldierly qualities and achievements which
-built up his fame.
-
-Every moment of these inspection tours was full of interest for
-Gatacre; who, being a good son, writes fully and simply about
-everything to the Squire at home.
-
-
-CAMP HAMURGHURI,
-
-_December_ 18, 1881.
-
-"We are having a very pleasant march from Nusserabad to Neemuch; good
-shooting all the way--duck, snipe, and deer; also some capital
-pig-sticking. The wild boars here are very difficult to get out of the
-jungle and grass, but when one does get them out across the open ground
-they run like greyhounds. I have two ponies a little under fourteen
-hands, both fast, and I have sometimes galloped a mile and a half
-before I could catch one; this was allowing him about a quarter of a
-mile start, otherwise if pressed they turn into the jungle. When you
-get up to them on the open ground, they turn round and run back a pace
-or two, and then come straight at you, rising on their hind legs to cut
-your horse if they get the chance, but {42} this of course they can't
-do if you use your spear properly. I have got some capital tushes.
-The best run we have had as yet was at a place called Roopauli, two
-marches back; two boars broke covert together and went away over
-capital ground to another place two miles off. The Commander-in-Chief
-and I took one and had a capital run after him. I had the luck to get
-the first spear. I was pleased, because I was riding a horse of the
-Chief's that could never be got up to a pig before. To-morrow we are
-coming to a place celebrated for cheetul, a kind of spotted deer,
-antlers like a stag and skin like a fallow deer. I am in hopes of
-getting one or two. This is a beautiful country to march through, very
-long grass and jungle all round; nearly all the hills are of white
-marble; and spotted marbles of sorts, and an enormous number of old
-forts and temples beautifully ornamented with carvings in marble and
-stone. Some of them are extraordinarily beautiful in form and design
-of carving, far superior to anything we see now--and these are
-thousands, not hundreds, of years old."
-
-
-[Sidenote: 1882]
-
-It is difficult to say when Gatacre "found" himself--to use an
-expression that Mr. Rudyard Kipling has for ever endowed with
-psychological meaning; but there can be no doubt that the shifting
-scenes in which he played his part from the time he landed in India, in
-August 1880, till he commanded his regiment in June 1884, must have
-widened his outlook on life, must have quickened his sense of the
-opportunities before him, and have enabled him to gauge his own powers.
-India encourages individuality to {43} a very high degree; men live in
-small groups in stations that are hundreds of miles apart; in any one
-place there is (in a sense) only one man of any one grade, so that the
-labourers do not jostle one another, but each has enough elbow-room to
-play freely with his tools.
-
-[Sidenote: To Burma]
-
-At the conclusion of his time with General Hardinge in February 1882,
-Gatacre was sent to act as Assistant Quarter-Master-General to the
-Burmese Division, with headquarters at Rangoon, then under the command
-of General H. Prendergast. The British connection with this
-picturesque river-port dates from 1824, when Sir Archibald Campbell
-captured it after a feeble resistance. In the following year, owing to
-continued outrages on British subjects and the refusal of the King of
-Ava to enter into any treaty obligations with us, a British force
-advanced up the Irrawaddy to Prome, and stayed there throughout the
-rainy season. In October the Burmese Army made an organised attempt to
-recover the place; but the British forces repulsed the attack, and
-followed up the enemy to within four days' march of their capital at
-Ava. At this point the Burmese sued for peace: their apologies were
-accepted, and the country was evacuated, except for the sea-board
-provinces of Arakan and Tenasserim. The Province of Pegu was restored
-to the Burmese and remained in their hands till 1852, when fresh
-outrages and insolence on the part of another Burmese sovereign again
-gave rise to hostilities. At the conclusion of peace Pegu {44} was
-formally annexed by Proclamation, while Lord Dalhousie was Viceroy,
-under the name of Lower Burma, and Rangoon was made the seat of
-government.
-
-Upper Burma was at that time in a deplorable condition; the excesses of
-the ruler, who was called Pagan-min, are described as recalling the
-worst years of the later Roman Empire. With a change of dynasty in the
-person of Mindon-min, matters improved somewhat. The new ruler
-realised the value of European enterprise and capital; he allowed
-strangers of all nations to settle in the country, and protected
-travellers and explorers. A few years later a commercial treaty was
-negotiated with Great Britain, a Resident was received, and for his
-protection he was allowed a small guard and an armoured boat on the
-river. To commemorate his flourishing reign Mindon founded a new
-capital at Mandalay, and in 1874 had himself crowned there to fulfil a
-prophecy.
-
-[Sidenote: King Theebaw]
-
-On his death, in September 1878, a terrible tragedy was enacted.
-Mindon, being an Oriental, had many wives and many sons; these latter
-he had dispersed as rulers of provinces with very good effect. When
-the old king lay dying, one of his wives devised a scheme by which to
-secure the succession to Prince Theebaw, for the reason that he was her
-son-in-law by his marriage with Supya-lat, her daughter. With the most
-fiendish designs Theebaw and the queen, in the king's name, summoned
-all the princes to Mandalay. They arrived each with {45} his Oriental
-retinue of women of all ages. The royal ladies were lodged in the
-prison, which had been cleared for their reception; the princes were
-received into the palace. "Under instructions from the King," a
-massacre was perpetrated on the nights of February 15, 16, and 17,
-1879. The queens and princesses and even royal children were done to
-death by the "ruffians released for the purpose from the jail which was
-now the scene of their cruelties, and their bodies were flung into a
-hole already dug in the jail."[1] The princes were compelled to pass
-through a certain doorway in the palace, where each one was in turn cut
-down; it is even said that the queen-mother and Supya-lat with their
-own hands did the deed. "Eight cartloads of the bodies of the Princes
-of the Blood were conveyed out of the city by the western or 'Funeral
-Gate,' and thrown into the river according to custom."
-
-
-[1] _Parliamentary Papers_ (Burma), 1886. Quotations from the
-_Mandalay Confidential Diary_, by Mr. R. B. Shaw, Resident, of February
-19, 1879, and later dates.
-
-
-It was calculated that some eighty souls thus perished. Even the
-people were horrified. Our Resident, Mr. Shaw, could do no more than
-express with vigour the light in which his Government would regard
-these atrocities; but King Theebaw was inaccessible to argument, and
-reasserted his right to take "such measures to prevent disturbance as
-might be desirable," stating that such acts were in accordance with the
-custom of the State, and that he would {46} go his own way without
-regard to "censure or blame."[2]
-
-
-[2] _Parliamentary Papers_ (Burma), 1886.
-
-
-[Sidenote: 1883]
-
-Owing to further gross outrages, the Resident was driven to fulfil his
-threat of breaking off friendly relations with such a ruler; the
-British flag was hauled down in August 1879, and the Residency
-evacuated.
-
-There were now no governors to keep order in the provinces: dacoits
-sprang up, traders were robbed and killed, the people were oppressed,
-and the land neglected. English merchants, however, continued to carry
-on their business at their own risk; their boats plied up and down the
-broad stream, and it was in their hospitable company that Gatacre spent
-Christmas 1882 at Mandalay.
-
-
-RANGOON, _January_ 11, 1883.
-
-"MY DEAR FATHER,
-
-"I send you a line to tell you my doings up-country at Christmas time.
-I was sorry to leave Alice just then, but the opportunity of seeing
-Mandalay for nothing was a great temptation.
-
-"We went, a party of six, including myself, most of them merchants. We
-had a steamer to ourselves, and the head of the Irrawaddy Flotilla
-Company, a Mr. Swan, who took us, did everything in first-rate style.
-The River Irrawaddy is a very difficult one to navigate at this dry
-season of the year, owing to the constantly shifting sands. We did not
-get aground, luckily, but we passed several steamers fast on the sands;
-they sometimes remain there six months till the river fills and floats
-them off. The steamers only drew 4 ft. 6 in. of water.
-
-{47}
-
-"We took four and a half days altogether to go up to Mandalay, but I
-did not join them till the steamer reached Prome, so I had only three
-days on board going up. The country, as far as we could see from the
-banks, consists of large rich plains, covered with grass and scrub
-jungle; very little cultivation, owing to the poverty of the people,
-but if capital was forthcoming the soil would grow anything. Where the
-crops were sown the yield was very large. There are low ranges of
-hills on the right bank, and a highish range, called the Shan
-Mountains, on the left bank.
-
-"We were told there was but little game inland; we saw plenty of
-wild-fowl, geese, etc. The poverty of the people is chiefly owing to
-the King having started lotteries, which bring him in 10,000 Rs., about
-L800, a day. The people have gone gambling mad, and barter everything
-they have for tickets--property, children, everything. The King ruins
-the country by his recklessness in squandering money; he presses the
-people to such an extent that an up-country Burman will hardly take the
-trouble to make money.
-
-"Mandalay is nothing but a collection of mud huts and a few masonry
-buildings, laid out in a beautiful style, all the houses in rows, with
-large streets running between each at right angles. It was laid out by
-Italians. None of the roads are made, so the bullock-carts passing
-along them in the rains have cut them up to a frightful extent; and in
-the rains they are impassable except quite at the edges, and then only
-to pedestrians. Mandalay was only built twenty-five years ago;
-formerly the capital was Ameerapoora, about six miles off, but was
-changed to Mandalay by order of the King. {48} Ameerapoora is a
-beautiful site--large trees, grass, and water everywhere. Some of the
-carved pagodas are very beautiful, but going very much to decay. The
-custom is, in Burma, that when a man builds a house or pagoda he only
-can repair it, or his relations; the consequence is that in course of
-time the building is forgotten and goes to pieces.
-
-"We saw the war-boats on the river; they are long dug-out canoes, a
-beautiful shape somewhat like this,[3] generally with a figure-head of
-a peacock (their sacred bird). The canoes are gilt all over, and
-manned with eighty to one hundred men; each has a short paddle, and is
-armed with a 'dah,' the Burmese knife, a 2 ft. 6 in. blade, with handle
-of 8 in. or 12 in. The canoes go like lightning, driven by the rowers,
-who shout all the time. The Burmese are great boatmen, and their races
-on the water are well worth seeing. They bet tremendously high on them.
-
-
-[3] See drawing in letter. [Transcriber's note: this letter was
-missing from the source book.]
-
-
-"The second largest bell in the world is at Mendoon, near Mandalay;
-this we went to see. It is 14 ft. high, and of a most enormous
-thickness--about 1 ft. 6 in. I should say. It was originally suspended
-on three enormous teak trees laid on masonry supports, but these have
-given way, and now it rests in the ground. There is also near the bell
-the commencement of a very large pagoda. Some one (I forget who) made
-up his mind to build the largest pagoda in the world, so started upon
-one. He got together an extraordinary amount of brick-work, but an
-earthquake unfortunately stopped the work by splitting it up in several
-places. It is about 100 yards square and high, so you can imagine the
-size of it. It is built with {49} large red bricks, 2 ft. long by 1
-ft. wide by 4 in. thick.
-
-"We stopped in Mandalay two and a half days. I rode about all over the
-place, and found the people very civil, though they are very suspicious
-of Englishmen.
-
-"We came down in one and a half days to Prome, where I caught the night
-train down, as I had to be back on New Year's Day, my leave being up.
-The trip was a most enjoyable one."
-
-
-[Sidenote: Second-in-command]
-
-The temporary staff billet having run out at the end of 1882, Gatacre
-went home on three months' leave early in the following year, and when
-he returned in May took up the post of second-in-command of his
-regiment, which in those days meant taking command of one wing of the
-battalion. This brought no change of residence, as the 77th were then
-quartered in Rangoon.
-
-He joined heartily in everything that was going on, and had, moreover,
-interests of his own which lay beyond the field of duty. The spring
-and autumn race-meetings were a great event. Though he does not seem
-to have owned any racing ponies, he was always in request as a jockey.
-Every morning he would hack down to the racecourse, and being a light
-weight was often asked to give a gallop to the ponies that were in
-training. In a letter of June 1883 he says: "I rode in five races, and
-won two, the hurdle race and an open race--the best race of the
-meeting--which pleased me."
-
-{50}
-
-There was a steeplechase pony named Free Lance that he rode to victory
-many times. The owner of Free Lance appeared as Mr. Darwood, a
-gentleman of Rangoon, of mixed nationality; but I am inclined to think
-that Free Lance was in reality the property of King Theebaw, for the
-General told me that at one time he had half shares with King Theebaw
-in a racing pony, which he rode, and there is no other period to which
-this incident could be attached. I have now in my possession a gold
-scarf-pin that King Theebaw sent as a recognition of Gatacre's services
-in the matter of this pony. Although this secret was kept so close
-that none of the regimental officers got wind of it, it is not
-considered improbable.[4] It was well known that Gatacre had friends
-amongst the leading men of Rangoon, and it is entirely in accordance
-with his character that he should have been personally acquainted with
-his native neighbours. Indeed it is not altogether impossible that he
-was engaged in some sort of secret intelligence duties for Government,
-for he told me that at one time he used to disguise himself and go and
-talk in the Native Bazaar, and it is certain that he acquired the
-Burmese language, and could even write it to some extent.
-
-
-[4] As King Theebaw was at that time an independent friendly sovereign,
-there is nothing contrary to any regulations in Gatacre's association
-with him in this matter.
-
-
-[Sidenote: Iolanthe]
-
-In the summer of 1882 the regimental officers and others in the station
-got up a performance of _Patience_, in which Gatacre {51} figured as
-one of the Dragoon Chorus. In the following year _Iolanthe_ was
-produced. Gatacre was anxious that the audience should include persons
-of all nationalities; and in order that those who could not understand
-the English words should have some key to the action, he made a precis
-of the play, and, having written it in Hindustani characters, had it
-lithographed, and distributed with the programmes. A copy of this
-curious document, which covers three sides of foolscap, and is signed
-in full, is still to be seen in the scrap-book of the officer who
-joined the 77th Regiment for love of his tutor at Sandhurst.
-
-At the end of September Gatacre heard of the birth of his third son,
-John Kirwan, now in the 11th Bengal Lancers.
-
-In December 1883 the regiment left Rangoon for Secunderabad.
-
-
-
-
-{52}
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-1884-1885
-
-SECUNDERABAD
-
-[Sidenote: 1884]
-
-I have read in a recent biography of Alexander Hamilton that "the power
-of his intellect was hardly suspected under the ambush of his
-extraordinary charm."[1] This was equally true of Gatacre. Moreover,
-the high standard of his physical endowments was in itself a mask to
-his mental abilities; in reality, his physical force was but the
-evidence and the result of his intellectual energy.
-
-
-[1] Alexander Hamilton, by F. S. Oliver, p. 149.
-
-
-[Sidenote: Camp of exercise]
-
-He turned the whole of his power on to the work in hand; even when
-partly disabled, he would not allow himself to be cheated of the
-pleasure and opportunity that his work afforded. Of course the
-opportunity that his soul yearned for was active service; he was daily
-discovering his own value, and longed to prove himself in the fierce
-furnace of war.
-
-The year 1884 opened with the nearest approach to these conditions that
-can be contrived without an enemy. A camp of exercise on a very large
-scale was held near Bangalore, {53} at which 10,000 troops were
-assembled. Sir Charles Keyes commanded the First Division, in which
-the 77th were included, and General H. Prendergast had command of the
-Second Division, with Colonel W. F. Gatacre as
-Assistant-Quarter-Master-General.
-
-In spite of the misfortune recorded in Gatacre's own letter given
-below, he more than satisfied his General, who writes on June 11, 1909:
-
-
-"I found him a remarkably clever, zealous, and efficient officer.
-During the operations his horse fell, and injured his ankle so that he
-could neither ride nor walk, but that did not prevent him from thinking
-out and arranging all our plans; though disabled and in great pain, he
-would write till two in the morning, and all went well with the
-Division, which he accompanied carried on a stretcher, owing to his
-devotion."
-
-
-Below is Gatacre's own account of it all:
-
-
-HEADQUARTERS 2ND DIVISION,
- CAMP KRISTNARAJAHPUR,
-
-_January_ 27, 1884.
-
-"MY DEAR FATHER,
-
-"I send you a short letter by this mail, but will write at length by
-next one, and tell you all about the manoeuvres. They are over now and
-have been most successful. I have enjoyed them thoroughly, though I
-have been most unfortunate. I told you one of my horses or charger
-ponies died of anthrax a few days before leaving Burma (I had just sold
-the brute for 600 rupees); and the other charger, which I had had for
-two years, and who {54} was a first-rate animal, died of colic the day
-after I arrived here. Fortunately for me a friend of mine was kicked
-off his horse a few days after coming here, and hurt a good deal, so he
-asked me to ride him, which I have done all through the fortnight's
-work. Though a very fine horse, he, like many walers, was very nervous
-and shy, and the last day of the manoeuvring he got nervous in jumping
-a nullah, and instead of jumping it he jumped into it, and rolled over
-me, giving me a regular flattening out; he has damaged my ankle and
-both my knees slightly, and I think it will be at least a month before
-I can do anything at all, though I am perfectly well in every way. The
-doctor says that the small bones of the foot are crushed, but that in a
-month I shall be all right. It was very annoying, just at the finish,
-wasn't it? Sir Frederick Roberts came to see me, and said he was very
-sorry about it; so did General Hardinge, the C.-in-C. in Bombay; he
-came and had a long talk in my tent, and told me all about John and his
-regiment. He thinks a great deal of John, and says his regiment is one
-of his best. Your luminous match-box has furnished lights for all
-these big people; it is always on my table; I shall scratch their names
-on the back of it. I wanted to see Sir Frederick Roberts about the
-command of the regiment; so I asked to see him in the usual way, and he
-sent word to say he would be glad to see me; so I got a litter and went
-across. He was most kind, said he knew all about it, that he would
-give his support, and that I need have no doubts on the matter. He
-asked me if I would like a staff appointment; I said I would, but that
-I wanted to command the regiment.
-
-"At present the camp has all broken up; {55} my regiment goes
-to-morrow, and I go with it. I have not seen my own regiment since I
-came here scarcely; as they were in the 1st Division and I was A.Q.M.G.
-of the 2nd Division."
-
-
-[Sidenote: In command]
-
-On June 24, 1884, Gatacre realised his immediate desire, and succeeded
-to the command of the 2nd Battalion Middlesex Regiment, as the old 77th
-had been renamed.
-
-Although nothing occurred during his period of command to distinguish
-him from many another equally efficient officer, still a recapitulation
-of the qualities which remain in the minds of those who served under
-him will give us some idea of what he then was. I am mainly indebted
-for the material for the following sketch of Gatacre as a Commanding
-Officer to the kindness of Colonel N. W. Barnardiston, M.V.O., who
-writes in July 1909:
-
-
-"I was adjutant at the time, and never before or since have I served
-under a better or more efficient battalion commander, nor have I come
-across one during my experience on the staff."
-
-
-Gatacre was forty years old when he succeeded Colonel Colquhoun; he had
-served very little with the regiment, but the time spent on the staff
-had added to his professional value. While his acute perceptions and
-easy receptiveness had ripened his judgment on many points, his
-simplicity of character and natural integrity remained unimpaired. He
-had downright notions about right and wrong, but was influenced more by
-the spirit than by the letter of the {56} bond: he was very just, but
-never hard, always showing a lofty sympathy for those in trouble of any
-sort, and a tender consideration for their feelings. There was about
-him a curious balance of moral austerity and physical
-tenderheartedness; these apparently contradictory qualities both came
-into fuller play when in the field. He taught the regiment to work
-with the disinterested spirit that animated himself; to work for the
-work's sake: he insisted on every duty being done correctly and
-conscientiously and strictly according to regulations. He never shrank
-from the disagreeable duty of rebuke, where the interests of the
-service were at stake; but at the same time he never unduly worried his
-subordinates, or interfered with their province, and in no way passed
-the frontier of his own department. If he wanted more work, he looked
-beyond and not below his own sphere of influence.
-
-Even at this time Gatacre's willingness to accept responsibility and to
-undertake troublesome and unexpected tasks was remarkable. Where some
-men might raise objections and fear obstructions when asked, or even
-ordered, to get something done that was new or out of the common, he
-would welcome the call on his resources, and do his utmost, by
-enlisting the goodwill and co-operation of those about him, to carry
-the business through. Later on, one of his colleagues in Poona looked
-upon his trick of saying, "No difficulty about that," as evidence of a
-very valuable quality; and in {57} the Office in Bombay there was a
-joke that the word "impossible" was not allowed.
-
-It was a sign of the lack of vanity in his composition that Gatacre
-took so long to find out that there was anything exceptional about
-himself, but it is now admitted on all sides that his capacity for work
-was far in excess of the average. According to Mr. G. W. Steevens in
-1898, "his body was all steel wire." He was certainly lean and light;
-at sixty he discovered to his great satisfaction that his weight was
-the same, ten stone two, as it had been as a subaltern in Peshawur. In
-appearance also he changed very little, looking always about ten years
-younger than his age. His back was short in proportion to the length
-of his limbs, which gave the impression of a shorter man than he
-measured, but at the same time this was the secret of his graceful seat
-on a horse, and of his extraordinary walking powers. Like the good
-horses that he loved to bestride, Gatacre was fast and free, and had
-the staying powers of the thorough-bred animal; it was inevitable that
-such a one should be sometimes difficult to "follow," and that other
-men should occasionally feel that he called upon them for exertions
-that were beyond their powers.
-
-His whole heart was in his profession; and with the material that was
-now under his hand he developed an aptitude for the practical training
-of both officers and men. Acting on ideas suggested by the recent camp
-at Bangalore, {58} he initiated small field-days at Secunderabad, in
-which one major with one half-battalion was pitted against another with
-the remainder. This was before the days of staff-rides and annual
-camps of exercise, and was so much of a novelty that his adjutant
-writes that many of his officers "learnt more of the art of organising
-manoeuvres, drawing up schemes, and issuing orders than it was then
-possible to do at the Staff College." Moreover, to accompany Gatacre
-on a field-day was a lesson in horsemanship. He had two capital Arab
-ponies, and would often lend the spare one to his adjutant or galloper.
-No obstacle stopped him, though sometimes these clever little animals
-were expected to move over the most impossible-looking country--craggy
-hills, big rocks and boulders, and the steep sides of deep nullahs. If
-really pounded, he would slip off and lead or drive his pony, until at
-the earliest moment he would be on its back again.
-
-[Sidenote: 1885]
-
-His gift for administration was further exercised in perfecting the
-regulations for the rapid turn-out of the Movable Column which had its
-base at Secunderabad: every little detail was most carefully thought
-out on the lines of a far larger mobilisation, and every man knew
-exactly where he had to go, and what he had to do, whenever he should
-hear the "Alarm."
-
-If he was impatient of laziness or shirking, he was, on the other hand,
-generous in his appreciation of honest work. He made it a practice to
-help good men to get forward. There were at that time in India a large
-number of {59} extra-regimental appointments open to non-commissioned
-officers. The natural training-ground for such aspirants was in the
-orderly room, but few commanding officers cared to part with a man who
-had just become really competent in his particular job and valuable to
-themselves; with the result that the more promising and ambitious young
-fellows were unwilling to serve. But during Gatacre's reign the plan
-was reversed: if a good man, no matter what his duties were, or how
-difficult he would be to replace, applied for a suitable and desirable
-position outside the regiment, Gatacre would heartily support the
-application. Very soon there were plenty of keen young soldiers eager
-to qualify for billets which were the sure road to advancement. When
-as a General Officer he had the opportunity of pushing forward
-promising young officers, he acted on the same principle; he was always
-ready to train, but never hesitated to let others reap the harvest that
-he had sown.
-
-Thus in a hundred ways the Colonel built up a reputation for kindness,
-efficiency, originality, and power: and we are not surprised to read
-that "his period of command was a very happy one for the 77th."
-
-In April 1885 the far-reaching consequences of the Russian scare made
-themselves felt at Secunderabad, where the following telegram was
-received:
-
-
-"Warn for service the 2nd Middlesex Regiment and 24th Madras Native
-Infantry. Detail hereafter."
-
-
-{60}
-
-The excitement was intense. No officer was allowed to leave his
-bungalow for a walk without saying in which direction he was going. To
-Gatacre the idea of leading his regiment into action must have
-presented visions of endless opportunities, and those who knew him must
-always regret that he had no chance to display as a regimental officer
-that personal valour and forwardness under fire for which, as a General
-Officer, he has been subjected to so much criticism.
-
-This state of expectant commotion lasted for six weeks, and then all
-hopes were quenched, for on May 26 official intimation reached the
-Commanding Officer that:
-
-
-"War with Russia having been averted, the regiment need no longer hold
-itself in readiness for active service."
-
-
-This was the second time that he had had to bury his disappointment,
-and again a third time was it to happen.
-
-[Sidenote: D.Q.M.G.]
-
-It was clear to all that before long there would be another Burmese
-War. The grievances of Europeans against King Theebaw had gone on
-accumulating: diplomatic efforts had entirely failed to secure
-attention or redress, the patience of the Foreign Office was at an end,
-and the Government of India was directed to prepare an expeditionary
-force to march on Mandalay, and thereby to teach King Theebaw that he
-could not afford to flout the British Government. This {61} mission
-was entrusted to General Prendergast. Gatacre volunteered to come down
-and help his former Chief in the embarkation of the troops at Madras
-for Rangoon. Having proved his value as a staff officer, and having
-heard of his previous journey to Mandalay, Prendergast was most anxious
-to take Gatacre with him; but all the posts had been filled, and to the
-General's "grievous disappointment and much to the disadvantage of the
-Government," the application to take him as Military Secretary or
-Special Transport Officer was refused, and Gatacre had to be content
-with the thanks of the Government of India for his services in the
-embarkation of troops which he was not permitted to accompany.[2]
-
-
-[2] _Proceedings of Government_, No. 6502, November 17, 1885.
-
-
-[Sidenote: Secunderabad]
-
-In a later chapter we shall follow the fortunes of the Expedition, but
-for the moment all thought of Burma was swept out of Gatacre's mind by
-the prospect of serving on the Headquarters Staff of the army. On
-November 24, 1885, the following telegrams were exchanged:
-
-
-"If agreeable to you, Sir Frederick proposes to recommend you to
-Government as Deputy Quarter-Master-General; you will have to join at
-once if Government approve."
-
-
-To which this reply was sent:
-
-
-"I gratefully accept His Excellency's offer; am ready to go anywhere."
-
-
-On December 11 the following Farewell Order was issued:
-
-
-{62}
-
-"Lieutenant-Colonel Gatacre wishes the Battalion farewell.
-
-"He thanks the officers, non-commissioned officers, and men for the way
-in which they have zealously and loyally carried out his orders during
-the short eighteen months he has had the honour of commanding them, and
-will always take the deepest interest in their welfare.
-
-"He especially thanks his regimental staff, viz. Lieutenant and
-Adjutant N. W. Barnardiston, and Captain and Quarter-Master Hunt, for
-their good service as Adjutant and Quarter-Master respectively, and
-Lieutenant Savile and Lieutenant Burton, who have on many occasions
-officiated in their capacities.
-
-"He wishes the 2nd Battalion Middlesex Regiment many happy New Years,
-and success wherever they go."
-
-
-
-
-{63}
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-1885-1889
-
-BLACK MOUNTAIN EXPEDITION
-
-Sir Frederick Roberts succeeded Sir Donald Stewart as
-Commander-in-Chief in India in 1885. After short leave home the new
-Chief returned just in time to preside over a great concentration of
-troops near Delhi in December of that year. It was the biggest thing
-of the sort that had yet been attempted; the manoeuvres occupied about
-three weeks, and concluded on January 8, 1886, with a Grand Review in
-which about 35,000 men took part. It would have been a splendid sight,
-had it not been spoilt by a deluge of rain. The Viceroy, Lord
-Dufferin, was on parade, and it was afterwards suggested that it was
-the firing of his salute that had brought down the rain. Anyhow, just
-as his flag was run up, the storm burst and the rain pitilessly poured
-down on the columns of men as they carried out the unaltered programme
-of the day. The march-past occupied six hours. According to an
-eye-witness, the "trot-past of cavalry and artillery in spite of
-everything was magnificent, and could have been performed {64} by no
-other troops.... The Viceroy sat on his horse through the rain with
-exemplary patience, and we only hope that he will be none the worse."
-
-General Chapman[1] had just taken up the post of
-Quarter-Master-General, and first saw his Deputy at this camp. Gatacre
-seems from the outset to have made a good impression on his Chief, who
-describes him in a letter from Delhi as "a man of active intelligence,
-quick and ready to do anything, a good rider, and a popular man."
-
-
-[1] Now General Sir Edward Chapman, K.C.B.
-
-
-[Sidenote: At Headquarters]
-
-It is the province of the Deputy to take charge of the office in which
-he is working--that is, to acquaint himself with all that is going on
-in the department and to know all the staff and the clerks personally.
-On his arrival at Headquarters Gatacre rapidly gathered up all the
-threads of his new work, and made himself more and more valuable to his
-Chief; while from his own point of view he used to say that it was at
-this time that he learnt how to put a finish to his work in the office,
-and to appreciate the scope and importance to the army at large of the
-individual work done at Headquarters. As is often the case after a
-campaign, there was much important reorganisation worked out during the
-next few years; new schemes of training, housing and surveying, were
-initiated and carried out. From the inside of the
-Quarter-Master-General's office Gatacre could in a short time get a
-comprehension of many points of {65} army administration such as a
-lifetime in the field would fail to give.
-
-[Sidenote: 1886]
-
-During the winter months the Commander-in-Chief goes on tour,
-accompanied by a few staff officers: sometimes the
-Quarter-Master-General would go himself and leave Gatacre in charge,
-sometimes it was the other way round. One year when the Q.M.G. was
-making an extended tour, Mrs. Chapman was much pleased at getting a
-visit from Colonel Gatacre every morning as he went down to office. In
-response to her appreciation of these attentions he averred that he
-looked upon her as part of the office, and must see that all was well.
-
-The two men were associated in this department for more than three
-years, and by the time that General Chapman had to resign (owing to bad
-health) a fast friendship had sprung up between them, one from which
-"the all-assuming months and years" have taken no part. On hearing of
-his friend's death in 1906 General Chapman wrote:
-
-
-"A more loyally devoted assistant I could not have found, active,
-untiring, and self-sacrificing; the public service and the interests of
-others were always before him. His gallantry and forwardness on
-service were acknowledged by all, but it was late in life that he so
-distinguished himself. I recall chiefly the straight-forwardness and
-honesty of his help and advice, and remember his never-failing and
-cheery support whenever we had a difficulty to face."
-
-
-Owing to the illness of the Quarter-Master-General, {66} Gatacre
-accompanied the Commander-in-Chief on two long tours in the spring of
-1886. On the first he saw many places of great historical interest,
-such as Cawnpore, Futtehghur, Lucknow; and in the second he was taken
-to Peshawur and Lundi Kotal, where many interesting problems of
-frontier defence were discussed on the ground. For two months in 1886
-he officiated as Quarter-Master-General, pending the arrival of Sir
-William Lockhart, who was to act for General Chapman while away on long
-leave.
-
-[Sidenote: 1887]
-
-Christmas was spent at Calcutta, and early in 1887 Gatacre was again on
-the move. During this year he was twice entrusted with an independent
-mission; in March he accompanied the Chief on his official visit to
-Peshawur, Kohat, Rawulpindi, and Quetta, and was afterwards sent to
-survey and report upon the proposed line for a military road from
-Loralai in Beluchistan to Dera Ghazi Khan on the Indus. His abstract
-of daily work shows that he was out all day exploring and surveying.
-His report shows that he thoroughly investigated all questions relating
-to the water supply and the area of the camping-grounds on the road,
-and deals with many questions as to the safety and comfort of the
-working parties and their guards. Although the country to be explored
-covered 183 miles, he worked with such celerity that the work was
-completed in thirteen days.
-
-[Sidenote: On tour]
-
-Writing from Bannu a week or two later he finds time to send a
-comprehensive account of his doings:
-
-{67}
-
-"I think I wrote you last from Loralai, beyond Quetta to the east:
-well, from there I explored a new road which is to run through Mekhtar,
-Kingri, Rukni, to Dera Ghazi Khan on the Indus. It has been approved,
-and is to be carried out at once; as in the event of troops moving up
-towards Kandahar, it would be the route along which all our regiments
-and stores from the Punjab would move. The country is a wild one at
-present, savage, with no cultivation or inhabitants, except a few
-robbers: but the lie of the road is good, and the gradients are easy.
-Of course a made road will draw the large Kafilas of camels with
-merchandise from one end to the other, and as the roads will be under
-our protection the native merchants will gladly use it, and this will
-gradually people the various halting-places, and so settle the country
-by degrees. There was much game along the route; markhor, a large goat
-with splendid horns; gud, a large sheep with very large curly horns,
-wolves and small game, hares, partridges, wood-pigeons, etc. I had
-very little time for shooting, but shot one markhor and much small game
-here and there as I came across it; but as I had a lot of surveying to
-do all day, I had no time to make excursions after game alone, though I
-should much have liked to have had a turn with Stephen in some of the
-hills through which I passed. You would have been delighted with the
-country in some places, something like Scotland with fewer trees and
-more sun, but comparatively cool for India. The only disagreeable
-thing about it is the general want of water and the number of poisonous
-snakes. Water is found only in certain streams and in single springs,
-and is very valuable. Of course, any good road which is {68} required
-has to follow the line of water, but the rivers commence to flow at any
-point in the river-bed, and after becoming a rushing torrent, disappear
-as suddenly as they arose, into the ground and are seen no more; where
-they go to no one knows, but you may seek in vain further down the bed
-of the river and not find water. In some cases the water reappears in
-the stream ten miles lower down, and disappears again as before. The
-snakes are everywhere, and it was a few days before I left Khur that a
-young engineer named Hackman was bitten. I saw his death in
-yesterday's paper. I killed several cobras while marching, I am glad
-to say."
-
-
-In November of the same year he was sent on a similar mission to
-Sikkim. It was discovered that a private treaty had been signed by
-which the Rajah had declared that Sikkim was subject only to China and
-Tibet, thus repudiating the British suzerainty. By way of preparation
-for an expedition to settle this question Gatacre was sent up to report
-upon the road over the Jelap-La along which troops would move on to
-Lingtu, the capital of Sikkim. Though it was at that time held by a
-hostile force of Tibetans, he approached near enough to sketch the fort
-at Lingtu. His report and his sketches were afterwards incorporated
-with other matter in a blue-book dealing with the affairs of Sikkim.
-Sir Thomas Graham asserts that the information set down was of great
-value to him when in the following spring he led a force into Lingtu
-and brought the incident to a satisfactory conclusion.
-
-{69}
-
-[Sidenote: At Simla]
-
-In a letter to his father from Simla of September 1887 Gatacre relates
-the following story:
-
-
-"Did I tell you I was nearly polished off by a madman with a revolver?
-He shot two men he came across, then got on to a rock and defied the
-crowd, but I got a stick and went for him, to prevent his doing more
-mischief. He warned me not to come near him, but I spoke to him in his
-own language, and never took my eyes off him, and when he was going to
-have a shot at me he suddenly changed his mind and blew a hole in his
-breast about three or four inches in diameter. The fact was he was not
-quite sure whether he had a spare round for himself, and these
-fanatical fellows always destroy themselves after doing as much
-mischief as they are able; when he shot himself I was just within reach
-of him, but too late to knock the pistol out of his hands."
-
-
-This incident attracted a good deal of attention at the time, as the
-murderer was the personal servant of a resident member of the United
-Service Club. He had begun by shooting at another servant, and
-inflicted a mortal wound; the next shot struck the chowkidar, or
-caretaker, in the arm. Gatacre then appeared on the scene and played
-the part he describes.
-
-
-There is another story told of him that belongs to this same year.
-
-On September 27 Lady Dufferin gave a ball at Government House; all the
-world was there and Gatacre among them. As was his invariable habit,
-he stayed to the end, and early in the {70} morning told a friend that
-he was just starting for a ride to Umballa, but would be back in office
-the next day. To accomplish this design he had arranged for ponies to
-be in readiness at the various stages along the Old Road from Simla to
-Umballa, which is a distance of ninety-seven miles, descending about
-6,000 ft. from the mountains to the plains. As far as Kalka they were
-hired ponies, from there to Umballa he had borrowed mounts from a
-friend, using nine ponies each way. Leaving Simla at 5.15 a.m., he
-reached Umballa at 2.30 that afternoon. At 4 o'clock he started back
-and dismounted at Simla again at 3.5 a.m. That is to say, after
-dancing till daybreak, he covered little short of two hundred miles in
-twenty-two hours, and turned up again at 10 o'clock ready and fit for
-his office work as usual.
-
-It is unnecessary to seek for any pretext for such exertion; the fun of
-the rapid ride, the desire to excel, were quite sufficient stimulus for
-him. He told the newspapers at the time that he wanted to show what
-office men could do.
-
-But before very long he was to have an opportunity of putting these
-powers to more practical uses. In September 1888 Gatacre and two of
-his colleagues on the Headquarter Staff were given posts on the Hazara
-Field Force, then concentrating near Abbottabad.
-
-[Sidenote: Hazara border]
-
-After the Mutiny the Hazara and Peshawur borders became "a
-rallying-point for mutinous Sepoys and traitors in arms who had to flee
-from British justice." There was in particular {71} a sect known as
-the Sittana Fanatics, who continued to stir up coalitions against our
-power, as they had previously done against our Sikh predecessors in the
-Punjab. An expedition under Sir Sydney Cotton in 1858 advanced into
-the mountains, drove the Hindustani fanatics from Sittana, destroyed
-their forts, razed their dwellings to the ground, and extorted an
-undertaking from the neighbouring tribes that the rebels should not be
-allowed a passage through their territory.
-
-[Sidenote: 1888]
-
-Although the centre of disturbance was thus forced back at the point of
-the sword to Malka, it was not long before numerous raids on unarmed
-traders, and other outrages, brought the peace of the frontier again
-into question. Our allies were either unable or unwilling to carry out
-their pledges, and in 1863 Sir Neville Chamberlain led a force through
-the Ambeyla Defile. This expedition differed from the others in that
-all the contiguous tribes were in a state of disaffection, and on this
-account there was more fighting than in the previous punitive
-expeditions. The story of the repeated capture and loss of the Eagle's
-Nest and Crag Picquet still makes brave reading, and afforded moreover
-most satisfactory proof of the loyalty of our reorganised Native Army.
-It was noted with satisfaction in 1888 that very few of the Hindustani
-fanatics were to be found in the ranks of the enemy, showing that the
-lesson of 1863 was more lasting in its effect than the others had been.
-The policy of the Government {72} had never altered; in every case the
-tribe was informed--
-
-
-"That the British Government did not covet their possessions, nor those
-of other neighbouring tribes, with whom it desired to be at peace; but
-that it expected tribes would restrain individual members from
-committing unprovoked outrages on British subjects, and afford redress
-when they are committed; that when a whole tribe, instead of affording
-redress, seeks to screen the individual offenders, the British
-Government has no alternative but to hold the whole tribe
-responsible."[2]
-
-
-[2] _A Record of the Expeditions against the North-West Frontier
-Tribes_, by Paget and Mason (1884), p. 41.
-
-
-The enforcing of this principle has led to the numerous little wars
-that have afforded the opportunities for distinction to all ranks of
-which the personnel of an army is so quick to avail itself. Each
-expedition has usually been of a few weeks' duration only; sometimes
-there was very little actual fighting; sometimes there was very little
-political gain; but always there has been a story of hardship and
-valour.
-
-The Hazara Field Force of 1888 was mobilised for the punishment of
-certain tribes inhabiting the slopes of the Black Mountain, a region
-lying on the left bank of the Indus, north of Abbottabad. It was some
-years since we had had a reckoning with Hassanzais and Akazais in
-particular, and they had been showing increased insolence in their
-attitude and daring in their raids.
-
-{73}
-
-[Sidenote: Battye killed]
-
-A sufficient occasion was all that was needed to bring about open
-hostility, and this was afforded by the tribesmen themselves on June
-18, 1888. On that day Colonel Battye and Captain Urmston conducted a
-route-march with some three score Goorkhas from the frontier post at
-Oghi; they had gone perhaps a little nearer to the frontier than was
-quite expedient, but it was afterwards shown that they had never
-actually left British territory. When about ten miles from Oghi, they
-were fired at from two points simultaneously. Colonel Battye ordered
-the Goorkhas to rush a ridge just ahead on which they could make a
-stand. The ridge was secured, but, unfortunately, the two British
-officers turned back to help a wounded man, and, while they were thus
-separated from the troops, both were cut down with swords. The Subadar
-(native officer) at once took command, though one arm had been disabled
-by a blow from a stone, and a bullet had gone through his thigh, and
-his head was streaming with blood. He collected the party, and marched
-back to the spot where the two officers had fallen. Keeping up a
-spirited fire to drive back the tribesmen, he succeeded in recovering
-both bodies, and brought the whole party back into camp at 8.30 that
-night. This man, Subadar Kishnbir Nagar Koti, had already gained the
-Order of Merit three times in the Kabul Campaign.[3]
-
-
-[3] See _Civil and Military Gazette_, June 1888.
-
-
-As the Headman of the tribe refused to hand over the offenders, the
-Government was driven {74} to avenge this outrage by sending an armed
-force into the country of the Hassenzais and Akazais, who were held
-responsible.
-
-[Sidenote: Hazara Field Force]
-
-This force, which numbered about 8,000 men, was organised in four
-columns, each formed of one British and two native regiments. A
-peculiar feature of this force was that no regiment was allowed to send
-more than six hundred men, which was a device to ensure the selection
-of a picked body of men. The late Sir John McQueen, who was then
-commanding the Punjab Frontier Force, was given command of the
-expedition, and Colonel W. F. Gatacre was appointed his Chief Staff
-Officer. This was naturally a moment of the liveliest satisfaction and
-anticipation for him. At last he found himself on active service; at
-last he was to face the ordeal for which he had been training for
-twenty-six years.
-
-Three of the columns marched out of Oghi on October 2, twenty-four
-hours' grace having been allowed beyond the time named in the ultimatum
-sent to the Maliks of the tribes. No. 4 Column, under
-Brigadier-General Galbraith,[4] had assembled at Derband on the River
-Indus, and was known throughout the campaign as the River Column; its
-function was to prevent any trans-Indus tribes moving eastwards across
-the river to join their neighbours, and it was hoped that the area of
-hostilities could thus be confined to those spurs of the Black Mountain
-where lay the heart of the disaffection.
-
-
-[4] The late Sir William Galbraith, K.C.B.]
-
-
-[Illustration: COLONEL W. F. GATACRE, D.S.O., 1888.]
-
-{75}
-
-The main mass of the Black Mountain lies in a curve of the River Indus
-between Thakot and Arab. To the north and west its slopes are cut into
-ridges which descend precipitously into the deep gorge of the river; to
-the east the eye rests on a bewildering succession of pine-clad
-mountain ranges, till, stretching over the vale of Kashmir, it reaches
-the line of eternal snows.
-
-The three mountain columns met with little opposition as they made
-their way up the spurs overlooking the Agror Valley. The Headquarter
-Camp was established at Khaim Gali, near the summit of the range, and
-from that point General McQueen directed the movements against the
-various villages. After about a fortnight General Channer, commanding
-No. 1 Column, was able to open up communication with General Galbraith
-in the valley below, at Kunhar. The latter at the outset had met with
-some slight opposition at Kotkai, resulting in the loss of two officers
-and five men, but had since made considerable progress up the river,
-and had moreover come to an understanding with the tribes in his
-immediate neighbourhood. The mountainous nature of the country made it
-extremely difficult to secure unity of action in the two regions. It
-became imperative that General McQueen should know what General
-Galbraith had done and had promised. To effect this purpose Gatacre
-offered to make his way down on foot to Kunhar, where the River Column
-had its headquarters.
-
-{76}
-
-[Sidenote: Visits Galbraith]
-
-By this time he was fairly well acquainted with the lie of the country,
-for he had been out daily with the columns, and, according to his
-colleague, Major Elles,[5] "had worked harder than any man in the
-force." He must have known that the direct descent from the ridge on
-which the Headquarter Camp at Khaim Gali was situated was a series of
-precipices. Taking the figures given on a map compiled for the
-expedition of 1891, the elevation of Khaim Gali is 8,680 ft., while the
-camp at Kunhar in the Indus valley is 1,560 ft., which means a clear
-descent of 7,120 ft. in a horizontal distance of less than five miles,
-though the distance actually marched worked out at fourteen miles.
-Major Elles accompanied Colonel Gatacre, and they took an escort of
-fifty Khybari Rifles. The party left camp at 6 a.m., and reached
-Kunhar at noon. Although it was then October, the sun had great power
-in the middle of the day; the narrow valleys down which they crept were
-very stuffy, and as they approached the end of the journey the air
-became very close and oppressive. Major Elles confesses that he felt
-the sun very much, was tired out, and "could not have attempted the
-climb back again that day. But nothing," he says, "seemed to tire
-Gatacre, who was the hardest man I ever met. He neither drank nor
-smoked, and ate very little."
-
-
-[5] Now Lieut.-General Sir Edmond Elles, G.C.I.E., K.C.B.
-
-
-After settling the business that was the motif of the journey, and
-partaking of the hospitality of the River Column headquarter mess,
-Gatacre {77} announced his intention of starting back at 2 o'clock.
-The men who acted as escort were dismayed at the Colonel Sahib's
-startling decision; indeed, only half of them were capable of setting
-off at once, but these insisted on being allowed to do so. Half-way up
-the mountain they were dead-beat; and as a small party able to take
-their place had been accidentally met with, the services of the
-newcomers were impressed, and Gatacre proceeded. It is a question for
-mountaineers whether the descent or the ascent was the more trying to a
-man's muscular system, and a question for Anglo-Indians whether the sun
-is hotter in the forenoon or the afternoon; anyhow, it must have been
-fairly fierce at 2 p.m. in the deep gorge of the Indus, and to have
-reached Khaim Gali again the same evening was an achievement worthy of
-mention in despatches. We are told that the first part of the ascent
-was very precipitous for about 2,500 ft., and impracticable even for
-mule carriage; the next 1,500 ft. was nothing but a succession of
-steps. Farther on, the line lay across terraced cultivation, which
-involved climbing up the walls supporting the fields, and walking
-across the soft plough which they enclosed, while throughout the march
-there were "passages which were impossible for anything but a goat."
-
-At 11 p.m. that same night Gatacre marched into the Headquarter Camp at
-Khaim Gali, the only man who had completed the double journey. The two
-marches had occupied six hours and nine hours respectively, and two
-hours only had {78} been spent in the triple business of negotiation,
-refreshment, and repose.
-
-This feat did not pass unnoticed at the time. The editor of the _Broad
-Arrow_ of October 20, 1888, says:
-
-
-"The story is suggestive of physical endurance and courage, and may be
-read with profit by fireside warriors and cynical philosophers upon the
-decline of the British officer."
-
-
-[Sidenote: Active service]
-
-Such an exchange of views between a confidential messenger from
-Headquarters and the officer commanding a column operating
-independently must always have great military value to the commander of
-an expedition, and it is evident that the consultation in this case was
-not without result, for in despatches we read that the first phase of
-the operations reached its conclusion on October 20. The Akazais and
-Hassanzais made complete submission, and by the end of the month had
-paid their fines in full. The object of the second phase was the
-coercion on similar lines of the Parari Saiads and Tikariwals. In the
-same way this involved much marching and counter-marching over the same
-"exigeant" class of country. Although there was scarcely any fighting,
-doubtless all those who took part in these operations learned many of
-the supplementary lessons of war which no manoeuvres can ever teach. A
-British officer in a Goorkha regiment tells us how he learned one of
-these lessons from Gatacre himself.
-
-The Brigade had just reached its {79} camping-ground: there had been a
-very arduous and hot march, finishing with a stiff climb up-hill. The
-Goorkha officer had flung himself on the ground, feeling dead-beat,
-when Gatacre rode up, and began making inquiry as to the water supply
-of the camp.
-
-"Who is the Quarter-Master of this regiment?" he asked.
-
-"I am, sir," said the officer, struggling to his feet.
-
-"What has been done to secure the water supply from contamination?"
-
-"Nothing, sir."
-
-"I must have a guard put over it at once. Where is the spring?"
-
-The spring was a thousand feet below. The commanding officer of the
-regiment, coming upon the scene, protested that his officer had only
-just come up.
-
-"Never mind," said Gatacre. "It is of the utmost importance. I order
-you as Quarter-Master to go down and see that a sufficient guard is put
-round the spring, and that the animals are kept at a proper distance."
-
-Much against his inclination the officer set about carrying out this
-injunction. On his arrival at the spring he saw the urgency of the
-order he was sent down to execute, and confessed the justice of the
-call upon his further exertions. Soldiers, bheesties, and animals were
-crowding round the pool, which, fed by a small spring, was the only
-water supply for the Brigade. He quickly restored order, made
-arrangements for {80} the watering of the different units, and, by thus
-securing the purity of the head-water, eliminated the chance of fever
-to thousands of men.
-
-[Sidenote: 1888-9]
-
-On October 28 General Channer occupied Thakot without resistance; on
-November 7 a deputation from the Parari Saiads came in and made full
-submission, as the Tikariwals had done already. On November 12 the
-Hazara Field Force began to disperse, having been under arms for six
-weeks. The casualties to the whole force amounted to twenty-seven men
-killed, fifty-nine wounded, and eight who had died of disease, showing
-that, from a military point of view, it was essentially a minor
-campaign. Moreover, politically, the results were inconclusive, but to
-Gatacre it was the field on which he had won his spurs: "the loyal
-support and valuable aid" that he had afforded his Chief were now for
-ever recorded; his initiative, energy, and physical powers had been
-proved in the field; his possession of military ability and soldierly
-qualities in a marked degree was now established.
-
-It is difficult to understand why he was awarded the Distinguished
-Service Order, which had been newly created as a recognition of the
-services of junior officers in the field, while his rank as substantive
-colonel in the army fully qualified him for a Companionship of the
-Bath; but so it was. Seven years had yet to run before the latter
-decoration was awarded, after the Chitral Campaign.
-
-[Sidenote: Safe home]
-
-Colonel Gatacre and Major Elles did not return {81} direct to
-Headquarters on the disbanding of the force, but made an extended march
-down the Indus, and reached Calcutta early in December. When writing
-his Christmas greeting to his father, Gatacre says:
-
-
-"We are all returned safely from the Black Mountain, and I must say I
-for one thoroughly enjoyed myself; it was rough going, of course, but
-the climate was good, and there was plenty of outdoor exercise--such a
-pleasant change after the office life."
-
-
-After another summer spent at Simla, Gatacre was sent in October 1889
-to act for Sir George Wolseley, who was then commanding the Mandalay
-Brigade. Throughout the three and a half years that he had served with
-the Headquarter Staff, much of the work in the Quarter-Master-General's
-office had had reference to the welfare of the troops which since
-November 1885 had been operating in Upper Burma. Gatacre had taken
-moreover a personal interest in the success and well-being of the Army
-of Occupation, for his brother John had been serving there in command
-of his regiment, the 23rd Bombay Infantry.
-
-The events which had occurred since Gatacre first visited Mandalay in
-1883 will be dealt with in the next chapter.
-
-
-
-
-{82}
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-1889-1890
-
-MANDALAY
-
-It was with difficulty that the British Government had lived so long at
-peace with Theebaw, King of Burma. In 1883 he sent a mission to
-Europe, ostensibly to study western civilisation, but it was recognised
-that in reality he was making advances to the French Government, who
-were of course our neighbours on the east, in Siam. There was also
-friction over the demarcation of the Manipur frontier on the west, but
-the actual ground for the outbreak of hostilities arose over a
-commercial question. An English trading company found that King
-Theebaw had sold over again to the French the rights over some forest
-lands for which the company had paid seven years' tolls in advance.
-The High Court of Mandalay upheld their sovereign's proceedings, so
-that the corporation were driven to appeal to the British Government to
-vindicate their claims. King Theebaw, however, flatly refused to
-discuss the matter with the Chief Commissioner of Lower Burma. The
-British Government welcomed the occasion to {83} send an ultimatum to
-King Theebaw "which aimed at a settlement of all the main matters in
-dispute between the two Governments,"[1] and simultaneously instructed
-Sir Harry Prendergast to prepare a force to march on Mandalay.
-
-
-[1] _Parliamentary Papers_ (Burma), 1886.
-
-
-A defiant answer having been returned by the King, orders for the
-advance were issued. A fleet of transports was escorted by a few
-vessels from the Royal Navy up the Irrawaddy. On November 14, 1885, at
-a point about twenty-eight miles beyond our frontier post at Thayetmyo,
-the forts at Minhla barred the passage of the river. Our naval guns
-then opened fire with good effect, and when the troops landed there was
-no resistance.
-
-[Sidenote: Theebaw surrenders]
-
-The advance continued, and ten days later a similar engagement took
-place about seven miles from Ava. After the naval guns had silenced
-the enemy's artillery, the Hampshire Regiment was landed, and drove the
-defenders from their entrenchments. At 4 p.m. on November 24 a royal
-state barge appeared bearing a flag of truce, and a message that the
-King "was well disposed in mind and heart."[2] To this a reply was
-sent that nothing less than the unconditional surrender of the King and
-his capital would satisfy the British Government, and that the response
-must be received within twelve hours.
-
-
-[2] Despatch dated January 13, 1886.
-
-
-The picturesqueness of the scene was so irresistible that even the
-official despatch breaks into description of the "far-famed city of
-Ava, {84} with its mouldering monasteries and decaying walls. On the
-banks are batteries bristling with guns, and parapets alive with
-scarlet-clad soldiers," etc., etc.
-
-King Theebaw's reply was received by the time specified, and when
-translated was found to express a frame of mind that was acceptable to
-the invaders. The subsequent advance from Ava was therefore unopposed,
-and on November 28 British troops made their way peacefully through the
-streets of Mandalay. In the afternoon of the next day the King and his
-Queens and a suitable retinue were conveyed on board a steamer and
-transported to Rangoon, _en route_ to India. As a compliment to their
-former estate, the escort was detailed from the Royal Navy. It is said
-that Supya-lat offered violent resistance to this deportation, saying
-that she would prefer death or any fate at the hands of the Englishmen
-to life as a state prisoner with her husband. But she had to conform.
-
-By Proclamation on January 1, 1886, Upper Burma was declared a part of
-the British Empire, and the Chief Commissioner, Sir Charles Bernard,
-transferred his headquarters from Rangoon to Mandalay.
-
-[Sidenote: Dacoity]
-
-Sir Harry Prendergast had completed his task in the occupation of the
-capital, but the subjugation of the vast province of Upper Burma,
-covering about 100,000 square miles, was a very different matter. The
-collapse of the Civil Government and the disbanding of the native army
-led to a state of anarchy. Pretenders sprang {85} up who were
-exploited by enterprising ex-officers, and became leaders of the
-various bands of dacoits that infested the land. These armed bands
-were a terror to the people, for they lived on the country and robbed
-and looted freely but it was not till we had won the confidence of the
-peaceable peasants that they would venture to give us information as to
-the whereabouts of their enemies. The fact that there was no cohesion
-or community of interest between these marauders made them the more
-troublesome to suppress, as each one had to be dealt with separately.
-The pacification of the country was entrusted to Sir George White with
-a force of three infantry brigades. But as there was no national party
-in arms against him, so there was no organised resistance; the enemy
-were not soldiers, but a lawless rabble led by brigands.
-
-In his report of this work in a country which he describes as "one vast
-military obstacle," he says:
-
-
-"The actual resistance offered to our troops was not very trying to
-disciplined well-armed soldiers, but small bodies of these soldiers
-have often had to stand up against bands whose numbers were estimated
-in thousands. Between April 1 and July 31 over one hundred affairs
-took place, and few days elapsed without the occurrence of fighting in
-some part of the newly acquired province."[3]
-
-
-[3] See _Despatch_, July 17, 1886.
-
-
-After a time it was found possible partially {86} to replace the
-soldiers by specially recruited armed military police, who were thickly
-distributed in all the disturbed districts; and gradually the more
-peaceable inhabitants realised that every time a military raid was
-organised there would be a smaller number of thieves and robbers left
-in the land.
-
-When the bulk of Sir George White's expeditionary force was withdrawn,
-Brigadier-General George Wolseley, who had been commanding the Mandalay
-Brigade, assumed the command of the permanent garrison. It was as his
-substitute that Gatacre held the post from October 1889 to October
-1890, with a few weeks' interval in the spring. Gatacre had been
-nearly four years in the same office on the Headquarter Staff, and his
-letters show that after the departure of General Chapman in April 1889
-he was anxiously watching for some new opening for himself. The change
-to an independent command was very welcome, and not less so was the
-change from the social life of Headquarters to the wild simplicity of
-Upper Burma. The military direction of such a vast and unsettled
-province would provide scope for administration and opportunity for
-personal exertion--would, in short, afford all the arduous duties in
-which Gatacre found his delight.
-
-[Sidenote: Fort Dufferin]
-
-The ancient citadel of Mandalay is now called Fort Dufferin. It
-consists of a vast quadrilateral enclosure, in the centre of which
-stands the palace, surrounded by gardens and a high teak-wood stockade.
-The walls are 10 ft. thick {87} and 29 ft. high; each side of the
-square is a mile and a quarter in length; at regular intervals there
-are gates leading to bridges over a moat that is more than 200 ft.
-wide. Along the walls are numerous picturesque watch-houses with
-little seven-roofed pagodas over each gate. These buildings provided
-quarters and offices for both the civil and military departments.
-
-Sir Charles Crosthwaite, who was Chief Commissioner of Burma when
-Gatacre took up the command, writes:
-
-
-"I lived in one of the pagoda erections over a gate in the Mandalay
-wall, and there was a long flight of steps leading up to my rooms. I
-can see Sir William now flying up the steps and rushing down them,
-after he had seen me, and vaulting on to his horse. He was
-indefatigable."[4]
-
-
-[4] August 18, 1909.
-
-
-The reception rooms in the palace itself were fitted up as a club for
-the officers of the garrison. Some men were playing whist there one
-evening in November 1889, when Gatacre came in, and going up to one of
-the players asked him if he knew anything about transport. The
-officer, busy with his cards, replied "Not a damn!" which elicited the
-unexpected response:
-
-"Will you be my transport officer?"
-
-When the hand was finished the subaltern turned round, and for the
-first time perceived who was speaking to him.
-
-"I am afraid you are chaffing me, sir."
-
-{88}
-
-"Not at all. The last two transport officers I have had knew
-everything--one could not teach them anything. Are you willing to
-learn?"
-
-That officer did his best to learn, and remained Gatacre's transport
-officer till his regiment left the station. He remembers especially
-his General's friendly manner, tells us how the dignity and power of
-his personality enabled him to dispense with the formalities of his
-position, and to do things which in other men might have resulted in
-undue familiarity. There was an arrangement by which the other staff
-officer carried on the work in the office, while the transport officer
-accompanied the General on all his tours. It is to this officer that
-we are indebted for the following story.
-
-[Sidenote: Maymyo]
-
-About forty miles from Mandalay there is a little hill-station called
-Maymyo, at an elevation of 3,500 ft. It is now full of red-brick
-buildings, and is the headquarters of the Lieutenant-General commanding
-the Burma Division, and there is a railway up from Mandalay which runs
-on to Lashio. But in 1889 Maymyo was but a collection of huts and
-tents, and the road that led thither was not only execrable to travel
-on, but infested with robbers. However, it served as a sanatorium, and
-the sick folk from Mandalay had to brave the dangers of the road. The
-transport officer had been spending a month at Maymyo with his wife,
-and, having met with exceptional difficulties in making his journey
-down, was very much alive to its discomforts. Only two days before
-another party had been {89} attacked, their native driver killed, and
-their kit dacoited.
-
-When they met next morning the General told the officer to lay a dak to
-Maymyo, as he intended going there next day. The thought of doing that
-journey again so soon was most distasteful, but the officer only asked:
-
-"What time do we start?"
-
-"There is no 'we' in it. You don't go. I am going alone."
-
-"That's ridiculous!" followed on, with such simplicity and directness
-that both broke into laughter.
-
-The idea was ridiculous, but it was carried out. The subaltern's pride
-of office was wounded by his being thus set on one side, but when he
-realised that it was done out of consideration to himself, and that no
-one else was taken, he could not but be satisfied. Risk and exertion
-were like magnets to draw Gatacre; he went alone, dispensing even with
-an orderly. The fastest and most active ponies were always sent out
-for the General's use, and it would have been difficult to find man and
-beast to keep up with him when on such an excursion. He must have made
-a very early start, for he rode forty miles up into the mountains,
-inspected the detachment of the Madras Native Infantry quartered there,
-and returned in time to dine with the Chief Commissioner. There he met
-Sir Frederick Fryer, to whom he related his day's work. It afterwards
-transpired that two of the ponies were broken down by the journey, but
-{90} even for such a mishap the General found a cheerful use. When
-rallied by one of his commanding officers on this point, he replied:
-
-"Hard on the ponies! Not at all. Why, my dear fellow, it is really a
-good thing, for the useless ones get weeded out."
-
-In 1886 Sir George White wrote that it would be a "long time before
-dacoity died of inanition."[5] But British methods, worked with
-British perseverance, had triumphed over Burmese institutions. In 1889
-Sir Charles Crosthwaite could write that "disorder and lawlessness had
-been put down, and the power of the Government firmly established and
-fully acknowledged."[6] It was, however, reserved for Gatacre to equip
-a little expedition which was to penetrate into the Kachin Hills, where
-a leader known as Kan Hlaing was harassing the country. The General
-sent the following telegram to Calcutta on November 25, 1889:
-
-
-[5] _Despatch_, August 18, 1886.
-
-[6] _Report of Administration_, August 1887 to August 1889.
-
-
-"Chief Commissioner has applied for services of troops to operate from
-Bhamo against Lwe Saing Tonhon Kachins, in Meteilaing, to effect
-capture or surrender of Kan Hlaing and reduction of Tonhon, the chief
-town. After effecting this, to march southwards in Binhong and attack
-pretender Sairyawuiniz. A column to co-operate from Ruby Mines
-district, marching on Momeit. Bhamo Column to consist of 75 rifles
-Hants, two guns No. 2 Bombay, 100 rifles 17th Bengal Infantry, and 250
-rifles Mogoung Levy. Momeit {91} Column to consist of 50 rifles Hants,
-150 Bengal Native Infantry from Mandalay. Have complied with his
-wishes, made all necessary arrangements. Column will start from Bhamo
-Dec. 1. The Momeit Column will reach Momeit about Dec. 10. Solicits
-Army's approval."
-
-[Illustration: Kachin Bridge over which five hundred men crossed in one
-day]
-
-The Bhamo Column was under Major Blundell's command, and the Momeit
-Column under Major Greenway. Lwe Saing was captured on December 23,
-and Tonhon on the 24th, after sharp fighting. Early in January the
-force crossed the Shweli River, which was a fierce mountain torrent, so
-strong that the rafts were swept away, and a man drowned. The passage
-over the various rocky streams was a great difficulty; in one place a
-swinging bridge was rigged up with transport ropes and timber; on
-another occasion the whole column of five to six hundred men with their
-stores were passed over the Kachin Bridge shown in the picture. A
-report arrived that the rebel Prince Sawanai and the dacoit leader, Kan
-Hlaing, were strongly stockaded at Manton, three marches farther on,
-and that he had a following of 2,000 men. The two columns met as
-arranged, and captured the village, though it was fiercely defended.
-Before the force left Manton, Brigadier-General Gatacre and Colonel
-Strover, the Commissioner, joined the column.
-
-The following letters give the General's own impressions of the country.
-
-
-{92}
-
-[Sidenote: 1890]
-
-IN THE DEFILE JUST BELOW BHAMO,
-
-_February_ 8, 1890.
-
-"We expect a first-class trip, and should be away about six weeks. We
-take a month's provisions with us, and a fortnight's follow us. There
-is a great charm to me in going into quite an unknown country, full of
-wild beasts and savages; there is nearly every animal under the sun
-said to be in these jungles, and the place has every appearance of it:
-tracks of all sorts along the river-banks. But we shall soon see for
-ourselves. I fancy the scenery will be grand, and we shall probably
-get many beautiful orchids."
-
-
-BERNARDMYO, _March_ 20, 1890.
-
-"I have only a moment for a line to say I've 'come out alive' at this
-end of the country, which is fortunate. It is one of the roughest
-journeys I have ever done, and we have been wet through for days, with
-no change possible; great mountains, with only goat tracks to move by,
-had to be climbed two or three times in the day, which made going most
-tedious. By marching from 5 a.m. to 6 and sometimes 7 p.m. we could
-only do thirty miles a day; this was for a ten days' movement, so you
-may imagine the country is rough. It's a magnificent land,
-however--wild elephants, lots of tigers, and beasts of every
-description everywhere, and the inhabitants perfect savages, but clever
-beyond measure at agriculture in their valleys, and on the hill-sides
-at weaving, knitting, basket-work, etc., of all kinds. I went to find
-the column I sent out some three months ago, and found it about 150
-miles off; they had had a good deal of fighting, and lost a matter of
-thirty men, which was unfortunate, but it might have been {93} more. I
-have ordered them all back, except 100 men to hold a post at Mantone,
-for if the rains commence I should never get them back at all, owing to
-the impossibility of the roads. I never saw such a desperate country
-for roads, as they call them; a goat would be puzzled with some of them.
-
-"I hope the Squire and all of you are well. How I should like to see
-you all, and have a dinner at Gatacre! I have not had any real good
-food for about two months, but, though rough, we enjoy what we do get."
-
-
-[Sidenote: A rough journey]
-
-Though the leader Kan Hlaing succeeded in effecting his escape, the
-expedition had good effect, for his following was dispersed and his
-prestige broken. To all those who had taken part in this "rough
-journey" it brought another clasp to their medal.
-
-On March 27 Brigadier-General Wolseley reached Mandalay on his return
-from leave, and took over the command next day. But before two months
-were out, he was wanted to officiate elsewhere, and Gatacre was sent
-back to Mandalay. He had been very sorry to "give up charge," and was
-proportionately pleased to resume the command. In his letters he
-speaks of having initiated many experiments which interested him very
-much. Writing to his sister in July 1890, he says:
-
-
-"I have commenced a Government farm here on a large scale, about eight
-hundred acres at present, but will run up to four or five thousand
-acres. I have started elephant ploughs, as the ground is so hard owing
-to want of rain that the {94} ordinary bullock plough is not strong
-enough, and if we do not plough now the season will be too far gone to
-enable us to get a crop off the ground this year. The elephant plough
-has to be specially made, or the brute will pull it to pieces;
-sometimes they get frightened, and then it is best to clear out, for
-though the plough weighs half a ton, it is nothing to a frightened
-elephant, who goes straight home with it through everything. I hope to
-send you a report on the working of the farm just now; the Squire would
-like to read it. I wish I had that big plough here that we used to
-have at Coton; it would be just the thing for this land. I forget how
-many horses it took, but I should put a couple of elephants in."
-
-
-[Sidenote: Down with fever]
-
-During these summer months he suffered repeatedly from fever.
-
-
-THE PALACE, MANDALAY,
-
-_July_ 22, 1890.
-
-"I have got influenza, which is a great nuisance, as it keeps me from
-my work, and the doctor warns me solemnly not to go in draughts and to
-keep out of the sun; but as my present abode is merely a large gilt
-shed, about thirty yards square, with looking-glass panels open to the
-four winds of heaven, it is rather difficult to follow his advice.
-Fortunately the open air always agreed with me, and I feel better
-to-day, so I hope I may soon be all right again. The rain keeps off,
-and I am afraid we shall have a famine if we do not get heavy rain
-soon, for the rice will fail. I wish I could hear somewhat of my
-future; it is a nuisance being left in doubt as to what I am going to
-do.
-
-{95}
-
-"I wish I had the services of Payne for a bit in the palace gardens; I
-would make them so pretty. We have rocks, grass, water, everything
-that one could wish to work upon, but have no artistic people who
-understand gardening. I am working at it, and getting seeds, and hope
-to make it a pretty place by-and-by."
-
-
-MYINGYAN, IRRAWADDY,
-
-_August_ 30, 1890.
-
-"When I last wrote I was in full steam down the Irrawaddy with the
-Chief Commissioner, but I got a bad go of fever, and the doctor put me
-ashore, as he thought I would have a better chance. I was rather bad,
-but the cool breeze on the bank has made a wonderful change, and has
-quite pulled me round. I've had no fever since I came, and am
-beginning to feel all right again. Of course, I haven't much walk in
-me, but that soon comes back with food--that's of course the difficulty
-in a place like this, but I've managed to get hold of a few chickens
-and cook them with my servant. Some of them have turned out a success,
-others smell of kerosine oil, but they all have to be eaten, so it
-doesn't much matter. I mean to go back to Mandalay in three or four
-days, and shall be glad to get on my horse again, for it doesn't suit
-me to be on my back. I have lots to do, and have a man to write from
-dictation, which saves me writing out long official letters, but still
-I'm anxious about many things which are being carried out at Mandalay.
-This place is just opposite Pakoko, where John commanded for a long
-time, and is very pretty, especially now the river is in full flood,
-miles across (five or six at least)."
-
-
-{96}
-
-S.S. "GEORGE," ON THE IRRAWADDY ABOVE MANDALAY,
-
-_September_ 22, 1890.
-
-"I'm off on my travels again, you see. We started this morning on
-inspection duty at Bhamo and Shwebo. We should arrive at the former
-place on 26th. We stay there two days, and then come down to Shwebo on
-right bank of river; the trip will do me good, I think, and will give
-me some relaxation while on board. I'm better, but not up to much yet.
-
-"I heard from the C.-in-C. Bombay, Sir George Greaves, to the effect
-that he was applying for my services as A.G. of Bombay Army. If I get
-this it will be nice, and I should see a good deal of John. It's a
-long time since I've seen him now.
-
-"The quail here have been abundant, and the snipe are coming in, but no
-bags have been made yet. I only speak from hearsay, as I have been
-unable to go out myself, as you will understand.
-
-"I wish you could all run up the river with me on this steamer; you
-would enjoy the voyage--such beautiful scenery, and such a river."
-
-[Sidenote: A new post]
-
-In October the "rightful owner" returned to the command at Mandalay,
-and Gatacre handed over finally. He brought away many specimens of
-Burmese art and handicraft. His own artistic faculties enabled him to
-appreciate all that was quaint or interesting in every locality that he
-visited. In later life he took great pleasure in showing his friends
-the objects of value or beauty that he had collected, and {97}
-evidently looked back on these years of strenuous service with real
-delight.
-
-From Mandalay he brought away a teak-wood drum that had belonged to
-King Theebaw. It is cut out of a solid trunk, and stands about three
-feet from the ground, weighs about a ton, and is covered with the most
-exquisite carving. He took special pleasure in this piece of
-furniture, and in a beautiful silver plate from the Shan States.
-
-In November 1890 Gatacre relinquished his substantive post at
-Headquarters, on his appointment as Adjutant-General to the Bombay
-Army, with the temporary and local rank of Brigadier-General.
-
-
-
-
-{98}
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-1890-1894
-
-POONA
-
-Brigadier-General Gatacre took over the duties of Adjutant-General to
-the Bombay Army on November 25, 1890, under Sir George Greaves as
-Commander-in-Chief.
-
-His deputy in the office was surprised to find that Gatacre was not so
-regular in his attendance as might have been expected, and noticed
-other signs that suggested that he was unhappy and had something on his
-mind. His colleague was quite right. Gatacre was indeed passing
-through a severe and prolonged trial, one about which he could take no
-one into his confidence. To his highly strung nature, in which the
-loftiest integrity was allied to the tenderest human feelings, a blow
-such as had fallen upon him must have wrung every fibre, and there is
-no doubt that he writhed under it.
-
-[Sidenote: In adversity]
-
-It was about this time that the General was bitten in the hand by a
-jackal that was said to be mad. His nerves being already unduly
-strained, the poison (or the thought of it) got such a hold on him that
-the howling of the {99} jackals kept him awake at night, and a terror
-even possessed him of their coming in through the open windows. So
-real was this obsession that he ordered iron railings to be fixed
-outside, and by thus convincing himself of the impossibility of such a
-thing, he gradually conquered the fantasies of his sick brain,
-triumphed over his sleeplessness, and reaped the benefit to his general
-health.
-
-What was really preying on his mind was not generally known till his
-friends read of the dissolution of his marriage. Gatacre was the
-petitioner, and there was no defence. This news gave rise to a strong
-feeling of sympathy with a man whose probity was unquestioned, and
-whose attractive appearance and genial manners had already made him a
-favourite in Poona. There was in Gatacre a depth of faithful affection
-which nothing could kill; the generosity and kindliness of his judgment
-forbad his harbouring any thought of blame, and he clung with unaltered
-loyalty to memories of the past.
-
- Love is not love
- Which alters when it alteration finds,
- Or bends with the remover to remove.
-
-
-It is from this time that we find him working with an _acharnement_,
-with a restless and passionate self-obliteration that became an
-unconquerable habit. Ambition stepped in to revive his interest in his
-profession, and the service of his neighbour provided occupation for
-his leisure hours.
-
-{100}
-
-[Sidenote: 1890-4]
-
-Poona is not only the Headquarters of the Bombay Army, but for a good
-part of the year it is the residence of the Governor of the Bombay
-Presidency. In the hot weather both civil and military officials
-retire to the country life of Mahabuleshwar, and in the cold weather
-spend a few weeks in Bombay City. Thus all the year round there was a
-succession of official and social engagements; every one had rather
-more to do than there was time for in office hours, and every one
-wanted to put in an appearance at such social functions as appealed to
-his particular tastes. Gatacre not only took part in all these events,
-but was the prime mover and organiser of everything that went on--no
-committee of management, no horse-show, gymkhana, or display was
-complete without his name. Amongst other details the programmes
-engaged his particular attention. He had a special chalk which, when
-used on prepared paper, could be reproduced as a lithograph by a very
-simple process. He rapidly gained great facility in the use of this
-medium, and there is now quite a remarkable series of exquisite
-drawings that were thus reproduced. A lively sense of humour animates
-some of these efforts, more especially those that did duty as
-hunt-cards. The card was the size of foolscap paper; each season had a
-new drawing, but all were variations of the study of foxes, while words
-were put into their mouths expressing the sentiments of the quarry
-towards Doctor Bull's hounds.
-
-[Sidenote: A.G.]
-
-The position of Adjutant-General is one of great {101} influence, and
-this influence Gatacre invariably used to promote the cause of
-uprightness and true benevolence. There was no red-tape about him; he
-was always accessible to all ranks, and instantly ready to deal with
-any emergency.
-
-On one occasion the friends of a young officer wanted to get him out of
-the way of temptation--the Adjutant-General detailed him to some
-outlying station. On the other hand, a young cavalry officer from
-Mhow, who was engaged to a lady in Poona, found himself unexpectedly
-detained at Headquarters by the A.G. If an officer and his family on
-their arrival were unable to find quarters, the A.G. would take the
-whole party in, regardless of any previous acquaintance. In the club
-one day Gatacre noticed the name of a young officer on the Headquarter
-Staff posted up as having failed to pay his club account. He sent for
-the officer and paid his bill, choosing to come himself to the rescue
-rather than that a young fellow in an honourable post should suffer
-disgrace. Thus many an unrecorded kindness, many a deed of silent
-sacrifice, showed the natural generosity of his heart, showed his
-freedom from any taint of bitterness. Instinctively and deliberately
-he endeavoured to obliterate his own sorrow by adding to the happiness
-of others, and in this way surrounded himself with an atmosphere of
-esteem and gratitude which reacted powerfully for his own benefit. The
-officer who succeeded him as Adjutant-General had worked in his office
-for some time, and he {102} now writes that the thought of him revives
-the "deep impression of what a dear, good fellow he was, and how
-hospitable and kind."
-
-[Sidenote: 1891]
-
-Gatacre's efforts at hospitality once gave rise to much amusement on
-the one part and dismay on the other. He usually kept but a small
-staff of servants, and dined at the club of Western India; but when
-there was some special gaiety going on, he would fill his house with
-guests from the outlying stations, and instruct his bearer to engage a
-good cook and other servants for the necessary period. At the Poona
-Race Week one year Gatacre's friends were complimenting him on the
-excellence of his arrangements, and stories were related as to the
-enormities of which native cooks are sometimes guilty in the
-preparation of the Sahib's food, and of their troublesome ways in
-general. One lady was particularly eloquent on the annoyance of having
-had to part with her khansama only a few days before in order that he
-might go and nurse his wife, who was dying. Some one suggested a tour
-of inspection round Gatacre's house, which he had held up as a model
-establishment. When the party reached the cook-house, I leave you to
-imagine the lady's surprise and amusement at finding her own truant
-cook installed for the nonce in her host's kitchen!
-
-His easy camaraderie of manner was so remarkable that a friend once
-asked Gatacre whether he had ever found that people took advantage of
-it, and treated him with undue familiarity, to which he replied that he
-had {103} never known them try. He defended himself with a dry and
-subtle humour. Assuming an impenetrable blandness of manner, he would
-on occasion utter sarcasms so veiled that some men could scarcely tell
-whether he was in earnest or not. He was never angry, but he had a
-command of quiet language that made his remarks as stinging as they
-were humorous. The man on the pillory would feel the sting, and the
-onlooker would see the humour.
-
-When another friend asked him why he was taking so much trouble over a
-matter that appeared outside the sphere of his interests, and scarcely
-worthy of the attention that he was lavishing on it, his reply seemed
-weighted with reproof as he said: "I don't think I ever knew what the
-meaning of the word trouble was."
-
-[Sidenote: Goes on tour]
-
-In the province of Bombay the inspections take place in the cold
-weather between November and March; a spell of hot weather then
-precedes the break of the monsoon early in June. The rains last till
-September, and are followed by another spell of hot weather, till the
-air cools down again to quite a pleasant temperature in November. The
-first inspection tour arranged for the end of 1891 included a visit to
-the regiments quartered at Kamptee in the Central Provinces. Kamptee
-was the Headquarters of the Nagpur District, to the command of which
-Brigadier-General John Gatacre, C.B., had been recently gazetted. To
-those who have heard of "inspection fever" (and even the best officers
-{104} are not always immune), it will be obvious that the station must
-have been in rather a commotion at the idea of a visit from the
-Commander-in-chief only four days after the arrival of a new General
-Officer Commanding. But the new General was well known and trusted in
-Kamptee, for he had already been in the station for three years while
-in command of his regiment.
-
-[Sidenote: A railway accident]
-
-Between 6 and 7 a.m. on November 5 the General was on the platform of
-Nagpur Station awaiting the arrival of the train, when a telegraphic
-message came in, saying that there had been a serious railway accident
-to the Chief's train about nine miles away. A message was sent back
-for medical assistance, and as soon as possible a break-down gang was
-got together, but it was nearly 11 o'clock before the relief train
-reached the spot. General John tells us that the sight that greeted
-him was more shocking than any battlefield. Eight men of the North
-Lancashire Regiment were killed outright, twenty-four were severely
-injured; a European guard, both drivers and both firemen were killed;
-five native passengers were also killed and eight wounded. Beyond this
-total of eighteen deaths, four soldiers died within the next few days
-in hospital. The framework of the carriages, the iron rails, and the
-men's rifles--everything was amazingly crumpled up and distorted.
-
-The permanent way at this spot runs along a thirty-foot embankment.
-The whole train was derailed, both engines with their tenders, a
-horse-box, and five or six coaches had rolled {105} to the bottom of
-the slope; the next carriage, in which Sir George Greaves had been
-travelling, was suspended half-way down the bank at an angle of 45 deg.,
-the body having been completely wrenched away from the platform; and
-the last coach, which had been occupied by the staff officers--Gatacre,
-Hogg, and Leach--was hanging in the most precarious position over the
-edge.
-
-It turned out that the train was unusually long and heavy that day, as
-it was bringing some fifty men of the North Lancashire Regiment back
-from Chi-Kulda, a civil hill-station in the Berars, where a few sickly
-men had been sent as an experiment. When the railway officials at
-Budnari Junction found that the three coaches set aside for the use of
-the Headquarter Staff had also to be attached, they feared that the
-engine would not be powerful enough to pull the train up a certain
-incline, and gave directions that a spare engine (which was meant only
-for local shunting work) should be put on in front. This supplementary
-engine was the cause of the misfortune, for the tyres of its wheels,
-having been mended, gave way under the unusual strain of a long
-journey. The front engine left the metals, and, rolling over, pulled
-the whole train along with it.
-
-The great majority of the fatal cases were of course in the first two
-coaches, in which the soldiers were unfortunately travelling. Some (of
-the poor fellows suffered fearfully from scalding, over and above
-terrible fractures and injuries; some were so inextricably wedged in
-amongst {106} the wreckage that it was not till the relief train came
-up with jacks and crowbars that anything could be done to relieve their
-excruciating sufferings. None of the staff officers were hurt, but
-Colonel Hogg had a narrow escape, for the end compartment, in which he
-had been shaving a few minutes earlier, was completely staved in by
-impact with the Chief's coach in front.
-
-In the official report forwarded by Sir George Greaves we read:
-
-
-"I desire to record with pleasure that the officers of the Headquarter
-Staff were conspicuous in their efforts to release the injured from the
-wreck of the train, especially Brigadier-General Gatacre, A.G.,
-Lieutenant-Colonel Leach, Military Secretary, and Captain Peyton,
-A.D.C., all of whom, at considerable personal risk, worked in under the
-overturned engines and carriages to get at the wounded."
-
-
-There were also miraculous escapes. A gymnastic sergeant was
-travelling in the first coach with two small dogs on his knees. Owing
-apparently to his trained activity, he was able to leap through the
-window, and thus escaped without injury from a compartment where all
-his companions were killed.
-
-As soon as possible the wounded were sent on into Kamptee under the
-charge of their companions, and it was three o'clock before the train
-got back again to pick up the staff officers.
-
-[Sidenote: "Such good sons"]
-
-On his arrival in Kamptee a telegram was handed to Gatacre, informing
-him of his father's {107} death. This was not unexpected, but for both
-brothers it must have added a more profound and personal sadness to the
-horrors with which the day had begun; and as next day they listened to
-the Service read over the poor young fellows who had been so suddenly
-struck down, their hearts must have been at Gatacre, where the same
-words would soon be read over the old man of eighty-six whom they had
-so sincerely loved and reverenced. Only a few days earlier they had
-sent a telegram of farewell in their joint names; and in due course had
-the satisfaction of hearing that it had arrived just in time to please
-the dying man, who murmured in response, "I thank God for such good
-sons."
-
-On April 1, 1893, Lieutenant-General Sir John Hudson took over command
-of the Bombay Army; only two months later he was killed by a fall from
-his horse. The Commander-in-Chief was taking his usual ride with
-Colonel Leach, his Military Secretary, before breakfast on the morning
-of June 9, when his horse stumbled heavily, throwing Sir John forward
-on his head. Six weeks earlier Sir James Dormer, Commander-in-Chief in
-Madras, had met with his death while out tiger-shooting, so that this
-further catastrophe came with added force to the sister Presidency.
-
-Gatacre had written home a few days before, saying how genial and
-kindly he found his new chief, with whom he was already on intimate
-terms. It was always a great satisfaction to him to think that the
-horse which had made {108} the blunder was not one of his choosing, for
-Sir John had already sought his advice in the matter of getting himself
-provided with chargers. As chief staff officer it fell to him to make
-all the arrangements for the imposing ceremony that took place at 8.30
-a.m. on the day following the tragedy. Lord Harris, the Governor, came
-down from Panchguni for the occasion. By special instructions he
-placed a wreath on the coffin in the name of Her Majesty the Queen, and
-numberless similar tributes showed the respectful sympathy of the whole
-army. The Guard of Honour was furnished by the 2nd Battalion
-Lancashire Fusiliers; all the troops in garrison, both in Poona and
-Kirkee, accompanied by massed bands, took part in the solemn
-procession. It is said that five thousand men attended the funeral,
-and that the whole was so admirably thought out and arranged in the
-short space of time that no confusion or difficulty arose at any point.
-
-[Sidenote: Hands over]
-
-In due course Sir Charles Nairne, R.A., became Commander-in-Chief of
-the Bombay Army. He was the last of the race, for during his tenure of
-the office its name was changed, and he handed over as
-Lieutenant-General Commanding the Bombay Army Corps. The office of
-Adjutant-General was also renamed, but that was not until after Gatacre
-had been succeeded by General Reginald Curteis. Sir Charles was the
-third Chief under whom Gatacre had served in this capacity in less than
-three years. But as these changes made no difference to Gatacre's
-{109} loyal service, so there seems to have been no difference in the
-high esteem in which his seniors held him. When he relinquished his
-post, some eighteen months later, the same cordial regard had grown up
-which he always contrived to win from all those with whom he was
-associated either officially or socially. When I came to live in the
-command, about two years later, there was no household from whom I
-received a more genuine welcome than from Sir Charles and Lady Nairne
-and their personal staff.
-
-Early in 1894 the Adjutant-General was appointed to the command of the
-military district that had its headquarters at Bombay.
-
-
-
-
-{110}
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-1894-1895
-
-BOMBAY
-
-[Sidenote: Colara]
-
-Although the climate of Bombay, which is situated on the nineteenth
-parallel, did not offer the attractions of Poona, and although the
-appointment brought no promotion in army rank, still Gatacre welcomed
-the change of work, and the accession of dignity and opportunity
-afforded by an independent command. On January 30, 1894, his selection
-for the command of the Bombay District was gazetted, and shortly
-afterwards he moved into the bungalow in the Marine Lines, which then
-formed the official residence. Of this quaint building he was the last
-tenant, for three years later this relic of Old Bombay and its naval
-neighbour disappeared under the consuming flame of the Plague
-Commission.
-
-This house and the adjacent one which sheltered the Admiral were
-historic erections, being survivals of the days when the Englishman
-first pitched his moving tent in these regions. For the original
-canvas covering of the tent, "jaffray-work," or plaited palm-leaves,
-had {111} been substituted, which had to be renewed each year just
-before the monsoon broke; this roof was supported on wooden columns
-that were the successors of the original tent-poles, and made a quaint
-feature in all the rooms. The canvas walls of the tent had been
-replaced by Venetian shutters; the doors were made of cotton stuff
-stretched on a frame, which left a large space above and below the
-eye-line. The deep verandah, on which greenhouse creepers sprawled
-luxuriantly, covered a space wide enough to allow of dining and
-sleeping out-of-doors.
-
-The weather is warm all the year round, and becomes exceedingly damp
-and oppressive in the spring and autumn, while in the summer the
-monsoon winds bring a rainfall of nearly 300 inches in three months.
-White uniform is worn throughout the year, even on full-dress
-occasions. At the extreme point of the island, in the breeziest and
-healthiest situation, there are barracks for one British regiment, and
-hard by is the beautiful chapel raised as a memorial to those who fell
-in the Afghan Campaign of 1849. It was an exceedingly pretty sight to
-see a regiment of men all clad in spotless white file into their places
-on a Sunday morning. The rifle regiments wear their black buttons and
-ornaments, and one would say that nothing could be smarter, until the
-reliefs bring another corps, who with their gold buttons and belts
-produce a more brilliant effect.
-
-According to the military classification, {112} Bombay is a
-Second-class District, held by a Brigadier-General, who is not really a
-General Officer, but a full colonel with temporary rank. A First-class
-District is held by a Major-General, whose importance is further marked
-by the presence of an A.D.C. There is, however, so much ceremonial
-work peculiar to Bombay that the General often wished that he had been
-granted the services of such a young officer, as a way of saving his
-regular staff.
-
-[Sidenote: Transports]
-
-Gatacre held this command for more than three years--from January 1894
-to July 1897--but for eight months in the summer of the second year,
-1895, he was on active service in Chitral, and for the same period in
-1896 he was officiating at Quetta. Owing to the difference in climate
-he thus served for five drill seasons in succession. Although these
-two short episodes will be dealt with separately, the fact that he did
-duty through the cold weather for three seasons in Bombay seems to
-justify also a study of the conditions peculiar to that command.
-
-So far as the passenger traffic is concerned, Bombay is the port of
-India. It is the quickest route to all the provinces, even as far east
-as Calcutta. All the transports between England and India call at
-Bombay, and the vast majority of troops are there embarked and
-disembarked. In consideration of the work entailed in arranging the
-transport service, an extra Deputy Assistant Adjutant-General was
-allowed on the staff; practically this department of the staff office
-was the shipping agency for all the reliefs {113} throughout India.
-Not only had the transhipping and railway arrangements to be made for
-every regiment on its arrival and departure, and for drafts of men from
-every branch of the service, but privilege passages had to be allotted
-to the innumerable officers and their families who, when going home on
-leave, hoped to avail themselves of the chance of a vacancy on a
-transport. The rule in allotting these passages was that the junior
-officer should take precedence, Government having apparently in mind
-that their scale of pay gave them the first title to consideration. At
-the same time, senior officers were often needed to take command of a
-ship full of details, and sometimes had to be searched for, Army
-nursing sisters, too, had special claims.
-
-All these conflicting interests gave rise to almost as many private
-letters as there were official applications. Ladies and children would
-come and live in Bombay in the hope of securing a vacancy at the
-eleventh hour--a device which was often successful. There were
-numberless hard cases and jealousies over these passages, and many
-funny stories were told. It was whispered that if an applicant called
-in person on the General, her chances would be in direct proportion to
-her personal attractions. The amount of baggage allowed was also a
-source of infinite vexation. Once a nursing sister, who had recently
-married an army surgeon, asked to be allowed to send her effects under
-her maiden name, as the scale of baggage allowed in her professional
-capacity {114} was slightly higher than that considered sufficient for
-a captain's wife.
-
-During the loading and unloading of these transports an officer of the
-General's staff had to be continuously on duty to attend to any matter
-that might arise, and to check the freight, live and dead. This was a
-tedious and very irksome duty, and, considering the amount of work
-going on in the office during the winter months, the time thus spent
-could be ill spared. The General made a practice of calling in person
-on all transports immediately before their departure, at whatever hour
-it might be, and soon after their arrival. If a homeward-bound vessel
-was starting on a midnight tide, he would dine in his picturesque white
-mess-dress, and thus be ready to go and pay his official visit of
-farewell. The house was a long way from the Bunder, so that this duty
-involved a drive of more than a mile, and a run across the harbour in
-the Government launch, which was always at his disposal. In that
-intensely Oriental setting the thrill of living (as it were) in the
-exchange, and seeing the great ships that go down to the sea carrying
-their load of joyful anticipations, was irresistibly moving. Gatacre
-was thus on terms of personal friendship with all the captains, and
-used to ask them to his own house. As a Christmas recognition of such
-attentions, the captain of the _Victoria_ sent up a specially selected
-sirloin of English beef one year on the morning of December 25. All
-who have tasted Indian beef will know that this was a rare delicacy.
-
-{115}
-
-[Sidenote: The Navy]
-
-But transports were not the only vessels in Bombay Harbour. There were
-ships from the Royal Navy, ships from the foreign navies, and
-Peninsular and Oriental weekly mails, outward and homeward bound.
-
-Between the navy and the army there was a strict etiquette regarding
-the exchange of visits. Writing from Bombay on November 3, 1909,
-General Swann tells us that--
-
-
-"The procedure in the matter of ceremonial calling was for a staff
-officer to go on board within twenty-four hours of a ship's arrival and
-arrange for the exchange of visits between the captain and the general;
-the first visit was made by whichever was the junior of the two, and
-both visits were supposed to be over within the twenty-four hours."
-
-
-Such official visiting had also to be attended to with great
-punctuality in the case of foreign warships, and on these occasions a
-bottle of champagne would be produced at any hour, and the health of
-the respective sovereigns ceremoniously toasted. The General
-particularly exerted himself to entertain these foreign guests. When a
-Russian vessel was in the harbour he asked the captain and three or
-four officers to breakfast at his house, inviting some ladies who could
-talk French to come and entertain them. On another occasion, when an
-Italian vessel lay at anchor, the General writes:
-
-
-"I got up in the middle of the night last night to take the Duke of
-Savoy and his staff out {116} hunting to-day. He thoroughly enjoyed
-himself, galloped to his heart's content, made himself very sore at the
-knees, and came home perfectly happy. I got back just in time to dress
-for parade service, but could not get time for breakfast. Went to
-church, and got back to luncheon at 2.30."
-
-
-[Sidenote: 1894-7]
-
-The hunting days in Bombay were Thursday and Sunday mornings; horses
-were sent on overnight. The meet was at daybreak at a place reached
-after about forty minutes in a train that left the station at 4.30 a.m.
-Hounds moved off as soon as the light allowed. It was a sporting
-country, for there were plenty of jackals, and the ground varied from
-soft ricefields, enclosed by Irish banks, to hard rock and heavy sand
-in which prickly-pear hedges were disagreeably abundant. The hunt
-usually returned to the Jackal Club Camp in time for the 8.30 train,
-and all the men got back in time to be at their offices by 10 o'clock.
-Every one in Bombay has an office of some sort, for no one would live
-there unless forced thereto by the necessity of fulfilling their
-vocation.
-
-Another feature of the Bombay command was the constant semi-official
-attendances at the railway station and elsewhere. Whenever His
-Excellency the Governor, or His Excellency the Commander-in-Chief, or
-His Excellency the Admiral Commanding the East Indian Squadron passed
-through the station, the General Officer Commanding was there to
-receive him, or to see him off as the occasion demanded.
-
-{117}
-
-[Sidenote: Guests]
-
-It was also his pleasure to meet any friends, official or private, who
-might be arriving or departing by the mail. There was hardly a week
-when his launch was not in attendance on the mail-boats. These usually
-arrived at daybreak, but for Gatacre no hour was too early. One
-morning the mail was to bring a general officer who was on his way to
-take over a command up-country. His son, already appointed as A.D.C.,
-had come down to Bombay to meet his father, and had called at the Staff
-Office on the previous day. The General offered to take him on board
-in his launch, as he was himself going to fetch his guest home to
-breakfast, and named the hour. But when the General stepped into the
-launch next morning the A.D.C. was nowhere visible on the Bunder.
-Afterwards the young man turned up, and his father said with a
-carelessnesss of speech which Gatacre was quick to detect: "May I
-introduce you to my son?" To which Gatacre replied: "You may bring him
-up to me if you like."
-
-It was one of the paradoxes of Gatacre's character that he was
-sometimes as punctilious about fine shades of etiquette as he was on
-other occasions kindly when such subtleties interfered with his mood or
-his purpose.
-
-All through the cold weather the General's house was full. There were
-the friends going by the mail to whom an invitation would be of the
-greatest convenience; there were the friends arriving by the mail who
-must stay one night to clear their baggage before starting up-country;
-{118} there were the friends who had entertained him when inspecting at
-their station, and whose daughters would enjoy the gaiety of the city.
-He was very fond of ladies, and minutely thoughtful for every detail
-which might contribute to their comfort or pleasure while in his house.
-
-Over and above all these calls on his time there was still the
-soldiering. The district covered a considerable area, extending
-northward as far as Cutch-Bhuj in Kathywarj and including many inland
-stations such as Ahmedabad, Baroda, Surat, and Khandalla. There was
-also a detachment of the Marine Battalion in the Persian Gulf. All the
-arrangements had been made for an official visit to Bushire in the
-spring of 1896, and it was with great reluctance that the General gave
-up this trip when he found himself under orders for Quetta.
-
-It was the soldiering that he loved, and it was for this love of the
-soldiering that he deliberately overworked himself. No personal
-considerations had any weight. Having no one at home to watch over
-him, he became recklessly irregular at his meals, and would sit up to
-all hours of the night writing--endlessly writing. What kept him going
-were the trips up-country to inspect the outlying regiments and
-detachments; for in the train he would make up his arrears of sleep,
-and the rules of politeness secured his punctual attendance at
-meal-time. The uncertainty of his hours was a matter of some comment
-at the office, where no doubt it {119} gave rise to considerable
-inconvenience, and probably not less troublesome was his habit of
-utterly disregarding the usual luncheon interval. The General was
-playfully conscious of all these misdemeanours, for on bidding good-bye
-to his chief staff officer on his departure for Quetta, he said:
-
-[Sidenote: Office hours]
-
-"Now you will be all right--with a brand-new General whom you can
-educate to attend the office regularly at eleven, and go home to tiffin
-at two."
-
-This officer, however, bore him no grudge for his vagaries, and now
-writes with great affection of his old Chief.
-
-
-POONA, _September_ 17, 1909.
-
-"As his staff officer there were two points he used to impress on
-me--'No difficulty' and 'No finality.' Difficulties, like hills, were
-useful for the exercise they give in surmounting them. There is no
-difficulty that cannot be overcome somehow. No finality is the
-watch-word of progress. What may seem best to-day can be improved upon
-to-morrow, but that is no reason for deferring action indefinitely:
-'The best is the enemy of the good.' Act on what seems good at the
-moment, and trust to time and opportunity to find something better to
-act on later. But act, and act promptly. This, I think, sums up the
-principles he tried to instil into me, and his example illustrates his
-teaching.
-
-"I never served under a chief who thought more quickly, decided more
-readily, or acted more promptly."
-
-
-During the last week of November 1894 the {120} Viceroy, Lord Elgin,
-arranged to hold a Durbar at Lahore. There was to be a great gathering
-of the native princes of the Punjab, and a concentration of British,
-Native, and Imperial Service troops. The Viceroy and the
-Commander-in-Chief both had large camps, to which they invited guests
-from all parts of India. Having received the offer of a tent and the
-hospitality of his camp from Sir George White, Gatacre selected the two
-best-looking chargers in his stable and repaired to Lahore in the
-highest spirits.
-
-[Sidenote: 1894]
-
-In a letter written a little later, however, he confesses that it was
-not the attractions of the Durbar that took him so far out of his
-command at such a busy time of the year, but the expectation of seeing
-some one again whom he had recently met as she passed through Bombay.
-For the guests a Durbar week is a holiday; the General was a free
-man--he had only to look on and enjoy himself. There were many
-official functions where every one was gloriously apparelled, but he
-looked as splendid as any in that brilliant company; and there were
-many social festivities which afforded opportunity for daily
-intercourse. It was during the picturesque pageants of the Lahore Week
-that I came under the spell of the General's charm. To know him was to
-love him, as many another has since said to me. During that week we
-learnt to know one another, and at the end of it he wrote a frank manly
-letter to my father, Lord Davey, begging him to sanction the idea of
-our marriage. {121} I regret that the kindly reply to his honest
-exposition of the whole matter has not been preserved; its purport
-being in accordance with our hopes, the engagement was made known, and
-I had the gratification of hearing my General's praises on all sides.
-
-In some letters of December 1894 he intentionally writes about himself,
-and supplies us with the incentives which inspired him.
-
-
-"I am always thinking of how I can get on, not for the sake of the
-money it brings, but for soldiering itself."
-
-
-And again:
-
-[Sidenote: Soldiering first]
-
-"I hope you will not mind my love of soldiering and work; it has such a
-fascination for me, I am inclined to put it first always. But my love
-for you will stand out first, and your love for me will enable me to
-carry out my work at personal inconvenience to ourselves, won't it?
-You see I am cunningly trying to get you to overlook my endeavours to
-think of soldiering as the first thing, but, dear, you will always be
-in my heart all the time."
-
-
-Perhaps it was by contrast with the slackness natural to the soft
-climate of Bombay that Gatacre's indomitable spirit attracted so much
-attention. Colonel James Arnott writes:
-
-
-"Working, as I did, in the Civil Department, I had no official
-association with your husband, and it was only when he commanded the
-Bombay District that I got to know him at all well. I was much
-impressed by his keen interest in his {122} profession, his strong
-_esprit de corps_, his enthusiasm for work, and the activity and
-strength which enabled him to carry it on in a way to stimulate others.
-I have a clear recollection of his active figure and his first-rate
-horsemanship, riding, as he often used to do, bare-backed, an
-indication of character and of those qualities so necessary in a
-soldier.
-
-"General Gatacre took his share in everything of public interest in
-Bombay, but I shall only refer to the very successful Assault-at-Arms
-which he organised--the first and best thing of the kind that I saw in
-my long residence in Bombay."[1]
-
-
-[1] September 13, 1909.
-
-
-[Sidenote: The first tournament]
-
-This tournament was a great event. The large grass-covered enclosure
-known as the Oval was borrowed from the Municipality for the purpose of
-a Grand Naval and Military Display and Assault-at-Arms. This space,
-flanked on one side by the Town Hall, and on the other open to the sea,
-offered every facility for such an undertaking. Admiral Kennedy, who
-was in residence for Christmas, willingly co-operated; his handy men
-rendered most valuable assistance, the naval element lending a
-distinction of which only a Bombay Assault-at-Arms could boast. An
-attractive programme was made out and entries were invited from all the
-stations in India.
-
-It was of course necessary to get subscriptions and guarantees; but the
-General was already personally acquainted with all the leading men in
-Bombay, and had no difficulty in {123} getting what he wanted. The
-Governor and the resident native princes gave their support and
-patronage, and many wealthy merchants, realising the great local
-expenditure that such a tamasha must involve, contributed generously.
-In the friendly relations established with the citizens of Bombay over
-the multifarious business of this tournament lay the secret of the
-facility with which Gatacre two years later won them to accept his
-views about segregation.
-
-Every detail of the entertainment had the General's personal attention;
-his fertile brain organised and perfected the whole and every part, his
-hands painted the scenery of the Soudan Village, his horse carried the
-officer's daughter who, in the gay uniform of the Royal Horse
-Artillery, opened the proceedings by presenting His Excellency the
-Governor with a programme in a silver case. The incessant labour
-entailed by this vast undertaking, and the strain necessary to honour
-all its calls upon him while carrying on simultaneously the routine of
-his official life, can be best expressed in his own words.
-
-Writing on the Thursday before the tournament, which was to open on
-Monday, December 17, he says:
-
-
-"Before I met you I thought there was only one thing in the world, and
-that was soldiering; now I think there are two, but the soldiering is
-at present the only one I have got. I have been busy to-day, and in a
-fever about the whole thing. I have been calling on the Italian ship,
-drinking 'The King and Italy,' again very bad {124} when one has fever,
-I should say; but no matter, the champagne was very good. The levee is
-just over, the whole world pouring before Lord Harris, and now I am
-going to paint till about 3 a.m. to-morrow. I have half a town to do,
-and no one seems able to originate anything."
-
-
-On the 18th, after the first day's performance, he writes:
-
-
-"What will you say to me, not writing to you yesterday? But if you
-only knew the sort of day I have had! First I was busy in the office,
-could not move from my chair till 4 o'clock p.m.; then I had to dress
-and meet H.E. the C.-in-C. at the station at 4.45, then to meet the
-Admiral at the Apollo Bunder a mile away at 5 o'clock--all official
-receptions; then to go to the Tournament to see all was right, finish
-painting scenery, entertain the Governor's party at dinner, go to the
-Tournament, watch it till 1 a.m., then drink 'the King and Italy' with
-the Italian officers, who remained till the last. Finally, at 2 a.m.,
-commence to count with an enormous staff of clerks 10,000 tickets, to
-see if the money was right. You see, I am responsible, and I like to
-be sure what we are doing. Well, dearest, the thing was a tremendous
-success. We sold 10,000 Rs. worth of tickets last night, shall sell
-probably 11,000 Rs. to-night, and so on.
-
-[Sidenote: Tent-pegging]
-
-"Everything went well. The light was not as good as I should wish, but
-it was fair. We had no accident in the ring, but got a horse killed
-afterwards, his leg being broken by a kick.... Well, I finished these
-beastly tickets at 4 a.m., and at 7 had to go tent-pegging for an hour,
-and since then have never sat down, so you see why I did not write.
-Now it is 5.30 {125} p.m., and I am so tired--or at least my eyes are;
-and I shall not have a chance to rest till 5 a.m. to-morrow; it will
-take us all that time to check the takings."
-
-
-On the 21st, when it was all over except for the prize-giving and the
-congratulations, he writes:
-
-
-"I have fever this morning; have not had any sleep for days, and had to
-run in the Open Competition for Officers' Tent-pegging, which I won
-easily, taking both pegs and then touching two more turned on edge. I
-was rather pleased, as no one else touched one sideways at all, and all
-were about twenty years younger than I! My team ran fourth for the
-Duke of Savoy's Cup; my men could not ride well enough; I got both mine.
-
-"To-day is the final ceremony. You have never seen such an
-extraordinary multitude; tens of thousands of children, who pay one
-anna each, crowding round the place endeavouring to get an entrance. I
-do wish you were here to see the unusual activity reigning in the town
-and the excitement we have caused."
-
-
-It was the novelty of the thing that gave importance to this
-tournament; the idea has since been carried out in many stations with
-marked success. It is interesting to note that such a gathering has
-also an indirect value; it promotes camaraderie between different
-branches of the service, and shows how much pleasure may be provided to
-both competitors and on-lookers by what was essentially "soldiering" in
-its inception.
-
-{126}
-
-In _The Times of India_ we read:
-
-
-"At the close of the Commander-in-Chief's speech three ringing cheers
-were given for His Excellency and a similar number for
-Brigadier-General Gatacre. The Commander-in-Chief having then left the
-arena, the troops left the ground with bands playing, the men-of-war's
-men as a special and well-deserved honour being escorted to the Apollo
-Bunder by a regimental band, and followed by a large crowd of
-civilians. Several of the troops in camp on the Oval visited the
-flagship H.M.S. _Bonaventure_, and the turret-ship _Magdala_ yesterday
-morning, while others were taken for a cruise in the harbour, a number
-of the up-country native troops being taken on a visit to inspect the
-local cotton mills.
-
-"The work of demolishing the enclosure and removing the plant has
-already begun, and to-day the majority of the troops will be _en route_
-for their up-country stations, many of them taking back prizes and
-other mementoes of the well-organised, well-managed, and finest
-military display and gathering of its kind ever held in the East."
-
-
-As soon as it was all over Gatacre took ten days' leave to Calcutta,
-where he was welcomed with surprise and pleasure by his friends of the
-other side.
-
-
-
-
-{127}
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-1895
-
-CHITRAL
-
-The annual inspections in the Bombay District for the season 1894-5 had
-all been carried out, confidential reports were rapidly being filled
-in, and got ready to forward to Headquarters, the arrangements for the
-sailing of the last transport were all settled, and all work was
-beginning to slacken in Bombay with the approach of the hot weather.
-Gatacre was making a push to conclude the season's work with a view to
-taking eight months' leave to England. In theory this long leave can
-be secured once in every five-year command; but Gatacre had now
-completed two such appointments without availing himself of this
-privilege, having been content with the sixty days' leave allowed each
-year.
-
-But whatever might be the special reasons which drew him homewards in
-1895, a better thing still was in prospect for him: in whole-hearted
-joy he writes on March 15:
-
-
-"I am so pleased: have got a telegram from {128} Sir George White
-saying, 'Have nominated you to command Third Brigade in Division to be
-mobilised for possible service Chitral.' This is a first-class
-business, for though it will prevent my coming home so soon, still it
-is a step onwards, and that is what we want, isn't it, dear? I am so
-pleased at getting this chance, and will do my best for your sake and
-my own."
-
-
-[Sidenote: The Third Brigade]
-
-The Chitral Relief Force was under the command of Sir Robert Low; the
-expedition was organised to effect the relief of Surgeon-Major
-Robertson, I.C.S., and some half-dozen officers who were shut up with a
-small garrison in the fort at Chitral. We are not concerned here with
-the internal events which had culminated in the siege of the fort by a
-hostile faction; suffice it to say that the Government of India
-regarded the matter as very urgent, and were sending a strong division
-of both British and Native troops to their assistance.
-
-Sir Robert Low's force was to approach from the south over the Malakand
-Pass, and to make its way up the valley of the Chitral River. This was
-a route which had not hitherto been used by the Indian Government, and
-covered about 185 miles. Communications with Chitral had previously
-been maintained from the north-east, via Gilgit. During the winter
-months this latter route was closed, as the road lay over snow-covered
-passes; the distance was about 160 miles from Gilgit, and this was the
-recognised access and the base of supplies for the little garrison.
-And so it came about that, {129} in response to messages from Major
-Robertson, Colonel Kelly was endeavouring to reach him from Gilgit,
-undismayed by almost impassable winter snows, at the same time that the
-Indian Relief Force was advancing with similar intention from Peshawur.
-
-In a letter from Mian Mir, March 24, 1895, Gatacre writes:
-
-
-"I leave to-morrow to take command of my Brigade at Hoti Mardan, about
-twenty-five miles north-east of Peshawur, and we shall march from there
-on April 1, right away for Chitral; but without doubt we shall have
-some rough work and some fighting. Umra Khan knows he will have no
-mercy after destroying Captain Ross's detachment, and will do his best
-to raise the whole border against us.
-
-"I have four first-class regiments--the Seaforth Highlanders, the
-Buffs, the 25th Punjab Infantry, the Second 4th Ghoorkas, and we are
-all sound and prepared to go anywhere, so I hope we shall all come well
-out of it.
-
- * * * * *
-
-"I think myself we shall have to drop our tents, small as they are, and
-march without them. Our difficulty will be crossing deep rivers; we
-shall have no boats, and must trust to making rafts of skins and
-floating the men across; but it is always a shaky business when there
-are bullets flying about."
-
-
-On March 30, in drenching rain, the first troops marched out of Hoti
-Mardan; on April 2 they met the enemy, who were lying in wait for them
-on the slopes of the Malakand Pass. But {130} in this and the
-subsequent engagements on the banks of the Swat and the Panjkora
-Rivers, the Third Brigade took no part, being held in reserve. A
-stirring account of the fighting is given by Colonel Younghusband in
-his _Story of the Guides_.
-
-A bridge of rafts was thrown across the Panjkora River; the Guides
-Cavalry and Infantry were passed over on the afternoon of April 15,
-with orders to reconnoitre certain villages early the next morning.
-But in the night a flood arose, huge trees crashed down on the swollen
-stream, completely wrecking the bridge. Two miles below this point,
-the Sappers were rigging up a suspension bridge; and in the meantime an
-attempt was made to float the men across on rafts supported by
-mussocks, or inflated goat-skins, and navigated by native boatmen.
-
-[Sidenote: A rescue]
-
-Gatacre, whose brigade was still in the rear, had pushed forward to see
-what was going on, and stood by the river's edge watching this "shaky
-business." Suddenly a raft on which four men were seated got out of
-control, broke away from the guiding rope, and was immediately caught
-by the current, and swirled down the turbulent stream. In an instant
-Gatacre jumped on his pony, and dashed at full gallop over the rocky
-ground in the wild hope of reaching the spot where the bridge was being
-made in time to warn the Sappers, and attempt a rescue. The bend of
-the river gave him time; with equal promptitude Major Aylmer got into a
-sling-cradle, and was lowered in mid-stream {131} just as the raft came
-in sight. Two men only were still on it, one of whom saw his chance
-and grasped the extended hand. As the river had narrowed from 200
-yards to ninety feet, the raft was travelling at a tremendous pace.
-There was a moment of thrilling strain on the ropes; the cradle was
-submerged by the sudden pull; but all held on heroically, and Aylmer
-had the satisfaction of bringing Private Hall safely to land. The
-other man, together with the two comrades who had been thrown off in
-the wild descent, were hopelessly lost.[1]
-
-
-[1] See Sir Robert Low's _Despatch_, April 18, 1895, par. 18.
-
-
-Early on April 17, the bridge being completed, the advance was resumed.
-It was here that the Third Brigade got its chance. An officer writes:
-
-
-"I can well recall our intense joy when we found ourselves going over
-the Panjkora Bridge in front of the Second Brigade, which had been
-leading since we left the Malakand. With feverish haste we packed our
-mules, having moved our camp the night before, so as to be as close as
-possible to the bridge."
-
-
-By 10.45 the Third Brigade, accompanied by the Guides Cavalry and the
-11th Bengal Lancers, were all across, and orders were received for a
-general advance on Miankalai, which was being held against us. Sir
-Robert Low's despatch runs:
-
-
-"I pushed on to Ghobani with the Third Brigade, arriving there soon
-after noon. The enemy had then collected on a bluff in two villages
-west of Mamugai. The battery came into action {132} about 12.30 p.m.,
-and the enemy soon fell back under cover. The Seaforth Highlanders and
-4th Goorkhas moved up to the south side of the valley, and then
-advanced against the enemy in a westerly direction, driving them back
-from spur to spur, and eventually arrived at the bluff mentioned about
-4 p.m., which they occupied for the night.
-
-"The enemy on this occasion did not show the bold front of previous
-days, but retired as the infantry advanced; and though the guns were
-sent forward about 1,000 yards to hasten their retreat, the loss of the
-enemy was not great. Throughout the action the troops were well
-handled by Brigadier-General Gatacre, D.S.O.
-
- * * * * *
-
-"The same afternoon Brigadier-General Gatacre with the Buffs, the 4th
-Goorkhas, half of No. 4 Company Bengal Sappers and Miners, No. 2
-Derajat Mountain Battery, and the Maxim guns of the Devonshire Regiment
-pushed on to Barwa, _en route_ for Dir and Chitral, with twenty days'
-supplies.
-
- * * * * *
-
-"On the afternoon of April 20 Brigadier-General Gatacre sent a message
-back to me that Major Deane, chief political officer, had received news
-that the garrison of Chitral was reduced to great straits, and that the
-mines of the enemy had reached to within ten yards of the fort, and he
-suggested that he should advance rapidly with a small body of five
-hundred men.
-
-"To this I consented, as being the only way of passing quickly through
-the intricate country we were now traversing, and the only chance of
-rescuing the garrison."[2]
-
-
-[2] See Sir Robert Low's _Despatch_, April 19, 1895.
-
-
-{133}
-
-[Sidenote: The Flying Column]
-
-The excitement and joyful anticipation amongst those who were to
-compose the Flying Column were intense. One of them writes:
-
-
-"We had intended pushing on over the Lowari Pass without baggage
-animals, the paths being unfit for even mules without much tedious and
-lengthy preparation. Every officer and man was to have carried ten
-days' supplies on his back, and I had already broken up the General's
-mess stores into suitable 40-lb. loads for hillmen to carry for us. In
-order to do this I only got to bed at our Janbatai camp at 1 a.m. and
-had to be up at 3 a.m.; so you can imagine it was impressed on my mind.
-
-"The dear General was, I fancy, awake all night, partly on account of
-the painful abscess that had been lanced that evening; but in spite of
-this he marched with us all next day, standing in his stirrups, because
-of the pain of sitting; and indefatigably urged on our bridging and
-road-making parties. After our arrival at Dir, having marched twenty
-miles and made the road and bridged the streams _en route_, the General
-would not rest or dine till the last of the transport mules had been
-piloted with lamps over a very difficult and rocky part of the path,
-just outside Dir. I fancy we dined at about 9.30 p.m.; but this was no
-unusual thing, for the General always insisted on seeing to the comfort
-of his brigade before his own, and I hardly ever managed to induce him
-to sit down to dinner till some time between 9 and 10 p.m."
-
-But much to the chagrin of the five hundred they were a flying column
-for twenty-four hours only, for on the 22nd news was received that the
-siege, which had lasted forty-six days, had {134} been raised. It was
-afterwards ascertained that Colonel Kelly had reached the fort at 2
-p.m. on the 20th, and that Sher Afzul and his supporters had fled the
-previous day. The General says nothing of his personal disappointment
-in the letters of this date, but when he was in the fort a month later,
-he writes:
-
-
-"I wish they had let me loose as I wished, when we reached the Swat
-River. I should have been in Chitral before Kelly, though he had only
-half the distance to go that I had. But G.O.C. wanted to move with a
-united force. Of course we all hold different views regarding the best
-way of doing these things, but had I had the doing of it, I would have
-moved by separate lines, one brigade in advance; one would have got on
-quicker, and more effectively. But this is only between you and me."
-
-
-[Illustration: Goorkhas crossing the Lowari Pass]
-
-The campaign now entered into the second phase; the fighting was over,
-but not so the work. The Government decided that the Third Brigade
-should proceed to Chitral. Having already reached Dir, they had
-covered nearly two-thirds of the distance according to the map, but the
-most difficult part of the journey was ahead of them. The Lowari Pass,
-10,450 ft. high, was covered with deep snow, and the valleys leading up
-to it on both sides were known to present almost insurmountable
-obstacles to the passage of a large body of men and animals.
-
-The following extract from _Trans-frontier Wars_ (vol. i. p. 544) gives
-a good idea of the physical features of the country to be traversed.
-
-
-{135}
-
-"Throughout its entire length from Dir to Ashreth, the road was a mere
-goat-track, offering extraordinary difficulties to the passage of
-troops, and requiring extensive improvements before laden animals could
-follow it.
-
-"The route to Gujar, at the foot of the pass, lay for eleven miles up
-the Dir Valley beside the tumbling snow-fed torrent that streams from
-the south side of the pass. The track was in general extremely
-difficult, frequently losing itself among the boulders that choked the
-bed of the stream, and rising steeply to traverse the face of a rocky
-bluff, only to fall again with equal abruptness on the other side.
-This portion of the road had to be realigned and reconstructed
-throughout, the river had to be bridged in three or four places, and
-stone staircase ramps had to be built in the water at more than one
-point, to enable laden animals to pass where the stream washed the foot
-of a precipitous cliff. From Gujar, 8,450 ft., to the summit of the
-pass, a distance of three miles, the track lay over frozen and often
-treacherous snow, at first at a fairly easy gradient, but growing
-steeper and more slippery as the pass was approached. Beyond the crest
-a great snow cornice, 15 ft. in height, overhung the head of the glen,
-down which the track descended for about 1,000 yards at a gradient of
-one in three or four, over vast drifts of avalanche snow, in which
-great rocks and the uprooted trunks of gigantic trees lay deeply
-embedded. From the foot of this descent the route lay down a steep and
-rocky gorge, now following the tangled bed of the torrent, now winding
-through fine forests of pine and cedar, or traversing open grassy
-glades clogged with the drainage of melting snows."
-
-
-{136}
-
-[Sidenote: The advance]
-
-In such a struggle with the forces of nature Gatacre was at his best.
-No difficulty dismayed him; his own passionate belief in the power of
-goodwill and hard work to overcome every obstacle inspired the whole
-force. The men learnt to work hard because he expected it of them and
-seemed always present to appreciate their efforts. They learnt to
-endure every hardship because he endured physical discomforts as great
-as theirs. Some few men were attacked with frost-bite, and the General
-was amongst the number; it caught him across the knuckles, and put him
-to great inconvenience. They saw him daily riding up and down the
-road, ministering to their comfort and their safety; and they realised
-that as a master he was one whom all good workmen delight to serve,
-because he made himself their servant.
-
-An officer who is now a Brevet-Colonel and has since served in Egypt,
-in East Africa, and in Natal, writes thus:
-
-
-"I have seen a good deal of active service, but nowhere have I met any
-officer, either of high or low rank, who more completely gave himself
-up to ensure the comfort of the troops under his command than the dear
-General. Nothing escaped his eagle eye: at one moment we were
-arranging that some picket should protect itself better against the
-wind and rain; at the next the General was showing how a shelter should
-be run up over the tent of some sick officer, to protect him from the
-heat of the or describing how better troughs could be for watering
-horses or mules.
-
-{137}
-
-"As to road-making, the General was unsurpassed. From the very
-commencement of the expedition he realised that good communications
-must be ensured; and made our brigade work as I have never seen any
-troops work, except Egyptian troops on the railway in the Soudan.
-Morning, noon, and night did every available man slave away at
-bettering the wild mountain paths which were our only link with our
-supplies and civilisation. The country supplied absolutely nothing but
-a little hill grass obtainable in some districts, which meant that
-every grain of food had to be laboriously carried up."
-
-
-It is evident that the care of 3,000 men in such a country was no light
-work; and Gatacre, who never took his work lightly even at home,
-certainly did not spare himself on service. His own letters give such
-a good idea of the routine of camp life, and of the spirit of genuine
-pleasure in it all that was so characteristic of him, that they shall
-tell their own tale.
-
-
-"We are marching all day over the most impossible ground. Our food
-comes up at about 10 o'clock at night. Last night, owing to the
-badness of the track, it never came in at all, and this morning I hear
-it is still four miles off, the other side of the pass: this means
-another eight hours! Talk about roads, you never saw such a country!
-You approach a range of hills 10,000 ft. high, you have to cut a road
-for the animals before you attempt to bring them up, and this means
-time. Every now and then they have to stop and clear away these
-creatures who stalk us and shoot from behind rocks. We have {138} been
-very fortunate in losing no men, though we have knocked over a good
-many of them."
-
- * * * * *
-
-"Yesterday we were soaked with rain twice, had difficulty about wood
-for cooking, all green and soaked with wet; but everybody got in by 10
-p.m. except about fifty mules and a company of Goorkhas who were
-stopped by the road falling away and some mules falling through about
-300 yards down the khud. This of course stopped the remainder there
-for the night, but we got them some food, and they had to bivouac the
-night there without fire or blankets. We got them on this morning.
-
-"Is it not marvellous? Out of my whole force of four regiments, a
-battery, and a company of Sappers, I have no sick men; they march all
-day, making roads, constantly get wet through, often have to sleep at
-great elevations. We were 8,700 ft. the night before last, without
-blankets, and yet they are all quite fit: no sick officer or man. Of
-course we take all the care we can of them.
-
-"Yesterday after passing over the pass we found on the hills along
-which the road ran all English flowers--narcissus, iris, lilies (they
-plant them on their graves), may, hawthorn, hyacinths, tulips, in great
-profusion. The country is magnificent, soil very rich, would grow
-anything; we must take the country and improve it. It is another
-Kashmir."
-
- * * * * *
-
-"We had a thunderstorm with lightning last night, a grand sight. I was
-coming back from Ashreth after nightfall, and stopped several times to
-watch the lightning light the snow peaks--quite beautiful!
-
-[Illustration: On the road to Chitral.]
-
-"I had a hard day the day before yesterday. {139} My orderly officer
-and I had to go from Dir to Janbatai and back, about fifty-six miles
-over a difficult road; we started at 5 a.m. and did not get back till 1
-a.m. yesterday. For we were delayed on the road so long inspecting
-that night overtook us, and we had to walk along a most impossible
-track leading our ponies; we literally had to feel our way with our
-feet. We all got falls over rocks and stones, but beyond breaking our
-skin and clothes we were none the worse. The river was running under
-us nearly all the way about 300 ft. straight down, so you may imagine
-we had to be careful. I lost my helmet, but fortunately it rolled down
-the track instead of over the khudside."
-
- * * * * *
-
-"Though I get up at daybreak and go to bed at 11 p.m. daily, I assure
-you that I never have a moment; it seems strange, but if you saw the
-country you would understand it. I have a long line of troops
-scattered over some forty miles of country connected by a single road
-along which only one man and one animal can pass at a time; sixteen
-bridges which may be washed away at any moment, causing many hours'
-delay in replacement; a snow pass, in the centre exactly, over which
-every ounce of food has to come; a terrific road along river-beds at
-one moment, running nearly up to the sky the next; 4,000 mules and
-donkeys working in stages from place to place, with supplies, guards,
-escorts, regiments, all of which have to be carefully watched to see
-that they have food and that nothing goes wrong. All this takes time,
-for it is a country one cannot gallop in, hardly go off a walk, but we
-are improving the roads and cutting new ones."
-
- * * * * *
-
-{140}
-
-"Then the snow pass stops us; we have to carry all our loads and
-supplies over the pass by hand. This makes us slow, but it is very
-sure; now the snow is melting and avalanches falling in every
-direction. Such an interesting country, and so beautiful! I have
-never seen such scenery, such mountains, trees, and rivers--simply
-magnificent! The spot I am now encamped in is about 2,000 ft. below
-the top of the pass, covered with gigantic cedars and pine-trees, eight
-and nine feet in diameter; I have never seen such trees. It is
-impossible to imagine anything more beautiful. There are high snow
-mountains all around us, a snow torrent from the avalanches rushing
-some hundreds of feet below us, carrying trees, rocks, etc., along with
-it; one can hardly hear oneself speak. Below in the valley one finds
-every English flower almost, chiefly in blossom, white peonies,
-honeysuckle--all sorts.
-
-"Well, we are getting on all right. I have been halted here for seven
-days owing to want of supplies; one of our bridges broke and stopped
-them. But we are moving on to-day; this refers to the troops only--of
-course I move up and down the line every day.
-
-"One of my officers was shot at yesterday, but up to date I have been
-unable to discover the man. I always have a duffedar (Native Cavalry
-N.C.O.) with a carbine behind me whenever I ride, and two Goorkhas
-whenever I walk; but I am out all day and most of the night, and I
-wonder they have not had a shot at me yet, for it is a wild country,
-full of trees, stones, and jungle.
-
-"Yesterday I caught thirty drivers stealing stores from their loads.
-There has been a great deal of this all along the road, causing us much
-{141} loss; so I had them all thrashed. There was much howling, but I
-do not think there will be any more thieving; we have to be summary
-here."
-
-
-[Sidenote: The fort]
-
-On May 15 the Third Brigade marched into Chitral. Sir Robert Low and
-the Headquarter Staff followed a few days later; their arrival was made
-the occasion for a political durbar, and a grand review of all the
-troops, including the garrison of the fort, and Colonel Kelly's
-triumphant little band. Sir Robert Low made a speech in which he
-complimented all ranks on the good work that each contingent had
-performed, and more particularly thanked the Third Brigade and their
-Brigadier for their share in the success of his expedition.
-
-At the first opportunity Gatacre himself read the Funeral Service over
-the grave where Captain Baird, who fell in the sortie of March 3, had
-been hastily buried during the siege. He gave orders for the erection
-of a wooden cross, and had photographs taken of this and the country
-round, which he sent with a sympathetic letter to the young officer's
-mother. On his arrival in England in the autumn he regarded it as one
-of his first duties to fulfil his promise to call on Mrs. Baird, a
-widow lamenting her only son.
-
-On the approach of the hot weather, the troops were withdrawn from the
-fort, and disposed in suitable camps along the road, pending the
-decision of Government on the question of {142} occupation. The long
-line of communications was divided into sections, the most advanced,
-from Dir northwards to Chitral, being held by the Third Brigade, the
-section from Dir southwards to Janbatai by the Second, and the Swat
-Valley by the First. Road-making and mending was still the principal
-occupation, for the General was never satisfied with his roads; and all
-through the summer months the men were kept, happy, and well by
-improving the roadway which is still used by the column of troops which
-every two years relieves the garrison of Chitral.
-
-It was probably at this time that the following incident took place.
-The General one day passed a supply convoy on the road, in charge of a
-transport officer with whose appearance he was dissatisfied, though he
-said nothing at the time. Next day he sent for the senior officer, and
-after a short talk with him told him to smarten up his subaltern.
-
-"Certainly, sir, certainly," said the officer, and a look of pride and
-relief stole over his face that he had himself escaped unfriendly
-criticism. The General, reading the man's expression, added, "And
-smarten yourself up, too."
-
-The officer who supplies this tale concludes: "I can see and hear the
-General's chuckle after administering this little pill."
-
-[Sidenote: Snipers]
-
-Colonel Ronald Brooke,[3] who proved himself an orderly officer after
-his General's own heart, tells us how the Ashreth Valley became
-infested by a band of hillmen who cut up stragglers from {143} the
-convoys, and finally one night attacked a band of Chitrali traders
-(under the impression that they were our transport followers) who had
-incautiously spent the night at the foot of the pass. Twelve out of
-thirteen were killed; one only escaped, badly wounded, to carry the
-news to the nearest military post. The story goes on:
-
-
-[3] Brevet-Lieutenant-Colonel R. G. Brooke, D.S.O.
-
-
-"The General and I at once hurried to the spot, which looked just like
-a shambles, and he immediately ordered a beat on a huge scale. Troops
-silently surrounded the Ashreth Valley from every side; and on August
-12, instead of a grouse drive, we indulged in the far more exciting
-experience of a Kafristan robber drive. A band of fifteen were flushed
-on the hillside, of whom five were captured, the others escaping, never
-to return to so dangerous a spot. Of the five prisoners, three were
-sentenced to death, and the other two were set free on account of their
-youth."
-
-
-[Illustration: General Gatacre and his favourite pony.]
-
-Having thus cleared his own valley of snipers, Gatacre longed to do the
-same on the Dir-Janbatai section, where the troops on escort-duty had
-been constantly fired on, several soldiers having been mortally
-wounded. At last he secured from the Major-General Commanding
-permission to take over this dangerous section as well as his own. A
-picked lot of Pathan Sepoys were sent down under an excellent native
-non-commissioned officer, with instructions to patrol the hillsides far
-above the position that snipers might take up, just when convoys {144}
-were on the move, and thus literally to stalk the stalkers. This idea
-was crowned with success. In a few days' time the Pathans spotted a
-party of three hillmen lying up for the convoy. With extraordinary
-skill they succeeded in capturing two of the party; the third man
-escaped, although so severely wounded that he was tracked by his
-blood-marks for nine miles. The two prisoners turned out to be Afghans
-who had come over the frontier bent on doing as much harm as possible.
-Both were hanged, and thenceforward there was no more sniping on that
-section.
-
-The General's interest in the scenery and flowers was very genuine.
-During the three months that the troops were scattered in various camps
-in these beautiful valleys, he found time to make a large collection of
-flowers and ferns, and himself attended to the drying and packing of
-the specimens. When these were eventually handed over to the Forest
-Department at Calcutta, the botanists found one fern which was
-pronounced a new variety, and named it after the General in the records
-of the Department.
-
-In due course orders arrived for the withdrawal of the Relief Force.
-Early in September Gatacre conducted his Brigade over the frontier, and
-bade them farewell amidst the heartiest expressions of affection and
-goodwill on the part of all ranks, British and Native.
-
-
-
-
-{145}
-
-CHAPTER X
-
-1896
-
-QUETTA
-
-On November 10, 1895, a few familiar words were read once more in a
-village church in Sussex, the old-world troth was given and plighted,
-and the face of the earth was changed thereby for the two persons most
-concerned.
-
-The General had been unable to take more than ninety days' privilege
-leave, and therefore had to be back in Bombay early in January. The
-drill season was already far advanced, the programme for the inspection
-of the various regiments in the outlying stations included in the
-Bombay Command was already laid out, and trips to Baroda, Ahmedabad,
-Surat, and Cutch-Bhuj followed one another in close succession.
-
-These trips, which made a welcome respite from the heavy office-work
-and town-life at Headquarters, sometimes included a day's sport and
-recreation.
-
-On Friday, February 21, the General, his staff officer, and the writer
-disembarked from the S.S. _Kola_ at Mandvi, in the Gulf of Cutch. This
-coast is so shallow that the steamers have to lie a long way out, and
-the process of {146} disembarkation includes transfer from the
-mail-boat to a steam-launch, thence to a rowing-boat, which runs
-aground alongside some bullock-drawn waggons. Across the highest
-timbers of these carts nets are stretched, on which the passengers seat
-themselves, while the final stage is a chair borne by four natives who
-are waist-deep in water as they cross the pools in the interminable
-stretch of sea and sand. A forty-mile drive in a carriage provided by
-the Rao Saheb of Cutch brought us to the capital where the 17th Bombay
-Infantry were then quartered. The Resident, whose guests we were, the
-Commandant of the regiment, four other officers, the doctor, and four
-ladies made up the whole British contingent.
-
-The inspection went off without memorable incident. The real interest
-of the trip lay in the native races and the pig-sticking camp, which
-the Rao Saheb had arranged to fill in the blank days while waiting for
-the weekly mail-boat.
-
-The Rao Saheb was a man of about thirty, who, together with his younger
-brother, Karloba, had taken kindly to English ways; they played
-lawn-tennis on even terms with the officers and their wives, and when
-on horseback their costume was entirely English except for the
-brilliant puggri. The camp and all its accessories were furnished by
-the hospitality of the Rao Saheb; he was our companion throughout the
-day, dinner alone excepted, and nothing was omitted for the comfort of
-his guests.
-
-[Sidenote: Pig-sticking]
-
-We reached Wanoti Camp early in the {147} morning, and the seven men
-who were carrying spears were soon on horseback. The country was flat
-and sandy, and bare except where patches of low scrub provided
-excellent cover. A few beaters were sent forward to drive out the
-game, and before long you could see some very solid-looking bodies,
-very low on the ground, moving amongst the bushes at a surprising pace:
-these were a "sounder" of pigs. The Rao Saheb selected one, the
-General another, and, being mounted on a capital white pony, I was
-close at his heels. This boar, which was scored to the General's
-spear, turned out to be the biggest of the seven which was the total
-for the day. But he was no sooner dispatched than we were off after
-another. Again the same spear was the first to touch him; then we lost
-sight of him as he crashed through a thick hedge. When we emerged
-through the nearest gap we found that the Resident had picked up his
-line, but while taking a thrust at him the pig jinked and tripped up
-the horse, so that both he and his rider rolled in the sand, while the
-pig went off with the eight-foot spear stuck in his body like a pin in
-a pin-cushion. If we had not been close at hand the savage creature
-would have turned and rent the fallen man, who, though unhurt, would
-have been defenceless.
-
-In the afternoon the beaters started on the other side of the camp, and
-a most thrilling incident occurred. After a chase of about two miles
-our pig disappeared over the edge of a forty-foot precipice, which was
-the cliff-like side of a dry nullah; we had to look for a chine, and
-{148} after a scrambling descent found him again, rather winded, hiding
-in a ditch about five feet deep and six to eight feet wide. The
-General had broken his spear in a previous conflict, and was therefore
-unarmed. There were two officers only with us, one of whom cried out,
-"If you do not know how to tackle him yourself, give your spear to the
-General, and let him try."
-
-He took the proffered spear, and, handing over his pony, stepped down
-into the nullah, just opposite the boar, and with the lance under his
-elbow stood facing the fierce creature for some four or five minutes,
-till the latter suddenly rose up and plunged forward; but the spear was
-in readiness, the charge was stayed, and the animal fell back, run
-right through the throat.
-
-While at Bhuj the following telegram reached the General:
-
-
-"From Military Secretary, Chief, Calcutta: Chief proposes to select you
-to officiate in command Quetta District during absence of General
-Galbraith proceeding on leave to England. Please wire if agreeable to
-you."
-
-
-It was followed two days later by another, from Sir Charles Nairne,
-Commander-in-Chief Bombay Army:
-
-
-"I congratulate you both on going to Quetta. You will have a wide
-enough field there."
-
-
-Throughout the month of March the General was kept busy with the
-preparation and execution of some extensive manoeuvres which took place
-on the hills near Khandalla. There was {149} also a Horse Show in
-Bombay to attend to; this was on a bigger scale than had hitherto been
-attempted. The General rode in several classes, and won the first
-prize for Arab chargers, and also for the best turn-out in the driving
-classes. The cheers that greeted him as he appeared in the
-prize-winners' parade were significant of the public appreciation of
-the energy that, as chairman of the committee, he had thrown into the
-undertaking.
-
-[Sidenote: Leaves Bombay]
-
-On the evening of April 7, as the General Officer Commanding sailed in
-the transport _Warren Hastings_ for Karachi, _en route_ for Quetta, the
-nine-gun salute boomed out its farewell greeting in the summer night.
-
-This First-class District, with its headquarters on the lofty plateau
-known as Quetta, about 6,000 ft. high, was a command wholly congenial
-to Gatacre's temperament. The office-work was very light; there was a
-garrison of two battalions of British infantry, one regiment of Native
-cavalry, and two of Native infantry, besides a complement of artillery,
-equipped both with oxen and mules, a splendid transport train, and
-other details. The outposts are on the actual frontier of the British
-Empire; their very distance and inaccessibility exercised a great
-attraction for him, so that the official visit to each station became a
-picnic pleasure-party in a very literal sense. Nothing was wanting,
-not even battle, murder, and sudden death, to create that sense of
-danger and adventure that casts its fascinating shadow over this wild
-frontier land.
-
-{150}
-
-As the season in which marching could be accomplished in comfort was
-already advanced, and the days were fast growing hot and long, it was
-decided to start very soon after our arrival on a tour of inspection to
-Fort Sandeman, Lorelai, and other outlying posts. Fort Sandeman lies
-to the north-east of Quetta, and is in the Lower Zhob Valley; it is 180
-miles from Khanai station on the Quetta Railway. A squadron of the 5th
-Sind Horse, under Captain Sherard, furnished the escort. No supplies
-could be reckoned on by the way, so that transport had to be drawn to
-carry six weeks' food for five mounted officers, their servants and
-horses, and also for the hundred Sowars and their horses, and for the
-transport animals themselves. This made quite a long line of horses,
-camels, and mules on the march, and one of the duties of our daily
-routine was a walk down the transport lines at sunset.
-
-There is not space here to do justice to this delightful ride. We
-covered between six and seven hundred miles in the six weeks we were
-out. The early starts while the moon shone brilliantly, the long
-leisurely days in camp, the evening scramble over the nearest hills,
-and the nights passed under the clear stars, with no sound but the
-steady tramp of the sentries; the puzzling alternation of sandy desert
-and rocky rift, dry nullahs and roaring torrents,--all make up memories
-of strange and delightful doings never to be spoilt, even by the
-counter recollections of sun and dust.
-
-In the autumn of the same year Fort Sandeman {151} was the scene of a
-shocking tragedy. A Sepoy of the 40th Pathans ran amok while on sentry
-duty one evening outside the officers' mess. According to his
-deposition later, he had been waiting to get all the five officers into
-line as they wandered round the billiard-table, so that he might strike
-them all with one bullet. But the finesse of his idea was defeated by
-his own impatience; he fired his shot when only three men were covered.
-Two young officers were so seriously wounded that they fell
-immediately, and died a few hours later. With great presence of mind
-and courage, and undismayed by a severe wound in the arm, Mr.
-Maclachlan gave chase to the murderer, and by raising the alarm and
-calling out the guard contributed to his capture, though unfortunately
-this was not effected till the tehsildar and two native clerks had been
-shot dead.
-
-It was the custom to make the last afternoon of an inspection visit the
-occasion for a social gathering; sports and trials of skill would be
-arranged, the native regiments would perform feats of horsemanship, and
-organize a display of national dancing and wrestling. One peculiarly
-striking effect was worked out by an officer in the 15th Bengal Lancers
-at Lorelai. Thirty-two Sowars in their white undress uniform, mounted
-on white or grey horses, cantered past doing sword-practice, their
-curved blades flashing in the sun; but the ghostly effect of these
-white horsemen was enhanced when they were followed by another group
-mounted entirely on chestnuts, doing {152} lance-practice, the red and
-white pennons and scarlet cummerbunds adding to the colour scheme.
-
-Lorelai also contributed its note of tragedy, for very shortly after
-our departure from Beluchistan, Colonel Gaisford (soldier and civilian)
-was treacherously assassinated in the very dak-bungalow in which we had
-resided.
-
-The object of a short tour planned for September was formally to take
-over a strip of land known as the Toba Plateau, which had been recently
-ceded to the Government of India under an arrangement effected by a
-Frontier Delimitation Commission. As this was a desolate land with few
-inhabitants, the General planned to combine this political object with
-military training in the way of practice in field-firing. He arranged
-that detachments of the 1st Bombay Grenadiers and of the 26th Beluchis
-should take part in the manoeuvres, and that the 25th Bombay Rifles
-should meet him at the camping-ground. It was the first time a white
-man had been seen in the country. The march abounded with picturesque
-and amusing incidents. For instance, there was the day when the camel
-transport lost their way. Their pace being a little slower than that
-of the mules, and the country that day with its low round sandhills
-being peculiarly puzzling, they lost touch with the tail of the column.
-A transport duffedar was sent back to look for the string of camels,
-but came not again; a corporal was sent on a mule to look for the
-duffedar, and he came not again. It was now getting late, and darkness
-would soon fall, so the {153} General himself started on a pony to look
-for the corporal. It was six o'clock before the camels, who were
-carrying our tents, mess kit, and clothing, reached the camp, from a
-point exactly opposite to the direction whence they were expected.
-
-[Sidenote: Field-firing]
-
-When the rendezvous on Toba Plateau was reached, after about three
-days' march from Chaman, we settled down for a week, and field-firing
-in the miniature valleys took place daily. The day before the proposed
-attack newspapers are spread out with the help of stones in the
-positions where tribesmen defending their homes would be likely to
-erect sangars and make a stand. The attacking column, being supplied
-with ball cartridges, shoot at these targets till they disappear, and
-then advance till a bend of the valley discloses another imaginary
-concentration of the enemy. This device presents a very realistic
-counterfeit of hill warfare.
-
-It seems to me now that all our time at Quetta was spent in such mimic
-fighting. The wild and desolate country, in which the cantonments lay
-like an oasis, lent itself admirably to military training; the
-garrison, complete in all its units, provided the necessary troops of
-all arms, so that a succession of field-officers were sent up for
-tactical examination, the practical side of which meant a series of
-field-days. The General's A.D.C., when called upon for reminiscences,
-sends the following anecdote:
-
-
-"His good temper and quiet way of rebuking people was, I have always
-thought, remarkable. {154} I remember a field-day when an officer had
-got a company in a very badly chosen spot. The General, in his usual
-innocent sort of way, went up to him to gather, as it were,
-information. He always did that: he looked as if he was dying to
-learn, while really he was leading on the man to talk and show what he
-knew, or else to convict him out of his own mouth. The Major had no
-good reason for his dispositions, and when cornered began to quote the
-drill-book. The General quietly said: 'It's not very good form to
-throw the drill-book at your General.'"
-
-
-On a similar occasion, at an outpost parade, the captain in charge of
-the picquet was unaccountably nervous, and had great difficulty in
-explaining the "idea." With two words the General put him out of his
-pain and signalised his incompetence: "You're shot," he said. "Who is
-next in command?"
-
-On the Sind-Pishin Railway, as the branch line is called that runs from
-Ruk Junction on the Indus through Quetta and on to Chaman, there is
-only one train in each direction in the twenty-four hours. The
-railroad runs for miles over the wildest and most desolate tracts. It
-is 150 miles from Quetta to Sibi, and Sibi is 100 miles north of
-Jacobabad. The roadside stations consist merely of a few planks as
-platform, a hut for the station-master, who is commonly an Eurasian,
-and a standpipe; sometimes there is a second hut, in which a bunnia
-does business in food-stuffs and other simple trading.
-
-[Sidenote: A massacre]
-
-Sunari Station, lying about 100 miles east of Quetta, must have been a
-place of slightly more {155} importance, for when the Marris fell upon
-it they found fifteen persons to murder. Unfortunately for him, a
-European youth, named Canning, a sub-inspector of the line, and son of
-the station-master at Sibi, happened to be there that fatal morning.
-As the daily train approached the station between 9 and 10 a.m., the
-engine-driver was puzzled at not receiving the customary greeting on
-the signals, but decided to crawl on carefully into the station. It
-was only too clear that a wholesale slaughter with swords had been
-perpetrated; the place was strewn with dead bodies, terribly slashed
-about, and the bunnia's shop had been set on fire. The terrified
-driver and guard found the station-master with his arm cut off, but
-still breathing, and carefully laid him on the train, but even this
-sole survivor of this unparalleled outrage died before the next station
-was reached. In the meantime the pointsman had fled on foot to the
-next station, and telegraphed the startling news from there to Quetta.
-
-Very shortly after the arrival of the news the telegraph wires were
-found to be cut; to imaginative minds a rising of the whole powerful
-tribe of Marris was imminent. The railroad, which ran for miles
-through the Marris' country, might be destroyed, the telegraph lines
-were already severed, all communication with India would thus be cut
-off, and Quetta isolated might have added another picturesque story to
-the romantic series of frontier annals.
-
-Very naturally a panic took place at the {156} adjoining
-railway-stations, some of the station-masters actually constructing
-amateur wire entanglements with the telegraph stores. A new staff was
-established at Sunari with a strong guard, and detachments of the 25th
-Bombay Rifles were posted all along the line. The Political Department
-offered the very handsome reward of 2,500 rupees for the capture of the
-three ringleaders, and Gatacre, who had been on short leave at Simla,
-hurried back to take a hand in the search.
-
-Early in the morning of October 23 the following letter was sent back
-to Quetta:
-
-
-"To-day I am going out with some of the Pathans to look over the ground
-where we hear some of these men have been, possibly are now. I do not
-think we shall get back to-night, as the ground is said to be very bad,
-but we have taken our blankets and some food. I should much like to
-catch these Ghazis; it would be highly satisfactory. The Marris
-promise Gaisford much, but I think they are humbugging him."
-
-
-The party left Dalujal Station at 5.30 a.m. The troops were drawn from
-the 24th Beluchistan Regiment. At nightfall they bivouacked near Dirgi
-Springs; and next morning, with a view to scouring the hills, the party
-was divided into four groups. Besides the General there were two
-British officers, two Native officers, and forty-four Pathans. One
-British officer was allotted to each party, and a subadar took charge
-of the fourth; the rendezvous was to be a well-marked peak in the range
-in front of them. {157} The General, with five Sepoys and a Marri whom
-he had impressed as guide, took a middle line and made straight for the
-summit, instructing the other parties to take a wider sweep. He had
-regarded this peak as a likely place, because he had heard that there
-was a musjid or small shrine built there, to which the murderers might
-have resorted for purification after contact with the Feringhi.
-
-As the handful of men crept up the rocky slope a sangar came into view,
-which was suggestive. The leading Pathan signalled with his hand that
-all should go silently, and crouch; a few more yards were covered in
-this way, and then the sangar was rushed. The Sepoys flung themselves
-upon the two men who were found sleeping behind the rocks with such
-splendid dash that they all rolled together as the enemy made frantic
-efforts to get at their knives. But no one was hurt, and in an instant
-the prisoners were securely bound with the puggris of their captors.
-
-The other search-parties now appeared on the scene, and very soon
-discovered the third Ghazi, who, being also asleep in fancied security,
-had no chance to get away. Three others, who had been sent away to
-draw water, were now seen approaching, but they turned and fled. The
-nature of the ground made it impossible to follow them on their own
-mountains with any chance of success.
-
-At noon the little force started back. On this return journey the
-General shifted his position from leading to bringing up the rear;
-{158} for he anticipated that a stampede might be made on the part of
-the prisoners with the intention of knocking him down the khud, while
-in the scuffle and panic they would hope to effect their escape. This
-reasoned caution in protecting his life against obvious and purposeless
-dangers was as habitual and spontaneous with the General as was his
-forwardness in disregarding the risks when occasion demanded. He was
-punctilious in protecting himself against sunstroke, and wore a pad
-down his spine as well as the universal topee, and by such personal
-heedfulness safeguarded his life and general health.
-
-However, on this particular occasion his precaution nearly proved
-disastrous. As the string of men crept down the mountain-side a
-jemadar noticed that one of the Sepoys had failed to uncock his rifle,
-and gave the necessary order. A shot rang out. The General's helmet
-was blown off his head, and was picked up blackened with the smoke of
-the charge. He is said to have smiled, as he rescued the Sepoy from
-the jemadar's wrath and secured the empty cartridge as a memento.
-
-[Illustration: Beluchi murderers.]
-
-When the party reached Sunari Station, after a march of seventeen
-miles, the General discovered that there was no political officer there
-to whom he could hand over the prisoners, so that there was no choice
-but to march another six miles to Dalujal. Here the murderers were
-taken over by the Civil Department. The irons with which they were
-immediately loaded seemed fantastically medieval in their weight {159}
-and simplicity. But on the other hand, nothing could have been more
-fantastic than the proceedings of the Englishman who had effected their
-capture. This was the view taken by Sir George White, the
-Commander-in-Chief, though he little guessed when he wrote how very
-nearly his words had come true.
-
-
-"I congratulate you on the way in which you managed and executed the
-capture. I am also very glad to know we have General Officers
-commanding first-class districts who take to the hills for amusement,
-but I must also say that I don't think the job was quite one for the
-G.O.C. to conduct personally. If they had managed to get a bullet into
-you it would have made the affair one of very sinister importance.
-However, from that point of view, 'all is well that ends well.'"
-
-
-[Sidenote: A death sentence]
-
-A few days later the headmen of the Marri tribe handed over the other
-three men implicated, and at Sibi, on November 2, the three Ghazis,
-Fakir Kala Khan, Jalamb, and Rahim Ali, atoned for their misdeeds. The
-sentence was death by hanging followed by public cremation.[1]
-
-
-[1] Compare _Beluchistan Gazette_, October 29, November 5, 1896, and
-_Civil and Military Gazette_, November 12, 1896.
-
-
-On the return of the troops to Quetta great excitement prevailed when,
-through the presence of a strong guard at the station, it became known
-that the promised treasure was on the same train. Of course this was
-divided amongst the Sepoys only; all those who went to the mountain had
-a share, with extra money to those {160} who actually took a hand in
-the fray. It was evening when the train came in, so that it was not
-till we reached the house that I noticed the blackened helmet, and saw
-the rent cut by the bullet. When called upon for an explanation, the
-emotion of that moment took possession of him again: it was the only
-time that I heard his voice break.
-
-Throughout that summer Mr. Curry and the railway engineers had been
-busy over the new railroad that was to connect Sibi and Quetta via the
-Bolan Pass. This line is shorter than the Hurnai route by fifty miles,
-but it had hitherto presented insuperable difficulties to the engineer.
-Two previous attempts had been made; but the floods rise so high in the
-gorges and had twice so completely wrecked the permanent way, that this
-route had been discarded by Sir James Browne, who preferred to tackle
-the Chupper Rift with his magnificent suspension bridge. But owing to
-the unreliability of the shifting sands at Mud Gorge it was imperative
-for military purposes to have an alternative line. The new
-Bolan-Mushkaf railroad was completed in November 1896. To give the
-General an opportunity of seeing this triumph of construction, Mr.
-Curry decided to initiate the new service on the day of our departure
-from Quetta. The eight months' acting appointment reached its
-conclusion on November 30, 1896, and the first mail train left Quetta
-for Sibi on that day at 10 a.m., carrying Gatacre back to resume his
-substantive appointment at Bombay.
-
-
-
-
-{161}
-
-CHAPTER XI
-
-1897
-
-THE PLAGUE
-
-In the Report issued by the Bombay Plague Committee of 1897 it is shown
-that 27,597 persons died of that disease between August 8, 1896, and
-June 30, 1897; while the total mortality from all causes for the same
-period was 45,886. This is more than one-twentieth of the normal
-average population given as 850,000.[1]
-
-
-[1] See Chart 3, issued with the _Report on the Bubonic Plague_, by
-Brigadier-General W. F. Gatacre, C.B., D.S.O., 1897.
-
-
-When the disease first declared itself, the Press and its volunteer
-correspondents showed extraordinary ingenuity in denying its existence,
-in attempting to discount the seriousness of the situation and
-inventing euphemisms by which to describe the "glandular fever." But
-the authorities responsible for the health of the city appreciated the
-gravity of the prospect. The Municipality appointed a special
-sub-committee to investigate the causes of the epidemic and to carry
-out measures for its suppression; and Mr. Haffkine, the bacteriologist,
-was requisitioned from Calcutta to identify the bacillus. By the {162}
-end of October the accommodation available in the Municipal Hospital
-for infectious diseases was lamentably inadequate. Customs officers in
-foreign ports took alarm and imposed quarantine on all vessels from
-Bombay Port. Natives of all classes were terror-stricken, and many
-families fled up-country. Thousands daily streamed over the two
-causeways that connect the Island of Bombay with the mainland; vast
-crowds assembled at the Bunders and the railway-stations in their haste
-to get away by sea and rail. Before January was out, half the
-inhabitants had escaped, for it has been shown that the population fell
-from 797,000 on December 8 to 437,000 on February 8. At the same time
-the mortality reached alarming figures, showing 4,559 in December and
-6,189 in January in excess of the normal death-rate duly corrected.
-Although January is the coolest and pleasantest month of the year, it
-proved the most disastrous; the outbreak reached its climax on the 15th
-and 16th, on which days 344 and 345 fatal attacks were recorded.
-
-The fires that burn inside the high walls that bound the Charni Road
-sent up a thicker smoke and a more suggestive stench than ever before.
-The price of wood for funeral pyres went up; in some cases Hindus
-consented to bury their dead, because they could not afford to buy the
-necessary timber. On January 18, 1897, an article appeared in _The
-Times of India_ seriously discussing the supply of vultures then
-inhabiting the Towers of Silence. The writer concludes {163} with the
-quaint phrase: "There are now nearly 400, the number being ample, even
-with the high death-rate now existing in the Parsee Community."
-
-[Illustration: Hindu burning-ghat]
-
-
-The General Officer Commanding was fully alive to the dangerous and
-insanitary condition of some of the older parts of the town. For the
-greater security of his household he took an airy house on Malabar
-Hill, instead of inhabiting the official residence in the Marine Lines.
-He further arranged for the Marine Battalion, which forms the permanent
-garrison of Bombay, to leave their antiquated huts in the same road and
-go out under canvas. Two English ladies living in the Marine Lines
-caught the plague, but fortunately both recovered.
-
-[Sidenote: A white man dies]
-
-The European colony were profoundly distressed on hearing of the death
-of Surgeon-Major Robert Manser on January 6, 1897. He was First
-Physician of the Jamsetjee Jeejeebhoy Hospital, and Professor at the
-Grant Medical College. It was said at first that pneumonia was the
-cause; but when Nurse Joyce, who had been attending him, died on the
-following day, suspicions were aroused, and the bacteriological
-examination established the connection between plague and pneumonia.
-
-Early in February, under a pseudonym, the General published two
-carefully reasoned and suggestive articles in _The Times of India_. In
-the first he pointed put that the existence of the plague and the
-consequent exodus of the {164} population afforded an excellent
-opportunity of carrying out extensive improvements in the housing and
-sanitation of the worst parts of the city, and in acquiring official
-control over the disposal of the dead. In the second he called
-attention to the inadequacy of the hospital accommodation to meet even
-the present demand, and boldly handles the question of finance, saying:
-
-
-"What is a lakh or ten lakhs of rupees where the prosperity of Bombay
-is concerned? The question is not one for Bombay to haggle over. The
-plague has become a thing of Imperial importance, Her Majesty takes a
-deep interest in it, and the necessary funds must be found. But the
-Government of India will want to see some exhaustive efforts on our
-part; they will expect an amount of thoroughness in combating the
-disease which up to the present we have not shown."
-
-
-After this appeal the writer goes on to suggest that a hospital should
-be established in Government House, Parel, a large mansion which had
-been the Governor's residence in the time of Sir James Fergusson, and
-had since been discarded in favour of a more breezy site on Malabar
-Point.
-
-[Sidenote: Official thanks]
-
-The municipality took the hint and voted funds. Lord Sandhurst
-responded readily and offered his "country seat" for the purposes of a
-Special Plague Hospital, and the General came forward officially, and
-promised to see to the equipment of the wards, and to provide doctors,
-orderlies, attendants, etc., from the troops under his command. His
-call for volunteers met with {165} the same ready response; for nurses
-he applied to the various Roman Catholic Convents in the neighbourhood;
-and expended a special donation from Lady Sandhurst in making the
-Sisters' quarters as comfortable as possible, and in fitting up a
-little Oratory for them. In ten days 150 beds were ready, and by the
-erection of matting huts in the large compound accommodation could be
-quickly provided for several hundred more.
-
-The following paragraphs, taken from a letter from the Government of
-Bombay to the Government of India, dated February 23, 1897, foreshadow
-the policy which was adopted a few days later:
-
-"3. To General Gatacre the thanks of His Excellency the Governor in
-Council are in a special degree due, both for the offer of assistance
-and for the energy he has thrown into the undertaking. He has spared
-himself no trouble, and the result will be an unquestionable benefit to
-the city.
-
-"5. I may add that His Excellency the Governor in Council anticipates
-great indirect benefit from a measure which brings the Military in
-touch with the Civil authorities in organising measures for preventing
-the spread of the plague, for it is not improbable that the Civil
-authorities may before long be driven to seek considerable assistance
-at the hands of the Military."[2]
-
-
-[2] Government Orders: General Department No. 1481/934 P. Bombay
-Castle, March 16, 1897.
-
-
-It was evident that the Governor regarded the situation as one which
-called for combined effort and extraordinary measures. He also {166}
-realised that if such an undertaking as stamping out the plague before
-the monsoon broke was to have any chance of success, there must be
-central control and central responsibility. He wanted a man endowed
-equally with the administrative capacity to conceive a comprehensive
-plan of action, and the executive sagacity to carry it out with success.
-
-[Sidenote: The Gatacre Committee]
-
-Lord Sandhurst, having decided to execute what amounted to a "coup" in
-its startling supersession of all the traditions of the civil,
-municipal, and military services, sent for Gatacre as the strongest man
-whose services he could command, asked him to name his own committee,
-and to frame in his own words the instructions under which he was to
-act, and the powers with which he was to be invested. There can be no
-doubt that the Governor himself contributed enormously to the good
-results achieved by the Plague Committee by the splendid freedom from
-control which he allowed its Chairman, and the manner in which he put
-every department of Government--civil and municipal--at his disposal,
-and then let him work out his own system unhampered by any question of
-custom or finance.
-
-Gatacre realised to the full that he was making himself personally
-responsible for the success of the undertaking. In a confidential
-letter he writes:
-
-
-"The Government of Bombay has given me its thanks, and I have been
-appointed chairman {167} of the committee to stamp out the plague.
-Lord Sandhurst sent for me, and asked me whom I would like to assist
-me, and I took Snow, Municipal Commissioner--he is the head of an
-enormous department and controls the municipality, which thus falls
-under me--James, an executive engineer of the municipality, an
-energetic man with an enormous staff of engineers and workmen--Dr.
-Dimmock, who is a sound man and has energy. I have made Cahusac
-secretary. I have been told that money is no object, but that I am to
-stamp out the plague. They have passed an Act directing all to carry
-out _any order_ I like to issue, so if I fail it will be my own fault;
-but I do not intend to fail. We shall have much opposition, as this
-gives me powers over all except the Governor and his Councillors.
-
- * * * * *
-
-"I wish they had handed me over this business in December, when I first
-came down; it would never have got out of Bombay. It has now become a
-most serious question, and has extended to the whole of India."
-
-
-We have to thank Dr. Dimmock[3] for an account of the first meeting of
-the Committee.
-
-
-[3] Lieut.-Colonel H. P. Dimmock, M.D., I.M.S.
-
-
-"We began at once to decide on sites for plague hospitals. One
-question that was asked was, What sort of disease was plague? In those
-days one knew very little about it, for the bacillus had not been
-discovered. I tried to explain as much as was known, and finished my
-remarks with words to the effect that whatever the special infection
-might be, it seemed to be deadly and certainly contagious, and that we
-need none of us expect 'to come out alive.' 'Well,' said the {168}
-General, with a smile, 'we can't think about that; we've only got to
-stop it, so let's get to work.'
-
-"One must consider that at the time plague was such an appalling and
-mysterious disease that even the doctors feared for their lives each
-day, though it was their business to face it. How much more awful the
-invisible foe must have seemed to a layman, and still more to one who
-had to lead the attack on it as he did most cheerfully and
-energetically without experience of the ways of infectious diseases!"
-
-
-The first step was to surround the city with a cordon to put a stop to
-the spread of the infection up-country. This could be the more easily
-and effectually carried out because Bombay City is built on an island.
-A police guard was posted on the Sion and the Mahim Causeways, where
-the road is carried over the water by long bridges, and at a ford
-available at low water; a foot-track along the main water-supply was
-boarded up; and the two railway-stations and all the Bunders were
-watched by inspection parties.
-
-[Sidenote: Special hospitals]
-
-Within the city the principle was laid down that all persons suffering
-from the plague must be brought into hospital. This involved two
-departments of labour; the first was to provide hospital accommodation,
-the second to enforce the handing over of the patients.
-
-To meet one of the manifold objections put forward by the population to
-the use of hospitals, a system was started by which each community
-should have its own building or camp. This disposed of many
-insuperable difficulties as to {169} the attendance on the sick, the
-preparation of food, etc.; and so much did this concession to their
-peculiar prejudices please the more enlightened communities, that their
-leaders came in person to the General and offered to run hospitals for
-their respective brotherhoods at their own expense. Such offers were
-willingly accepted, but control over these locations was rigidly
-maintained in the hands of the Committee. Indeed, so rapid was this
-demand for special accommodation for each sect, that--
-
-
-"A scheme of hospital organisation was designed, a special equipment of
-staff, stores, furniture, and appliances being drawn on a ready basis,
-suitable to any pressing demands.... So that on an order being issued
-by the Committee for the institution of a hospital of any proportion,
-the District Medical Officer had merely to follow the orders laid down
-for a hospital of the size indicated.... Copies of the plan and
-equipment of a one-section hospital (twenty beds) was accordingly
-issued to the various executive departments of the Committee, and to
-all contractors, with directions to regulate the constructions of
-buildings and the supply of stores, medicines, and furniture
-accordingly."[4]
-
-
-[4] _Report_, p. 22.
-
-
-Within one month of its creation the Committee were running forty-three
-hospitals, of which fifteen were Government and twenty-eight were
-special private institutions such as have been described. In every
-detail of the internal management of these private {170} institutions
-the will of the Dictator prevailed. He was always a welcome visitor;
-he took the keenest interest in the symptoms as they developed in any
-exceptional cases, and he made sure that those peculiarly Christian
-principles should be upheld which decree that there should be no
-distinction of caste in any one "jamat," no difference made between
-high and low, rich and poor, and that all the sick should receive equal
-attention.
-
-But it was one thing to provide model buildings and the best of
-attendance, and another to persuade the relatives of the sick to bring
-in the patients. At the same time the segregation of the sick was the
-basis of the whole policy, and it was to secure this end that the
-house-to-house visitation was instituted.
-
-While the mere idea of such a thing inflamed the minds of the writers
-in the Native Press, in practice the people soon found out that every
-consideration was shown. An appeal was made to the native gentlemen
-who were Justices of the Peace to attend at such visitations, and this
-had an excellent effect. White men did not enter the houses unless
-opposition was made; in the street a small body of troops was employed
-as a show of authority, but these were mostly drawn from the Native
-regiments. In no case was violence needed; the only pressure used was
-the personal presence of the General, the force of his will and
-character, the persuasion of his words uttered in their own tongue; the
-people grew to have faith in his promises, to {171} appreciate his
-devotion to their interests, and to respect his methods.
-
-[Sidenote: Drives the brake]
-
-The Fire Brigade brake was commandeered to carry the search-parties.
-The rendezvous was at daybreak; every one had to be punctual, for the
-General waited for no one. The Committee was accompanied by officials
-with special knowledge of the quarter to be visited, and there were
-always a few lady-doctors present.
-
-Supplies were taken in tiffin-baskets, but, says Dr. Dimmock, "the
-General's spare diet was a subject of wondering comment; some bread and
-dried fruit and a bottle of soda water was his usual breakfast, and his
-untiring energy on such diet was marvellous."
-
-The General himself drove the brake, and one or other of the Plague
-Committee staff would sit on the box in order to give him an
-opportunity of discussing urgent matters.
-
-On one occasion in April such a search-party was organised for an
-essentially Mahommedan quarter, where some opposition might be
-expected. The locality was occupied by Memons, Sunni Mahommedans, and
-opulent merchants hailing from Cutch. The usual military precautions
-were taken, and house-to-house visitation was in full swing. In a
-five-storied building in Kambekar Street occupied by rich Memons a
-plague case was discovered on the third floor. The patient was a Memon
-boy aged twenty, belonging to the rich family of Noorani, who were also
-the "Patels of the Moholla," _i.e._ leaders of the neighbourhood. The
-usual {172} certificate was made out, in the name of the patient, Haji
-Ayub Haji Abdul Rahim Noorani, by the sub-divisional medical officer,
-and the family were informed that the young man would be removed to the
-hospital. To this they objected, and already a sullen crowd had
-assembled outside. In Mahommedan quarters the crowd is essentially
-male, with an admixture of children; the women, being "Purdah Nashins,"
-do not show themselves.
-
-On being informed of the trouble, the General, who was a little farther
-up the street, immediately repaired to the spot, speaking conciliatory
-words to the crowd as he made his way to the third floor and entered
-the room. Here he selected the oldest member of the family and "very
-courteously" discussed with him the necessity for the removal of the
-youth to hospital. In the meantime the new hand ambulance (which was a
-litter on a pair of bicycle wheels, worked out on an idea of the
-General's) reached the door; but the sight of it upset the parents so
-much that they withdrew their reluctant consent to Haji's removal.
-Recollecting that he was dealing with a wealthy family, the General
-suggested that they should send for one of their own carriages.
-Impervious to any notions of infection, but highly conscious of their
-local standing, the family readily consented to this compromise.
-Having won his point, the General made his way down to the street,
-where the crowd was now very dense: he whispered to a native inspector,
-slipping a few rupees into his {173} hand. In a few minutes there was
-a vast scramble for sweets which were flying in every direction; under
-cover of this bombardment the patient was successfully carried off in
-an English brougham drawn by richly caparisoned white horses.[5]
-
-
-[5] Recollections furnished by Mr. Louis Godniho, Deputy Officer; see
-also _Advocate of India_, April 3, 1897.
-
-
-[Sidenote: The Seedee king]
-
-On another occasion the quarter known as Kazipura was selected for the
-morning's search work. Kazipura is inhabited by all classes of
-Mahommedans, including the African Negroes or Seedees. On the arrival
-of the brake the party broke up and entered various dwellings. One
-party, consisting of two members of the Committee and Dr. Sorab
-Hormusjee (to whom I am indebted for this story, and who held the
-appointment of Lady Assistant to the Health Officer), came across a
-Seedee boy aged eighteen years, whom they declared to be suffering from
-the plague. The mother denied this, saying her son was only tired,
-having been dancing all night, and, supported by some male relatives,
-angrily asserted that she would not allow his removal.
-
-[Illustration: House-to=house visitation.]
-
-Within a few minutes the streets and alleys were swarming with Seedees
-armed with sticks, and a serious riot seemed inevitable. But
-fortunately the Chairman was on the spot; he instructed Mr. Vincent,
-the Police Commissioner, to send for the Seedee King Makanda. The
-arrival of the Great Man and his Queen Sophie had a magic effect; a few
-words of explanation {174} from the Chairman, a few words from the King
-to the sick man's mother, won the day for the cause of law and order.
-
-The third story that I have selected is told by Miss Remy, a nursing
-sister of the Order of St. John of Jerusalem. As her contribution
-describes the horrible dens that were daily visited I give her
-recollections in her own words:
-
-
-"When plague broke out in Bombay I gave up my post for a time (as
-Matron of a Maternity Hospital attached to a College School) and was
-selected by the Plague Committee to organise and take charge of the
-Grant Road Hospital till such time as the Roman Catholic Sisters of the
-Order of Jesus and Mary were able to take up the work as they had
-promised. From this hospital--the Police Hospital, where I afterwards
-worked--I was taken out on several occasions by the Plague Committee in
-their house-to-house visitation. The people have strong prejudices
-against natives of another caste, and especially Europeans, approaching
-too near their places, so that in examining the houses it was necessary
-to respect the feelings of the owners in this regard. The rooms are
-usually 10 ft. by 10 ft.; the floor sometimes is of clay beaten down
-till it is firm and smooth and covered with a layer of liquid cow-dung,
-which quickly dries, forming a clean and neat surface; this is renewed
-at short intervals of a week or so. The internal arrangements are very
-simple; the cooking-place, usually surrounded by shining brass and
-copper pots, occupies a corner of the room, a low charpoy or cot in
-another, bundles of firewood, cow-dung cakes used as fuel, are stocked
-in odd recesses with a collection of dried fish and grain. General
-{175} Gatacre, always courteous and tactful, was most careful in
-observing their prejudices. He always asked me to go in first and
-report if any of the occupants were suffering from plague or other
-causes, and also as to the condition of their room. The General would
-follow closely, and as the door opened to admit me he would look into
-the room. If it was particularly clean and cared-for, he invariably
-rewarded the occupants with a rupee or so as encouragement. He was
-quick to see things, patient with details, and possessed of a tact and
-eloquence which smoothed over many difficulties that came in the way of
-our work. He was particularly fond of little children, and I have
-often seen him pat their heads and slip some coppers into their hands
-as we went along visiting the different tenements. One incident I
-remember very well. On leaving the neighbourhood of Ripon Road, after
-visiting a long row of _chawls_, we were followed by a crowd of
-children, about fifty or more. Suddenly on turning a corner we came
-upon a sweet shop. The General went up to the stall and, to the utter
-amazement and indignation of the owner, seized several trays of the
-sweets and scattered them on the pavement, when there was a general
-scramble and loud hurrahs. Before the man could remonstrate Sir
-William took a handful of loose silver from his pocket and placed it on
-the counter. This more than compensated the man for the sweets, and he
-smiled and salaamed."
-
-
-During this systematic visitation hovels were discovered where white
-men had never before penetrated; scores of houses were boarded up and
-labelled "U.H.H.," which stood for "Unfit for human habitation."
-
-{176}
-
-In _The Times of India_ of March 31, 1897, we have a graphic but, alas!
-lengthy account of the visit of the Committee to a Mahommedan quarter
-to sanction buildings selected for use as hospitals. We read: "When
-the General's brake was sighted they lustily cheered him." On this
-occasion a feast and a vote of thanks was part of the programme.
-
-
-"Tea and coffee were provided by the members of the party. When all
-were seated, Khan Bahadur Cassum Mitha rose and said in Hindustani:
-
-"'General Gatacre,--We have been much honoured by your visit to this
-place to-day. Since you have assumed the command of affairs relating
-to this dire pestilence, we have learnt to assure ourselves of our
-safety. We are convinced that you honour our religious feelings, and
-we believe that what you do is for our own good. You have perhaps no
-idea of the esteem and respect you command among us. You have won over
-our hearts by your noble demeanour, and on the altar of your popularity
-we are ready to sacrifice everything.... In you, General, we find a
-saviour, and we thank Lord Sandhurst for sending you among us. You may
-count on our assistance at any and every moment. Our lives and our
-money will be always at your command.'"[6]
-
-
-[6] See _Bombay Gazette_, March 31, 1897.
-
-
-[Sidenote: Opposition]
-
-As if in protest against the compliance of the great majority to the
-wishes of Government, one sect of Mahommedans, the Sunnis, showed
-themselves very refractory. After much elaborate {177} letter-writing
-the Headmen sent a Mr. Raikes to lay before the Plague Committee the
-objections to their proceedings. At the conference that was arranged
-the delegate was heckled into expressing himself clearly: "'It really
-comes to this,' he said; 'they ask you to minimise as far as you
-possibly can the great objections they have to the removal of the sick
-by not doing it at all.'"[7] To which the Chairman seems to have
-rapped out: "That is absolute nonsense!"--to the great amusement of his
-supporters. But though his words were pointed, his conduct was
-deliberate, and his patience faultless, for in a leading article we
-read:
-
-
-[7] See _Advocate of India_, March 31, 1897.
-
-
-"The correspondence between General Gatacre and the representatives of
-the Sunni Mahommedans will satisfy every one that the community has
-been treated with extraordinary patience. The Chairman of the
-Committee has given two long interviews to the Sunni leaders, who have
-had professional assistance in placing their views before him. He has
-listened patiently and respectfully to every argument and objection
-that has been put before him; they have gone to the Governor with a
-letter which put their case at its strongest; and once again they have
-gone back to General Gatacre, who once more, in replying to their
-solicitors, treats them with a kindness and a consideration which sheer
-stubbornness seldom meets with in this world."[8]
-
-
-[8] See _Times of India_, April 7, 1897.
-
-
-The show of troops was slightly increased {178} when the recalcitrant
-quarter was visited, but this precaution had due effect, and no
-violence took place.
-
-After about six weeks of unsparing toil and incredible devotion, it was
-becoming clear that the labours of all those concerned were not in
-vain: the returns were showing a steady and unmistakable decline. But
-this had not been accomplished without very great persistence on every
-side. The General writes:
-
-
-"I hope I shall hold out all right, but the strain is pretty severe;
-some of my Committee are feeling it, but have not broken down yet. We
-are working from fourteen to eighteen hours in the day, which does not
-give me much time for writing."
-
-
-That he won the loyal support of all his colleagues is clear from the
-following letter:
-
-
-"... The General is keeping very well; the amount of work he gets
-through is tremendous. There is one thing about him that has struck me
-very much, and that is the extraordinary personal influence he quite
-unconsciously exerts over the men working under him. A Surgeon-Colonel
-H---- has been sent down from Chitral for plague duty here, and he
-dislikes the whole thing. He had congenial work up there, a lovely
-climate, snow and frost, a nice house with a lovely garden; and he has
-come down to work in the slums of Bombay at the hottest time of the
-year, with no friends in the place, and a most enervating climate. He
-says that if any one else but General Gatacre was at the head of
-affairs, he would resign to-morrow. {179} Major B---- is the same.
-His staff appointment will be up in October; he has eight months' leave
-due to him, and would have taken it if there had been any other General
-here. But he knows how busy General Gatacre is with the plague, and
-feels that it would be hard on him to get a new A.A.G. just now. And
-Major B---- is a hard-headed man, with, one would think, little
-sentiment about him. But I could give you many instances. Captain
-C---- of the Bombay Infantry, who is working as a secretary in the
-office, is only staying because General Gatacre is the Chief.... The
-General had a great dinner last month for all the medical men in
-Bombay, and as they refrained from discussing the plague, or their
-methods of treating it, it went off very well. Last week we had
-another dinner of twenty-four, to which all the Russian, German, and
-Austrian scientists and all the foreign consuls were invited; it was a
-decidedly interesting evening."
-
-
-On April 30 the General writes:
-
-
-"... We are still struggling with the plague, and though it is milder
-in Bombay it is still dreadfully severe in the provinces all around.
-We have now been put on to take up the provinces, and it is like paying
-the labourers of an enormous town when our pay-day comes on.... The
-work and worry here is unceasing, and I really don't know when we shall
-be out of the wood."
-
-
-And again a fortnight later:
-
-
-"The climate, though good for Bombay, is beastly, and there is still
-much sickness about. {180} We lost a nurse, Miss Horne, ten days ago,
-of plague. In Bombay the mortality has come down to nearly normal, but
-in Cutch-Mandvi it is still very bad; at the latter place, with a
-population of 10,000 actually present, they have lost 2,000 in the last
-fortnight! I am just beginning to write the Report; it will take about
-two months, I think. We trust the disease will not break out again
-during the rains, but people know so little about it that it is
-impossible to say."
-
-
-Writing on May 21, 1897, he says:
-
-
-"... Our work has not lightened much here yet, although the disease is
-under control. You see the same organisation must exist to prevent the
-plague breaking out again as up to date has existed for controlling it.
-There is much plague in the districts, and people are trying to get
-back to Bombay. Many come in with the disease on them, but we catch
-them all at the stations and Bunders, and put them in hospital. Now we
-are stopping every one coming in and detaining them eight days, to make
-sure they have not got the disease."
-
-
-In India that year the Queen's birthday was to be celebrated on June
-22. Lord Sandhurst invited the General to his official dinner on the
-occasion, and urged him to come to Poona for a few days' change; but
-the latter declined the kind invitation, being fearful lest
-disturbances should occur in Bombay owing to the general holiday.
-
-[Sidenote: A murderous assault]
-
-That very night, at Poona, as the guests were returning after the
-dinner, a horrible outrage was {181} perpetrated. In the darkness
-armed men climbed on to the back of two open carriages and shot the
-officers riding in them. Mr. Ayerst, who with his wife was in the
-first carriage attacked, died on the spot, being shot through the head.
-It was afterwards shown that there was no ill-feeling against this
-young officer, and that he was the victim of a mistake. In the
-carriage immediately following, Mr. Rand, a political officer who had
-been acting as Chairman of the Poona Plague Committee, was driving
-alone; he was shot through the lungs, and though at one time there
-seemed some hope of his recovery, he succumbed about ten days later.
-
-It was well known that Gatacre had been receiving threatening
-letters[9]; violent language of this sort had even appeared in the
-papers. It was therefore natural that a very strong wave of sympathy
-and resentment at such an outrage should have been felt in Bombay,
-where the measures likely to provoke such personal retribution had
-necessarily been more drastic.
-
-
-[9] See _Advocate of India_, April 13, 1897.
-
-
-The General writes on June 25:
-
-
-"... Our dinner was a success, but the affair at Poona has rather upset
-people; it appears that the people there have been determined to have
-the blood of the Plague Committee, and accordingly arranged to
-assassinate them. Rand I fear must die; Ayerst, who was shot by
-mistake, was killed at once; L----, who was on the Committee as
-segregation officer, was wanted, but the assassin mistook Ayerst for
-{182} him. I trust the man will be discovered; we know who the
-instigator is, but it will be difficult to prove it. I wish I was on
-the job. I went to Poona yesterday, and saw the place, and had a long
-talk with Brewin, head detective; he seems fairly confident he will
-trace the murderers and bring the crime home to the suspected
-instigators."
-
-
-[Sidenote: Farewell]
-
-Though telegrams conveying the welcome news had reached him a fortnight
-earlier, it was not till the end of June that Bombay learnt that its
-General Officer Commanding had been appointed to the command of a
-Brigade at Aldershot, and would shortly be leaving the scene of his
-labours. The city had now been pronounced free from plague, hospitals
-were being closed on all sides, and employes of all ranks were daily
-dismissed. The Gatacre Committee had succeeded in stamping out the
-plague, and a chorus of gratitude arose towards the man to whose
-courage and determination the success of the attempt was mainly
-attributed. Every community wished to present him with a token of its
-recognition, while all combined to entertain him "on a very grand
-scale."[10] Leave was obtained from the Government of India to accept
-five testimonials, which, being cased in the silver cylinders familiar
-to the Anglo-Indian, are as beautiful as their contents are unique.
-Two of these offerings were a source of special pride and pleasure to
-their recipient. The casket {183} presented by "The Citizens of
-Bombay" contains a scroll of parchment on which sixty signatures
-testify that all the representative men in the city, Christian,
-Mussulman, and Hindu, all merged their differences in their unanimous
-appreciation of the brilliant qualities and self-sacrificing devotion
-of the Chairman of the Bombay Plague Committee. A silver box presented
-by the seven officers who had so loyally served on the Committee
-throughout those four arduous months was also specially prized. But I
-am very sure that he would wish me not to omit a record of the offering
-of the Plague Staff, native clerks, engineers, and workmen of all
-classes; or of the touching farewell accorded him by the Sisters of the
-Cross at the Bandora Convent.
-
-
-[10] See _Bombay Gazette_, July 6, 1897, and _Times of India_, July 22,
-1807.
-
-
-On July 2, one week before he sailed for home, he writes:
-
-
-"I am looking forward to getting back to life again; I have been buried
-in a plague-pit for the last few months."
-
-
-
-
-{184}
-
-CHAPTER XII
-
-1897-1898
-
-FROM ALDERSHOT TO BERBER
-
-[Sidenote: 1897]
-
-When Gatacre reached Aldershot on Sunday, August 11, 1897, he found
-that his Brigade was already engaged in manoeuvres. The training was
-so arranged that year that though a continuous scheme was carried on
-from day to day, the troops returned each evening to their barracks.
-His Royal Highness the Duke of Connaught, who commanded the Aldershot
-District, sent a kind message of welcome to the new Brigadier, saying
-that he would not expect to see him out for the first few days, but
-hoped that he would soon be able to take up the command of his troops
-in the field.
-
-[Sidenote: Route-marching]
-
-As the field-days all took place within easy reach of Aldershot, many
-ladies used at first to ride out on their bicycles to see what was
-going on. This practice was, however, suddenly dropped after we learnt
-that two of our friends had been taken prisoners one day. They were
-detained, and entertained, at the Headquarter Camp during the day's
-operations, and were not liberated until the troops were on the march
-{185} homewards. It was thought that ladies thus prowling round until
-they got in touch with their husbands' corps would quite innocently
-carry information that would materially affect the execution of the
-military scheme.
-
-It was a great pleasure to Gatacre to find himself in England again.
-His sociable and friendly instincts all came into play. I remember his
-getting hold of a list of the cadets at Sandhurst, and seeking out the
-sons of his friends, and asking them over to such events as would
-interest them. He set about getting horses, and looked forward to a
-hunting season at home. The Brigade route-marching was positively an
-enjoyment to him; he took so much interest in his new regiments that he
-would get up early on the route-marching days and be on the barrack
-square to see the first battalion march out, and sit there on his horse
-until the last man of the last battalion had passed him. Then
-cantering on, he would work his way up to the head of the column and
-see the first and the last company march in. He found the most genuine
-and unaffected pleasure in every phase of his work. The conditions
-under which it was carried out were much easier and less exacting than
-they had been in India. Indeed, the light work that goes on after
-October 1 was so much of a holiday to him that all thought of long
-leave was postponed till later in the season.
-
-At Christmas he took ten days' leave, which we spent at my father's
-house in Sussex. The distance being only twenty-four miles, and the
-{186} weather being open, we did the journey on horseback, and had a
-few days' hunting with Lord Leconfield's hounds during our visit. On
-Monday, January 3, we rode back, and, arriving late, had just sat down
-to luncheon when the A.D.C. suddenly turned up, bringing a telegram in
-his hand.
-
-[Sidenote: 1898]
-
-"This seemed so important, sir," he said, "that I thought I ought to
-bring it myself."
-
-The telegram was from the War Office in London to the Aldershot
-Divisional Office, and ran:
-
-
-"Please send General Gatacre and Major Snow, Brigade-Major, here as
-soon as possible; may be wanted for foreign service."
-
-
-There had been a paragraph in the morning papers announcing the
-movement of troops from Cairo up the Nile, and this news supplied us
-with the true interpretation. The General got away by the next train,
-and in the afternoon sent back this telegram:
-
-
-"Arrive 9.15; sail Wednesday next."
-
-
-Having returned so recently from India, the General had all that he
-wanted in the way of field-service uniform and camp kit. Though
-twenty-four hours seemed a short time in which to make preparations for
-such a momentous journey, still he got away more comfortably than the
-other men who had received the same short summons. On Tuesday morning
-he cleared up work in the office, and handed over {187} his Brigade; he
-left Aldershot in the evening, and started from Charing Cross at 8.30
-a.m. on Wednesday, January 5, 1898, for Egypt, via Marseilles.
-
-There is no need to tell over again the long story of the gradual loss
-of the Soudan to Egypt, with the encroachment of the Dervish Empire,
-nor of the fall of Khartoum with the death of General Gordon ("my
-brother dreamer in an iron race") on January 26, 1885, nor of the
-patient preparation that had been going on in the thirteen years that
-had passed. This book is concerned only with the final act of the
-drama, the defeat of the forces of the Khalifa Abdullahi, and the
-recovery of the capital.
-
-In 1898 Sir Herbert Kitchener was Sirdar of the Egyptian Army. He had
-organised his force for the purpose it was to fulfil, and had gradually
-crept onwards up the Nile, until, on September 3, 1897, he reached and
-occupied Berber. At that point he was, as it were, within striking
-distance of Khartoum. This view seems also to have been held by the
-enemy, for in December the Intelligence Department heard of warlike
-preparations on his part. This report precipitated the massing of the
-forces on our side. The Sirdar knew that he could call for the
-assistance of British troops when the real struggle was to take place,
-and he made his call in December.
-
-Orders were immediately issued for the concentration of three
-battalions at Wady Halfa. The 1st Lincolnshire and the 1st Cameron
-{188} Highlanders were already at Cairo, the 1st Warwickshire were
-moved from Alexandria, while the 1st Seaforth Highlanders at Malta were
-warned and shipped to Cairo in a very short space of time. This
-regiment was also pushed forward, as soon as others had been brought
-from Crete and Gibraltar and Burma, to maintain the usual garrison in
-Lower Egypt. The command of this service Brigade was given to
-Major-General W. F. Gatacre, C.B., D.S.O. Major d'Oyly Snow
-accompanied him as Brigade-Major, and Captain R. G. Brooke as A.D.C.
-
-The General proceeded by train to Assouan, and by boat to Wady Halfa,
-which he reached on Thursday, January 25. It was here that he first
-met the Sirdar. But the troops had already passed on in front to
-Railhead, which was then the other side of Abu Hamed. From Wady Halfa
-the new Desert Railway, which was still under construction, leaves the
-Nile and strikes out to the south-east across the open country towards
-Abu Hamed, a journey of about 250 miles.
-
-Writing from Camp Guheish, about seventeen miles south of Abu Hamed, on
-February 2, the General says:
-
-
-"We arrived here last night about eight o'clock, after a long journey
-across the desert from Halfa. Such a desert--not a thing to be seen
-but sand and a few low black rocks jutting out of the plain. A few
-straw-coloured birds, like stonechats, and a wagtail I saw at one
-place; goodness knows what they live on. At {189} one o'clock we were
-within one mile of Abu Hamed, and were steaming steadily along, when,
-in ploughing through a sand-drift, we went off the line, and had to
-turn to and clear the line with the few shovels on the train and our
-hands. Fortunately we were only a mile from Abu Hamed, so I sent on a
-messenger, and in fifty minutes a relief train came up, and, with the
-help of jacks, the engine was got on to the line again in four hours.
-It was fortunate we did not run off the line in the middle of the
-Desert, or we should have been delayed at least a day, and would have
-been put to inconvenience for food, though of course we had some.
-Well, I found Snow waiting for us, and we detrained our horses safely,
-and then, after going on another mile, we came to our camp, placed
-between the Nile and the railway--a howling desert, with a tremendous
-wind blowing night and day. The dust fills everything, but the climate
-up to date is magnificent, and I hope will continue so for a long time;
-quite cold at night and in the morning, sufficient to make me put on my
-great-coat, and at night, though of course I sleep in my clothes, I am
-glad of all the blankets I can put on.... The Maxim guns I left at
-Halfa temporarily, as we haven't got sufficient food for the mules yet,
-but as soon as the train is running through we shall have them up."
-
-
-A fortnight later the railway had grown longer, and as Railhead
-advanced, so the British Brigade moved southwards and finally camped at
-Abu Dis.
-
-Gatacre used the three weeks that the troops were encamped by the
-railway to get in touch with his Brigade--to feel and to improve their
-{190} marching powers. His methods excited some comment at the time,
-but afterwards, when there was a real call for exceptional exertions,
-it was frankly admitted that the previous training had been of great
-value. "It is impossible to deny that, while discipline and health
-were successfully maintained, the general efficiency was greatly
-increased."[1]
-
-
-[1] _The River War_, by Winston Spencer Churchill, vol. i. p. 366.
-
-
-There were, however, two directions in which efficiency was seriously
-hampered--boots and bullets. The General writes on February 2:
-
-
-"The present-shaped bullet .303 Lee-Metford rifle has little stopping
-power. Well, we have only this class of ammunition, so I am altering
-the shape of the bullet to that of the Dum-Dum bullet, which has a
-rounded point. I do this by filing the point off. Before I left Cairo
-I provided four hundred files and small gauges to test the length of
-the altered bullet, and daily here we have 2,800 men engaged on this
-work. I borrowed fifty railway rails and mounted them flat side
-uppermost, to form anvils on which to file. We have a portion of men
-unpacking, and another portion packing, so that the same men are always
-at the same work. The men are getting very sharp at it; it would make
-a capital picture. This is a terrible place for boots, and many of the
-men whose boots were not new at starting have mere apologies for boots
-on their feet. Fortunately, we have time to rectify this, and I have
-taken the necessary steps."
-
-
-And again a week later:
-
-
-"The men are working very well; we have {191} no drink, and therefore
-no crime or sickness. I am getting on well with altering our
-ammunition. We have 3,000,000 rounds to alter, but are making good
-progress, altering about 80,000 rounds per day."
-
-
-In the same letter we read:
-
-
-"There are crocodiles in the river here, but not many. A fisherman
-caught one about three feet long, a most vicious little brute, who
-snaps at everyone and everything; he is tied by the middle with a piece
-of string, and swims about in a bath; he will probably be eaten when
-his master gets hungry. Three days ago a gazelle was trapped and sent
-in to us by a native. He was uninjured, and a beautiful little brute,
-with large eyes like Lorna's. We all decided to keep him as a pet, and
-he got quite tame in a few hours. But alas! we got hungry, and some
-one suggested that he might escape--so we ate him. Perhaps it was the
-wisest course."
-
-In a letter dated Abu Dis, February 24, we get the first word of the
-forced march that was ordered on the following day:
-
-
-"I am so frightfully busy that I cannot find time for anything, so I
-think I may as well sit down and write to you for relaxation.
-Yesterday we had a seventy-mile ride to a place called Bastinab and
-back, looking out for future camping-grounds, for I have got a hint to
-be ready to move on at once, as Mahmoud at Metemma has crossed over to
-the east side of the Nile, and threatens to attack Atbara and
-Berber.... We may have to move and stack our camp baggage, etc., by
-the side of the line {192} in the desert, and march on in light order,
-the same sort of thing as in Chitral--a most exciting business this
-would be, wouldn't it?
-
-"My Maxim Battery came in to-day; I am quite pleased to get it. The
-men are looking splendid, and we have only thirty or so sick out of a
-total strength of nearly 3,000. I have now got my camel transport,
-something like 800 animals; this makes me more independent, and if I am
-required to move I can do so."
-
-
-Between February 22 and 25 a series of telegrams had been flying
-between the Sirdar at Berber and the Brigadier at Abu Dis. All the
-details of the march which would be necessary to bring the British
-troops forward were proposed on the one side and sanctioned on the
-other, so that when on Friday, February 25, the following telegram was
-received at midday, orders were immediately issued and the start was
-made that evening.
-
-
-"News has come in that enemy in ten rubs advancing. You can therefore
-move Brigade as arranged.--SIRDAR."
-
-
-(A rub means any number between 500 and 1,500 men.)
-
-To which this message was sent in reply:
-
-
-"I shall arrive at Atbara Camp nine or ten o'clock on Wednesday second
-with Maxims and 2,000 men; guns and cavalry will arrive on
-first.--GATACRE."
-
-
-I have found a rough draft of the official {193} report of the forced
-march made by the British Brigade on Berber in accordance with the
-order received, and have decided to print this narrative almost as it
-stands.
-
-
-"The 1st Lincolnshire and detachment 1st Royal Warwickshire Regiment,
-with the six guns Maxim Battery, Royal Engineer detachment, Army
-Hospital Corps, and Army Service Corps, moved to Railhead, sixteen
-miles, by an empty ballast train, thence by route march seven and a
-half miles to camp at El Sherreik, which they reached at daylight on
-the morning of Saturday, February 26, all well. Remainder of Warwicks
-moved at midnight, arriving at Sherreik 7.30 a.m. The 1st Cameron
-Highlanders bivouacked by the side of the railway, and on the arrival
-of a train at 5 a.m. were railed to Railhead. They reached camp at
-9.30 a.m. all well.
-
-"At El Sherreik the Brigade halted for the day, and at 10 p.m. started
-on their march for Diveryah. Tea was made at Nedi, and the troops left
-again, after resting, at 2.30 a.m. on Sunday. Bastinab was reached
-shortly after daybreak. Captain Bainbridge, Egyptian Army, supplied
-firewood, and fires were lit, it being very cold. Here sixty pairs of
-fantasses were taken, as no water was available _en route_. The road
-onward proved rocky and sandy in places, and was very heavy going for
-tired men, but Diveryah was reached at 3 p.m. The stony nature of the
-country completely wore out many of the boots. The last three miles
-were very trying, as the sun was hot; there was no shade, and the men
-felt the weight of their equipment. The bivouac was laid in a small
-nullah, running at right angles to the Nile, and the men made
-themselves very comfortable. Finding that a {194} great number of men
-had worn through the soles of their boots, I arranged with Captain
-Strickland, Egyptian Army, to convey about 400 men, under the command
-of Major Napier, Cameron Highlanders, by an Egyptian steamer to Berber.
-They left Diveryah on Monday morning, February 28, and reached Berber
-the same day, where they were refitted from the boot store of the
-Egyptian Army, and rejoined the Brigade on arrival.
-
-"At 2.30 a.m. on Monday, February 28, the Brigade moved from its
-bivouac _en route_ to Um Hosheyo by the desert track, which, almost
-immediately after leaving the bivouac, lay through brushwood and broken
-ground. Owing to touch being lost by the rear battalion, a delay of
-three-quarters of an hour ensued, when the march was resumed over a
-rough and stony piece of country. After about five miles the track
-improved, and at 6.15 a.m. the first man of the Brigade marched into Um
-Hosheyo. Continuing its march the advanced guard reached a grove of
-Dom palms at Wady Hamar at 8.30 a.m., where a halt was made till 4.30
-p.m. to enable the troops to cook and sleep. At 4.30 p.m. the troops
-again moved forward over a good level track, and continued marching
-until 10.45 p.m., at which hour Genenetti was reached. Total distance
-from El Sherreik to Genenetti forty-five miles. Here we dropped
-another 122 men whose boots had completely gone.
-
-"At 3 a.m. on Tuesday, March 1, the Brigade paraded and moved off along
-a fairly good track, heavy in places, for Aboudyeh, twelve miles.
-After a trying hot march the Brigade reached a point two miles north of
-Aboudyeh at 9 a.m., where they rested till 4.30 p.m. Three men were
-reported missing, but it was subsequently {195} ascertained that they
-had proceeded with other men who had worn out their boots from
-Genenetti, under command of Major Snow, Brigade-Major, with spare
-ammunition and commissariat supplies. At 4.30 p.m. the troops left
-Aboudyeh for El Hassa, thirteen miles, a very hot evening, over (at
-first) a good hard plain, crossed here and there by heavy sandy khors;
-there was little wind, and the column marched till 11 p.m. through
-dense clouds of dust. After marching about two miles the Brigade
-halted to give the men water at Aboudyeh, where a certain number of
-wells containing brackish water were found. The inhabitants turned out
-and provided _dilus_ (buckets) and ropes, willingly giving the men
-water. Company after company filed past, each man getting half a
-canteen full of water. After this halt no more water was obtainable,
-as the route lay inland, and the men had to rely on their water-bottles.
-
-"At 11 p.m. on Tuesday the Brigade filed on to the El Hassa
-camping-ground, about three miles north of Berber, and bivouacked by
-the side of the Nile. Two miles before reaching El Hassa, the General
-Officer Commanding received a letter by camel messenger from His
-Excellency the Sirdar, directing that the column should halt for
-twenty-four hours, and pass through Berber at 5.30 a.m. on the morning
-of March 3. The Brigade, therefore, remained halted till 3.30 a.m. on
-the morning of Thursday the 3rd, when it marched for Berber.
-
-"On arriving at the north end of the town of Berber, the column was
-reinforced by the 400 men who had been refitted with boots from the
-Egyptian Army stores. The Sirdar met the column at about 5.30 a.m. on
-the outskirts of the town, and was heartily cheered by the troops {196}
-as they passed him. The bands of the Soudanese battalions played in
-the three regiments, and the men met with a great reception from all
-ranks of the battalions in garrison, who turned out to a man, and
-afterwards provided tea and cigarettes for the men, and breakfasts for
-the officers, at the camping-ground. The officers likewise received
-much hospitality at the hands of the Sirdar and the various messes in
-garrison. At 4.30 p.m. the troops moved on again to Camp Dabeika,
-eleven miles from Berber, along an excellent desert track, about a mile
-from, and parallel to, the Nile. The Brigade arrived with no sick man.
-The conduct of the troops during the whole march was excellent; there
-were no cases of difficulty between them and the natives of the
-country, and there was no crime, which may be considered as highly
-satisfactory and showing the state of discipline in which the
-commanding officers hold their regiments."
-
-
-The General marched the greater part of the way on foot, and made use
-of his spare horses to mount footsore men. When questioned on this
-point, he gave the following reply in a letter:
-
-
-"With regard to my doing our long march on foot, it was nothing to me;
-troops necessarily march slowly, and it is pleasanter and less
-fatiguing (not to speak of its being a better example) for me to walk
-all the way. I always had my horse with me, and I constantly had to
-get on to go to the head of the column, or the tail, to see if all was
-going right, and this made a nice change."
-
-
-The distance from Railhead to El Hassa, just {197} short of Berber, was
-sixty-five to seventy miles, and this journey was accomplished between
-10 p.m. on Saturday and 11 p.m. on Tuesday--seventy-three hours.
-Another fifteen miles on Thursday completed the march to Dabeika.
-
-This concentration had its effect on the enemy, who gave up any idea of
-attacking the Sirdar on the Nile, and the camp was unmolested for the
-next three weeks. Some critics have on this account made out that
-Gatacre overtaxed his troops in bringing them along at an unnecessary
-pace in such a climate; but surely the measure of the necessity for
-rapidity lies in the danger which this junction averted rather than in
-the security which it brought about. Moreover, it was the Sirdar on
-the spot who decided and gave orders: the General carried them out. At
-the time he wrote of it as a race between himself and Mahmoud.
-
-
-
-
-{198}
-
-CHAPTER XIII
-
-1898
-
-ATBARA AND OMDURMAN
-
-[Sidenote: Combined force]
-
-All through the winter every movement on the part of the Dervish
-leaders was carefully watched by the gun-boats on the Nile and the
-Egyptian cavalry on its banks. The Intelligence Department had a
-system of espionage by which the feeling inside Omdurman was made known
-to them. The Sirdar knew that the Khalifa was unwilling to turn out
-his main army, but that a large force was preparing to move out of
-Metemma under the combined command of the Emir Mahmoud and the cavalry
-leader Osman Digna. Before long the Sirdar knew that this force had
-crossed to Shendy on the right bank of the Nile on February 28, and
-that on March 13 they had reached Aliab, which is only twenty miles
-south of Dakila, the Egyptian outpost. But their subsequent designs
-were not known. It was doubtful whether their scheme was to attack the
-Sirdar at Dakila, a fort which had recently been built on the right
-bank of the Nile, where the large tributary stream of the Atbara flows
-in from the south-east, or to make a dash {199} on Berber and sever the
-railway communication lower down. Eventually the Dervish leader found
-himself unable to carry out either of these schemes, the fortress
-appearing too formidable after the arrival of the British contingent,
-and Berber proving too remote. He decided therefore to threaten both
-points, and took up a strong position on the banks of the Atbara, about
-thirty miles above Dakila, which he fortified and entrenched
-elaborately, and waited for his foes to take the initiative.
-
-The force with which the Sirdar could meet the enemy was composed of
-the British Brigade, which had now been completed to four battalions by
-the arrival of the Seaforth Highlanders, and three Brigades of the
-Egyptian Army, commanded respectively by Colonel Maxwell, Colonel
-Macdonald, and Colonel Lewis. There were also eight squadrons of
-cavalry, and two Maxim guns under Colonel Broadwood, six companies of
-the Camel Corps under Major Tudway, and some artillery, both heavy and
-light, under Colonel Long. The total ran up to nearly 14,000 men of
-all arms. This force was concentrated at Kenur on the Nile, and all
-the officers seem genuinely to have held the opinion that contact with
-the enemy might occur at any moment. But as it turned out, it was not
-till seventeen days after the Sirdar's force started on their march to
-meet the enemy that the two armies met.
-
-On Sunday, March 20, the whole force marched across the angle of the
-desert to Da {200} Hudi, a camp on the Atbara River about twelve miles
-south-east of Kenur. They started as if only for a reconnaissance in
-force, for we read: "We are taking only one day's supplies and what we
-stand up in, one blanket being carried for us on camels." The hospital
-staff and transport was cut down to such narrow dimensions that it was
-hardly adequate for the work when the big fight really took place.
-Through all the next seventeen days the force lived on tinned beef and
-biscuits, in daily anticipation of closing with the enemy. But what
-was privation, discomfort, and hardship to every man in the force was
-vexation of spirit also to Gatacre. Writing on March 30, he says:
-
-
-"We may move to-morrow against Mahmoud, who is still in his entrenched
-jungle position at Hilgi on the east bank of the Atbara, eighteen miles
-south of this. I have been urging the Sirdar to move forward and
-attack him, as we have been inactive for some days, while Mahmoud is
-merely sitting and waiting for us. The inaction has a bad effect, both
-on our men and on the enemy."
-
-
-And again on April 3:
-
-
-"We are leaving the camp to-morrow, and going on to one three and a
-half to four miles south of Abadar. I was in great hopes that the
-Sirdar would attack Mahmoud at once. I thought I had persuaded him,
-but he wired my recommendation to Lord Cromer, and gave his own opinion
-and that of General Hunter, which were for waiting. To-day he got a
-wire from Lord Cromer, deciding not to attack--a great {201} pity, I
-think. At present the situation is as under: Mahmoud is in a zariba
-about ten miles from here, with about 20,000 men, very much crushed up
-for space, exceedingly hard up for food, and so placed that they
-cannot, in the event of a reverse, get away at all as an organised
-force. There never was such a chance, and we are missing it."
-
-
-Continuing his letter on the following day, he says:
-
-
-"Yesterday, after writing so far, I got a bad go of colic, or malaria,
-or something, which made me feel very bad; but I am better to-day, and
-hope to be all right to-morrow. I hear that another telegram has come
-from Lord Cromer, saying, on consideration he leaves the matter to the
-Sirdar, so I presume he will now attack as soon as possible. I hope
-so. We have moved to-day to Abadar, and are encamped in a shady belt
-of trees, near the river, but it is getting very hot."
-
-
-[Sidenote: A forward policy]
-
-During this time there had been frequent reconnaissances in the
-direction of the enemy's camp by the cavalry and Camel Corps and
-artillery. Three small actions had been fought; and with the help of
-the information thus obtained, and from the tales of deserters, the
-position, size, and strength of Mahmoud's camp were known with
-considerable accuracy.
-
-It was the responsibility which Gatacre had incurred by advocating an
-early attack on this fortified position, against the advice of others
-better acquainted with Soudan warfare, that {202} coloured all his
-dispositions when the day arrived. He did not, however, let his
-natural forwardness of character deceive him as to the resistance to be
-overcome. The author of _The River War_ has already made this point,
-although he did not know the true interpretation of the situation.
-
-
-"It is impossible not to sympathise with General Gatacre's obvious
-determination that, whatever happened to the other parts of the
-assault, the British Brigade should burst into the enclosure at all
-costs.[1]
-
-
-[1] _The River War_, vol. i. p. 457.
-
-
-This feeling of exaggerated personal responsibility led the General to
-take up his position at the head of his Brigade. In his letter written
-four days later he anticipates the criticism that would be levelled
-against him on this account, and shows that he had weighed the point,
-and had deliberately forsaken the traditional place. Scientific
-soldiers may criticise his action, but, according to Mr. Churchill,
-there was to a civilian a certain grim splendour in the spectacle.[2]
-
-
-[2] _Ibid._, vol. i. p. 468.
-
-
-In the General's last letter before the fight we find the following
-words:
-
-
-"My men are ready. I have taught them all I know. We shall do our
-best, and I think my regiments will do all I expect of them; God bless
-you."
-
-
-[Sidenote: The assault]
-
-The battle of the Atbara was fought on Good Friday, April 8, 1898. It
-was a brilliant victory, and resulted in the capture of Mahmoud and the
-{203} total defeat of his army. The enemy's losses were estimated at
-40 Emirs and 3,000 Dervishes killed. On our side the losses were 24
-killed and 101 wounded in the British Brigade, and 56 killed and 371
-wounded in the Egyptian Army. It is interesting to note that the
-casualties in the two Egyptian Brigades, which took part in the assault
-on the zariba simultaneously with the British regiments, amount to 381,
-which gives a higher ratio per Brigade than the figure for the British
-troops, which is 125. So that it is scarcely possible to maintain that
-the formation adopted in Gatacre's brigade was peculiarly destructive.
-
-The General's own letter of April 14 from Darmali furnishes a very
-graphic account of the engagement and the return march:
-
-
-"They all did very well, but I had to get a bit forward to watch that
-all went well. Between you and me, a General Officer should not get up
-into the firing line of his Brigade without good reason; this I know,
-but I had good reasons for going there. When your whole Brigade only
-covers a space of 200 yards by 200 yards, it is immaterial where you
-are, so far as the penetration of bullets is concerned, but what is
-important is that the G.O.C. should be where he can watch any important
-point.... Well, our men started the ball, and we pushed straight on
-over the stockade. It was pretty hot when we were pulling away the
-zariba fence; the ground was flying up as if it was being harrowed all
-round me, with the fire of the riflemen, and I lost a terrible bunch of
-men at that {204} spot. Of course I saw the sooner we got to the
-stockade the sooner we should stop the rifle fire, so we rushed it, and
-as soon as we were in we soon killed all the riflemen and the spearmen
-there, but we had a real good fight. The general operations of the
-day, however, were as follows: On evening of the 7th (Thursday) the
-British Brigade and three Egyptian Brigades moved out from Abadar at 6
-p.m., my Brigade leading; we moved in square about three miles, sat
-down in the Desert, had some food and water, and slept in square till 1
-o'clock a.m. Of course we took no blankets or anything with us, merely
-one day's food, ammunition, and water. At one o'clock we moved on in
-square, the other brigades following; it was moonlight, and a curious
-sight to see these three enormous hollow squares moving solemnly on
-with not a note or a whisper even--no smoking. We went on till just
-before dawn, then halted and deployed into line; a fine line it
-was--the Camerons, Seaforths, and Lincolnshires, with the Warwicks in
-column on the left flank at right angles.
-
-"We then advanced a bit, till we could see the Dem (zariba), pulled up,
-and commenced firing with our artillery, in hopes of drawing Mahmoud
-out to fight, and secondly of pounding his army well before we
-assaulted the position. Our cavalry was on my left, watching the left
-flank; the Dervishes made several attempts to get their cavalry out,
-but failed. Well, after hammering away for an hour, the order for
-assault was given, and away we went, the, Camerons covering the front
-of the assaulting column, and firing as they went; directly we got on
-to the crest of the hill men began to tumble about, and I gave the
-order to rush the zariba and stockade.
-
-{205}
-
-[Sidenote: The return march]
-
-"We lost some very good officers and men killed, but that must always
-be; we lost fewer than I expected. Captain Findlay, Camerons, a nice
-fellow, was killed getting over the zariba. Captain Urquhart, of the
-Camerons, too, was killed. He had just come back from the Staff
-College on purpose to take part in the expedition. Gore was quite a
-boy. I was with Captain Findlay most of the march to the zariba, as
-his was the company of direction, and as we were marching principally
-by the stars, I had to be there or thereabouts. After they were dead I
-cut off a bit of hair from Findlay and Urquhart to send home; Gore had
-had his hair cut so short that none was procurable. We buried them all
-in one grave, immediately after the fight. A curious sight: the Pipers
-and Buglers of a Soudanese battalion played the Dead March in Saul,
-then the Pipers of the Camerons and Seaforths played a Lament, then we
-filled in the grave. We had amongst the four Brigades about 600 killed
-and wounded, and we had, immediately we had buried the dead and dressed
-the wounded, to carry all these men back about eight miles across the
-desert. We told off eight men to each stretcher, and moved slowly
-homewards, leaving at 6 p.m. The fight was over about 8.45 a.m. I
-think, but it took us all day to dress the wounded and build sheds for
-them (of bushes). The sun, of course, is very hot, and we had all to
-sit in the desert, as the bush and the river-bank was so full of dead
-and dying Dervishes as to make it inadvisable for our men to lie there.
-
- * * * * *
-
-"Now I suppose we shall be here for three months, to refit and prepare
-for the next go-in at Khartoum, which will require careful doing."
-
-
-{206}
-
-The Sirdar was naturally very much gratified at the decisive nature of
-his victory, and was overwhelmed with telegrams of congratulation. The
-following quotation from an article in _Blackwood's Magazine_ of
-December 1902 tells us how the Sirdar expressed himself to his
-colleague:
-
-
-"Kitchener was dictating his dispatch to the Queen when there passed in
-front of us a pony led by a syce, and laden with spoils selected from
-that field of plenty with the praiseworthy discrimination of an art
-connoisseur. Kitchener hailed the man, and selecting the finest coat
-of mail and the most beautifully finished spear, bade me take them to
-General Gatacre with his warmest thanks for the splendid gallantry and
-good judgment with which he had led his fine Brigade. I seem now to
-see the pleasant light that shone in that brave soldier's eyes as I
-gave him the message word for word. What a splendid fellow, and how
-willingly any of us would have given our right hands to save him from
-the fate that befell him--at the hands of his own chiefs--in South
-Africa."[3]
-
-
-[3] _Ex_ article, "Campaigning with Kitchener," December 1902, p. 738.
-
-
-In the official dispatch the Sirdar wrote:
-
-
-"The high state of efficiency to which the British Brigade was brought
-is, I consider, in a large measure due to the untiring energy and
-devotion to duty of Major-General Gatacre and the loyal support
-rendered him by the commanding officers of his battalions, all of whom
-he has brought to favourable notice. During the engagement on the 8th
-inst. General Gatacre showed a fine example of gallant leading. The
-{207} cordiality and good feeling existing between the British and
-Egyptian troops, who have fought shoulder to shoulder, is to a great
-extent due to the hearty co-operation of General Gatacre, and I cannot
-speak too highly of the services rendered by him and the troops under
-his command in the recent operations."[4]
-
-
-[4] _The Times_, Wednesday, May 25, 1898.
-
-
-All through May, June, and July the time hung heavily for the British
-Brigade. They were quartered in the villages of Darmali and El Sillem,
-the General's headquarters being at the former. The temperature ran up
-to 106 deg. and 108 deg. in the shade, but he makes light of the heat and says,
-"One does not feel it as one does in India."
-
-One little incident of these weary days has survived, and is recorded
-by an officer in his recollections.
-
-
-"When the General was inspecting the Ordnance workshops at our camp on
-the Nile, a non-commissioned officer was brought to his notice as
-having done very good work. Gatacre complimented him highly, and said:
-
-"'Now, what can I do for you? I'll tell you what, you shall carry my
-flag when we advance to Omdurman.'
-
-"I believe the man's face was a picture, and he did not see it at all
-in the same light."[5]
-
-
-[5] _With the 72nd Highlanders in the Sudan Campaign_, by Colonel
-Granville Egerton.
-
-
-
-For, as all the Brigade knew, the General's flag had been carried at
-the battle of the Atbara by Staff-Sergeant Wyeth, who had been shot
-through the knee and had subsequently died of his {208} wound, so that
-the non-commissioned officer had good cause to look on it as an
-undesirable honour.
-
-This matter of carrying a flag into action has also aroused comment,
-but it is recorded that the Sirdar was always accompanied by the red
-Egyptian Flag, and it is probable that, in flying a little Union Jack
-behind him, the General had merely adopted this practice to flatter the
-nationality of his troops.
-
-At the end of May he made a trip in a gunboat to Shendy and Metemma,
-which he much enjoyed. In June he took a fortnight's leave to
-Alexandria and Cairo. It was while staying there that he received
-official intimation of his having been advanced to Major-General's
-rank, for hitherto his name had appeared in the Army List as a Colonel
-with the temporary and local rank of Major-General. According to
-regulations, a medical examination was necessary before this promotion
-could be confirmed. The idea that there could be any question about
-his health amused Gatacre greatly, and he offered, as a test, to run a
-hundred yards' race with the Principal Medical Officer. The challenge
-was politely declined, and an appointment made for the formal
-examination.
-
-[Sidenote: Promotion]
-
-In August Gatacre had the great satisfaction of finding himself in
-command of a Division in the field. A second Brigade of British troops
-was being sent up, and Colonel Wauchope[6] and Colonel Lyttelton[7]
-arrived from England to take {209} over the First and Second Brigades
-respectively. But however gratifying this promotion might be, it
-lifted him farther from the soldiers and the fighting, and it is owing
-to this circumstance that his name was so little mentioned in the story
-of the fight before Omdurman. This elevation, however, made no
-difference to his work or his activity. On August 17 he writes from
-Dakila:
-
-
-[6] The late Major-General Andrew Wauchope, C.B.
-
-[7] General the Hon. Sir Neville Lyttelton, G.C.B.
-
-
-"We are very busy now with embarkations and detrainments of troops
-arriving from the north; we are up nearly every night, as trains arrive
-at most unearthly hours; this of course is unavoidable. My first
-Brigade has gone on, and the embarkation of the second commences at
-daybreak to-morrow morning.... We move by steamers towing barges to
-Wad Bishara, about 145 miles, and thence by route march."
-
-
-Wad Bishara is just below the Sixth Cataract, and lies on the western
-bank about fifty-five miles north of Omdurman.
-
-The defeat of the Dervish army at the battle of Omdurman took place on
-Sunday, September 2, 1898. The story was told with much detail in the
-newspapers at the time, and has since been elaborately set out in _The
-River War_, but, notwithstanding the existence of many records, this
-book would not be complete without some account of such an important
-event. Though far from being a comprehensive narrative, the General's
-letter is interesting in itself:
-
-
-"_September_ 7, 1898.
-
-"On the morning of September 1 we marched twelve miles through jungle,
-finding everywhere {210} traces of the flight of the Dervish
-outposts--dead animals, men, etc., who had been killed by them,
-probably people attempting to desert.
-
-"We arrived at Kerreri about 12 noon, and found a village on the river
-with much open ground to our front and south-west, with a conical hill
-standing up in the plain about two miles to the south. We settled down
-to eat in the village, and in about an hour our cavalry sent in to say
-that the Khalifa's army was on the march from Omdurman towards us in
-three bodies, a centre and two wings. As soon as we had had our food,
-we set to work to get our troops into position in a kind of semicircle
-round the village, and strengthened ourselves with a zariba and trench,
-where zariba thorns were unprocurable; this we finished by dark, and
-then sat down to eat and sleep. The night passed quietly. The Khalifa
-missed a chance of doing us much damage by not attacking at night, but
-luckily he did not disturb us.
-
-"At 3.30 a.m. we stood to our arms, ready for an attack at dawn. It
-was a beautiful moonlight night, and I had been up most of the time,
-watching my line and inspecting the patrols, etc. About six in the
-morning of the 2nd we got intelligence that the Khalifa's army was
-coming on, and presently they began to pour across the open ground
-about two miles off, yelling like demons, apparently an endless stream
-of men and horses. I have never seen anything like it--banners flying
-all along the line, guns firing, etc. For an hour they kept pouring
-along in thousands, and suddenly the centre of the mass turned, and
-came straight for us. I made all my men lie down, so that nothing
-could be seen of us except our zariba fence. As soon as they got
-within range, about 2,300 yds., we opened {211} fire with all our guns,
-rifles, and Maxims, and a hail of lead fell on the army; but they were
-impervious to any influences of this kind, and kept pressing on and on
-till we literally mowed them down by hundreds. After about
-three-quarters of an hour, the ground was strewn with dead and dying,
-and then, as our fire did not slacken, they began to turn and go, but
-only at a walk, no running about it.
-
-[Sidenote: The great fight]
-
-"Then we advanced, and after we had moved on about one mile the centre
-of the Dervish force returned to the charge and fell upon a Soudanese
-Brigade, to whose assistance I sent a British Brigade (General
-Wauchope's); this stayed the Dervish attack, which was driven back and
-followed up. The whole force advanced and poured a heavy fire into the
-retreating Dervishes, who slowly withdrew, fighting. We had now been
-at work fighting and moving from 3.30 a.m. under a heavy sun without
-water, and had still four miles to march over a very sandy country, so
-we started in fighting formation, keeping ourselves ready at any moment
-to face west again. Well, they finally drew off to the hills, and we
-moved slowly on-towards the water, which one Brigade reached at 2 p.m.
-and the other at 3.30 p.m.; halted there till 4.30 p.m., and then
-marched on again into Omdurman, about three and a half miles; this we
-did not reach till dark, as we had to go carefully. There were still a
-lot of Dervishes in the town, and our gun-boats were shelling them, up
-the river and in the town. We had to bivouac out in the desert, as we
-could not find a suitable place. We could get no water that night, as
-the river was too far to send to, and it was not safe to allow small
-parties to go out.
-
-{212}
-
-"Next morning we marched down to the river and bivouacked on the
-water's edge, and there we are now.
-
-"The total dead counted were 10,324 as near as could be; the wounded it
-would be impossible to count, as they all crowded away on to the
-river-bank and into the town, but there were thousands of them,
-possibly another 10,000 or more, some with the most fearful wounds. I
-went out the next afternoon and also the day following with water for
-the wounded. I sent out many mules laden entirely with water, and we
-relieved many of these unfortunates, but no doubt many died from want
-of water.
-
-"Now the whole thing is over, except an excursion to Fashoda, which the
-Sirdar is arranging; I think he goes up to-morrow with 100 men of the
-Northumberland Fusiliers in a steamer.
-
-"We had a nice day at Khartoum; we (800 men from various battalions),
-two or three bands, nearly all the officers, and an equal number of
-Egyptians steamed up on gun-boats to Khartoum, landed opposite Gordon's
-Palace, hoisted the Union Jack and Egyptian flag simultaneously,
-saluted them, and then held a Memorial Service for Gordon. All our
-clergymen were present; the Sirdar made me stand on his right hand,
-thus paying a compliment to the British troops. Afterwards we wandered
-about and hunted among the ruins to find traces of Gordon."
-
-
-[Sidenote: Friendly words]
-
-There is no doubt that the General enhanced his reputation enormously
-in this campaign. Not only was his work done in the sight of Europe,
-but it was done under the eyes of a very exacting master. _The World_
-wrote at the time: {213} "Perhaps the highest compliment that can be
-paid him is that he has satisfied the Sirdar." Another paper said:
-"General Gatacre is a keen soldier--a workman 's'il y en a.' His idea
-of practising troops in the field during a campaign was an inspiration.
-The conventional idea has been that in the field the only alternatives
-were fighting and taking it easy. Result when campaigning in a bad
-climate, laziness in camp, rum, fever, and loss of condition generally."
-
-In a letter of congratulation from a Civil Service friend in India, we
-find the following generous appreciation:
-
-
-"You yourself are becoming more famous every day, to the great delight
-of your friends and well-wishers; and I was proud to see that at the
-Atbara you gave them a touch of the same bravery and indifference to
-danger that you delighted us with at the old club at Simla, when you
-rushed across the open and disarmed that Pathan servant who, after
-murdering the cook's mate, was firing 'promiscuous,' while we all
-huddled in the next block. Do you remember?"
-
-
-One of his former Chiefs on the Bombay side wrote:
-
-
-You ought to have been a K.C.B. long ago, but you are all right now,
-and nothing can keep you back."
-
-
-
-
-{214}
-
-CHAPTER XIV
-
-1898-1899
-
-COLCHESTER
-
-[Sidenote: Festivities]
-
-On November 15, 1898, the Honours Gazette for the recent campaign was
-published, and Gatacre found himself a Knight Commander of the Bath.
-Having also been awarded the Second Class of the Imperial Order of the
-Medjidieh by His Highness the Khedive, he was now in possession of two
-stars as well as two additional war medals. He had the honour of
-receiving his knighthood at the hands of Her Majesty Queen Victoria at
-Windsor on December 10, 1898. Not long afterwards he received an
-invitation to stay at Windsor Castle, and had the honour of dining with
-Her Majesty.
-
-[Sidenote: 1899]
-
-In the following February it was notified that Her Majesty the Queen
-had been graciously pleased to nominate Sir William as one of the
-officers to receive a Reward for Distinguished and Meritorious Service.
-
-The whole nation was delighted with the success of its representatives
-in Egypt, and as all hearts had been wrung by the tragedy of 1885, so
-now all rejoiced with the victors of 1898. A {215} unanimous vote of
-thanks was passed in both Houses of Parliament. A large copy of these
-gratifying words printed on vellum and bound in red and green covers
-respectively was presented to each of the senior officers named
-therein. These were forwarded through Lord Kitchener, who added a few
-words endorsing the appreciation of Sir William's good work.
-
-The Lord Mayor of London gave a dinner at the Guildhall in the Sirdar's
-honour. The Lord Provost of Edinburgh invited Lord Dufferin and Lord
-Kitchener to accept the Freedom of that ancient city. Edinburgh had
-reason to feel a special interest in the campaign, for one of the
-brigadiers was a Midlothian man and there had been two Highland
-regiments in his command. Lord Dufferin was especially pleased to see
-Gatacre again, for as Viceroy of India he remembered him well while
-serving on the Headquarters Staff.
-
-There were also two gala days when the General was the central figure;
-for his native county of Shropshire was very proud of her son. On
-December 15 Sir William was enrolled a Freeman of the City of
-Shrewsbury with much acclamation and many kindly speeches. The county
-town of Bridgnorth also entertained him handsomely, and reminded him
-that he had signed their roll in the year 1860. Sir William was not a
-pretentious speaker, but when called upon for a speech on such
-occasions his ideas were simple and his words fluent and appropriate.
-
-The appointment he had held at Aldershot {216} having been cancelled on
-his departure for Egypt, the General found himself unemployed for a
-time after his return, but at the end of October he was informally
-invited to say whether the Poona First-class District in India or the
-command of the Eastern District with Headquarters at Colchester would
-be the more agreeable to him. It was without hesitation that he chose
-the latter. From August 1880, when he left Dover with his regiment, to
-August 1897, when he had returned to take over his brigade at
-Aldershot, he had served continuously in India, while (with a short
-interval of five months) he had been working in the tropics for a
-further ten months. He had now nearly completed thirty-seven years'
-service, of which twenty-three had been spent in India. There was
-therefore to him a most attractive novelty about serving at home, and
-the independent provincial command that was offered to him would, he
-knew, in many ways prove most congenial. He took over the command from
-General Burnett on December 8, 1898, and went into residence at
-Colchester the next day.
-
-The Eastern District at that time included the nine counties which lie
-between Norfolk and London, and between Nottingham and the sea. The
-General Officer Commanding was directly responsible to the War Office
-for the troops of all arms, regular, militia, and volunteers, within
-this area. During the training season the work was very heavy and
-necessitated a great deal of touring. His previous experience in
-Bombay {217} had given the General a special interest in coast defence,
-and it was therefore with pleasure that he again found himself in
-command of a long sea-board.
-
-In the last year of his command, 1903, the Army Reorganisation scheme
-slightly changed his official position, but this was purely technical,
-and only affected his last six months there.
-
-[Sidenote: In Sussex]
-
-Occasionally Sir William was called upon to take part in the training
-outside his own district. Early in the year 1899 he was detailed to
-conduct one side of a staff-ride that took place in Sussex. An
-imaginary Blue Force was supposed to be concentrated at Eastbourne,
-while the Defence held the heights to the north of Ashdown Forest. The
-wild and picturesque district over which the operations were conducted
-added immensely to Gatacre's pleasure in the trip; he wrote with
-enthusiasm of the miles of heather-land, and had in the end the further
-satisfaction of finding that, as the Blue Invader, he had defeated his
-Red Opponent by a night-march on Dorking.
-
-Among other events of the London season Sir William was present at the
-Royal Academy Dinner. Invitations to all sorts of public functions and
-city dinners followed throughout the summer. As the journey from
-Colchester only occupies one hour, it was possible for him to enjoy all
-such London diversions without in any way neglecting his professional
-duties.
-
-Further evidence of his enhanced reputation was afforded by his
-selection to command a Division on Salisbury Plain in the forthcoming
-{218} manoeuvres. Two Divisions were organised, under the general
-direction of Sir Charles Mansfield Clarke. One had its headquarters at
-Perham Down and was commanded by Sir Leslie Rundle, the other by
-Gatacre with headquarters on the Downs above Bulford. This latter
-Division consisted of two brigades under Colonel Ian Hamilton and
-Colonel Clements; the staff remained in camp throughout the ten weeks'
-training, but the troops (which included units from the militia and
-volunteers as well as the regular army) took part in the training for
-two or three weeks only. This was the first occasion on which khaki
-uniform was worn in England; a certain battalion having recently
-returned from abroad, came into camp as it was, before refitting with
-home clothing. The camp lasted from June 25 to September 3; at the end
-Sir William wrote that his stay had been most instructive, and that Sir
-Charles Mansfield Clarke had expressed himself as much pleased with all
-that had been done.
-
-Throughout this summer the situation in South Africa, so far as it
-could be known through the daily papers, was giving rise to great
-anxiety, and the probability of an outbreak of hostilities before very
-long became more and more apparent. Early in October Gatacre was
-warned that in the event of an Army Corps proceeding to South Africa he
-had been selected for the post of Lieutenant-General commanding the
-Third Division. Sir George White had only a week before started to
-take command of the forces in {219} Natal, and had borrowed Gatacre's
-A.D.C.; and at the same time the 6th Company Army Service Corps had
-been sent off from Colchester to the Cape.
-
-Before the middle of the month Sir William's appointment and the
-details of his command were gazetted, and he received orders to sail on
-the Union-Castle Line mail steamer _Moor_ on Saturday, October 21, from
-Southampton. His departure from Colchester was fixed for Friday the
-20th. Although it was scarcely ten months since he had been resident
-in the district, the General had, as usual, become very popular with
-all classes. The Mayor and Corporation insisted on being given an
-opportunity of expressing their congratulations and good wishes.
-
-"The Council," they said, "felt that they were parting not only with a
-distinguished officer and an ornament to Her Majesty's service, but
-with a brother citizen."
-
-[Sidenote: Off to the Cape]
-
-Crowds of friends were assembled on the platform that Friday afternoon,
-every officer of the garrison was there in uniform, and there were many
-persons who had come in by train to cry "God-speed," for not a few had
-husbands, sons, and brothers already at the front. Many people at that
-time thought that the war would be a very short affair after the
-arrival of the reinforcements, and it was in this spirit that a lady in
-her farewell greeting said: "Good-bye, General--good luck to you; but I
-fear it will all be over before you get out." To which the General
-replied so gravely that she felt reproved: {220} "Make no mistake. We
-have a long tough job before us."
-
-
-In the evening papers that same day the news of the battle of Talana
-Hill was published. This was the first conflict of the three years'
-war, and very naturally the account of it added fervour to the public
-interest in the official departures. Two troopships were leaving
-Southampton that Saturday as well as the Union-Castle liner which was
-to carry Sir Redvers Buller and his three divisional commanders. The
-public knew by what train the officers would travel, and both at
-Waterloo and at Southampton the popular enthusiasm was expressed with
-extraordinary vehemence.
-
-
-
-
-{221}
-
-CHAPTER XV
-
-1899
-
-CAPE COLONY
-
-It was with great reluctance that Sir Redvers Buller had been persuaded
-to give any forecast to the War Office in London of the disposition of
-troops he intended to make on reaching Capetown. But whatever these
-may have been, he found on his arrival that the situation had so
-materially changed that he had to rearrange his plans to suit the
-emergency.
-
-The Boers were bringing so much pressure to bear on Ladysmith, where
-Sir George White had established his headquarters, and on Kimberley,
-that he decided to send the First Division under Lord Methuen to the
-relief of the latter place, and to employ in Natal the Second Division
-and the two brigades of which the Third Division had been originally
-composed. It seemed at the same time so important to reassure the
-loyal colonists in Eastern Cape Colony that he sent Gatacre there with
-one battalion of infantry and a promise of speedy reinforcements.
-
-Writing on board ship between Capetown and {222} East London, on
-November 16, Sir William says:
-
-
-"I am ordered to go to East London, and take command of the district up
-to Bethulie Bridge. Now, what does this mean? Why, that with the
-Royal Irish Rifles, which has never been on service before, together
-with half-battalion Berkshire Regiment, and a few Volunteers, I become
-responsible for the railway line and adjacent country up to the Orange
-River, about 200 miles long--but the last 100 miles are much
-disaffected. I have no definite orders, except that I am to hold
-Queenstown if possible, but East London at any rate, and am to raise as
-many Volunteers as possible."
-
-
-When the General reached East London he found that it could be left
-under the care of a local Volunteer Corps, and so he proceeded by train
-to Queenstown the same day. Here he found the half-battalion named
-above, a small detachment of Royal Garrison Artillery, and half a
-company of Royal Engineers. Besides these regular troops there were
-229 men of the Frontier Mounted Rifles, and 285 of the Queenstown Rifle
-Volunteers.
-
-Sir Redvers Buller, who was the General Commanding-in-Chief, chose
-Natal for his headquarters. Sir F. Forestier-Walker was in command of
-the Lines of Communication, with headquarters at Capetown. Sometimes
-Sir Redvers sent his messages direct to Gatacre, and sometimes they
-came through Capetown. There was no friction and no contradiction,
-{223} but it may well have been that this duplication of important
-telegrams created an atmosphere of unrest and added poignancy to
-Gatacre's feeling of helplessness.
-
-On November 18 a telegram was received from Sir Redvers Buller,
-pointing out that "the great thing in this sort of warfare is to be
-pretty certain that one position is safe before you advance to another,
-and that we are not yet strong enough to play tricks."[1]
-
-
-[1] See _Official History of the War in South Africa_, 1899-1902, vol.
-i. pp. 286, 287.
-
-
-[Sidenote: Conflicting messages]
-
-Three days, later, however, the General Commanding-in-Chief strikes a
-different note:
-
-
-"I calculate it will be at least five days and probably a week before I
-have a second battalion to send you, or a battery of field artillery,
-but I am anxious to get into a position to protect the Indwe mines
-better than we do. Do you think it would be safe for you to advance
-your force or part of it to Stormberg, and hold that instead of
-Queenstown? I am told it is a good position for a force the size of
-yours. Of course you will have no support."[2]
-
-
-[2] From contemporary copy of telegram in W. F. G.'s own handwriting.
-
-
-To this Sir William replied that he had not sufficient men as yet to
-advance on Stormberg, but as soon as more troops arrived he intended to
-occupy that junction and clear the country round it.
-
-At the time this message was sent the Boers had not yet crossed the
-Orange River {224} in strength, but by November 5 they had occupied
-Aliwal North and Stormberg, and were advancing on Dordrecht. The first
-is an important town on the Orange River, near which there are good
-bridges, both for the road and the railway; the second is a railway
-junction fifty-five miles north-west of Queenstown, and Dordrecht is a
-small town only thirty-five miles from Queenstown to the north-east.
-
-[Illustration: Invasion of Cape Colony: the Boers marching south over
-the Orange River at Aliwal North.]
-
-On hearing of the occupation of Dordrecht, Sir Redvers grew anxious
-lest his former suggestion should be taken too seriously, and
-telegraphed to Sir F. Forestier-Walker:
-
-
-"Caution Gatacre to be careful. I think he is hardly strong enough to
-advance beyond Putters Kraal before Methuen's return."[3]
-
-
-[3] See _Official History_, vol. i. p. 288.
-
-
-And on the following day he added instructions to reinforce Gatacre by
-one, or if possible two battalions, and "any mounted men that can be
-spared."[4]
-
-
-[4] _Ibid._
-
-
-Writing on November 24, Sir William says:
-
-
-"I have not yet got any more troops, but am hoping for some directly.
-Fancy what a predicament for a General Officer to be in--no troops, no
-transport, no horses for his Mounted Infantry; but I trust all are
-coming. The only unfortunate thing is that our people in front,
-police, civilian officers, etc., are obliged to fall back for want of
-support. I have been over a good deal of country the last few days,
-round our outposts, and am delighted with it. It is fine and open, and
-the farmers are a nice set of people. The sun is hot, but nothing like
-India: {225} one can ride in it all day without inconvenience, and it
-hardly ever gives you sunstroke."
-
-
-[Sidenote: An anxious time]
-
-And again on the 28th:
-
-
-"I have had a terribly anxious time the last two days, the Boers
-wrecking everything in my front, and no troops to drive them out. I am
-thankful to say that I hear to-day that a regiment, the 2nd
-Northumberland Fusiliers, is arriving here to-morrow, ... and so I
-shall be able to make some kind of show--but I am still badly off for
-everything. I am still praying for artillery, hospitals, etc. The
-whole country is seething with rebellion, and to put it down we require
-a lot of men."
-
-
-Immediately after the arrival of this reinforcement, Gatacre advanced
-his Headquarters to Putters Kraal, twenty-five miles up the railway,
-and placed outposts at Sterkstroom, Bushman's Hoek, and Penhoek. The
-cross railway line running from Stormberg westwards through Rosmead to
-Naauwpoort was soon afterwards destroyed by the enemy, thus putting a
-stop to any combined action between Sir William and Sir John French,
-who was defending a parallel railway which runs up from Port Elizabeth
-through Naauwpoort and Colesberg to Bloemfontein.
-
-On November 30 Sir William writes:
-
-
-"I fear this is a grumbling letter, but I am in a miserable state of
-inefficiency. I have only two regiments (one joined yesterday). We
-have waggons but no harness, and only {226} half the mules to draw
-them--and are within a few miles of the enemy. I have orders to raise
-Mounted Volunteers, but have no saddlery, no equipment, no clothing to
-supply them with: it would be laughable if it were not lamentable and
-serious....
-
-"The worst point about the whole thing is that I can hear nothing of
-any more troops coming to me, that the Boers are eating up the country
-in our front, and forcing the farmers to join them, because I cannot
-move: and consequently they are getting stronger every day. I assure
-you that I am perfectly sick at such a display of inefficiency,
-unpreparedness, and apathy.
-
-"Yesterday I made a dash out to Molteno, some sixteen miles ahead of my
-present position, and seized some 7,000 bags of food, meal, etc., and
-brought it in on some trains which I took out."
-
-
-On Saturday, December 2, Sir William sent the following message to Sir
-Redvers Buller:
-
-
-"Military situation here requires dealing with extreme carefulness.
-Boers have occupied Dordrecht, and enemy is advancing in a southerly
-direction, evidently pointing for Queenstown. I have two British
-regiments only, and I am thirty-three miles to the north of Queenstown.
-I am holding Bushman's Hoek range, to endeavour to prevent descent into
-Queenstown district, which would mean general state of rebellion of
-Dutch. Force will be strengthened at Queenstown by next British
-regiment, which should arrive at Queenstown December 5, but Queenstown
-is indefensible position. Are there any orders, especially as regards
-my movements?"[5]
-
-
-[5] See _Official History_, vol. i. p. 288.
-
-
-{227} To which this reply was returned:
-
-
-"We have to make the best of the situation, and if the enemy is
-advancing by Dordrecht, the importance of Bushman's Hoek is diminished.
-You have a force which altogether is considerably stronger than the
-enemy can now bring against you. Cannot you close with him, or else
-occupy a defensible position which will obstruct his advance? You have
-an absolutely free hand to do what you think best."[6]
-
-
-[6] See _Official History_, vol. i. p. 288.
-
-
-[Sidenote: Night attack suggested]
-
-On the following day the message given below reached Gatacre through
-Sir F. Forestier-Walker:
-
-
-"General Buller inquires whether you can safely leave your present
-position and advance to Henning's Station, or somewhere near where you
-can get a safe position, and also institute a policy of worry. He
-thinks if you could occupy Henning's Station Boers would fall back on
-Burghersdorp, or if you could get near enough to Burghersdorp to make
-night attack, it would be the thing to stop anxiety (_sic_). He adds
-Hildyard with a battalion and half sent a column of seven thousand
-Boers under Joubert himself flying. The above was probably wired
-before Buller read notification of the enemy's occupation of Dordrecht.
-He wired last night as follows: tell Gatacre he will have to take care
-of himself till 5th Division arrives. A telegram just received says he
-has given you a free hand."[7]
-
-
-[7] From copy of telegram in A.D.C.'s handwriting.
-
-
-Burghersdorp is about twenty-three miles north of Stormberg, and
-Henning is a station about ten miles west of Stormberg on the cross
-{228} line. This telegram, therefore, sketched a far more arduous and
-hazardous enterprise than that which Gatacre afterwards attempted.
-
-Within the next few days the Third Division was strengthened by the
-arrival of the 74th and 77th Batteries Royal Field Artillery, the First
-Battalion Royal Scots, the 33rd Company Army Service Corps, and the
-16th Field Hospital. All these units were only just arrived from
-England, so that, although the additional battalion of infantry was
-very valuable, Gatacre was unable to employ the men on the raid that he
-had been planning for some time past. They would serve, however, to
-protect the camp, and would thus set the other two battalions free for
-use as a striking force. Even these had only been two and three weeks
-in the country respectively, and the General had had no opportunity of
-getting them into the hard condition and fighting form that was reached
-by his Brigade on the Nile.
-
-On December 8 he writes:
-
-
-"I am frightfully busy and worried. The whole of this country is
-seething with rebels, and as they are all mounted, and I have only a
-few mounted infantry on half-fed ponies, it is very difficult to cope
-with them.
-
-"I have now three regiments of infantry, but have a long railway line
-to guard, and every culvert has a couple of armed men in it. Fancy
-what an anxiety this is--their safety, their food, their overworked
-condition. If I had my Division I could really strike somewhere....
-
-"I am hoping to move on a bit to-morrow or next day to recover some of
-the country given {229} up prior to my arrival, as I think occupation
-of a position in advance of this may tend to awe the Dutch behind me."
-
-
-In the _Official History_ we read that--
-
-
-"The General Officer Commanding considered that, in the existing
-strategic situation, any further prolongation of the defensive attitude
-he had hitherto been obliged to maintain would be injurious. He
-determined, therefore, to take advantage of the free hand left to him
-by Sir Redvers Buller, and to follow the further suggestion that he
-should close with the enemy."[8]
-
-
-[8] See _Official History_, vol. i. p. 289.
-
-
-The first week in December was spent in reconnoitring the Stormberg
-position so far as wandering parties of Boers would permit. The
-general himself prepared a sketch of the hills surrounding it and the
-roads leading thereto, which he carried with him on the march. The
-only map available was on too small a scale (twelve and a half miles to
-the inch) to be useful for tactical purposes, but all possible
-information was extracted from every man acquainted with the locality.
-Their accounts of the features and the distances were often inexact,
-and did not always agree, but eventually five local men, belonging to
-the Cape Mounted Police, under Sergeant Morgan of the same corps, were
-selected as guides.
-
-The General's scheme was to attack the Boer laager on the Stormberg
-Nek; by a night march of nine miles from Molteno he hoped to reach a
-{230} position from which the enemy's camp could be assaulted at
-daybreak.
-
-The concentration was made at Molteno, on the afternoon of December 9,
-the troops being brought from Putters Kraal by train, about sixteen
-miles, and some from Bushman's Hoet, which was half the distance. The
-force consisted of the two field batteries, with an escort of Mounted
-Infantry and two Infantry Battalions. It should have been further
-augmented by the detachment from Penhoek of 235 Cape Mounted Rifles,
-but, owing to the miscarriage of a telegram, these men failed to appear.
-
-Another circumstance that modified the original plan was a report that
-was brought in at the last minute that the enemy had fortified and
-entrenched the pass between the Kissieberg and Rooi Kop, over which
-runs the main road and the railway to the junction. The informant
-affirmed that the Boer main laager was placed on the heights of the
-Kissieberg, which could be easily ascended from the western side, where
-there were no artificial defences. The General was assured by all
-those who should have known that to reach this hill on its western
-flank would only add two miles to the projected march, and that they
-could lead him to a favourable spot for such an attempt.
-
-[Sidenote: The start]
-
-A council was held in the station-master's room at Molteno, and all the
-commanding officers were consulted as to their men's condition and
-fitness for the expedition. Although the train service had been most
-carefully timed, a {231} delay of two hours had somehow crept in; the
-railway was but a single line and the siding accommodation very
-limited. However, no one foresaw any difficulty, and so the start was
-made at nine o'clock that evening by moonlight. Indeed, so eager were
-the men that they set out at an unusually brisk pace.
-
-In the General's official report we read:
-
-
-"The force marched, with the usual halts, for about eight miles by
-moonlight, and halted near Roberts's farm at 12.30. The chief guide
-now reported that we were within one and a half miles of the enemy's
-position, and, after a rest of about three-quarters of an hour, we
-marched off again in the dark."[9]
-
-
-[9] See _Despatches_ published March 17, 1900.
-
-
-It was soon after this halt that the General realised that the guides
-had not brought him along the road that he had indicated, but, as he
-wrote, to turn back in consequence of this discovery did not commend
-itself to him. So the men tramped on, and at 4.20 a.m. found
-themselves under a face of the Kissieberg. A single shot from a Boer
-picket precipitated the attack, and before long the enemy had located
-the British column.
-
-
-"Three companies of the Royal Irish Rifles formed to the left, and
-occupied a kopje; the remainder of this battalion and the
-Northumberland Fusiliers advanced up a steep hill against the enemy's
-position."[10]
-
-
-[10] _Ibid._
-
-
-"There was no good position for the British {232} guns, except the
-ridge 2,000 yards to the west of the Kissieberg. But the infantry's
-need of immediate support was too pressing to allow time for that
-ridge's occupation. Lieutenant-Colonel Jeffreys, by direction of
-General Gatacre, caused the 77th Battery to come into action near the
-kopje, the 74th unlimbering in the open veldt to the westward. The
-Mounted Infantry continued to escort the batteries....
-
-[Sidenote: A fatal mischance]
-
-"The Boers from the main laager had now manned the hill, but the
-British artillery was bursting shells on the threatened crest, and a
-Boer gun, which had come into action, was for a time silenced.
-
-"The attack had lasted half an hour, and progress up the hill was being
-slowly made by the British infantry, when five companies of the
-Northumberlands, on the right of the line, were ordered to retire by
-their commanding officer. He considered that his battalion must leave
-the hill. The three foremost companies, who were nearly on the summit,
-did not hear this order, and, under the command of Captain Wilmott,
-remained with the Irish Rifles, clinging on as they were. The fire of
-the enemy appeared to be slackening, and for the moment the groups of
-British officers were convinced that, if they were supported, they
-could gain the crest. But the withdrawal of a portion of the attacking
-line had made further success impossible. Nor was that all. Seeing
-the five companies of the Northumberland Fusiliers falling back to the
-west, the batteries conceived that all the assailants were retreating,
-and exerted themselves to the utmost to cover the movement by their
-fire. The sun was now rising behind the western face of the
-Kissieberg, so that all the upper part presented to the British guns a
-black target, on {233} which neither friend nor foe could be
-distinguished. Thus a fatal mischance came about. A shell fused for
-explosion just short of the Boer defensive line burst over the foremost
-group of the Irish Rifles, and struck down Lieutenant-Colonel Eager,
-Major H. J. Seton, the second-in-command, Major Welman, Captain Bell,
-and three men. A conference had a few moments before been held between
-Colonel Eager and Captain Wilmott, as to the steps which should be
-taken to protect the men from the shells of their own gunners. The
-former officer had stated that as the situation of the infantry was
-evidently unknown to the batteries, and was masking their fire, it was
-necessary to fall back. Captain Wilmott, on the other hand, urged that
-if the men were once ordered to withdraw, it would be very difficult to
-get them up the hill again. Colonel Eager replied that there was no
-help for it. Therefore a general retirement now began."[11]
-
-
-[11] See _Official History_, vol. i. pp. 297-8.
-
-
-An officer of the Royal Irish Rifles writes in his official report:
-
-
-"At this time I did not think there was more than a piquet in front,
-and a rush at the end of the kopje would have taken that part of the
-position and the Boer gun. Colonel Eager, Major Seton, Major Welman,
-and Captain Bell were knocked over at this point by one of our shells,
-otherwise I think they would have taken this portion of the Boer
-position. From subsequent conversation with one Voss, Secretary to
-Swanepoel, Commandant Smithfield Laager there is no doubt that many of
-the Boers were leaving the position."
-
-
-{234}
-
-It seems, therefore, clear that the day was almost won, for had our
-shells fallen a little farther forward, so that the infantry could have
-held on a quarter of an hour longer, they would doubtless have found
-the defences evacuated. If our victorious troops had been able to eat
-the enemy's breakfast, we should have heard nothing of the fatigues of
-the night march, nor of the missing telegram.
-
-But, unfortunately, the morning ended differently. We will close the
-account with a quotation from a letter written by one of the
-aides-de-camp:
-
-
-"The General, as soon as he realised the state of things, arranged for
-the retirement, quite cool under the hottest fire, encouraging the men
-and moving over the position in every direction, not recklessly, but
-with a fine courage, which did us all good to watch. The retirement
-was carried out in wonderful order, and, weary though the men were,
-they hastened to join their units, and marched home in fair order....
-Throughout the retirement he was the last man of the column, beating up
-tired stragglers, and bringing in abandoned transport."
-
-
-In all the accounts something is said about a secondary force of Boers
-that came on to the scene soon after the general retirement had begun,
-but according to the following extract from another officer's report,
-they refrained from doing us as much damage as might have been effected
-by a more experienced enemy.
-
-{235}
-
-"Just as we were moving off about 400 Boers appeared on the high
-plateau on our right flank from the Steynsburg direction, but were at
-once checked by the fire of our guns, and gave the infantry no further
-trouble."
-
-
-The advanced troops got back to Molteno at 11 a.m., and all were in by
-12.30. The casualties were officially returned as eight officers
-wounded (one died of wounds) and thirteen missing; in other ranks there
-were 25 killed, 102 wounded, and 548 missing. The whole force employed
-amounted to 3,035 of all ranks.
-
-The main facts of this account are taken from the _History of the War
-in South Africa_ recently published. So little is said in the
-General's despatch of the part played by the infantry that this
-omission is a subject of comment in Lord Roberts's covering letter of
-February 1900.[12] It may therefore be concluded that the
-Field-Marshal (who was commanding the forces in Ireland at the time
-that the engagement was fought) was at the time of writing ignorant of
-many incidents that have since been brought to light.
-
-
-[12] See _Despatches_ published March 17, 1900.
-
-
-[Sidenote: With an ace]
-
-In Sir William's letter three days later he speaks of the action as "a
-most lamentable failure, and yet within an ace of being the success I
-anticipated," and goes on:
-
-
-"The fault was mine, as I was responsible of course. I went rather
-against my better judgment in not resting the night at Molteno, but I
-{236} was tempted by the shortness of the distance and the certainty of
-success. It was so near being a brilliant success."
-
-
-Both in the articles published at the time, and in the _Official
-History_ referred to above, the circumstances in which Sir William was
-placed are held to have made some demonstration imperative.
-
-
-"Sir William Gatacre's decision to advance on Stormberg was fully
-justified by the strategical situation. General Buller's telegram,
-although it left him a free hand as to time and opportunity, had
-suggested that operation. The plan, though bold, was sound in its
-design, and would have succeeded had not exceptional misfortune
-attended its execution."[13]
-
-
-[13] See _Official History_, vol. i. pp. 301, 302.
-
-
-On the following day, Monday, the battle of Magersfontein was fought on
-the north-west, and on Friday of the same week Sir Redvers Buller
-delivered his unsuccessful attack on Colenso. Owing to the proximity
-of dates, the attempt to retake Stormberg is associated in the public
-mind with the other engagements of that week; but in the numbers
-employed, in the losses suffered, and in political importance it
-shrinks into insignificance compared with them. At Magersfontein, on
-December 11, 14,964 troops of all ranks were engaged, the total killed
-and wounded was returned as 885, with 63 missing; at Colenso, out of
-19,378 men, the losses were 899, with 240 missing; while at Stormberg,
-out {237} of 3,035 engaged, 135 were killed and wounded, and 571 taken
-prisoners.[14] From a political point of view, though no ground was
-gained, still none was lost, and Sir William was actually able, the day
-after, to establish his headquarters at Sterkstroom, which was five
-miles farther up the railway than he had been at Putters Kraal.
-
-
-[14] See _Official History_, vol. i. app. vi. pp. 468, 469, 470.
-
-
-From the General Commanding-in-Chief Sir William received the following
-telegram:
-
-
-"Your telegram respecting your action and dispositions, I think you
-were quite right to try the night attack and hope better luck next
-time. I don't think you will find them attack you when in position,
-but it would be better to retire than run the risk of being surrounded;
-as to this you must judge for yourself, but military considerations
-should be held paramount.--BULLER."[15]
-
-
-[15] See original text. From Frere Camp, 2.17 p.m.; reached
-Sterkstroom 4.4 p.m., December 11, 1899.
-
-
-Writing on December 18, Sir William says:
-
-
-"I have now three regiments--the Derbyshire, Royal Scots, and Royal
-Irish Rifles. I have been obliged to send the Northumberland Fusiliers
-to East London to look after the base, as Sir Redvers Buller wished
-this done. My Howitzer Battery he has been obliged to send to Natal to
-assist Clery.
-
-"I have up here (Sterkstroom) a large camp with supplies, stores, etc.,
-and have been ordered by Buller to entrench and endeavour with my
-mounted troops to harry the district round me, but I have so few
-trained troops, and these Boers {238} are so mobile (all mounted) that
-it is a very difficult matter to catch them.
-
- * * * * *
-
-"You must not expect to see much movement from my force: I have no
-strength--cannot leave my line of communications, which are long. All
-the districts behind me are ready to rise, and I cannot separate my
-regiments. I have received orders to entrench my camp, and this I am
-about to do. This will, of course, free my mounted men a bit, as the
-post, with provisions, will be safe for them to come back to. As I am
-writing I hear of a threatened rising in Alice and Seymour, two
-districts south-west of Stutterheim, right away behind me, which makes
-it difficult for me to retain my communications with the coast. These
-may be exaggerated reports, but I have had so many warnings that one
-cannot afford to disregard them. You may rest assured we shall fight
-to the end anyhow, and my thoughts will be with you."
-
-
-
-
-{239}
-
-CHAPTER XVI
-
-1900
-
-ORANGE FREE STATE
-
-The anxiety felt by the commanders of the three detached forces in
-South Africa was shared by the nation at home. The telegrams sent to
-England by Sir Redvers Buller showed that the state of affairs in Natal
-after the battle of Colenso was very critical, and that only prompt and
-ample reinforcements would be of any avail. Troops of all arms were
-despatched to Capetown as fast as ships could be got ready to carry
-them, and Field-Marshal Lord Roberts was appointed Commander-in-Chief,
-with Lord Kitchener as his chief staff officer.
-
-The Field-Marshal reached Capetown on January 10. Four weeks were
-necessary for the organisation of his new army, which amounted to
-35,000 men when concentrated at Modder River on February 8. A week
-later General French at the head of a Cavalry Division rode into
-Kimberley, and on the same day the Sixth Division got in touch with
-General Cronje, and commenced the series of operations which led to his
-surrender with all his army. There {240} were yet, however, two
-serious engagements to be fought, at Poplar Grove and Driefontein,
-before the Commander-in-Chief entered Bloemfontein on Thursday, March
-15, 1900. By that time this advance in force into the enemy's country
-had had its effect in the east and south. The pressure in Natal was
-relaxed, and on March 1 Sir Redvers Buller rode into Ladysmith and
-greeted Sir George White and his gallant garrison. In the meantime
-Gatacre and Clements had been holding on to the railways, impatient to
-move forward as soon as it was safe to do so. Both these columns,
-which had been marking time in the face of the enemy, had had
-occasional conflicts, but these were, for the most part, outpost
-affairs, or the result of reconnaissance.
-
-Writing from Sterkstroom on February 24, Sir William says:
-
-
-"Yesterday we had a fight just north of Molteno, and unfortunately lost
-about seventy men, but we gained the information we required.
-Montmorency is missing, and I fear he has been wounded or shot. His
-party got too far ahead of us, and it was with difficulty I extricated
-them. I was very nearly shot twice, once by a rifleman (Boer), once by
-a shell--very near. I have had marvellous luck on more than one
-occasion. The men all behaved very well. I do not think that people
-realise quite the extent of the country I am covering. From Karn Nek
-to Bird's River is thirty-five miles, and I have three and a half
-regiments only to do it with. I think I told you that Brabant, a
-Colonial, {241} had been given a command under me of mounted troops.
-He has a very mixed lot, and their procedure is sketchy, but Lord
-Roberts wishes him to have a free hand. He is to start to-day towards
-Dordrecht, and I have told him what I want him to do, _i.e._ to cut in
-between Dordrecht and Jamestown, which I think should have the effect
-of making them fall back from Stormberg, in which case I could occupy
-it, but, as you see, I cannot occupy it without evacuating some place
-behind me."
-
-
-[Sidenote: Across the river]
-
-On March 5 the Third Division reoccupied Stormberg; on the 6th they
-reached Burghersdorp; on the 9th the scouts chased the Boers to the
-bridge over the Orange River at Bethulie, and entrenched themselves on
-the southern bank. The little band arrived just in time to see the
-railway bridge blown up, but their advance saved the roadway.
-Lieutenant Popham, of the Derbyshire Regiment, promptly cut the
-electric wire that would have fused the dynamite, and at night Sir
-William, accompanied by Lieutenant Grant, R.E., crept along the
-parapet, and dropped the parcels of explosives into the river. The
-scouts of the Third Division were rather proud of having saved this
-bridge, as at Norvals Pont both were destroyed. The next day the
-column occupied Bethulie in the enemy's country, and on the 15th took
-possession of the railway junction at Springfontein. Colonel Clements
-had also crossed the Orange River, and made his way on to the junction
-shortly after the Third Division had captured the place.
-
-{242}
-
-"The deliberation of Gatacre's movements surprised his younger
-officers, who did not know that the Divisional General had received
-orders from the Commander-in-Chief not to commit himself seriously
-until reinforcements had reached him, and, if possible, to repair the
-railway which connects Stormberg with Naauwpoort Junction."[1]
-
-
-[1] See _Official History_, vol. ii. p. 247.
-
-
-Colonel Clements had received orders in the same strain:
-
-
-"Do not attempt to force passage of river until you hear from me, or
-are certain that the enemy have considerably loosened their hold over
-the heights on the north bank. This they are sure to do when we reach
-Bloemfontein, and it is better that the repair of the bridge be delayed
-a few days than that lives be lost unnecessarily."[2]
-
-
-[2] _Ibid._, vol. ii. p. 256.
-
-
-On March 16 General Pole-Carew was sent down the line from Bloemfontein
-to meet Gatacre and Clements.
-
-
-"He found at Edenburg that he had just missed Grobler's contingent
-proceeding north-east. This was only the first of two parties escaping
-from Colesberg, the second being under Lemmer, while Du Plessis and
-Olivier were leading a third party in the same direction from Bethulie
-and Aliwal North. When the three parties united in the neighbourhood
-of Ladybrand, they formed the imposing total of 5,500 Boers, 1,000
-Kaffirs, 10,000 oxen and 800 waggons, covering a total extent of
-twenty-four miles on the march.
-
-{243}
-
-"As soon as Pole-Carew heard of Grobler's movements on the 16th, he
-urged upon the Commander-in-Chief the advisability of sending out a
-strong force east of Bloemfontein, to intercept the Boer commandoes as
-they came up from the south, and of bringing Brabant from Aliwal North
-and Gatacre from Springfontein to close in upon their rear."[3]
-
-
-[3] See _Times History_, vol. iv. p. 7.
-
-
-[Sidenote: A pacific policy]
-
-The Field-Marshal was not, however, ready to undertake such an
-extensive movement; his force had only reached its goal the day before,
-and neither his men nor his horses would have been equal to such a
-chase. Moreover the situation presented itself to him in quite a
-different light. The ready submission of the Boer farmers in the
-vicinity of the main army led him to exaggerate the effect on the
-nation at large of the capture of General Cronje and his four thousand
-fighting men. He was led to believe by reports from various outlying
-districts that there was no fight left in the Boers, and in his desire
-to win them without unnecessary blood-shed he decided to try a policy
-of pacification.
-
-On his arrival at Bloemfontein Lord Roberts issued a Proclamation by
-which, in the name of Her Majesty the Queen, he offered pardon and
-protection to all such burghers as would lay down their arms and swear
-an oath of allegiance.[4] A week later he telegraphed to the War
-Office:
-
-
-[4] For words of Proclamation see _Official History_, vol. ii. p. 260.
-
-
-"So many burghers have expressed their {244} desire to surrender under
-the terms of the last proclamation that I have sent small columns in
-various directions to register the names and to take over arms."[5]
-
-
-[5] See _Times History_, vol. iv. p. 8.
-
-
-In pursuance of this policy the Field-Marshal on March 19 telegraphed
-the following order to Sir William Gatacre, whose headquarters were at
-Springfontein:
-
-
-"Could you manage to take a small force, say two battalions, one
-battery, and some mounted infantry, as far as Smithfield? It is very
-desirable British troops should be seen all over the country and
-opportunity given to burghers to surrender and deliver up their arms
-under the conditions of the Proclamation of March 15."[6]
-
-
-[6] See _Official History_, vol. ii. p. 301.
-
-
-Gatacre's command at this time had increased to four battalions of
-infantry, with such mounted infantry as he had been able to raise from
-their ranks, and this Brigade was now employed as line-of-communication
-troops. Two battalions were needed at Bethulie Bridge, where the men's
-assistance was required in passing stores, etc., over the road-bridge
-until the railway should be repaired; from the other two he had to
-supply guards for 115 miles of railway from Bethulie to Bloemfontein.
-The Colonial section of his force was acting more or less independently
-under General Brabant, who had established his headquarters at Aliwal
-North.
-
-{245}
-
-To the telegram given above Gatacre replied that he could not spare
-more than one battalion (the 2nd Royal Irish Rifles), a field battery,
-a company of the mounted infantry of the Royal Scots and a section of
-that of the Royal Irish Rifles. His suggested reduction was approved,
-and the column started on its fifty-mile march to Smithfield on the
-20th.
-
-On the 21st Sir William rode about twenty miles west of the railway to
-Philipolis, where he took over the keys from the Landrost without
-opposition, returning the same evening to Springfontein.
-
-In order to understand Sir William's part in the affairs of the next
-ten days, it will be necessary to follow in detail the messages that
-passed daily between the Field-Marshal Commanding-in-Chief and the
-Divisional General.
-
-[Sidenote: Troops sent to Wepener]
-
-On Monday, March 26, instructions were received directing that two
-squadrons of Brabant's Mounted Colonials from Aliwal North, together
-with the mounted infantry company of the Royal Scots already at
-Smithfield, should push on to Wepener, which lies fifty miles to the
-north-east of Smithfield.
-
-On Tuesday, the 27th, the 1st Derbyshire Regiment and the 11th Brigade
-Division of the Royal Field Artillery were called up to complete a
-Division at headquarters, thus reducing Gatacre's small force by about
-1,000 men.
-
-On the same day Sir William telegraphed to Headquarters reporting a
-rumoured concentration of the enemy at Modder Poort, expressing {246}
-his anxiety for the detachment that was marching on Wepener, and
-suggesting that he should reinforce the column. In reply he was
-informed that the Field-Marshal did not anticipate danger at Wepener,
-but that he concurred in the strengthening of the party there.
-
-On March 28 the following telegram was received from Headquarters:
-
-
-"If you have enough troops at your disposal, I should wish you to
-occupy Dewetsdorp will make road from here to Maseru safe preventing
-enemy's forces from using telegraph lines to the south let me know what
-you can do to this ends."[7]
-
-
-[7] From _True Copy_, furnished by D.A.A.G. in 1900.
-
-
-Now there are two versions of this telegram. The above is the version
-as it was received by General Gatacre at 9.40 a.m. on March 28.
-Between the words "_Dewetsdorp_" and "will" he mentally supplied the
-word "_I_" to fill in the sense. When, however, this important
-telegram was quoted by Lord Roberts in a despatch to the War Office
-(dated April 16, 1900), the following verbal variations occur. We find
-"_I should like_" for "_I should wish_"; the words "_it would_" take
-the place of "_will_"; "_and prevent enemy_" stands for "_preventing
-enemy's forces_"; and the last word "_ends_" appears in the singular,
-thus bringing it into the body of the message.[8] These differences
-will seem trifling to the reader, but the meaning of this telegram has
-since been questioned. Gatacre {247} read it as an order to send a
-detachment to Dewetsdorp similar to the one already ordered to Wepener,
-and the writer of the _Official History_ so reads it, even in the
-secondary form.[9]
-
-
-[8] See _Official History_, vol. ii. app. vii. p. 614.
-
-[9] See marginal note, _Official History_, vol. ii. p. 302.
-
-
-[Sidenote: Detachments]
-
-Dewetsdorp lies on the main road that runs from Bloemfontein south-east
-through Wepener into Basutoland; the distance from the capital to
-Dewetsdorp is forty miles, and it is twenty-five miles on to Wepener.
-A detachment sent there was therefore in far less danger than the post
-at Wepener, and was a source of strength to the latter. It was also
-known to Gatacre that General French was operating with a mounted force
-at Thaba'Nchu, so that he naturally concluded that the road
-Bloemfontein--Thaba'Nchu--Ladybrand, or Maseru, was strongly held. As
-he himself said in evidence before the Royal Commission, he "never sent
-them [the troops] there as an outpost, nor expected them to act as
-such, but merely to hold a post on an interior road."[10]
-
-
-[10] See _Report South African War Commission_, vol. iii. p. 276.
-
-
-On the same day, March 28, Gatacre sent this reply to the disputed
-telegram:
-
-
-"Following moves are in progress, in view to covering whole country
-east of railway.
-
-"Three squadrons Brabant's Horse moving Rouxville to Wepener; two will
-reach Wepener Sunday next (April 1), the third on Tuesday.
-
-"One squadron Brabant's is moving to Bushman's Kop half-way between
-Rouxville and Wepener.
-
-{248}
-
-"One company Royal Scots Mounted Infantry reaches Wepener Sunday.
-
-"Two companies 2nd Royal Irish, Rifles reach Dewetsdorp Sunday.
-
-"One company Royal Irish Rifles and one section Mounted Infantry Royal
-Irish Rifles reach Helvetia to-morrow.
-
-"Three companies Royal Irish Rifles at Smithfield with squadron
-Brabant's Horse."[11]
-
-
-[11] See Official History, vol. ii. p. 303.
-
-
-As Gatacre received no reply to the above message he assumed that his
-dispositions were approved. In furtherance of Lord Roberts's wishes he
-slightly strengthened the post at Dewetsdorp next day by sending there
-some mounted infantry of the Northumberland Fusiliers. These changes
-were also telegraphed to Headquarters.
-
-Although such detachment duty naturally fell to the Third Division as
-line-of-communication troops, still it would seem that the Headquarters
-Staff, in calling upon Gatacre to furnish these remote garrisons, had
-overlooked the fact that his _Division_ had never numbered more than
-four infantry battalions, and had not at any time ever possessed any
-cavalry. By thus scattering the few men at Gatacre's disposal, the
-Commander-in-Chief reduced the numbers available for guarding the
-hundred miles of railway.
-
-
-"The railway was necessarily the first care; if that was seriously
-broken, the army at Bloemfontein, if it did not actually starve, must
-be injuriously affected."[12]
-
-
-[12] _Ibid._ vol. ii. p. 306
-
-
-That this question of the adequate protection {249} of the railway line
-became a week later a great anxiety to Lord Roberts we know from his
-urgent telegram of April 5, in which he tells Gatacre to satisfy
-himself that the guards are properly placed, sufficiently entrenched,
-and on the alert.
-
-[Sidenote: Great distances]
-
-There were at Headquarters in March 1900 three brigades of Cavalry, and
-three divisions of Infantry, with their complement of Horse and Field
-Artillery, which with other units made up a fighting force of 34,000
-men. As has been said, Dewetsdorp and Wepener were both nearer to
-Bloemfontein than to Springfontein, the headquarters of the Third
-Division. From this place Gatacre had to arrange for the supplies for
-posts which were eighty and ninety miles away, and that this could not
-be done without difficulty we see in his letter to me, dated March 31,
-1900:
-
-
-"After reaching this we have been occupied in covering the whole
-country from Wepener to Philipolis, and all the country between them
-and the Orange River, with patrols and small parties, and it is such a
-business getting supplies to all these scattered detachments. We find
-we can make them somewhat self-supporting by making the farmers supply
-sheep, and they can get the farmers' wives to bake bread on payment.
-The roads generally speaking are good, not metalled, of course, but
-hard clay, which in dry weather are perfect to move upon; in wet
-weather they become slippery."
-
-
-[Illustration: Map of India and Burma] (Transcriber's note: map
-omitted from this etext because too large to scan)]
-
-The same day the following telegram reached Gatacre from Bloemfontein:
-
-
-{250}
-
-"(With) Reference (to) telegram from Brabant to your Assistant
-Adjutant-General Springfontein repeated to Intelligence here, what
-reinforcement do you propose to send him? Boers are active on that
-side and have strong force between Ladybrand and Thabanchu. Brabant
-should be reinforced and supported."[13]
-
-
-[13] From _True Copy_, furnished by D.A.A.G., 1900.
-
-
-In response to this Gatacre ordered up troops from the Colonial Corps
-at Aliwal North, and pushed forward the support at Bushman's Kop.
-
-On that same Saturday, March 31, he was directed to arrange for a
-battalion of infantry and a battery to be at Leeuwberg Kopje, eight
-miles from Bloemfontein, at daybreak of April 1. Three companies of
-the Northumberland Fusiliers and five companies of the Royal Scots were
-accordingly sent. When replying to this order he adds that he has no
-infantry left, and only one battalion from which to find guards for the
-railway line.
-
-A third message from Headquarters reached Gatacre at 10.47 that night
-(the 31st), which informed him of the engagement near the Waterworks,
-told him to exercise special caution on the railway, and to draw in all
-outlying forces, adding that "it would appear that Dewetsdorp is too
-far advanced for security."[14]
-
-
-[14] _Ibid._
-
-
-In response, Gatacre immediately sent off various telegrams by which he
-hoped to get in touch with his detachments, and also started off a
-despatch-rider; but the distance was eighty miles, as has been said.
-
-{251}
-
-[Sidenote: At Dewetsdorp]
-
-It will be remembered that the troops from Smithfield and Helvetia that
-were assembling at Dewetsdorp were due to reach their destination on
-Sunday, April 1. On his arrival the Officer Commanding the three
-companies Royal Irish Fusiliers--
-
-"was greeted with information from local sources that a Boer commando
-was expected soon to appear before the village, and, selecting ground
-which commanded the place, he began to strengthen his position, which
-he covered by outposts. In the evening a patrol to the north of
-Dewetsdorp was fired upon. He informed the Headquarters Third Division
-of this by telegram, and also of the rumoured approach of the commando,
-which, however, was not credited by the Intelligence Officer who
-accompanied his detachment."[15]
-
-
-[15] See _Official History_, vol. ii. p. 306.
-
-
-At midnight Gatacre's telegram arrived directing him "that he should
-immediately move his troops to Reddersburg," and closing with the words
-"matter urgent." At 3.30 a.m. next morning (April 2) the
-despatch-rider appeared with the same instructions.
-
-In the meantime the engagement known as Sannah's Post had taken place
-on Saturday, March 31, only thirty miles away. As this unfortunate
-affair directly affected the Proclamation detachments, I hope it will
-not seem out of place if I give a brief sketch of what had been taking
-place a little farther north.
-
-The main water-supply for the city of Bloemfontein was drawn from a
-point on the Modder {252} River, where it is crossed by the high road
-running due east to Thaba'Nchu. This point, which is about twenty-one
-miles from the capital, is known as Sannah's Post. On March 15 the
-"somewhat inadequate force of 300 mounted infantry" was sent out to
-hold the Waterworks, and two days later a mounted column, 1,500 strong,
-under General French, was pushed on to Thaba'Nchu, twenty-one miles
-farther east. From this force Colonel Pilcher was detached, and
-through his operations definite news of the enemy's whereabouts was
-obtained and duly forwarded to Bloemfontein. General French was soon
-after called back to Headquarters, and left Colonel Broadwood in
-command of the column. It is clear that--
-
-
-"Broadwood, with his 1,500 men, had never been intended to fight
-battles where he was, forty miles from any supporting force, but only
-to publish Lord Roberts's proclamations, and to collect arms from any
-Boers that might surrender."[16]
-
-
-[16] See _Times History_, vol. iv. p. 33.
-
-
-So that when he discovered that General Olivier was behind him with
-5,000 men, he had no choice but to retire on the Waterworks.
-
-After the death of Joubert the control of the Boer forces fell into the
-hands of younger men, the most conspicuous amongst whom was Christian
-de Wet. Having conceived a plan for capturing the Waterworks guard, he
-placed {253} his forces astride of the road, and hid them in the bed of
-a stream about five miles west of the Modder River. When the day
-arrived for the execution of his plan, he found that the mounted column
-was also delivered into his hand.
-
-[Sidenote: Sannah's Post]
-
-A messenger got through who carried news of Broadwood's plight between
-Olivier and De Wet to Lord Roberts, and he sent out an infantry
-division under General Colvile. But the two forces failed to work
-together, and the enemy triumphed. This was on Saturday, March 31.
-
-
-"The material result of De Wet's achievements at Sannah's Post was the
-acquisition of seven guns, much ammunition, many horses and waggons,
-and a large number of prisoners. By occupying the Waterworks, which
-did not again pass into Lord Roberts's hands until April 23, he
-inflicted great injury on the health of the troops in Bloemfontein.
-The moral effect of his success was enormous. It confirmed the
-resolution of those of the Free State burghers who still remained in
-arms; it encouraged the waverers; it afforded De Wet the occasion for
-putting strong pressure upon the considerable numbers of his fellow
-countrymen who, declaring themselves tired of the war, had given in
-their rifles to the British troops, and had been allowed to return to
-their farms as peaceful non-combatants; and it gave those who followed
-him good heart for his next stroke."[17]
-
-
-[17] See _Official History_, vol. ii. pp. 298, 299.
-
-
-On the Sunday following Gatacre was summoned to Headquarters, and had
-interviews {254} with the Commander-in-Chief, of which he has left the
-following memorandum:
-
-
-"On Sunday, April 1, I proceeded to Bloemfontein by order to see Lord
-Roberts, arriving late at night. Early next morning (April 2) I saw
-the Field-Marshal, and he told me he was placing me in command of the
-Orange Free State territory held by us, and was giving me ten other
-battalions, which were to be used as under, _i.e._ six Militia
-battalions to be distributed along the railway south of Bloemfontein,
-and in the country east and west of it; the four battalions were, with
-the four I had already (the 2nd wing of the Berkshire was to be called
-up from Cape Colony), to make up a Division with which I was to proceed
-at once to Dewetsdorp and operate along the Basuto border through
-Ladybrand, Clocolan, Ficksburg country, to clear Lord Roberts's right
-flank, to enable him to advance northwards. He directed me to draw up
-for his approval a scheme of distribution for the six Militia
-battalions through the country. This I did, and submitted it on the
-spot. The Field-Marshal was anxious to know by what date I considered
-I could concentrate my troops at Reddersburg, ready to move, after
-relief by the Militia battalions. I replied that, on the assumption
-that I received the Militia battalions on the 6th, I could move on
-April 17 (reliefs had to be effected, transport collected, supplies,
-etc., etc.). This date was considered satisfactory by Lord Roberts.
-The same evening (April 2) about 9.30 p.m. Lord Roberts again explained
-to me carefully what he wished, that he was anxious for me to move as
-soon as possible, and that I was to proceed to Springfontein
-immediately, and commence {255} preparations. This I did, morning of
-April 3, by first train."
-
-
-It would appear that nothing was said during the Monday spent at
-Bloemfontein about the detachment that was moving that very day from
-Dewetsdorp through Reddersburg back to the railway at Bethanie. No
-anxiety seems to have been felt at Headquarters as to what De Wet would
-do next.
-
-[Sidenote: A relief column]
-
-At about 7 o'clock on Tuesday evening, April 3, information was brought
-into Edenburg that the Dewetsdorp detachment was surrounded at
-Mostert's Hoek, a ridge three or four miles east of Reddersburg. This
-disquieting news was telegraphed to Lord Roberts, who sent an urgent
-message to Gatacre directing him to prepare to move on Reddersburg, and
-asking what troops he had available. The reply stated that there were
-forty scouts and about twenty-five mounted infantry at Springfontein, a
-Brigade Division Field Artillery at Bethanie, and about two companies
-mounted infantry at or near Edenburg. A return message informed
-Gatacre that the Field-Marshal was sending five companies of the
-Cameron Highlanders by train to Bethanie, and told the General that he
-was on no account to go without them.
-
-The order to turn out reached the regiment just before midnight; they
-had three miles to march to the station, and were entrained at 3.30 a.m.
-
-{256}
-
-That same morning, April 4, at about 6 o'clock, the scouts and some
-mounted infantry started from Bethanie to reconnoitre towards
-Reddersburg, which was about twelve miles distant, and an hour later
-they sent in a message that they could hear the firing.
-
-When the five companies of the Camerons and the mounted infantry from
-Edenburg had joined him at Bethanie, Gatacre started at the head of the
-column. At 9.30 a.m. another message was sent back by the Officer
-Commanding the scouts to say that firing had ceased for half an hour.
-Gatacre pushed on till he reached a ridge west of the village, but he
-was still five or six miles from the scene of the fight when he learnt
-through a loyal colonial that two hours earlier the British had
-surrendered to a force of Boers between two and three thousand strong.
-
-[Sidenote: Too late]
-
-It was then 11 o'clock, and the relief column was at least five miles
-from the scene of the misfortune.
-
-The General called a halt, and eventually decided that his troops,
-being mainly infantry, could do nothing in the way of pursuit of a
-mounted enemy. After resting for an hour or so, Gatacre came to the
-conclusion that the safer course would be to retire on the railway, for
-it must be remembered that he had received the most precise orders "not
-to move against the Boers until he had satisfied himself that their
-strength and position warranted his doing so with success."[18]
-
-
-[18] See _Official History_, vol. ii. p. 311.
-
-
-{257}
-
-About four miles had been accomplished on the return journey, when a
-messenger arrived from the Chief Staff Officer ordering the column to
-return and occupy Reddersburg. Accordingly the men retraced their
-steps and settled down for the night as best they could; but at
-midnight a telegram reached the General containing very urgent
-counter-orders:
-
-
-"The C.-in-C. directs that you retire to Bethanie during this night so
-as to reach Bethanie to-morrow morning, as our information leads us to
-believe that the enemy are moving down in the Reddersburg direction and
-you are not strong enough to oppose a large force."[19]
-
-
-[19] From original text.
-
-
-The column started off again at 2 a.m. April 5.[20]
-
-
-[20] The movements of the Relief Column are taken from _The 79th News_,
-special issue entitled "South African War Record," p. 17. The hours
-differ slightly from those given in the _Official History_.
-
-
-We are not concerned here with the fatigues of the march from
-Dewetsdorp, nor with the particular stress which led to capitulation.
-It is enough to know that although a messenger had succeeded in getting
-through the enemy's lines, and although the casualties numbered only
-ten killed and thirty-five wounded out of 591 men of the regular army,
-some one betrayed his comrades' honour, and the whole party was
-captured.[21] If this column had been able to hold on an hour or so
-longer, there would have been no Reddersburg incident. In the same
-way, {258} if more prompt and more energetic measures had been taken
-from Headquarters to rescue the column from the perilous situation
-created by the defeat at Sannah's Post, the little force could easily
-have been brought into Bloemfontein with the help of cavalry. As a
-matter of fact there were on April 2 three cavalry brigades camped at
-Springfield, Rustfontein, and Bloemspruit respectively, all of which
-lie just outside the capital to the south and east.
-
-
-[21] NOTE.--The Officer Commanding was exonerated from all blame in
-this matter.
-
-
-In the meantime, what had become of the other detachments? At Wepener,
-four days later, a force of 1,898 men, composed almost entirely of
-Colonial Corps, under the command of Colonel Dalgety of the Cape
-Mounted Rifles, was attacked by De Wet and blockaded for fourteen days;
-but so skilfully, under the guidance of Major Ronald Maxwell, R.E., did
-the men entrench themselves, that the total casualties at the end of
-the siege were only 169.
-
-The other columns, at Smithfield, Helvetia, and Rouxville, were only
-saved by the skilful handling of Major Allen of the Royal Irish Rifles,
-who collected them all and withdrew on Aliwal North, and by the heroic
-spirit of the men themselves. The detachment from Helvetia marched
-seventy-three miles in fifty-two hours, and that from Smithfield
-forty-five miles in thirty-six hours. General Brabant sent out some
-empty waggons to meet the exhausted infantry, but, though almost
-barefoot and reeling with fatigue, they refused to accept the lift,
-saying that if they did so the good name of the regiment would suffer.
-
-{259}
-
-The story of all these detachments must be looked at as a whole, as a
-policy. It was the defeat at Sannah's Post which, coming "like a bolt
-from the blue," changed the whole situation; "the dispositions of the
-troops, designed to restore peace, were (now) not merely inadequate,
-they were wholly inappropriate."[22] It is difficult to see how the
-position of the Dewetsdorp detachment differs from that of the others,
-all of which were but the execution of the policy sketched in the
-telegram from the Field-Marshal to the War Office of March 21, given on
-page 243.
-
-
-[22] See _Official History_, vol. ii. p. 305.
-
-
-On April 9 Sir Herbert Chermside arrived at Springfontein to take over
-the command of the Third Division, and the next day the following
-letter reached Sir William Gatacre:
-
-
-"_From Chief of the Staff, S.A.F.F._
-
-"SIR,
-
-"I am directed by the Field-Marshal Commanding-in-Chief in South Africa
-to inform you that his lordship has decided, though with much regret,
-to relieve you of your present command. You will therefore be good
-enough to make over the command of the 3rd Division to Major-General
-Sir Herbert Chermside, G.C.M.G., C.B., and proceed to England at an
-early date.
-
-"I have the honour to be, Sir, "Your obedient servant, "B. DUFF,
-_Colonel, for Major-General,_ "_Chief of the Staff, S.A.F. Force._"
-
-
-When the camp woke up on the morning of the 11th their ex-commander was
-gone. The {260} following letter reflects the spirit in which his
-staff officers looked at the matter.
-
-
-"REDDERSBURG, _April_ 12, 1900.
-
-"It is with a heavy heart indeed that I write this. Why, oh why did
-they treat our General so hardly, so unfairly? We know nothing except
-the bare facts. All are sorry and grieved, and many question the
-fairness, the justice of the action taken. No one worked harder than
-he did. I may say it would have been impossible to do so. He never
-spared himself. Luck, cursed luck, has been all against him. I heard
-two days ago from England that they believed that he had attacked at
-Stormberg with two battalions when he had eight at his command,--such a
-gross mistake! Now the luck having turned, as it appeared, the
-unfortunate Royal Irish Rifles get caught again, although no possible
-blame could be attached to him by reasonable men. I worked out the
-orders and telegrams he had given and received myself, and I know what
-was done. They seem to have attributed the blame of it to him--most
-unfairly. He was so good about it and so plucky, blaming no one and
-taking the blow so courageously,--man could not be braver under any
-circumstances. All the interest of the campaign has gone for me, and
----- feels for him as much as I do.
-
-"We shall never have a chief whom we can serve more loyally, who was
-always considerate and even-tempered, and spared himself so little.
-His faults, if I may use the expression, are his virtues, devotion and
-loyalty and energy--to use all in the service of his country. It has
-been a great blow to us all.
-
-"Believe me, we feel it as the loss of a personal and dear friend."
-
-
-
-
-{261}
-
-CHAPTER XVII
-
-1900-1903
-
-BACK TO COLCHESTER
-
-Since the Book of Job was written steadfastness in adversity has ever
-been considered as a virtue of high order. Indeed, what need is there
-in a Christian country to insist that want of success in the affairs of
-this world is not incompatible with an unsullied conscience and a
-stainless shield?
-
-From Capetown Gatacre sent a telegram begging Lord Roberts to give some
-reason for his action, and in reply received a letter which (while
-declining to discuss the main issue) closes with the following sentence:
-
-
-"This action, which Lord Roberts has felt it his duty to take, casts no
-slur whatever upon your honour, your personal courage, your energy and
-zeal, which are beyond all question."[1]
-
-
-[1] For the reasons given by Lord Roberts to the War Office, see the
-dispatch printed at the end of this volume, p. 286; reprinted from the
-_Official History_, vol. ii. p. 614.
-
-
-This was the spirit that welcomed Sir William on his arrival in
-England; for he came straight home and calmly awaited the verdict of
-the War Office in London.
-
-The first to pour balm on her servant's {262} wounded spirit was Her
-Gracious Majesty Queen Victoria. Gatacre reached London on May 12, and
-on the 24th, in the _Birthday Gazette_, his name appeared as a
-recipient of the Gold Medal of a new Order, the Kaiser-i-Hind, which
-the Queen had just created for the recognition of Public Service in
-India. This first distribution of the decoration had regard more
-especially to services rendered in dealing with the plague and the
-famine of 1897 and the following years.
-
-Only five days after Gatacre's arrival the relief of Mafeking, after
-217 days' siege, was celebrated in London with much popular rejoicing.
-This uproarious joy jarred mercilessly on Sir William's mood, but the
-whole country exulted, and there was no way of escape. The daily
-papers too were full of South African news, so that even this source of
-idle distraction carried its sting. And so it happened that when an
-old friend came to call on the morning of May 24, and to inquire after
-the General's health (which to most men seemed to provide an obvious
-explanation of his return), he had the pleasure of informing us of the
-new decoration.
-
-On the following day Gatacre received instructions to resume command of
-the Eastern District.
-
-[Sidenote: A welcome home]
-
-British hearts, ever loyal to brave men in distress, did not stop to
-quibble over professional responsibilities; they remembered the years
-of devoted service, they knew of his personal gallantry, and they
-trusted time to prove their faith. Colchester struck the first {263}
-note: the townspeople turned out in their thousands to cheer one whom
-they knew and loved. During the drive from the station to the camp the
-crowd massed in the streets was so great and so vociferous that the
-wave of feeling was overwhelming, and it was with a sense of relief
-that we reached our destination.
-
-In the following June the Prince and Princess of Wales (as we then
-spoke of Their present Majesties) honoured Norwich with a visit to open
-the new buildings of the Jenny Lind Hospital. The whole population of
-the royal borough was in the streets that lovely summer day, and made
-their loyalty known in the usual way; but they did not forget to keep a
-sharp lookout for the man who had come from the war, for the man who
-had so lately fought in their battles; and as the cheers died away
-after the royal carriage had passed out of sight, they were renewed
-with deafening insistence as each voice strained to make its message of
-love and esteem reach the ears of one who with his own eyes had seen
-the enemy. For I believe that in those days of popular excitement over
-the occupation of Pretoria, Gatacre was, to the man in the street, the
-personification of a successful war that had just reached its
-conclusion.
-
-This burst of feeling, howsoever prompted, was very touching, but what
-did more to encourage Sir William than any other single event was the
-gracious and cordial greeting accorded to him by His Royal Highness
-when, as in duty bound, the General had the honour of receiving {264}
-him at Norwich Station. Her Royal Highness the Princess of Wales also
-sent for me in the course of the afternoon and was pleased to use very
-kindly and appreciative words about my husband's services to his
-country, and her sympathy with his immediate trouble.
-
-When in the round of annual inspections the General visited the Cadet
-Corps of Bedford Grammar School, he had further evidence of his
-personal popularity in the attentions showered upon him by all the boys
-in the school, who insisted on dispensing with the usual mode of
-traction and harnessing themselves to his carriage. It was the same
-thing at Clacton, when the Lord Mayor of London opened the Essex
-Agricultural Show. Sir William had been detained in his office, and
-only reached the show-ground just before the luncheon assembly broke
-up; the speaker within the tent was at a loss to account for an
-untimely uproar. It was the crowd outside who had recognised "General
-Gatacre," and, as he entered, those inside the tent took up the strain.
-
-However gratifying such popular outbursts may be in their spontaneity,
-it is the reasoned judgment of his peers that a man ultimately values.
-The following telegram was received by the senior officer in the
-station on the day after our return to Colchester.
-
-
-"The members of the Aldershot Conservative Club are delighted to read
-of the deservedly enthusiastic welcome accorded to General Gatacre
-yesterday, and wish to convey through you {265} to the General their
-hearty greetings upon his safe return from the seat of war. We do not
-forget his services to the Empire, and we loyally reciprocate
-Colchester's sentiment."
-
-
-[Sidenote: Sympathy]
-
-It was in the summer of 1900 that the call arose for more troops for
-South Africa, which brought several new county Yeomanry Corps and the
-Volunteer Service Companies into existence; it was Sir William's
-business to promote the formation of all such corps within the nine
-counties that made up the Eastern District, and to contribute in every
-way to their efficiency. This brought him into personal contact with
-the leading men of all parts of his command, for it will be remembered
-how much public spirit was shown in the revival of interest in the
-Auxiliary Forces that marked the years 1900 and 1901. I should like
-here to record how helpful were the loyalty, the confidence, and I may
-say the sympathy (if that word can stand for an unexpressed sentiment
-where silence alone befitted the dignity of the personnel on both
-sides) that he received on all sides; and how the cordial relations
-established between the General and the county society of his district
-encouraged him to tread patiently and hopefully the path he had traced
-for himself. In many cases the official visit to some great man's
-house to inspect the corps encamped in his park led to shooting visits
-in the following autumn--a delightful testimony to the undiminished
-power of his personal charm.
-
-{266}
-
-On the other hand, those in daily converse with Sir William, both in
-his office and outside, were not blind to the sustained effort on his
-part that was necessary to carry him through those trying days of
-eclipse. One under whom he had served in India wrote, with the insight
-of true affection, for the guidance and inspiration of another:
-
-
-"I feel that it is very difficult for Gatacre to face all that he has
-to bear; but I feel certain that through it all he has exhibited
-soldierly qualities of a high order, that must be appreciated; but his
-return home will be very difficult for him to accept, and I fear he
-will have no opportunity of justifying himself. You must, you know, be
-in very good heart, and feel very brave for his coming."
-
-
-It was very difficult for Gatacre to bear, and he never forgot
-
- The hopes by weakness foiled, or evil fate,
- The slander, the dumb heart-break, and the pain.
-
-It was incontrovertibly the fiercest trial to which he could have been
-subjected.
-
-Those who have only known suffering when it comes shrouded in the
-simple majesty of death can have no measure of the additional
-bitterness of blows dealt by the hand of man, nor the torture endured
-by a righteous man when his honour is affected.
-
-Gatacre had known what it was to suffer in his private life, but then
-his profession had come {267} to his assistance, and by flinging
-himself with all his natural vigour into its arms for shelter and
-comfort he had triumphed over his pain. In this case he had been given
-a second chance, he had been allowed to be happy again. The laurels
-that he had reaped doubled their value in his eyes in that there was
-another to share them. But his profession at all times had a far
-larger share of his heart than anything that contributed to his
-pleasure. That was the way he was made; his profession was identified
-with his duty, and for him there was nothing so enjoyable as those
-duties which taxed his endurance and his energy. His soldiering was
-all in all to him; it was his record; all he had to show; the building
-that he had built with the bricks that had been served out to him. In
-his own estimation he was nothing if not a soldier.
-
-Now, recalled, rejected, the worldly hope on which he had set his heart
-had turned to ashes in his hand: the ambition which had been his saving
-grace in the days of tribulation was lost to him now. Was this the
-guerdon for all the years of loving toil? Was this "the reward of it
-all"?
-
-Who shall say whence a man draws his reserves of strength? It seemed
-to some of us that in his own dauntless character Gatacre found
-unquenchable inspiration: his independence of the opinion of men, his
-own intimate knowledge of the facts of the case, his untarnished record
-of loyal service, and his own "triumphant endurance and conquering
-moral {268} energy"--these were things of which no one could deprive
-him.
-
- I will be patient and proud, and soberly acquiesce.
-
-
-[Sidenote: Hopes]
-
-With a supreme effort of steadfastness and a resolute courage he forced
-his faith in disinterested work to come to his rescue, but henceforth
-he was working not to deaden the pain of outraged sensibilities, not
-for his own advancement, but for the work's own sake--to forward the
-cause of the army in South Africa, for the simple service of the
-country. Nothing but his accumulated powers of silent endurance, his
-proud indifference to his own feelings, aided by the response that his
-speechless loyalty won from his daily companions, could have sustained
-him through those three and a half long years while he silently and
-quietly did his duty. Borrowing the words of another we may say that
-"his military experience had intensified his natural horror of schism
-and lukewarm co-operation, and magnanimity was a stronger force than
-any personal consideration."
-
-Now I contend that in achieving this triumph of discipline Gatacre
-reached a loftier level in the sight of God and man than any to which
-high appointments could have raised him; and I believe that his example
-and his memory in this respect alone will outlive the story of many
-battlefields, and that he will thus have transformed a story of
-momentary defeat into an everlasting victory.
-
-This attitude implied a rare simplicity and a {269} profound knowledge
-of the world. He preferred to accept misconstruction and
-misrepresentation rather than betray the lofty promptings of his own
-soul; and he was at the same time perfectly conscious that any attempt
-(even though successful in the main) to set himself right in the eyes
-of the world would alienate his friends and make enemies. These words
-are something more than a speculative analysis of what might have been
-his frame of mind; for the latter argument was the ground of his
-refusal to accept any of the several offers he received from writers
-who asked his sanction for the preparation of articles throwing light
-on the events in which he had taken part.
-
-As the General recovered his balance and settled down to the routine of
-his work, his natural buoyancy returned, and he once more took a
-pleasure in all that went on around him. Hopes that things might work
-out all right in the end arose to cheer him, and there was much to
-foster such an idea.
-
-When the South African War Commission was initiated, he hoped that this
-would give him a chance to explain matters, imagined that it would be a
-confidential court of inquiry, a sort of hearing in camera, where,
-without insubordination or disloyalty, he would be encouraged to speak.
-In May 1903 he was summoned to give evidence. On their arrival all the
-witnesses are taken aside by one of the Commissioners and formally
-cautioned not to say anything that might be used against them. To
-Gatacre these words carried a personal meaning, though the phraseology
-completely puzzled {270} him. He failed to see how anything that was
-true could be so used, and could find no purpose in the warning. The
-Commissioners, however, confined their attention to questions of
-efficiency and other generalities, and no interest was shown in his
-personal affairs. And thus this hope of salvation vanished. One touch
-of character showed itself: he tells the Commissioners how he raised
-companies of mounted infantry from the battalions in his command, and
-goes on to say that as soon as the men had learnt to ride and to
-perform their special duties, he was ordered to send them forward to
-Army Headquarters, so that his own force was constantly denuded of
-mounted troops. In the proof submitted for correction his reply to an
-obvious question appeared as "I never complained." He struck out the
-past tense, and it stands as his motto: "I never complain."[2]
-
-
-[2] _South African War Commission_, vol. iii. p. 277.
-
-
-[Sidenote: Departure]
-
-Another circumstance in the last year of his command revived his hopes
-of re-employment. This was a visit by the Commander-in-Chief to
-Colchester and other places in the Eastern District. Everything had
-gone very well, the Commander-in-Chief had expressed himself highly
-satisfied with all that he had seen, and on the last day, at a garden
-party at Chelmsford, the Chief Staff Officer handed on the encouraging
-message that Lord Roberts had been much pleased with his visit, and
-that he had remarked a higher tone amongst officers and men at
-Colchester than at any other camp. This was, of {271} course, said in
-private conversation, but it was taken as "inspired."
-
-In August of the same year, 1903, when preparations were being made for
-extensive manoeuvres to be held on Salisbury Plain, Gatacre was
-appointed as Umpire-in-Chief of the Blue Army. This was a good omen,
-for it seemed incredible that a post of such importance in the training
-of the troops engaged should be given to an officer who was likely soon
-to be struck off the active list, who was, so to speak, already cast.
-
-That he had a genuine belief that his services might yet be utilised by
-the State in some capacity is shown by his decision to go on half pay.
-In the summer of 1903 he called on the Secretary of State for the
-Colonies and asked him to consider his name for any suitable post in
-that Department. I believe that he would have taken the Governorship
-of any island, regardless of its size or climate, just for the love of
-the service of the State--just for the pleasure of using powers that he
-knew himself still to possess unimpaired.
-
-The term of the command ran out on December 8, 1903. That he should
-vacate the post without immediate prospect of re-employment was in
-itself a bitterness to him, and chilled the expectations that had
-contributed to the harmony of his days.
-
-His memory hung about Colchester for many years. It was not merely
-that his portrait hung in the Soldiers' Institute that he had opened,
-{272} nor that he had won many extra comforts for both officers and men
-in the new barracks that were built under his direction. It was more
-than this; it was the weight of his name, the tradition of love and
-esteem that the name revived. When the men were decorating their rooms
-for Christmas 1906 they made a banner which carried these words: "To
-the memory of Major-General Sir William Forbes Gatacre--one of the
-best." This spontaneous tribute was set up nearly a year after his
-death, and four years after he had left Colchester, a time long enough
-for the reliefs to have removed all the battalions that had known him
-there; but there was scarcely a regiment in the service that had not
-known him somewhere in his thirteen years' service as General Officer.
-
-
-
-
-{273}
-
-CHAPTER XVIII
-
-1904-1906
-
-ABYSSINIA
-
-Although Gatacre undoubtedly indulged hopes of further employment, he
-had not much confidence in such expectations. While prepared to move
-onwards should his desires be fulfilled, he was simultaneously
-safeguarding his retreat.
-
-During the manoeuvres he had made inquiries about the working of the
-Remount Department in the counties, and had discovered that there was a
-post open to him which would provide both congenial occupation and
-reasonable remuneration, namely L500 a year in addition to pension.
-
-He bought a little house in the Cotswold Hills, and for the first few
-weeks enjoyed the leisure, as he had always enjoyed the leisure of his
-sixty days' leave.
-
-Although the post he coveted was vacant, and although similar posts
-were being worked by retired officers of his rank, unaccountable
-difficulties arose in securing it. In the hope of wearing down these
-obstacles, whatever might be their origin, Gatacre got permission to
-hold the post for eight months, but the pay attached was withheld, the
-arrangement being that he was to draw allowances only, {274} on the
-scale fixed by Government for all such duty, which is calculated to
-cover actual travelling expenses. The work consisted mainly of
-overhauling and replenishing the list of registered horses, over an
-area of twenty-two counties. These included Wales and Cornwall to the
-west, while on the east a line drawn from Cheshire to Hampshire
-inclusive of these two counties would form a rough boundary. He very
-soon got profoundly interested in his task.
-
-He invented a new system of tabulating all sorts of information useful
-to the Department. He found that to complete what was properly a
-year's work in eight months involved working under more pressure than
-could justly be expected, more especially as his services were
-voluntary; but the old incentive of reaching his own self-imposed
-standard would not let him leave his work unfinished. The facts he had
-collected were useless, his labour would be in vain, unless he could
-record them in a form that would be handy for reference. His reports
-were to be the _vade mecum_ of the Remount and Yeomanry Officer in each
-county; there was one little volume for each county, and a General
-Directory for use at Headquarters. Permission was obtained from Sir
-Evelyn Wood, commanding the Second Army Corps, to employ an army clerk
-and two typewriting clerks (women) in an office in Salisbury, and there
-Gatacre worked for six weeks in July and August 1904. In order to
-complete his task in the allotted time, he had to stick so closely to
-his desk that he {275} grudged the loss of working hours which would be
-the consequence of a Sunday at home. But it occurred to him that as
-the nights were short and cool he could save the time that would be
-wasted in the train by doing the journey by night on his bicycle. The
-distance was sixty-four miles; the first time it worked very well and
-he met with no mishap, but on the return journey he punctured at 2
-a.m., and as it was too dark to do his own repairs, he had to complete
-the last twenty-four miles on foot.
-
-[Sidenote: On the road]
-
-A fortnight later he was on the road again, but decided to come by day.
-He telegraphed to me that he was leaving Salisbury at noon on Saturday.
-Having remonstrated with him about making this journey in one stretch,
-as he had done previously, I wired that I would meet him at Malmesbury
-at 5 p.m., reckoning that he could not complete his forty-eight miles
-in less than five hours, and that my presence would ensure a break in
-the long spin. He arrived five minutes before time, but we did not
-start off again till six. On another occasion he started at daybreak,
-and we met at nine o'clock for breakfast at Malmesbury. His age was
-then sixty; the story is told in order to show not only that he still
-possessed staying powers above the average, but that he still found the
-highest delight in using such powers.
-
-In September he was informed that the Remount Department had no longer
-any use for his services. Across the letter to this effect I find
-written in his own hand "Disappointing, {276} very!" Once more it
-seemed to him that his devotion and exertion counted for naught; he had
-done good work, but he had mysteriously failed to make it of any
-account.
-
-[Sidenote: 1905]
-
-There was, however, an interpretation of the situation which, though
-hidden from his eyes, can be read between the lines of the file of
-correspondence. He could see and could gauge the usefulness of his
-services and ideas, but his humble-mindedness hid from him the fact
-that it was his own value that stood in his way. His highly trained
-administrative faculties immediately grasped all the bearings and
-possibilities of the problem before him, and he could not resist the
-desire to improve upon existing methods. This was not what the
-Department wanted. Although willing to admit the intrinsic merits of
-his scheme, the authorities were not prepared to put in force such a
-comprehensive measure of reorganisation; so that while they could
-honestly say that his "work would serve as a model," they had no option
-but to discontinue using a tool that was too powerful, too keen, for
-their purpose. His military rank and his administrative ability made
-it impossible to employ him in the subordinate position that he coveted.
-
-[Sidenote: Retired]
-
-Yet another blow was hanging over him. On March 22,1905, he went to
-London to attend the Memorial Service to His Royal Highness the Duke of
-Cambridge in Westminster Abbey. At such a gathering he naturally found
-many friends (more especially as the Duke had been Colonel-in-Chief of
-the Middlesex Regiment), {277} and, according to one who was amongst
-the number, it was a pleasure to see how many distinguished men came to
-greet him, civilians as well as soldiers, and among them men of
-political standing who knew him more by reputation than in person.
-This was the last flicker of his public life, for when he returned to
-the country that evening the intimation of his immediate retirement lay
-among his correspondence. By contrast to his mood when a few hours
-earlier he had stood honoured among his peers, this letter seemed a
-stinging blow, and I can confidently say that he did not expect it.
-There were still eight months to run before he reached the age of
-sixty-two, at which point he would (in the event of his not having been
-promoted to the rank of Lieutenant-General) have had to "retire" under
-the regulations.
-
-The one thing that we had vaguely dreaded had come to pass. The thing
-was unthinkable, but it was true--the words in his friend's letter had
-become prophecy: he was to "have no opportunity of justifying himself,"
-no chance of obliterating the slur that had been cast on his name. His
-career was at an end, and it had closed a dishonoured career, when to
-have held one more appointment, however insignificant, would have
-implied recognition of the facts of the case and compensation for the
-hasty judgment.
-
-It was some time in the summer of 1905 that the late Sir Lepel Griffin
-invited Gatacre to sit on the board of the Kordofan Trading Company.
-{278} We welcomed the new interest. I thought that the pretext for
-regular visits to London was a desirable thing; I liked to think of his
-moving amongst busy men, and having something to occupy his mind.
-There was no idea of making a fortune; we had very little spare
-capital, and he only invested the small amount necessary to qualify as
-a Director.
-
-From the first he foresaw the opportunity that might arise of visiting
-the territory specified in the concession. The prospect attracted him
-wildly. As the season approached when such a proposition could be
-seriously entertained, his spirits rose, and he revelled in the idea of
-starting off for the desert; he took the keenest pleasure in preparing
-every contrivance for his comfort that his experience of camp-life
-could suggest; he set about getting books and pamphlets in which he
-could learn the history of the trade in rubber and the chemical
-processes of its manufacture.
-
-A telegram which reached us on November 10, asking whether he could be
-ready to start by the Peninsular and Oriental night mail of the 17th,
-lifted him into the highest spirits: from that moment he talked of
-nothing but tents, rifles, and such-like necessities, and thought of
-nothing but the valuable report that he would prepare for his
-co-Directors.
-
-To those who have been inclined to blame me for letting him go, I would
-reply that it still appears to me that any attempt to stop him would
-have been dictated by selfish motives. He was offered a delightful
-trip, one that would {279} afford him all those arduous pleasures that
-his soul loved. Why should I stand in his way? I did desire greatly
-to accompany him, but in such a short space it would have been
-impossible to wind up his affairs and so set me free to go.
-
-[Sidenote: Up the Nile]
-
-The rubber forests that were the objective of the trip lay in
-Abyssinia, east and south of Addis Abeba. The party consisted of the
-General, in command; an experienced Syrian trader named Idlibi, who had
-acted as his interpreter during the Egyptian Campaign of 1898; one or
-two men of a similar class, and a suitable number of servants and
-porters. Amongst Sir William's three personal servants, one was a
-Mahommedan bearer from India, with whom he could talk freely in
-Hindustani, and who could therefore act as interpreter to the Arab
-servants. The route selected involved a trip in steamers of about 500
-miles up the White Nile to Taufikia, and then, turning eastward, a
-further 250 miles up the tributary river Sobat, which in its upper
-reaches is called the Baro, to Gambela, from which it is 300 miles by a
-good caravan track to Addis Abeba.
-
-At Fashoda, which is now officially called Kodok, the party came across
-an English missionary boat. Gatacre went on board and had tea with the
-five missionaries a few days before Christmas.
-
-It was hoped that there would have been enough water in the river to
-float the shallow craft right on to Gambela, but first one boat and
-then the two smaller craft ran aground. {280} It was therefore
-necessary to open communications from Keg, where the last barge
-stranded, to Gambela by road, a distance of about thirty-eight miles.
-Leaving Idlibi in charge of the caravan, Sir William accomplished this
-march on foot in three days, accompanied by his servants and a few
-porters.
-
-[Sidenote: 1906]
-
-Gambela is an important trading centre, and was the first objective of
-the journey. Politically it is known as an Enclave--that is, a tract
-of country leased by the King of Abyssinia to the Soudan Government.
-It thus becomes a frontier post of the Soudan, and has a small
-Soudanese garrison, which in January 1906 was under the command of the
-Memour Mehined Riad Effendi.
-
-The Memour was exceedingly hospitable to Sir William, receiving him as
-a guest in his house, and doing everything in his power to facilitate
-his journey. Gatacre's letters speak most gratefully of the kindness
-he received at this officer's hands. At Gambela he discovered the
-Company's agent, and arranged with him to procure three hundred
-coolies, who should march to Keg, and then carry the merchandise from
-the boats along the track by which Sir William himself had just
-travelled.
-
-[Sidenote: His death in the desert]
-
-Having completed his business, Gatacre started back to join Idlibi, and
-report progress. On this return journey he was unfortunate in his
-camping-grounds. Tents being superfluous in such a climate, the party
-just bivouacked where they halted when the sudden darkness of {281} the
-tropics fell upon them. In a small notebook of daily jottings, which
-at his leisure Gatacre worked up into a more formal journal, I find the
-following entry on January 11, 1906: "Camped in a swamp--horrible
-water." He reached Keg next day, and was pleased to find that Idlibi
-had disembarked all the stuff and divided it into suitable loads for
-the men to carry. A few days later, being impatient at the non-arrival
-of the coolies, Gatacre decided again to make his way to Gambela, but
-was attacked with fever on the road, and died at a place known as
-Iddeni.
-
-His body was conveyed in a canoe to Gambela, where Mehined Riad Effendi
-saw to its burial in the Abyssinian Christian Cemetery, with due
-formality.
-
-On Idlibi's arrival with the merchandise a court of inquiry was held,
-at which the Memour presided. The depositions of all the servants were
-formally taken, and a translation of their words was forwarded through
-the British Consul at Addis Abeba to the Foreign Office in London. It
-appears therein that there was another Englishman moving to and fro
-during that week, and that he passed the General on the Tuesday
-previous to his death, which took place on Thursday, January 18, 1906.
-I mention this to show that the locality was not unknown to
-civilisation, and that Gatacre was not the only one to brave the
-climate.
-
-It is clear that darkness overtook him on the 11th while on swampy
-ground, so that he was {282} compelled to pass the night exposed to
-dangerous miasmas. I am convinced that had it not been for this
-misfortune, or some similar accidental misadventure, he would have
-returned with the rest of the mission on June 10 as young and
-high-spirited as he was on his departure.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Lofty designs must close in like effects:
- Loftily lying,
- Leave him--still loftier than the world suspects,
- Living and dying.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The key-note to Gatacre's character may be said to be willingness--an
-eager and fearless willingness to follow the right, the best, an
-unconditional spending of himself in carrying out the lofty conceptions
-of duty and service with which he was gifted. Everything he undertook,
-everything he accomplished, was done with an eager gallantry and a
-joyful zeal. The effect of these qualities was enhanced by a proud
-indifference to the cost to himself.
-
-His soldierly heedlessness in risking his life had its moral
-counterpart in his willingness to accept to the full all responsibility
-for his actions. How should one who feared not the Hand of God--"the
-arrow that flieth by day, nor the pestilence that walketh in
-darkness"--how should such a one fear the judgment of man?
-
-It is to the remarkable association of an exalted sense of duty with
-exceptional physical powers that Gatacre owes much of his distinction.
-His {283} standard of efficiency and discipline was as far above the
-average as were his powers of bodily endurance. His lowliness of mind,
-however, hid from him the true measure of his endowments, and led him
-to try to inspire all men with his own lofty ideals. During his long
-services as staff officer he was always ready to show to his Chief the
-enthusiastic co-operation that he expected from those who were serving
-under him. Though some officers may have smarted under his sarcasms,
-though they may have thought that he overtaxed his troops, it is
-admitted on all sides that his exactions were prompted solely by the
-interests of the service, and that his life was the expression of the
-precepts that he instilled. In the final act of his military career
-Gatacre proved that he was ready to do as he would be done by--to
-submit himself without question to the word of authority. Many a time
-had he been face to face with death; when something more precious than
-life itself was demanded he laid aside his reputation without a murmur.
-
-[Sidenote: The broken arcs]
-
- * * * * *
-
- Therefore to whom do I turn but to Thee, the ineffable Name?
- Builder and Maker, Thou, of houses not made with hands!
- What, have fear of change from Thee who art ever the same?
- Doubt that Thy power can fill the heart that Thy power expands?
- There shall never be one lost good! What was, shall live as before;
- The evil is null, is nought, is silence implying sound;
- What was good, shall be good, with, for evil, so much good more;
- On the earth the broken arcs; in the heaven a perfect round.
-
- * * * * *
-
-{284}
-
-[Sidenote: Finis]
-
-In a sense Gatacre was but the fulfilment of an everlasting type. It
-is this quality in him, this spark of the eternal Quixotic, of the
-eternal Heroic, of the eternal Tragic, that redeems his life from the
-commonplace, that has made him an example to some of his own
-generation, and may yet make him an example to some that are to come.
-Death has put an end to controversy. His fair fame remains; he is
-crowned with the halo of the departed, and his name is written on the
-long roll of true knights, _sans peur et sans reproche_.
-
-
-
-
-{285}
-
-In Memoriam
-
-On Saturday, May 26, 1906, an alabaster tablet bearing the inscription
-given below was dedicated by the Rev. H. Hensley Henson, Canon of
-Westminster, in Claverley Church, Shropshire.
-
-IN LOVING MEMORY OF
-
-SIR WILLIAM FORBES GATACRE
-
-MAJOR-GENERAL KNIGHT COMMANDER OF THE BATH A MEMBER OF THE
-DISTINGUISHED SERVICE ORDER HOLDING THE KAISER-I-HIND GOLD MEDAL AND OF
-THE ORDER OF THE MEDJIDIEH AND KNIGHT OF GRACE OF THE ORDER OF SAINT
-JOHN OF JERUSALEM
-
-THIRD SON OF EDWARD LLOYD GATACRE ESQ OF GATACRE IN THIS PARISH BORN AT
-HERBERTSHIRE CASTLE 3 DECEMBER 1843 DIED NEAR GAMBELLA ABYSSINIA 18
-JANUARY 1906
-
-HE SERVED WITH DISTINCTION IN THE HAZARA CAMPAIGN 1888 IN THE TON-HON
-EXPEDITION 1889-90 IN THE CHITRAL RELIEF FORCE 1895 HE COMMANDED THE
-BRITISH DIVISION IN THE ADVANCE ON KHARTOUM 1898 AND THE THIRD DIVISION
-OF THE SOUTH AFRICAN FIELD FORCE 1899-1900 NOT LESS MEMORABLE WAS HIS
-SERVICE AS PRESIDENT OF THE BOMBAY PLAGUE COMMITTEE 1897
-
-STRENUOUS IN ACTION AND GIFTED WITH AN EXALTED SENSE OF EFFICIENCY AND
-DISCIPLINE HE TROD HIS PATH IN LIFE WITH AN UNSWERVING DEVOTION TO DUTY
-HIS SIMPLICITY OF CHARACTER HIS GREAT COURAGE AND POWERS OF ENDURANCE
-HIS MANLY TENDERNESS OF HEART WON HIM THE ADMIRATION AND AFFECTION OF
-ALL WHO KNEW HIM
-
-"WHOM GOD LOVETH HE CHASTENETH"
-
-
-
-
-{286}
-
-REASONS FOR THE REMOVAL OF LIEUT.-GENERAL GATACRE[1]
-
-
-[1] See _Official History_, vol. ii. p. 614.
-
-
-In a memorandum to the Secretary of State for War, dated April 16,
-1900, Lord Roberts set forth his reasons for the step he had taken in
-removing Lieut.-General Sir William Gatacre from the command of the 3rd
-Division.
-
-With reference to the defeat at Stormberg, Lord Roberts explained the
-view he had taken as follows:
-
-
-"In my opinion, Lieut.-General Gatacre on this occasion showed a want
-of care, judgment, and even of ordinary military precautions, which
-rendered it impossible for me, in justice to those who might be called
-on to serve under him, to employ him in any position where serious
-fighting might be looked for. I was, however, most anxious to avoid,
-if it were possible, the infliction on him of the slur which
-necessarily attaches itself to a General who is removed from his
-command while on active service. I, therefore, refused to supersede
-him at the time when I assumed the chief command in South Africa,
-believing that I might safely employ him on the lines of communication
-or in any position not actually in the front.
-
-{287}
-
-"On March 28 I telegraphed to Lieut.-General Gatacre as follows:
-
-
-"'No. C. 696. If you have enough troops at your disposal I should like
-you to occupy Dewetsdorp. It would make the road to Maseru safe, and
-prevent the enemy from using the telegraph line to the south. _Let me
-know what you can do to this end._'
-
-
-"To the question italicised above, Lieut.-General Gatacre gave me no
-reply. In answer to my telegram he sent a list of movements then in
-progress in the southern part of the Orange Free State, east of the
-railway, which included a movement of two companies Royal Irish Rifles
-towards Dewetsdorp, where they were due to arrive on Sunday (April 1).
-
-"On March 30 he wired that two companies mounted infantry and three
-companies Royal Irish Rifles were moving on Dewetsdorp.
-
-"On March 31 I wired to Lieut.-General Gatacre that I considered
-Dewetsdorp too far advanced for security, and on April 1 he informed me
-that he had sent a despatch rider to Dewetsdorp with orders for the
-troops there to fall back on Reddersburg.
-
-"The result of these movements was that in falling back these companies
-were surrounded east of Reddersburg and, being without food or water,
-were eventually compelled to surrender. For this result I must hold
-Lieut.-General Gatacre responsible. Dewetsdorp is some forty-five
-miles by road east of the railway on which the mass of the troops were
-stationed, and is {288} therefore a position in which a small force is
-much isolated and might be in great danger if attacked. It appears,
-however, that Lieut.-General Gatacre ordered two companies mounted
-infantry and three companies Royal Irish Rifles to Dewetsdorp on his
-own responsibility, and failed to give me the information I asked for
-as to what he could do with the troops at his disposal as regards
-holding the place, which, if supplied, would have enabled me to judge
-of its adequacy or otherwise, and therefore whether Dewetsdorp should
-or should not be occupied. The small force he actually sent was
-entirely incapable of holding its own so far from sufficient force, and
-being partly composed of infantry was unable to move rapidly when a
-retirement became necessary. I consider that in thus isolating a small
-detachment, Lieut.-General Gatacre has shown a grave want of judgment
-which must necessarily shake the confidence of those under his orders
-and have a bad effect on the _moral_ of his troops. I am therefore
-unable to retain him in command of his division and have given orders
-for his relief and return to England.
-
-"ROBERTS, Field-Marshal"
-
-"BLOEMFONTEIN, "_April_ 16, 1900."
-
-
-
-
-{289}
-
-INDEX
-
-
-Addis Abeba, Abyssinia: W. F. G. starts for, Nov. 1905, 278
-
-Adjutant-General Bombay Army. See Staff Services.
-
-Aldershot: W. F. G. serves there as D.A.Q.M.G. in 1879-80, 37
- serves as G.O.C. Third Infantry Brigade, 1897-8, 184
-
-Aldershot Conservative Club: telegram of welcome from, 1900, 264
-
-Allahabad: W. F. G. quartered there, 1862-4, 14
-
-Allen, Colonel E., R.I.R., withdraws detachments to Aliwal North, 258
-
-Aliwal North, O.F.S.: headquarters of Colonial Corps, 1900, 244
-
-Appointments held by W. F. G. See Staff Services and War Services.
-
-Arnott, Colonel James: recollections of 1894, 121
-
-Assault-at-Arms, Bombay, 1894, 122-5
-
-Atbara: events leading to engagement on banks of, 1898, 199-202
- battle of, April 8, 1898, 203-6
-
-Aylmer, Maj.-Gen. F. J., V.C., C.B.: served with Royal
- Engineers on Chitral Relief Force, 1895, 131
-
-
-Baird, Captain A. McD.: killed during siege of Chitral, 1895, 141
-
-Bannu: letter written from, by W.F.G. while on tour, 1887, 67
-
-Barnardiston, Col. N. W., M.V.O., adjutant to 77th Regt.:
- recollections of, 55-9
-
-Battye, Col. L. R., 5th Goorkhas, killed near Oghi, 1888, 73
-
-Beluohistan. See Quetta, Fort Sandeman, etc.
-
-Bengough, Maj.-Gen. Sir Harcourt, K.C.B., late Middlesex Regt.:
- recollections of, 15
-
-Bethulie Bridge: saved by scouts of Third Division, 241
- removal of explosives by W. F. G. and Lieut. Grant, R. E., March,
- 1900, 241
-
-Black Mountain Expedition, or Hazara Field Force, 1888, 72-81
- Tribes: historical sketch of, 71-2
-
-Bloemfontein, O.F.S.: occupied by F.-M. Lord Roberts, March, 1900, 240
- garrison of, April 1900, 249
- W. F. G. proceeds to, for interview of, April 2, 1900, 254
-
-Bolan-Mushkaf Railroad: first mail train Nov. 30, 1896, 160
-
-Bombay: W. F. G. commands mil. district, 1894-7, 110-26
- testimonials by citizens of, 182
-
-Boots: unsatisfactory nature of, Egypt, 1898, 190
-
-Brabant, Maj.-Gen. Sir E. Y., K.C.B., commanding Colonial Corps,
- South Africa, 1899-1900, 240
- headquarters of, at Aliwal North, 244
- his detachment at Wepener to be reinforced, March 1900, 250
- sends waggons to meet infantry detachments, 258
-
-Broadwood, Maj.-Gen. R. G., C.B., A.D.C.: operations near
- Thaba' Nchu, 252
- at Sannah's Post, 253
-
-Brooke, Bt.-Lieut.-Col. R. G., D.S.O.: Orderly Officer
- Third Brigade, Chitral Relief Force, 1895, 142
- A.D.C. to W. F. G. in Egypt, 1898, 188
-
-Brooke, Robert, of Madeley Court: effigy of, in Claverley Church, 4
-
-Browne, Col. H. L., late 77th Regt, : recollections of, 29
-
-Buffs, the, 1st Batt. East Kent Regt.: form part of Third
- Brigade Chitral Relief Force, 1895, 129
-
-Buller, Gen. Sir Redvers, V.C., G.C.B., etc: sent to the Cape
- in command of Army Corps, Oct. 1899, 220
- dispositions made on arrival, 221
- telegrams sent for W. F. G.'s guidance, 223
- suggests night attack, 227
- approves unsuccessful attempt on Stormberg, 237
- anxious position of, Dec. 1899, 239
- relieves Ladysmith, March 1900, 240
-
-Bullets: unsatisfactory nature of, Egypt 1898, 191
-
-Burma, Lower: historical sketch of, 43-4
- Upper: under Mindon-min and King Theebaw, 44
- annexed by Proclamation, Jan. 1, 1886, 84
-
-
-Cambridge, H.R.H. the Duke of, K.G., G.C.B., etc.: Memorial
- Service to, March 22, 1905, 276
-
-Cameron Highlanders: 1st batt. in Egypt, 1898, 187
- march on Reddersburg, April 1900, 255
-
-Camp of Exercise, at Bangalore, 1884, 53
- at Delhi, 1885-6, 63-4
-
-Cape Colony: W. F. G. sent to reassure eastern portion of, Oct. 1899,
-221
- invasion by Boers, Nov. 1899, 224
-
-Channer, Lt.-Gen., V.C., C.B.; commanding No. 1 Column, Hazara Field
- Force, 1888, 75
- occupies Thakot, 80
-
-Chapman, Gen. Sir Edward, K.C.B.: Q.M.G. India, 1885-9, 64
-
-Chermside, Hon. Lt.-Gen. Sir H. C., G.C.M.G., K.C.B., takes over
- command, of Third Division, South Africa Field Force, 1900, 259
-
-Chitral Relief Force: See Chapter IX., 127-44
- W. F. G. to command Third Brigade, March 1895, 128
- advance over the Lowari Pass, 134-40
- reaches Chitral Fort, 141
-
-Churchill, the Right Hon. Winston Spencer, author of _The
- River War_, cited, 202, 209
-
-Clarke, Gen. Sir Charles Mansfield, G.C.B., G.C.V.O.: Director
- of manoeuvres on Salisbury Plain, 1899, 218
-
-Claverley: church of, ancient tombs therein, 4
- Manor of, mentioned in Domesday Book, 1
-
-Clements, Maj.-Gen. R. A. P., C.B., D.S.O.: commanding brigade
- on Salisbury Plain, 1899, 218
- orders given to, _re_ Norval's Pont Bridge, 242
-
-Colchester: headquarters of Eastern District; W. F. G. takes up
- command, Dec. 1898, 216
- departs for South Africa, Oct. 1899, 219
- resumes command, May 1900, 262
- hands over, Dec. 1903, 271
-
-Colenso: battle of, Dec. 1899, compared with attempt on Stormberg, 236
-
-Colville, Maj.-Gen. Sir Henry, K.C.B., 253
-
-Connaught, H.R.H. the Duke of, K.G., G.C.B., etc.; at Aldershot, 1874,
-34
-
-Crosthwaite, Sir Charles, K.C.S.I.: Chief Commissioner,
- Burma, 1887-90, 87
- report on administration by, cited, 90
-
-
-Dacoity: difficulties of suppression, 85
-
-Decorations worn by W. F. G.:
- D.S.O., 1889
- C.B., 1895
- Jubilee, 1897
- K.C.B., 1898
- Order of the Medjidieh, 2nd class, 1898
- Kaiser-i-Hind Gold Medal, 1900
- Coronation Medal, 1902
- War Medals:
- Indian Frontier, 2 clasps.
- Chitral 1895, 1 clasp.
- British Soudan.
- South Africa, Queen's medal, 2 clasps.
- Egyptian Soudan, 2 clasps.
-
-Delhi: Camp of Exercise at, 1884-5, 63-4
-
-Deputy Assistant Quartermaster-General, Aldershot, 1879-80. See
- Staff Services.
-
-Deputy Quartermaster-General, India, 1885-9. See Staff Services
-
-Derbyshire Regt.: with Third Division in South Africa, 1900, 237
- called up to headquarters, 245
-
-Dewetsdorp: telegram regarding occupation of, March 1900, 246
- geographical position of, 247
- party of occupation strengthened, 248
- arrival of detachment, 251
- anxiety about safety of detachment, 255
-
-Dimmock, Col. H. P., M.D., I.M.S.: recollections of, 1897, 167
-
-Dufferin and Ava, First Marquess of, Viceroy of India, 1885, 63
- receives Freedom of the City of Edinburgh, 1898, 215
-
-
-Eager, Lieut.-Col., R.I.R.; mortally wounded at Stormberg, 1899, 233
-
-East London, C.C.: W. F. G. disembarks at, Nov. 1899, 222
-
-Elles, Lieut.-Gen. Sir Edmond, G.C.I.E., K.C.B.: serves with Hazara
- Field Force, 1888, 76
-
-Egypt: campaign of 1898. See Chapters XII., XIII., 186-213
-
-Eyton, R. W.: author of _Antiquities of Shropshire_, cited, 1-3
-
-
-Forbes, William, Esq., of Callendar: maternal grandfather to W. F. G., 7
- William, son of above, M.P. for Stirlingshire, 7
- Jessie, sister to above: married Edward Lloyd Gatacre, Esq.;
- mother of W. F. G., 7
-
-Forced march on Berber, Feb. 1898, 191-7
-
-Forestier-Walker, Gen. Sir Frederick, G.C.M.G., K.C.B.: commanded
- Lines of Communication, South Africa, 1899, 222
-
-Fort Sandeman: official visit to, 1896, 150
- murderous outrage at, 1896, 151
-
-Franco-Prussian War: W. F. G. visits battlefields, 1870, 30
-
-Free Lance, steeplechase pony, Rangoon, 1882-3, 50
-
-French, Gen. Sir John, G.C.V.O., K.C.B., etc.: operations
- round Colesberg, C.C., 1899, 225
- operations round Thaba 'Nchu, O.F.S., 1900, 252
-
-Fryer, Sir Frederick, K.C.S.I.; Financial Commissioner,
- Burma, 1888-92, 89
-
-
-Galbraith, Maj.-Gen. Sir William, K.C.B.: commanding the River
- Column, Hazara Field Force, 1888, 74
- hands over Quetta District to W. F. G., while on leave for
- eight months, 1896, 148
-
-Gambela, Abyssinia: visited by W. F. G., 1906, 280
- W. F. G. buried at, 1906, 281
-
-Gatacre, feoffment held by royal grant, 2
- house at, curious specimen of domestic architecture, 5
- township of, 1
-
-Gatacre, ancestors and others, as named in text, in chronological order:
- Sir William de, suit subject to Wager of Battle, 2
- Sir Robert de, sat on jury, Grand Assizes, 1200, 2
- Sir Thomas de, estate escheated unjustly, 1368, 3
- Alice, his wife, appeals to King in Chancery, 3
- John, Groom of the Body to Henry VI.: High Sheriff
- of Shropshire, 1409, 3
- John, son of above, M.P. for Bridgnorth, 12th year of Edward IV., 3
- William, died 1577, interesting monument in Claverley Church, 4
- Francis, died 1599, his son, similar tablet, 4
- Thomas, brother to above, died 1593, distinguished divine, 4
- Thomas, his son (1574-1654), member of Westminster Assembly, 4
- Colonel Edward (1768-1849), grandfather to W. F. G., 6
- Edward Lloyd, Esq., the Squire (1806-1891), father of W. F. G., 6
- he died, Nov. 1891, 107
-
-Gatacre, Maj.-Gen. Sir John, K.C.B., late Indian Army: leaves home for
- India, 1867, 9
- serves in Burma, 1885-9, 81
- G.O.C. Nagpur District, 1891-6, 103
-
-Gatacre, William Forbes: For career of, see Promotions, Staff Services,
- War Services, and Decorations
-
-Ghazis: Marri outrage at Sunari Station, Beluchistan, 1896, 155
- W. F. G. conducts search-party, 156
-
-Goorkhas, 2nd batt. 4th Goorkha Rifles, part of Third Brigade Chitral
- Relief Force, 1895, 129
-
-Gordon, Gen. Charles, C.B.: fall of Khartoum, 1885, 187
- Memorial Service to, Sept. 1898, 212
-
-Graham, Maj.-Gen. Sir Thomas, K.C.B.: _re_ Sikkim, 1888-9, 68
-
-Grant, Major P. G., R.E.: removes explosives from Bethulie Bridge,
- 1900, 241
-
-Grant, Sir Francis, P.R.A., portrait by, 6
-
-Greaves, Gen. Sir George, G.C.B., K.C.M.G.: C.-in-C. Bombay Army,
- 1890-3, 96
- in railway accident, 1891, 105
-
-
-Hamilton, Gen Sir Ian, K.C.B., D.S.O.: commanding a Brigade on
- Salisbury Plain, 1899, 218
-
-Hardinge, Gen. the Hon. Sir Arthur, K.C.B.: C.-in-C. Bombay
- Army, 1881, 40
- visits W. F. G. in camp, 1884, 54
-
-Harris, Lord, G.C.S.I., etc.; Governor of Bombay, 1890-5, 108
-
-Hazara Field Force, 1888: W. F. G. as A.A. and Q.M.G., 70-81
-
-Hazaribagh, Bengal: W. F. G. joins 77th Regt. at, 1862, 14
-
-Hemis, monastery at. See Kashmir
-
-Herbertshire Castle, Stirlingshire: W. F. G. born at, Dec. 3, 1843, 7
-
-Hudson, Gen. Sir John D., K.C.B.: his death while C.-in-C. Bombay
- Army, 107
-
-
-Idlibi, Syrian trader and interpreter, with W. F. G. in Abyssinia,
- 1905, 279
- gives evidence, 1906, 281
- returns to England, June 1906, 282
-
-_Iolanthe_: performed by officers, 77th Regt., 1883, 51
-
-
-Kamptee, headquarters of Nagpur District: railway accident
- near, 1891, 103
-
-Kashmir: W. F. G. takes trip to, 1867, 17
- crosses the Zoji-La to Leh, 19
- visits Hemis, 20
- sees Burra Lama, 22
- visits Skardo, 25
-
-Kelly, Col. J. G., C.B.: advances from Gilgit, 1895, 129
- raises the siege of Chitral, 1895, 134
- on parade at Chitral, 141
-
-Kent, Gen. Henry, C.B., late 77th Regt.: at Allahabad, 1862, 14
- at Aldershot, 1874, 34
-
-Keyes, Gen. Sir Charles, K.C.B.: commanding First Division,
- Bangalore Camp of Exercise, 1884, 53
-
-Khaim Gali: headquarter camp on Black Mountain, 1888: W. F. G. marched
- from Khaim Gali to Indus and back, 75-8
-
-Kitchener, Gen. Viscount, G.C.B., etc.: Sirdar of Egyptian
- Army, 1898, 187
- orders advance of British Brigade, 192
- sends trophies to W. F. G., 206
- receives Freedom of City of Edinburgh, 1898, 215
- appointed C.S.O. to F.-M. Lord Roberts, 1899, 239
-
-Kunhar: headquarters of River Column, Hazara Field Force, 1888, 75
-
-
-Ladak, Leh. See Kashmir.
-
-Lahore: Durbar at, 1894, 120
-
-Leach, Col. H. P., C.B., D.S.O.: Mil. Sec. to C.-in-C., Bombay;
- in railway accident, 1891, 106
- with Sir John Hudson, 1893, 107
-
-Leeuwberg Kopje, O.F.S.: batt. of infantry called up to, 1900, 250
-
-Leir-Carleton, Maj.-Gen. R. L.: Master of Staff College Draghounds,
- 1873-4, 35
-
-Lincolnshire Regt., 1st Batt.: in Egypt, 1898, 193
-
-Lorelai, Beluchistan: official visit to, 150
- display by 15th Bengal Lancers, 1896, 151
- assassination of Col. Gaisford, 152
-
-Low, Gen. Sir Robert, G.C.B.: commanding Chitral Relief Force, 1895, 128
- dispatches quoted, 131-2
- parade at Chitral, 141
-
-Lowari Pass: description of, 135
-
-Lyttelton, Gen. Sir Neville, G.C.B., in Egypt, 1898, 208
-
-
-Magersfontein, battle of: compared with attack on Stormberg, 1899, 236
-
-Mahmoud, Dervish Emir: advance of, 1898, 197
- defeat and capture of, 202
-
-Malakand Pass: action during advance on Chitral, 1895, 128
-
-Mamugai: action during advance on Chitral, 1896, 131
-
-Mandalay: visited by W. F. G. in 1882, 46
- W. F. G. officiates in command of brigade, 1889-90, 86-97
-
-Manser, Surgeon-Major Robert: died of plague, 1897, 163
-
-Marris: outrage at Sunari Station, 1896, 155
-
-Maymyo, Upper Burma: W. F. G. makes flying visit to, 1890, 89-90
-
-McQueen, Lieut.-Gen. Sir John, G.C.B.: commanding Hazara Field Force,
- 1888, 74
-
-Memour Mehined Riad Effendi: Egyptian officer at Gambela, 1906, 280
- holds court of inquiry there, 281
-
-Methuen, Gen. Lord, G.C.B., etc.: marches to the relief of
- Kimberley, 221
-
-Middlesex Regt. See Seventy-seventh.
-
-Military Secretary: W.F.G. as. See Staff Services
-
-
-Nairne, Gen. Sir Charles, G.C.B.: C.-in-C. Bombay Army, 1893-7, 109
- telegram of congratulation from, 1896, 148
-
-Napier, Gen. Sir Robert, G.C.B., etc.: Mil. Member of Council, 1862:
- story of French Eagle, 14
-
-Northumberland Fusiliers: at Stormberg, 1899, 232
- M.I. Company sent to Dewetsdorp, 1900, 248
-
-Norval's Pont Bridge: telegram regarding tenure of, 1900, 242
-
-Norwich: Royal visit to, 1900, 265
-
-
-_Official History of the War in South Africa_, 1899-1902:
- quoted as under:
- account of attack on Stormberg, Dec. 1899, 231-3
- justification for ditto, 236
- _re_ deliberation of Gatacre's movements, 242
- telegram ordering occupation of Smithfield, 244
- telegram regarding occupation of Dewetsdorp, 246
- marginal note _re_ above cited, 247
- telegram _re_ movements of units of the Third Division, 248
- arrival of detachment at Dewetsdorp, 251
- results of action at Sannah's Post, March 31, 1900, 253
- cautionary telegram to W. F. G., 256
- situation subsequent to Sannah's Post, 259
-
-Omdurman: capture of, Sept. 2, 1898, 209
- letter describing same, 209-12
-
-
-Panjkora River: rescue of Private Hall, 1895, 131
-
-Pembroke Dock: W. F. G. with Depot Batt. there, 1868, 29
-
-Pig-sticking: while Mil. Sec., 1881, 41-2
- near Cutch-Bhuj, 1896, 146-8
-
-Pilcher, Maj.-Gen. T. D., C.B.: operations round Ladybrand, 1900, 252
-
-Plague, bubonic, at Bombay, 1897: See Chapter XI., 161-83
- total mortality from, 161
- cause of Surgeon-Major Manser's death, 163
- subject of two anonymous articles by W. F. G., 164
- appointment of Plague Committee, 166
- policy instituted by above, 168
- incidents of house-to-house visitation, 171-5
- opposition of Sunni Mahommedans, 177
- President of Poona Committee shot, 181
-
-Pole-Carew, Lt.-Gen. Sir Reginald, K.C.B., C.V.O.: movements and
- recommendations of, March 1900, 242
-
-Poona: W. F. G. as Adjutant-General there, 1890-4. See
- Chapter VII., 98-109
- outrage after Queen's birthday dinner, 1897, 181-3
-
-Prendergast, Gen. Sir H. N. D., V.C., G.C.B.: commanding Burmese
- Division, 1882, 43
- commanding Second Division Bangalore Camp of Exercise, 1884, 53
- asks for W. F. G. as Special Service Officer, 1885, 61
- account of his expedition to Mandalay, 1885, 82-4
-
-Promotions: William Forbes Gatacre:
- gazetted Ensign 77th Foot, Feb. 18, 1862
- Lieutenant 77th Foot, Dec. 23, 1864
- Captain 77th Foot, Dec. 7, 1870
- Major Middlesex Regt., March 23, 1881
- Lieut.-Col. Middlesex Regt., April 23, 1884
- Colonel, April 29, 1886
- Colonel substantive, Nov. 25, 1890
- Major-General, June 25, 1898
- retired March, 1904
-
-Punjab Infantry, 25th Regt.: part of Third Brigade Chitral
- Relief Force, 1895, 129
-
-Putter's Kraal, C.C.: W. F. G. advances to, Nov. 1899, 225
-
-
-Quetta: visits while on tour as D.Q.M.G., 1887, 66
- W. F. G. officiates in command of District, 1896, 145-60
-
-
-Rangoon: history of occupation of, 43-4
- W. F. G. quartered there as A.Q.M.G., 1882, 43
-
-Reddersburg, O.F.S.: surrender near, April 1900, 257
-
-Remount Department: W. F. G. temporarily works for, 1903-4, 273-6
-
-_River War, The_: by the Right Hon. W. S. Churchill, quoted as under:
- _re_ efficiency of British Brigade Egypt, 1898, 190
- _re_ assault of zariba by above, 202
- _re_ position of G. O. C., cited, 202
-
-Roberts, Field-Marshal Earl, V.C., K.P., G.C.B., etc.;
- visits W. F. G. in camp at Bangalore, 54
- becomes C.-in-C. India, 1885, 63
- his covering letter to Dispatches (pubd. March 1900), cited, 235
- reaches Capetown as C.-in-C. South African Field Force, 239
- telegram to W.O. _re_ Proclamation, 243
- orders occupation of Smithfield, 244
- orders occupation of Wepener, 245
- telegram _re_ occupation of Dewetsdorp, 246
- summons W. F. G. to Bloemfontein, and forecasts his plans for
- the advance, 254
- expresses anxiety about the detachment at Dewetsdorp, 255
- sends 5 cos. Cameron Highlanders to Bethanie, 255
- orders the return of the Relief Column from Reddersburg, 257
- sends official letter instructing W. F. G. to proceed to
- England, April 1900, 259
- quotation from private letter _re_ recall, 263
- his official visit to the Eastern District, 1903, 270
-
-Robertson, Sir George Scott, K.C.S.I., M.P.: defended the Fort at
- Chitral, 129
-
-Royal Irish Rifles, 2nd Batt.: reaches Queenstown, C.C., 222
- quotation from officers' reports _re_ Stormberg, 233, 235
- sent to Smithfield, O.F.S., 245
- 2 cos. pushed on to Dewetsdorp, 248
- the O.C. directed to retire on Reddersburg, 251
- column surrenders at Mostert's Hoek, 257
- splendid marching by detachments from Smithfield, Helvetia, and
- Rouxville, 258
-
-Royal Military College, Sandhurst: W. F. G. there as cadet, 1860-1, 12
- W. F. G. there as professor, 1875-9, 36-7
-
-"Run amok": W. F. G. attempts to disarm man with pistol at Simla,
- 1887, 69
- letter _re_ above, 213
-
-Rundle, Lieut.-Gen. Sir Leslie, K.C.B., K.C.M.G.: commanding a Division
- on Salisbury Plain, 1899, 218
-
-
-Salisbury: W. F. G. works there on remount duty, 1904, 275
- bicycles to and fro, 275
-
-Salisbury Plain: W. F. G. commands a Division, 1899, 217-18
- Chief Umpire, Blue Army, 1903, 271
-
-Salt Lakes, Bupshu. See Kashmir
-
-Sandhurst. See Royal Military College
-
-Sandhurst, Lord, G.C.I.E. etc.: Governor of Bombay, 1895-9, 164, 166,
-180
-
-Sannah's Post, O.F.S.; engagement at, 1900, 251
- material results of engagement at, 253
- change brought about by engagement at, 259
-
-Seaforth Highlanders: 1st Batt. in Egypt, 1898, 188
- 2nd Batt. in Chitral, 1895, 129
-
-Seton, Col. H. J.: wounded at Stormberg, 1899, 233
-
-Seventy-seventh Regt., afterwards 2nd Batt. (D.C.O.) Middlesex Regt.:
- raised 1787, 13
- services and movements of, 14
- at Hazaribagh, Allahabad, Barreilly, and Peshawur, 14-17
- reaches Portsmouth, 1870, 29
- leaves Dover for Rangoon, 1880, 38
- moves to Secunderabad, 1883, 51
- W. F. G. in command, June 1884 to Dec. 1885, 55-61
-
-Shaw, F. B., Esq.: Resident at Mandalay, 1879, 46
-
-Sikkim: W. F. G. sketches Fort at Lingtu, 1887, 68
-
-Simla: W. F. G. and the servant "run amok, " 1887, 69
- rapid ride to Umballa and back, 1887, 70
-
-Sirdar, the: See Kitchener
-
-Sniping: during advance on Chitral, 1895, 143-4
-
-Snow, Brig.-Gen. T. D'O., C.B.: Brigade-Major, Egypt, 1898, 186
-
-South African War Commission, Report of, quoted, 247
- and again, 270
-
-Springfontein, O.F.S.: occupied by Third Division troops, 241
- troops at, April 3, 1900, 40
- scouts and 25 M.I., 255
-
-Staff College, Camberley: W. F. G. admitted, 1873, 33
- Drag-hounds, W. F. G. as First Whip, 34
-
-Staff Services, W. F. G.: Instructor in Surveying, B.M.C., 1875-9, 36
- D.A.A. and Q.M.G. Aldershot, 1879-80, 37
- A.A.G. (officiating) Secunderabad, 1880-1, 39
- Mil. Sec. (officiating) to C.-in-C. Bombay, 1881-82, 40
- A.Q.M.G. (officiating) Rangoon, 1882, 43
- D.Q.M.G., Bengal, 1885-90, 61-97
- G.O.C. (officiating), Mandalay, 81-96
- A.-G. Bombay, 1890-4, 98-109
- G.O.C. Bombay, 1894-97, 110-82
- G.O.C. (officiating), Quetta, 1896, 148-60
- G.O.C. Third Infantry Brigade, Aldershot, 1897-98, 184-6
- G.O.C. Eastern District, 1898-1903, 216-71
-
-Stormberg, C.C.: Sir R. Buller suggests advance to, 223
- occupied by Boers, Nov. 1899, 224
- W. F. G. makes arrangements for the attack, 229
- description of the advance and assault, Dec. 10, 1899, 231-5
- casualties, 235
- compared with Magersfontein and Colenso, 236
-
-Sunari Station, Beluchistan: outrage at, 1896, 155
-
-Supya-lat, wife to King Theebaw, 45
- deported, 1885, 84
-
-Swann, Brig.-Gen. J. C., C.B.: A.A.G. to W. F. G. while commanding
- Bombay district; letter _re_ procedure quoted, 115
- recollections of, 119
-
-
-Thaba 'Nchu, O.F.S.: Sir John French's operations near, 247
- movements of troops preceding Sannah's Post, 251
-
-Theebaw, King of Burma: succeeds Mindon-Min, 1879, 44
- as owner of "Free Lance" (?), 50
- surrender of Mandalay, 1885, 83
-
-"_Times_" _History of the War_, quoted, as under:
- _re_ Col. Pole-Carew's movements, 1900, 243
- _re_ telegram about spreading proclamations, 244
- _re_ Col. Broadwood's position at Thaba 'Nchu, 252
-
-Transport officer, the: at Mandalay, 88-89
-
-Transport Service, the: P. and O. vessels, 122-5
-
-Toba Plateau, Beluchistan: Camp of Exercise at, 1896, 153
-
-Ton-Hon Expedition, 1889-90, 90-92
-
-Tournament at Bombay, 1894, 122-5
-
-
-Umballa: rapid ride from Simla, and back, 1887, 70
-
-
-War Services, W. F. G.: Hazara Field Force, 1888, as A.A. and
- Q.M.G., 70-81
- Ton-Hon Expedition, 1889-90 as Brig.-Gen., 90-92
- Chitral Relief Force, 1895, G.O.C. Third Brigade, 128-44
- Egypt, advance on Khartoum, 1898, G.O.C. commanding British
- Brigade and (subsequently) Division, 186-213!
- South African Field Force 1899-1900, G.O.C. Third Division, 219-60
-
-Warwickshire Regt. (Royal): 1st Batt. in Egypt, 1898
-
-Wauchope, Maj.-Gen. Andrew. C.B., C.M.G.; commanding First Brigade,
- Egypt, 1898, 208
- his brigade sent forward, 211
-
-Wepener, O.F.S.: telegram ordering occupation of, March 1900, 245
- W. F. G.'s anxiety as to safety of detachment, 246
- besieged by Boers, 258
-
-de Wet, Christian, Boer General; lays his plans for capture of
- Waterworks guard, March 1900, 252
- value of his victory at Sannah's Post, 253
-
-White, F.-M. Sir George, V.C., G.C.B., etc.: in Burma, 1885, 85
- entertains W. F. G. at Lahore, 1894, 120
- appoints W. F. G. to command Third Brigade, Chitral Relief Force,
- 1894, 128
- letter from, _re_ Marri Raid, 1896, 159
- starts for Natal, Sept. 1899, 219
- at Ladysmith, 221
- relief of Ladysmith, 240
-
-Wolseley, Gen. Sir George, G.C.B.: commanding Mandalay Brigade, 86
- returns to his command, 96
-
-
-
-
-_Printed by Hazell, Watson & Viney, Ld., London and Aylesbury._
-
-
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: Map of the UPPER NILE]
-
-[Illustration: Part of CAPE COLONY and the ORANGE FREE STATE]
-
-[Illustration: Map of THE SOUDAN & ABYSSINIA]
-
-
-
-
-THE MILITARY MEMOIRS OF LIEUT.-GEN. SIR JOSEPH THACKWELL, G.C.B.,
-K.H., Colonel 16th Lancers. Arranged from Diaries and Correspondence
-by Colonel H. C. Wylly, C.B. With Portraits, Maps, and other
-Illustrations. Demy 8vo. 15s. net.
-
-"The Memoirs of this fine old soldier, whose lot it was to see a vast
-amount of very hard fighting in many notable campaigns, are of quite
-exceptional interest.... Not only well worth reading on account of its
-general interest, but from which there is a very great deal to be
-learned."--United Service Magazine.
-
-
-A MARINER OF ENGLAND. An Account of the Career of William Richardson
-from Cabin-Boy in the Merchant Service to Warrant Officer in the Royal
-Navy (1780 to 1817), told in his own words. Edited by Colonel Spencer
-Childers, R.B., C.B. Demy 8vo. 10s. 6d. net.
-
-"Worth a dozen of the ordinary memoirs with which the market is
-flooded. For it is a genuine human document, a revelation of the
-thoughts and doings of a typical English sailorman during the most
-stirring years in our naval history.... We have found the book
-delightful reading."--Spectator.
-
-"... Such excellent stuff, and in such racy, straightforward English
-... uncommonly good reading. It makes us think of some of Captain
-Marryat's pictures of what they did at sea in the brave days of
-old."--Standard.
-
-
-TWO ADMIRALS: SIR FAIRFAX MORESBY, G.C.B. (1786 to 1877), and his son,
-JOHN MORESBY. A Record of Life and Service in the British Navy for a
-hundred years. By Admiral John Moresby. Illustrated. Demy 8vo. 14s.
-net.
-
-"This deeply interesting and delightfully entertaining volume."--Daily
-Telegraph.
-
-"One of the most entertaining and instructive books in modern naval
-literature.... In every line the book smacks of the sea and of the
-breezy nature of the British sailor."--The Globe.
-
-
-THE LIFE OF ADMIRAL SIR LEOPOLD MCCLINTOCK. By Sir Clements Markham,
-K.C.B., F.R.S With Maps and Illustrations. Demy 8vo. 15s. net.
-
-"No living sailor was so worthy to be the biographer of Sir Leopold
-McClintock as Sir Clements Markham.... Sir Clements Markham has
-written with much of the simplicity and reserve of the great explorer
-himself. Never for a moment does he diverge from quiet narrative ...
-it is an inspiring record of one who did his duty as he saw it, and
-found the path to fame by his own fine qualities of
-character."--Westminster Gazette.
-
-
-THE LIFE OF MAJOR-GENERAL SIR CHARLES W. WILSON, Royal Engineers. By
-Colonel Sir Charles M. Watson, K.C.M.G., C.B., R.E., M.A. With
-Illustrations. Demy 8vo. 15s. net.
-
-"There is a most interesting account of the circumstances of the time
-in this admirable biography, and those who would know the true story of
-the failure to relieve Gordon should by all means read it. He was a
-good soldier and a good man, and we are glad to commend this biography
-to soldiers who know how to appreciate the service that men like Sir
-Charles Wilson render to their country."--Army and Navy Gasette.
-
-
-THE LIFE OF MAJOR-GENERAL SIR JOHN ARDAGH. By His Wife, Susan,
-Countess of Malmesbury (Lady Ardagh). With Illustrations. Demy 8vo.
-15s. net.
-
-"... Lady Malmesbury has written her husband's life with rare
-discrimination and reticence ... exhilarating record of a splendidly
-strenuous life ... an admirable record of the work of a great servant
-of the State and it should be in the hands of every young
-soldier."--Athenaum.
-
-
-THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF SIR JAMES GRAHAM, 1792-1861. First Lord of the
-Admiralty in the Ministries of Lord Grey and Lord Aberdeen, and Home
-Secretary in the Administration of Sir Robert Peel. By Charles Stuart
-Parker, Editor of "Life of Sir Robert Peel." With Portraits and other
-Illustrations. Two Vols. Demy 8vo. 24s. net.
-
-
-LORD DUNRAVEN'S THE OUTLOOK IN IRELAND. The Case for Devolution and
-Conciliation. Demy 8vo. 7s. 6d. net.
-
-
-LORD MILNER'S WORK IN SOUTH AFRICA. From its Commencement in 1897 to
-the Peace of Vereeniging in 1902. Containing hitherto Unpublished
-Information. By W. Basil Worsfold. With Portraits and a Map. Demy
-8vo. 15s. net.
-
-
-FURTHER MEMOIRS OF THE WHIG PARTY, 1807-21. By Henry Richard Vassall,
-3rd Lord Holland (1773-1840). With which is Incorporated a Chapter
-termed "Miscellaneous Reminiscences." Edited by Lord Stavordale,
-Editor of "The Letters of Lady Sarah Lennox." With Portraits. Demy
-8vo. 18s. net.
-
-
-LENNOX, LADY SARAH, THE CORRESPONDENCE OF. 1745-1826. Edited by the
-Countess of Ilchester and Lord Stavordale. With Photogravure
-Frontispiece and other Illustrations. One Vol. 10s. 6d. net.
-
-
-THE HATZFELDT LETTERS. Letters of Count Paul Hatzfeldt to his Wife,
-written from the Headquarters of the King of Prussia, 1870-71.
-Translated from the French by J. L. Bashford, M.A. With Illustrations.
-Demy 8vo. 15s. net.
-
-
-CHARLES JAMES FOX. A Commentary on his Life and Character. By Walter
-Savage Landor. Edited by Stephen Wheeler. With Photogravure Portrait.
-Demy 8vo. 9s. net.
-
-
-THE FIRST BRITISH AMBASSADOR TO CHINA.
-
-THE LIFE AND CORRESPONDENCE OF GEORGE FIRST EARL MACARTNEY, 1737-1806.
-From hitherto Unpublished Correspondence and Documents. By Mrs. A. G.
-Robbins. With Portraits and other Illutrations. Demy 8vo. 16s. net.
-
-
-MOLTKE IN HIS HOME. By Friedrich August Dressier. Authorised
-Translation by Mrs. C. E. Barrett-Lennard. With an Introduction by
-Lieut.-General Lord Methuen. With Illustrations. Demy 8vo. 6s. net.
-
-This does not attempt to give a biography of the great Field-Marshal,
-but contains a series of sketches and incidents of his life, and of the
-characteristics and surroundings of one of the greatest soldiers of the
-nineteenth century.
-
-
-NELSON'S HARDY. His Life, Letters, and Friends. By A. M. Broadley and
-the Rev. R. G. Bartelot. Many Illustrations and Portraits, 10s. 6d.
-net.
-
-"A record of the beautiful human friendship which existed between the
-two men, and should be read by everybody interested in one of England's
-greatest heroes and in the historical incidents of his time."--The
-Tatler.
-
-"The importance of this Life and Letters of Hardy is undeniable....
-That Hardy is worthy of a complete biography is undoubted, and this
-book is a desirable possession to all who care for England's naval
-glories."--Daily Chronicle.
-
-
-LETTERS FROM THE PENINSULA (1808-1812). Written by Lieut.-General Sir
-William Warre, C.B., K.T.S. Edited by the Rev. Edmond Warre, D.D.,
-C.B. With Portrait and Map. Demy 8vo. 10s. 6d. net.
-
-"If we wanted to choose the sort of testimony that would make the
-circumstances of a well-known campaign more real to us than ever
-before, we should undoubtedly choose the private letters of an officer
-to his friends.... We advise the general reader to try William Warre's
-letters. They will find revealed in them a stout and loyal heart, and
-a careful and intelligent mind which had a singular ability for
-discerning the drift and significance of things."--Spectator.
-
-
-A WEEK AT WATERLOO IN 1815. Lady De Lancey's Narrative. Being an
-account of how she nursed her husband, Colonel Sir William H. De
-Lancey, mortally wounded in the great battle. With Photogravure
-Portraits and other Illustrations. Square crown 8vo. 6s. net.
-
-"A vastly interesting human document.... We need not trouble to praise
-where Sir Walter Scott and Charles Dickens have so fervently
-belauded."--Daily Telegraph.
-
-"Pages of writing of terrible beauty, subtlety, delicacy, and power
-describe her nursing of him and his death. It is not a jagged series
-of poignant notes.... There is no heroine in English history or
-literature more worshipful than Lady De Lancey."--World.
-
-
-THE BOOK OF WAR. Translated into English by Captain E. F. Calthrop,
-R.A. Crown 8vo. 2s. 6d. net.
-
-This work, the writings of Suntzu and Wutzu, Chinese Strategists of
-about the 5th century B.C., is the most famous work on the art of war
-in the Far East. It deals with operations of war, statecraft, moral
-and training of troops, stratagem, the use of spies, etc., and for 25
-centuries it has been the Bible of the Chinese or Japanese ruler. The
-book is distinguished alike by the poetry and grandeur of its language
-and the modernity of its spirit.
-
-
-THE LETTERS OF QUEEN VICTORIA. A Selection from Her Majesty's
-Correspondence between the Years 1837 and 1861. Published by Authority
-of His Majesty the King. Edited by Arthur Christopher Benson, MLA.,
-C.V.O., and Viscount Esher, G.C.V.O., K.C.B. With numerous
-Photogravures. Medium 8vo. Three Vols. L3 3s. net. Also Crown 8vo.
-Three Vols. 6s. net.
-
-
-FOURTEEN YEARS IN PARLIAMENT, 1892 TO 1906. By A. S. T.
-Griffith-Boscawen, formerly M.P. for the Tonbridge Division of Kent.
-Demy 8vo. 10s. 6d. net.
-
-
-LIFE OF THE MARQUIS OF DUFFERIN AND AVA. By Sir Alfred Lyall, P.C.
-Third Impression. With Portraits, etc. Demy 8vo. Two Vols. 36s. net.
-
-
-THE DUKE OF ARGYLL, 1823-1900. Comprising his Autobiography down to
-1857, and his Life from that Date onwards, based on his Correspondence
-and Diaries. Edited by the Dowager Duchess of Argyll. With Portraits
-and other Illustrations. Two Vols. Medium 8vo. 36s. net.
-
-
-LIFE OF SIR ROBERT PEEL. Based on his Correspondence and Private
-Documents. Edited by Charles Stuart Parker. With a Summary of Peel's
-Life by his Grandson, the Hon. George Peel. With Portraits. Three
-Vols. Demy 8vo.
-
-VOL. I. FROM HIS BIRTH TO 1827. 16s. VOLS. II. AND III. FROM 1827
-TO HIS DEATH IN 1852. 32s.
-
-
-THE CREEVEY PAPERS. A Selection from the Diaries and Correspondence of
-Thomas Creevey (1768-1838) from Family Papers hitherto unpublished.
-Edited by the Rt. Hon. Sir Herbert Maxwell, Bart., M.P. With
-Portraits. One Vol. Demy 8vo. 10s. 6d. net.
-
-
-SIDNEY HERBERT (LORD HERBERT OF LEA). A Memoir. By Lord Stanmore.
-With Portraits and other Illustrations. Two Vols. Demy 8vo. 24s.
-net. No Life of Sidney Herbert has hitherto been published.
-
-
-THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF GEORG JOACHIM GOSCHEN, 1752-1829. By Viscount
-Goschen. With Portraits and Illustrations. Demy 8vo. 36s. net.
-
-
-NELSON AND OTHER NAVAL STUDIES. By James R. Thursfield. With
-Illustrations. Demy 8vo. 12s. net.
-
-"Few other writers except Mahan possess Mr. Thursfield's faculty of
-combining the romance of the sea with the science of naval warfare, and
-in both alike the cult of Nelson gives life and warmth to their
-studies.... The merit of Mr. Thursfield's writing is the firm hold
-which he has of the central principles of a maritime defensive policy.
-His writing is effective, and at times even brilliant; but this it is
-which gives it force and lucidity."--Westminster Gazette.
-
-
-A SHORT HISTORY OF THE CHIEF CAMPAIGNS IN EUROPE SINCE 1792. By
-General A. von Horsetzky, G.O.C. the 1st Austro-Hungarian Army Corps
-and the Troops in Cracow. Translated by Lieutenant K. B. Ferguson,
-R.G.A. With numerous Maps and Plans. Demy Svo. 18s. net.
-
-"We have nothing but praise for Gen. von Horsetzky's book. It is a
-valuable addition to military literature, for we do not know where
-else, in such form, records of so many campaigns can be studied. The
-work of translation and condensation has been admirably done. The
-merit of the book is its extreme clearness and known accuracy ... those
-who desire to gain a correct idea of modern military history will find
-the book invaluable."--Army and Navy Gazette.
-
-
-RASPLATA (The Reckoning). By Commander Wladimir Semenoff. His Diary
-during the Blockade of Port Arthur and the Voyage of the Fleets under
-Admiral Rojdestvensky. With Maps. Demy Svo. 10s. 6d. net.
-
-"Commander Semenoff writes only of what he knows and has seen. His
-simple candour and cool intrepidity enable him to record his
-experiences at the moment in the most appalling scenes of naval
-conflict that modern times have known."--Times.
-
-"An authentic record of the highest value, which is likely to become a
-classic among naval annals."--Westminster Gazette.
-
-
-THE RUSSIAN ARMY AND THE JAPANESE WAR. Being Historical and Critical
-Comments on the Military Policy and Power of Russia and on the Campaign
-in the Far East. By General Kuropatkin. Translated by Captain A. B.
-Lindsay. Edited by Major E. D. Swinton, D.S.O., R.E. With Maps and
-Illustrations. 2 Vols. Demy 8vo. 28s. net.
-
-"... We doubt if a more virile or sincere document was ever put before
-the public, and it says little for the official wisdom of General
-Kuropatkin's fellow-countrymen that such a record should have been
-suppressed in the land of its origin. In England, at any rate, the
-patent honesty and abundant good feeling of these measured criticisms
-will be valued at their proper worth."--Daily Telegraph.
-
-
-THE TRUTH ABOUT PORT ARTHUR. By Monsieur E. K. Nojine, accredited
-Russian War Correspondent during the Siege. Translated and Abridged by
-Captain A. B. Lindsay. Edited by Major E. D. Swinton, D.S.O. With Map
-and Illustrations. Demy 8vo. 15s. net.
-
-"M. Nojine is unusually well qualified to offer testimony on the long
-beleaguerment. He writes with vivacity and force, and the translation
-is competent and spirited, both on account of its vivid narrative and
-by reason of the extraordinary revelations it contains.... It is the
-most remarkable book about the war yet issued."--Times.
-
-
-OFFICIAL ACCOUNT OF THE SECOND AFGHAN WAR, 1878-1880. Produced in the
-Intelligence Branch, Army Headquarters, India. Abridged Official
-Account. With numerous Maps and Illustrations. Medium 8vo. 21s. net.
-
-"An excellent compendium of the whole war, clearly written and amply
-illustrated by photographs, maps, and diagrams.... It is a narrative
-that will fascinate the many who love to read about war-like
-movements.... It is a story of wise and patient preparation, carefully
-arranged generalship, supreme daring, amazing tenacity. Undoubtedly
-the right thing has been done in giving to the world a stiring story,
-which has remained too long, many will think, a secret record."--The
-Sheffield Independent.
-
-
-CAVALRY IN FUTURE WARS. By His Excellency Lt.-General Frederick von
-Bernhardi, Commander of the 7th Division of the German Army.
-Translated by Charles Sydney Goldman, Editor of "The Empire and the
-Century." With an Introduction by General Sir John French, K.C.M.G.,
-K.C.B., G.C.V.O. Demy 8vo. 10s. 6d. net.
-
-"Here at last, in the English language, we have a really important work
-on the German cavalry at first hand."--Broad Arrow.
-
-"General Von Bernhardi most certainly knows what he is talking about,
-and is equally at home when discussing matters of the highest import or
-others of comparatively trifling details; he displays a sound knowledge
-and judgment concerning all things of organization, strategy, tactics,
-and training; and moreover, he thoroughly understands horses, so that
-he is enabled to offer very valuable service on every subject connected
-with them, from training of the remount to the economical use of
-horseflesh in war."--Westminster Gazette.
-
-
-THE GERMAN OFFICIAL ACCOUNT OF THE WAR IN SOUTH AFRICA. Prepared in
-the Historical Section of the Great General Staff, Berlin. Translated
-by Colonel W. H. H. Waters, R.A., C.V.O., and Colonel Hubert Du Cane,
-R.A., M.V.O. 2 Vols. With Maps and Plans. Demy 8vo. 15s. net each.
-
-"The most valuable work in which, since its close, the war has been
-discussed. It stands alone, because it is the only work in which the
-war has been surveyed by trained and competent students of war, the
-only one of which the judgments are based on a familiarity with the
-modern theory of war. The best book that has yet appeared on the South
-African War."--The Morning Post.
-
-
-FROM LIBAU TO TSU-SHIMA. A Narrative of the Voyage of Admiral
-Rojdestvensky's Squadron to the East, including a detailed Account of
-the Dogger Bank Incident. By the late Eugene Politovsky, Chief
-Engineer of the Squadron. Translated by Major F. R. Godfrey, R.M.L.I.
-Crown 8vo. 6s.
-
-"A painful book, but a deeply interesting and a really valuable one,
-which will have a place of permanent value among the documents of the
-Russo-Japanese war."--Daily Telegraph.
-
-
-BEFORE PORT ARTHUR IN A DESTROYER. The Personal Diary of a Japanese
-Naval Officer. Translated from the Spanish Edition by Captain R.
-Grant, D.S.O., Rifle Brigade. With Maps and Illustrations. Cheap
-Edition. Square 8vo. 3s. 6d. net.
-
-"It is pre-eminently a book to be read for enjoyment as well as
-instruction; but it will fall short of its more immediate value if
-measures are not devised for bringing it before the attention of those
-responsible for the education of 'youngsters' in training for a sea
-life."--Pall Mall Gazette.
-
-
-THE BATTLE OF TSU-SHIMA. Between the Japanese and Russian Fleets,
-fought on the 27th May, 1905. By Captain Vladimir Semenoff (one of the
-survivors). Translated by Captain A. B. Lindsay. With a Preface by
-Sir George Sydenham Clarke. Crown 8vo. 3s. 6d. net.
-
-"It is one of the most thrilling and touching records of naval warfare
-that we have ever read."--The Westminster Gazette.
-
-
-FORTIFICATION: Its Past Achievements, Recent Developments, Future
-Progress. By Colonel Sir George S. Clarke, R.E., K.C.M.G., F.R.S. New
-Edition Enlarged. With numerous Illustrations. Medium 8vo. 18s. net.
-
-
-ARTILLERY AND EXPLOSIVES. Essays and Lectures written and delivered at
-various times. By Sir Andrew Noble, K.C.B., D.C.L., F.R.S. With
-numerous diagrams and Illustrations. Medium 8vo. 21s. net.
-
-"No one can speak on the subject of modern artillery and explosives
-with greater authority than Sir Andrew Noble."--Engineering.
-
-
-THE ARMY IN 1906. A Policy and a Vindication. By the Rt. Hon. H. O.
-Arnold-Forster, M.P. Demy 8vo. 15s. net.
-
-"Mr. Arnold-Forster's remarkable work will be read with the deepest
-attention and respect by all who have the interest of the Army at
-heart; and though many may differ from him, now as formerly, in
-reference to matters of detail, few will be found to deny that the
-principles he enunciates are in themselves absolutely sound....
-However much any may disagree with Mr. Arnold-Forster's proposals, few
-will deny that he has given very strong reasons in support of them
-all."--Westminster Gazette.
-
-
-IMPERIAL OUTPOSTS. From a Strategical and Commercial Aspect. With
-Special Reference to the Japanese Alliance. By Colonel A. M. Murray.
-With a Preface by Field-Marshal The Earl Roberts, V.C., K.G. With Maps
-and Illustrations. Demy 8vo. 12s. net.
-
-"We should like to see every officer in the British Army with the wide
-vision and interest in the strategical and commercial organization of
-the Empire which Colonel Murray displays."--Spectator.
-
-"Colonel Murray deals with subjects of the highest interest. If we
-note those opinions from which we differ, it must be with the
-preliminary remarks that there is still more in the book with which we
-thoroughly agree, and that the whole of it is suggestive and worthy of
-the most careful consideration."--Athenaum.
-
-
-THE ART OF RECONNAISSANCE. By Colonel David Henderson, D.S.O. With
-Diagrams. Small crown 8vo. 5s. net.
-
-PRINCIPLES AND METHODS--PROTECTION AND SECURITY--CONTACT--INDEPENDENT
-RECONNAISSANCE--THE SCOUT--THE PATROL--RECONNAISSANCE OF
-GROUND--TRANSMISSION OF INFORMATION.
-
-This work is a guide to the study of reconnaissance in the field under
-modern conditions of war, and deals with the practical details as well
-as with the theoretical principles of the subject. It has been printed
-in clear type on special paper and so bound that it can be conveniently
-carried in the pocket by military students.
-
-
-IMPERIAL STRATEGY. By the Military Correspondent of "The Times." With
-Maps. Medium 8vo. 21s. net.
-
-"The book is a most valuable and timely aid to the cause of national
-security, and should be read by all those who are in a position to
-influence the destinies of the Empire."--Morning Post.
-
-
-A NATION IN ARMS. Speeches on the Maintenance of the British Army.
-Delivered by Field-Marshal The Earl Roberts, V.C., K.G. Crown 8vo.
-Cloth, 2s. 6d. net; paper, 1s. net.
-
-The Spectator says:--"It is with no small satisfaction that we note the
-republication, under the title of 'A Nation in Arms,' of the speeches
-on the question of National Service delivered by Lord Roberts.... It
-is not the creation of a military caste for which he pleads, but the
-building up of the highest type of citizen--the citizen who is able to
-protect his native land and his rights and liberties himself and
-without external aid, and who believes that national safety is not to
-be hired, but to be achieved by self-sacrifice.... It is hardly
-necessary to say that Lord Roberts and those who agree with him ask for
-national training such as is willingly and cheerfully undergone by the
-citizens of Switzerland, not for that which is imposed on the German
-population. We have one more word to say--that is, to ask our readers
-to study carefully Lord Roberts' book. We would specially ask this of
-those who dread, and, as we hold, are right in dreading, militarism,
-and who look forward to universal peace as the ultimate goal for
-mankind. They will find that Lord Roberts has not a word to say in
-praise of war.... What he does desire is that as long as war
-continues--and no sane man can, unfortunately, doubt its continuance in
-our generation--the British people shall, when it comes, be prepared to
-meet it."
-
-
-THE RISE AND EXPANSION OF THE BRITISH DOMINION IN INDIA. By Sir Alfred
-Lyall. Fourth Edition, with a new Chapter bringing the History down to
-1907. With Maps. Demy 8vo. 5s. net.
-
-
-OVER-SEA BRITAIN. A Descriptive Record of the Geography, the
-Historical, Ethnological, and Political Development, and the Economic
-Resources of the Empire.
-
-THE NEARER EMPIRE.--The Mediterranean, British Africa, and British
-America. By E. F. Knight. Author of "Where Three Empires Meet,"
-"Small Boat Sailing," etc. With 9 Coloured Maps. Crown 8vo. 6s.
-
-Mr. E. F. Knight, the well-known traveller and war correspondent, in
-this volume gives a description of what he calls the Nearer
-Empire--_i.e._, the British possessions in the Mediterranean, Africa,
-and America. The book is no mere collection of geographical facts. It
-seeks to show what the Empire is, how it came to be, and what is the
-history of its growth. It deals also with the political development
-and the economic resources of the Colonies. The descriptive parts have
-an additional charm through being to a large extent a record of
-personal observation. To quote from the Preface:--"The author has
-travelled in most of the countries over which the British flag flies.
-He has witnessed, and on some occasions taken part in the making of
-several portions of that Empire in times both of peace and war, and has
-therefore been able to draw on his own personal experiences and
-observations when writing this short account of Britain beyond the
-seas."
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of General Gatacre, by Beatrix Gatacre
-
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK GENERAL GATACRE ***
-
-***** This file should be named 41788.txt or 41788.zip *****
-This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
- http://www.gutenberg.org/4/1/7/8/41788/
-
-Produced by Al Haines
-
-Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
-will be renamed.
-
-Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
-one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
-(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
-permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
-set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
-copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
-protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
-Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
-charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
-do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
-rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
-such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
-research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
-practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
-subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
-redistribution.
-
-
-
-*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
-
-THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
-PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
-
-To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
-distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
-(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
-Gutenberg-tm License available with this file or online at
- www.gutenberg.org/license.
-
-
-Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works
-
-1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
-and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
-(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
-the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
-all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
-If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
-terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
-entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
-
-1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
-used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
-agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
-things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
-paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
-and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
-works. See paragraph 1.E below.
-
-1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
-or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
-collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
-individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
-located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
-copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
-works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
-are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
-Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
-freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
-this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
-the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
-keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
-Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
-
-1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
-what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
-a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
-the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
-before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
-creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
-Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
-the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
-States.
-
-1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
-
-1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
-access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
-whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
-phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
-copied or distributed:
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
-
-1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
-from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
-posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
-and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
-or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
-with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
-work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
-through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
-Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
-1.E.9.
-
-1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
-with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
-must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
-terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
-to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
-permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
-
-1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
-License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
-work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
-
-1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
-electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
-prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
-active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm License.
-
-1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
-compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
-word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
-distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
-"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
-posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
-you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
-copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
-request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
-form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
-License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
-
-1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
-performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
-unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
-access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
-that
-
-- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
- the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
- you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
- owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
- has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
- Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
- must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
- prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
- returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
- sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
- address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
- the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
-
-- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
- you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
- does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
- License. You must require such a user to return or
- destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
- and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
- Project Gutenberg-tm works.
-
-- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
- money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
- electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
- of receipt of the work.
-
-- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
- distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
-
-1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
-forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
-both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
-Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
-Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
-
-1.F.
-
-1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
-effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
-public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
-collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
-works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
-"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
-corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
-property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
-computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
-your equipment.
-
-1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
-of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
-liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
-fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
-LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
-PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
-TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
-LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
-INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
-DAMAGE.
-
-1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
-defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
-receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
-written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
-received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
-your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
-the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
-refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
-providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
-receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
-is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
-opportunities to fix the problem.
-
-1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
-in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO OTHER
-WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
-WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
-
-1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
-warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
-If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
-law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
-interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
-the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
-provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
-
-1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
-trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
-providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
-with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
-promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
-harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
-that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
-or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
-work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
-Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
-
-
-Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
-electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
-including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
-because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
-people in all walks of life.
-
-Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
-assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
-goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
-remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
-and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
-To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
-and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
-and the Foundation information page at www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
-Foundation
-
-The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
-501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
-state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
-Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
-number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
-Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
-permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
-
-The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
-Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
-throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at 809
-North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email
-contact links and up to date contact information can be found at the
-Foundation's web site and official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact
-
-For additional contact information:
- Dr. Gregory B. Newby
- Chief Executive and Director
- gbnewby@pglaf.org
-
-Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
-Literary Archive Foundation
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
-spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
-increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
-freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
-array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
-($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
-status with the IRS.
-
-The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
-charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
-States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
-considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
-with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
-where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
-SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
-particular state visit www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
-have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
-against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
-approach us with offers to donate.
-
-International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
-any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
-outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
-
-Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
-methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
-ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations.
-To donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-
-Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
-works.
-
-Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
-concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
-with anyone. For forty years, he produced and distributed Project
-Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
-editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
-unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
-keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
-
-Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
-
- www.gutenberg.org
-
-This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
-including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
-subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.