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-Project Gutenberg's The History of Lumsden's Horse, by Henry H. S. Pearse
-
-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/license
-
-
-Title: The History of Lumsden's Horse
- A Complete Record of the Corps from its Formation to its Disbandment
-
-Author: Henry H. S. Pearse
-
-Release Date: June 11, 2016 [EBook #52303]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE HISTORY OF LUMSDEN'S HORSE ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by KD Weeks, Brian Coe and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Transcriber’s Note:
-
-This version of the text cannot represent certain typographical effects.
-Italics are delimited with the ‘_’ character as _italic_.
-
-Errors, when reasonably attributable to the printer, have been
-corrected. Please see the transcriber’s note at the end of this text for
-details. Corrections made to the text are summarized there.
-
-Footnotes have been resequenced to be unique across the book, and have
-been gathered at the end of each chapter.
-
-The illustrations have been moved to avoid falling within a paragraph.
-The captions will appear here as [Illustration: <caption>]. A large map
-and accompanying legend was bound as a fold-out inside the end cover.
-The Reference, included in that image is presented here, and contains a
-daily location of the unit.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- LUMSDEN’S HORSE
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-[Illustration: D.M. Lumsden.]
-
- THE HISTORY
- OF
- LUMSDEN’S HORSE
-
- A COMPLETE RECORD OF THE CORPS FROM ITS
- FORMATION TO ITS DISBANDMENT
-
- EDITED BY
-
- HENRY H.S. PEARSE
- (WAR CORRESPONDENT)
-
- AUTHOR OF ‘FOUR MONTHS BESIEGED—THE STORY OF LADYSMITH’ ETC.
-
- WITH MANY PORTRAITS AND OTHER ILLUSTRATIONS
- AND A MAP
-
-
-
-
- LONGMANS, GREEN, AND CO.
- 39 PATERNOSTER ROW, LONDON
- NEW YORK AND BOMBAY
- 1903
-
-
- [All rights reserved]
-
- PREFACE
-
-
-Although this History of Lumsden’s Horse embraces a period in the South
-African campaign that was crowded with great issues, it makes no
-pretence to rank among the many able and comprehensive works dealing
-with those events. Elaborate descriptions and criticisms of operations
-as a whole have been purposely avoided, except so far as they serve to
-explain and emphasise actions in which the corps took part.
-
-First of all, the book is intended to be no more than a regimental
-record, enlivened by the personal experiences of men who helped to make
-history at a time when the whole British Empire was moved by one
-impulse. India’s part in that movement is the inspiring theme, and one
-object has been to show how the idea of organising an Indian Volunteer
-Contingent for service in South Africa passed from inception to
-accomplishment, through the efforts of a Committee in Calcutta which
-made itself responsible for every financial liability in connection with
-the corps from its formation to its disbandment.
-
-The cost of publication is being defrayed out of a balance of funds
-remaining in the hands of the Committee, and each member of the corps
-will receive a copy as a souvenir of his interesting experiences and a
-proof that his services are still remembered. Publication, however, is
-not restricted to members of the corps, and the Editor ventures to think
-that this book will suggest to general readers many points worthy of
-consideration. It illustrates the facility with which British subjects
-in India are able to band themselves together, and affords yet another
-instance of many in which the Indian Government has shown itself capable
-of utilising instantly its resources for the Empire’s benefit. And, more
-than this, it will stand as a proof of the cordiality with which the
-Indian public—British and Native—came forward at a time of Imperial need
-with offers of personal service or liberal subscriptions, which enabled
-the Committee to raise and despatch a Mounted Contingent completely
-equipped in every detail.
-
-Among those who have assisted the Editor with information that has
-enabled him to produce this History, he has especially to thank the
-Committee, the Adjutant of the Regiment (Major NEVILLE TAYLOR, 14th
-Bengal Lancers), whose sketch-map of the positions at Houtnek was made
-from personal reconnaissance, and Messrs. D.S. FRASER, GRAVES,
-BURN-MURDOCH, KIRWAN, and PRESTON. He is also indebted to Major Ross,
-C.B., Durham Light Infantry, for interesting material. Acknowledgment is
-due to Messrs. JOHNSTON & HOFFMANN, Messrs. F. KAPP & CO., Messrs.
-BOURNE & SHEPHERD, and Messrs. HARRINGTON & CO., of Calcutta, and
-others, who have kindly placed photographs at the Editor’s disposal; and
-to the proprietors of the ‘Englishman,’ ‘Pioneer,’ ‘Indian Daily News,’
-‘Statesman,’ ‘Times of India,’ and ‘Madras Daily Mail,’ for permission
-to reproduce from their columns the personal narratives that brighten
-many pages of this book.
-
- H.H.S.P.
-
-ARTS CLUB, LONDON: _January 1903_.
-
- CONTENTS
-
-
- CHAPTER PAGE
-
- INTRODUCTION 1
-
- I. HOW THE CORPS WAS RAISED AND EQUIPPED 7
-
- II. PREPARING FOR THE FRONT—DEPARTURE FROM CALCUTTA 40
-
- III. OUTWARD BOUND 68
-
- IV. NEARING THE GOAL—DISEMBARKATION AT CAPE TOWN AND
- EAST LONDON 85
-
- V. AN INTERLUDE—THE RESULTS OF SANNA’S POST 96
-
- VI. BY RAIL AND ROUTE MARCH TO BLOEMFONTEIN 109
-
- VII. IMPRESSIONS OF BLOEMFONTEIN—JOIN THE 8TH MOUNTED
- INFANTRY REGIMENT ON OUTPOST 127
-
- VIII. THE BAPTISM OF FIRE—LUMSDEN’S HORSE AT OSPRUIT
- (HOUTNEK) 144
-
- IX. AFTER OSPRUIT—SOME TRIBUTES TO MAJOR SHOWERS AND
- OTHER HEROES 175
-
- X. PRISONERS OF WAR 191
-
- XI. TOWARDS PRETORIA—LUMSDEN’S HORSE SCOUTING AHEAD OF
- THE ARMY FROM BLOEMFONTEIN TO THE VAAL RIVER 208
-
- XII. JOHANNESBURG AND PRETORIA IN OUR HANDS 230
-
- XIII. ON LINES OF COMMUNICATION AT IRENE, KALFONTEIN,
- ZURFONTEIN, AND SPRINGS—THE PRETORIA PAPER-CHASE 248
-
- XIV. ALARMS AND EXCURSIONS—BOER SCOUTING—A
- RECONNAISSANCE TO CROCODILE RIVER—FAREWELL TO
- COLONEL ROSS 270
-
- XV. A MARCH UNDER MAHON OF MAFEKING TO RUSTENBURG AND
- WARMBATHS—IN PURSUIT OF DE WET 286
-
- XVI. EASTWARD TO BELFAST AND BARBERTON UNDER GENERALS
- FRENCH AND MAHON 313
-
- XVII. MARCHING AND FIGHTING—FROM MACHADODORP TO
- HEIDELBERG AND PRETORIA UNDER GENERALS FRENCH
- AND DICKSON 340
-
- XVIII. HOMEWARD BOUND—APPROBATION FROM LORD ROBERTS—CAPE
- TOWN’S ACKNOWLEDGMENTS—FAREWELL TO SOUTH AFRICA 359
-
- XIX. THE RETURN TO INDIA—WELCOME HOME—HONOURS AND
- ORATIONS—DISBANDMENT 377
-
- XX. A STIRRING SEQUEL—THE STORY OF THOSE WHO
- STAYED—MEMORIAL TRIBUTES TO THOSE WHO HAVE GONE 409
-
- ------------------
-
- _APPENDICES_
-
- I. ROLL OF LUMSDEN’S HORSE, INCLUDING TRANSPORT 427
-
- II. MOBILISATION SCHEME FOR LUMSDEN’S HORSE 437
-
- III. THE ADJUTANT’S NOTE-BOOK 446
-
- IV. LIST OF OFFICERS, N.C.O.S, AND MEN WHO HAVE BEEN
- AWARDED DECORATIONS, COMMISSIONS, OR CIVIL
- APPOINTMENTS 454
-
- V. HONOURS AND PROMOTIONS 456
-
- VI. HONORARY RANK IN THE ARMY 461
-
- VII. LUMSDEN’S HORSE EQUIPMENT FUND 462
-
- VIII. FRIENDS AND SUPPORTERS OF THE CORPS 476
-
- IX. LUMSDEN’S HORSE RECEPTION COMMITTEE 480
-
- X. THE FINAL ACCOUNTS 483
-
- XI. REPORT OF TRANSPORT SERGEANT 485
-
- XII. TOPICAL SONG BY A TROOPER 490
-
- INDEX 491
-
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
- _PLATES_
-
-_From Drawings, and from Photographs by Messrs._ JOHNSTON & HOFFMANN,
- KAPP & CO., BOURNE & SHEPHERD, _and_ HARRINGTON & CO., _Calcutta_;
- _Messrs._ ELLIOTT & FRY, _London_, _and others_.
-
- LIEUTENANT-COLONEL D.M. LUMSDEN, C.B. _Frontispiece_
- (_Photogravure_)
-
- SIR PATRICK PLAYFAIR, C.I.E. _facing 1
- page_
-
- HIS EXCELLENCY LORD CURZON, VICEROY OF INDIA ” 8
-
- BEHAR CONTINGENT OF LUMSDEN’S HORSE ” 14
-
- MYSORE AND COORG CONTINGENT ” 18
-
- THE EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE ” 26
-
- COLONEL LUMSDEN, C.B., SIR PATRICK PLAYFAIR,
- C.I.E., COLONEL MONEY, MAJOR EDDIS, MR. HARRY
- STUART
-
- OFFICERS OF THE CORPS ” 30
-
- COLONEL LUMSDEN, MAJOR SHOWERS, CAPTAINS TAYLOR,
- BERESFORD, NOBLETT, RUTHERFOORD, CHAMNEY,
- CLIFFORD, AND STEVENSON, LIEUTENANTS CRANE,
- NEVILLE, SIDEY, AND PUGH
-
- MESSING AT CALCUTTA ” 34
-
- HORSES IN CAMP AT CALCUTTA ” 40
-
- ON PARADE, CALCUTTA ” 44
-
- TAKING HORSES ON BOARD TRANSPORT 28 ” 52
-
- EMBARKATION AT CALCUTTA ” 56
-
- H.E. THE VICEROY ADDRESSING THE CORPS ” 60
-
- B COMPANY LUMSDEN’S HORSE LEAVING CALCUTTA ” 64
-
- THE REGIMENT IN CALCUTTA ” 72
-
- MAXIM-GUN CONTINGENT ” 76
-
- CAPTAIN HOLMES, SERGEANT DALE, C.V.S. DICKENS,
- N.J. BOLST, P.T. CORBETT
-
- SURMA VALLEY LIGHT HORSE. CONTINGENT OF ” 80
- LUMSDEN’S B COMPANY
-
-
- MAJOR (LOCAL COLONEL) W.C. ROSS, C.B. ” 117
-
- TRANSPORT AND WATER CARTS ” 132
-
- OUTLYING PICKET TAKING UP POSITION ” 136
-
- HOUTNEK, SHOWING POSITIONS OF BRITISH AND BOER ” 144
- TROOPS
-
- N.C.O.S AND TROOPERS ” 156
-
- SERGEANT F.S. McNAMARA, LANCE-SERGEANT J.S.
- ELLIOTT, CORPORAL A. MACGILLIVRAY, R.U. CASE,
- C.A. WALTON, A.F. FRANKS, J.S. SAUNDERS, R.N.
- MACDONALD, L. GWATKIN WILLIAMS
-
- BRINGING HALF-RATIONS UP TO NORMAL ” 213
-
- N.C.O.S AND TROOPERS ” 214
-
- H.J. MOORHOUSE, A.K. MEARES, W.K. MEARES, H.W.
- PUCKRIDGE, R.G. DAGGE, R.P. WILLIAMS, R.C.
- NOLAN, T.G. PETERSEN, S. DUCAT
-
- N.C.O.S AND TROOPERS ” 230
-
- CORPORAL L.E. KIRWAN, J.S. CAMPBELL, C.E. TURNER,
- E.S. CHAPMAN, G. INNES WATSON, C.E. STUART, C.
- CARY-BARNARD, E.S. CLIFFORD, H. GOUGH
-
- INVALIDED HOME AFTER THE SURRENDER OF PRETORIA ” 248
-
- J. SKELTON, R.P. HAINES, H.W. THELWALL, C.K.
- MARTIN, H.S. CHESHIRE, H.B. OLDHAM, M.H. LOGAN,
- J.V. JAMESON, H. HOWES
-
- NIGHT IN CAMP ” 296
-
- PHILIP STANLEY ” 306
-
- TRANSPORT DRIVERS ” 320
-
- T. HARE SCOTT, H.G. PHILLIPS, R.P. ESTABROOKE, J.
- BRAINE, R. PRINGLE, W. BURNAND
-
- TRANSPORT DRIVERS ” 324
-
- L. DAVIS, LEO H. BRADFORD, C.W. LOVEGROVE, S.W.
- CULLEN, F.C. MANVILLE, F.C. THOMPSON
-
- THE LAUNDRY ” 328
-
- H.P. BROWN, A TYPICAL TROOPER ” 340
-
- N.C.O.S AND TROOPERS ” 346
-
- SERGEANT A.H. LUARD, CORPORAL G. LAWRIE, F.G.
- BATEMAN, L. KINGCHURCH, IAN SINCLAIR, PERCY
- COBB, HARVEY DAVIES, C.E. CONSTERDINE, D.
- ROBERTSON
-
- N.C.O.S AND TROOPERS ” 360
-
- SERGEANT G.E. THESIGER, CORPORAL W.T. SMITH, E.B.
- MOIR-BYRES, J.A. BROWN, H. EVETTS, J.L. STEWART,
- H.N. SHAW, E.S. CLARKE, B.E. JONES
-
-
- GAZETTED TO THE REGULAR ARMY ” 366
-
- CORPORAL F.S. MONTAGU BATES, H.S.N. WRIGHT, J.D.L.
- ARATHOON, S.L. INNES, F.W. WRIGHT, R.G. COLLINS,
- A.E. NORTON, W. DOUGLAS-JONES, T.B. NICHOLSON
-
- RECEIVING THE MAYOR OF CAPE TOWN’S FAREWELL ” 372
- ADDRESS ON THE SOUTH ARM
-
- CHEERING IN RESPONSE ” 372
-
- HOME FROM SOUTH AFRICA—N.C.O.S AND TROOPERS ” 378
-
- SERGEANTS STOWELL, DONALD, RUTHERFOORD, FOX,
- FARRIER-SERGEANT EDWARDS, LANCE-CORPORAL GODDEN,
- S.C. GORDON, E.A. THELWALL, A.P. COURTENAY
-
- HOME FROM SOUTH AFRICA—N.C.O.S AND TROOPERS ” 384
-
- SERGEANT J. BRENNAN, H. NICOLAY, A. ATKINSON, C.H.
- JOHNSTONE, G. SMITH, N.V. REID, W.R. WINDER,
- R.M. CRUX, L.K. ZORAB
-
- MEMBERS OF LUMSDEN’S HORSE WHO JOINED THE ” 410
- JOHANNESBURG POLICE, DECEMBER 1900
-
- SILVER STATUETTE, PRESENTED TO LIEUTENANT-COLONEL ” 418
- LUMSDEN
-
- TABLET IN ST. PAUL’S CATHEDRAL, CALCUTTA ” 424
-
-
- _OTHER ILLUSTRATIONS_
-
- PAGE
-
- CAPTAIN NOBLETT (MAJOR ROYAL IRISH RIFLES), COMMANDING 142
- B COMPANY LUMSDEN’S HORSE
-
- CAPTAIN H. CHAMNEY 152
-
- CAPTAIN NEVILLE C. TAYLOR 156
-
- H.C. LUMSDEN (KILLED IN ACTION, HOUTNEK, APRIL 30, 159
- 1900)
-
- LIEUTENANT C.E. CRANE 162
-
- J.H. BURN-MURDOCH 163
-
- HERBERT N. BETTS, D.C.M. 167
-
- MAJOR EDEN C. SHOWERS (KILLED AT HOUTNEK) 175
-
- BUGLER R.H. MACKENZIE 187
-
- E.B. PARKES 187
-
- DAVID STEWART FRASER 193
-
- WATERVAL PRISON, PRETORIA 206
-
-
- PERCY JONES, D.C.M. 228
-
- LIEUTENANT G.A. NEVILLE 234
-
- LIEUTENANT H.O. PUGH, D.S.O. 242
-
- WALTER DEXTER, D.C.M., CUTTING THE TELEGRAPH WIRES AT 243
- ELANDSFONTEIN
-
- P.C. PRESTON, D.C.M. 244
-
- CAPTAIN RUTHERFOORD, D.S.O. 263
-
- CAPTAIN W. STEVENSON, VETERINARY SURGEON 268
-
- SERGEANT ERNEST DAWSON 269
-
- A TYPICAL BOER 275
-
- CAPTAIN CLIFFORD 277
-
- J.A. GRAHAM, D.C.M. 278
-
- BERNARD CAYLEY 279
-
- L.C. BEARNE 280
-
- A HALT ON THE MARCH TO BARBERTON: GENERAL MAHON AND 339
- COLONEL WOOLLS-SAMPSON
-
- SERGEANT STEPHENS 346
-
- CAPTAIN C. LYON SIDEY 352
-
- D. MORISON 354
-
- CORPORAL J. GRAVES 355
-
- LANCE-CORPORAL JOHN CHARLES 376
-
- J.S. COWEN 382
-
- SWORD OF HONOUR PRESENTED TO LIEUTENANT-COLONEL 407
- LUMSDEN
-
- A. NICHOLSON 414
-
- G.D. NICOLAY 416
-
- H. KELLY 417
-
- K. BOILEAU 418
-
-
- _MAP_
-
- PART OF SOUTH AFRICA, SHOWING THE ROUTES TAKEN _facing page_ 490
- BY LUMSDEN’S HORSE
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Photo: Elliott & Fry_
- SIR PATRICK PLAYFAIR, C.I.E.
-]
-
-
-
-
- THE
-
- HISTORY OF LUMSDEN’S HORSE
-
- INTRODUCTION
-
-
-
-
-To Lumsden’s Horse belongs the high honour of having represented all
-India in a movement the magnitude and far-reaching effects of which we
-are only beginning to appreciate. While the stubborn struggle for
-supremacy in South Africa lasted, no true sons of the Empire allowed
-themselves to count the cost. Some were prepared to pay it in blood,
-others in treasure, to make success certain, and none allowed himself to
-harbour even the shadow of a thought that failure, with all its
-inevitable disasters, could befall us so long as the Mother Country and
-her offshoots held together. At the outset only those blessed with
-exceptional foresight could have believed in the completeness of a
-federation the elements of which were bound together by no other ties
-than sentiment. Selfish interests were merged in combined efforts for
-the common weal, and, while the necessity for action lasted, few cared
-to reckon the price they were paying for an idea.
-
-Even the long-looked-for advent of Peace has hardly brought home to us a
-knowledge of all that War in South Africa meant, not only in a military
-sense, but also in its greater imperial significance. The men who fought
-and bled for the noble sentiment of British brotherhood never dreamed
-that they were doing more than duty demanded, though they had perhaps
-given up every chance of success in life to answer the call of
-patriotism; and among those who stayed at home there are millions
-untouched by the bitterness of personal bereavement who can have no
-conception of the sacrifices that were made to keep our Empire whole.
-Casualty lists, with all their details of killed and wounded, do not
-tell half the story. To know it all we must dip deep into the private
-records of every contingent, British and Colonial, that volunteered for
-active service, and deeper still to fathom the motives of men who, when
-their country seemed to need them, threw aside all other considerations
-and rallied to her standard.
-
-Continental critics may sneer at us for making much of this idea, but
-none know better than they do the difference between loyalty expressed
-in such a noble form and the mere instinct of self-preservation that too
-often passes current for patriotism. They tell us that it is every
-citizen’s duty to be a soldier and every soldier’s duty to die, if
-necessary, for his country; but when they see self-governing nations
-from every quarter of the world coming into line by their own free will
-and all welded together by one sentiment, they have no better name for
-it than lust of empire. Nevertheless, they know it for what it is, a
-thing of which they had previously no conception, and they recognise in
-the impulses that led to this mighty manifestation the secret of Great
-Britain’s world-wide power. Let envious rivals say what they will. Let
-them magnify our reverses and minimise our triumphs, if the process
-pleases them. In spite of everything, the South African War stands a
-great epoch of an age that will some day come to be reckoned among the
-greatest in British History, and all who have helped towards the shaping
-of events at this memorable time can at least claim to have earned the
-gratitude of posterity.
-
-And India may well be proud of her share in the work. Measured by the
-mere number of men whom she sent to the war, her contribution seems
-perhaps comparatively small; but when we remember the sources from which
-that contingent was drawn, the munificence of gifts from Europeans and
-natives alike for its equipment and maintenance, and all the sacrifices
-that war-service involved for every member of the little force, we
-cannot but admire the spirit that called it into being. A great crisis
-was not necessary to convince us that British residents in India would
-fight, if called upon, with all the valour that distinguished Outram’s
-Volunteers of old. Few, however, would have been bold enough to predict
-that for any conceivable cause hundreds of men would readily relinquish
-all that they had struggled for, give up the fruits of half a life’s
-labour, and calmly face the certainty of irreparable losses, without
-asking for anything in return, except the opportunity of serving their
-country on a soldier’s meagre pay. Still less could anybody have
-imagined that a time might come when Indian natives, debarred from the
-chance of proving their loyalty by personal service, would give without
-stint towards a fund for equipping a force to fight in a distant land
-against the enemies of the British Raj. If Indian princes had been
-permitted to raise troops for the war in South Africa, our Eastern
-contingent would have numbered thousands instead of hundreds. What
-natives were not allowed to give in men they gave in cash and in
-substance, according to their means, thereby showing that they were with
-us in a desire to defend the Empire against any assailant. In reality
-this meant more than an offer of armed forces, and to that extent it was
-worthy to rank with the self-sacrifice of Anglo-Indians who gave
-personal service, and thereby took upon themselves a burden the weight
-of which cannot be readily estimated. It must not be forgotten that
-raising a corps of Volunteers in India is a very different matter from
-the enrolment of a similar force at home, or wherever there are dense
-populations and ‘leisured classes’ to be drawn upon. There are no idle
-men in India, everyone having gone there to fill an appointment and earn
-his livelihood. When the call came, therefore, it could only be answered
-by sacrifices or not at all, and nobody is more conscious of this fact
-than the man whose laconic appeal for Volunteers brought three or four
-times more offers than he could possibly accept. In his opinion ‘the men
-who vacated appointments worth from 300 to 500 rupees a month and went
-to fight for their country on 1_s._ 2_d._ a day have given a much larger
-contribution to the War Fund than they could afford.’ As an instance he
-mentions three members of the medical profession, Doctors Charteris,
-Moorhouse, and Woollright, each of whom threw up a lucrative practice
-and joined the ranks as a trooper. These are not exceptional but simply
-typical cases. Scores of other men gave up equally remunerative
-appointments with the same noble unselfishness to enrol themselves in
-Lumsden’s Horse.
-
-To Colonel Lumsden alone belongs the honour of having evoked this
-splendid manifestation of patriotic feeling. The idea of forming a corps
-of Indian Volunteers was his; and though similar thoughts may have been
-in many minds at the same moment, nobody had given a practical turn to
-them until his message—electric in every sense—startled all
-Anglo-Indians into active and cordial co-operation. How all that came
-about will be told with fuller circumstances in its proper place, but
-some reference must be made here to the man whose firm faith in the
-patriotism and soldierly qualities of Indian Volunteers led him to the
-inception of a scheme which events have so abundantly justified.
-
-Lieutenant-Colonel Dugald McTavish Lumsden, C.B., needs no introduction
-to the East, where the best, and perhaps the happiest, years of his life
-have been spent. Without some details concerning him, however,
-completeness could not be claimed for any record of the corps which is
-now identified with his name. The eldest son of the late Mr. James
-Lumsden, of Peterhead, Aberdeenshire, he was born in 1851. At the age of
-twenty-two he obtained an appointment on the Borelli Tea Estate, in the
-Tezpur District of Assam, and sailed for India. Consciously or
-unconsciously, he must have taken with him some military ambitions
-imbibed through intimate association with leaders of the Volunteer
-movement in Scotland. At any rate, he soon became known as a keen
-Volunteer in the land of his adoption, and when in 1887 the Durrung
-Mounted Rifles was formed, he was given a captaincy. A year later that
-corps lost its identity, as other local units did, in the territorial
-title of Assam Valley Light Horse, with Colonel Buckingham, C.I.E., as
-commandant, while Captain Lumsden got his majority and took command of F
-Squadron in the Durrung District. Subsequently he commanded the regiment
-for a time, and, though he left India in 1893, he did not lose touch
-with his old comrades. Every year he returned to spend the cold weather
-among his friends in Assam, showing always undiminished interest in the
-welfare of his old regiment. Thus, when the time came for a call to
-active service, he had no sort of doubt what the response would be from
-the hardy, sport-loving planters of Northern Bengal. Himself an
-enthusiastic _shikari_ and first-rate shot, he knew how to value the
-qualities that are developed in hunting and stalking wild game. And his
-experience of Indian Volunteers was not confined to his own district. He
-knew every corps in Bengal by reputation, and could thus gauge with an
-approach to accuracy the numbers on which he would be able to draw for
-the formation of an Indian contingent. Much travel in many lands had
-also made him a good judge of men, as evidenced by the first thing he
-did when the idea of calling upon India to take up her share of the
-Imperial burden came to him.
-
-At that time he was travelling in Australia, and had no means of knowing
-how deeply the feelings of British residents and natives of the East had
-been stirred by news of the reverses to our arms in South Africa. The
-dark days of Stormberg and Magersfontein had thrown their shadow over
-Australia as over England, chilling the hearts of people who until then
-had refused to believe that British troops could be baulked by any foes,
-notwithstanding the stern lesson of Ladysmith’s investment. Through that
-darkness they were groping sullenly towards the light, and wondering
-what national sacrifices would have to be made before the humiliation
-could be wiped out. It is in such moments of emergency that natural
-leaders come to the front. Among the few in England or the Colonies who
-realised the military value of Volunteers was Colonel Lumsden. Though
-thousands of miles away from the scenes of early associations, his
-thoughts turned at once to the bold riders and skilful marksmen with
-whom he had so often shared the exciting incidents of the chase. He made
-up his mind at once that the planters, on whose spirit he could rely,
-were the very men wanted for South African fighting. On the parade
-ground they might not be all that soldiers whose minds are fettered by
-rules and traditions would desire, but he knew how long days of exercise
-in the open air at their ordinary avocations, varied by polo,
-pig-sticking, and big-game hunting, had toughened their fibre and
-hardened their nerves. He could count on every one of them also for keen
-intelligence, which he rightly regarded as more important than mere
-obedience to orders, where every man might be called upon to think and
-act for himself. Colonel Lumsden would be the last to depreciate Regular
-soldiers, or undervalue their discipline, but experience had taught him
-that men who can exercise self-restraint and develop powers of endurance
-for the mere pleasure of excelling in manly sports, adapt themselves
-readily enough to military duties. To them, at any rate, the prospect of
-hardships or privations would be no deterrent, the imminence of danger
-only an additional incentive. On December 15, 1899—a day to be
-afterwards borne in mournful memory—Colonel Lumsden made up his mind
-that the time for action had come to every Briton who could see his way
-to giving the Mother Country a helpful hand. He cabled at once to his
-friend Sir Patrick Playfair in Calcutta his proposal to raise a corps of
-European Mounted Infantry for service in South Africa, and backed it
-with an offer, not only to take the field himself, but to contribute a
-princely sum in aid of a fund for equipping any force the Government
-might sanction. Then, without waiting to know whether his services had
-been accepted, he took passage by the next steamer for India.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER I
- _HOW THE CORPS WAS RAISED AND EQUIPPED_
-
-
- Offer Government fifty thousand rupees and my services any capacity
- towards raising European Mounted Infantry Contingent, India, service
- Cape. Wire Melbourne Club, Melbourne.—Leaving nineteenth, due Calcutta
- January 9. Do not divulge name until my arrival.—LUMSDEN.
-
-These were the stirring words of Colonel Lumsden’s laconic message
-flashed by cable from Australia to Calcutta at a time when all India was
-ripe for any movement in aid of the Empire, and only waiting for a lead
-in the course it should take. No wonder that the spirit of a man whose
-enthusiastic confidence was expressed in an offer so munificent
-communicated itself to all whom Sir Patrick Playfair consulted on the
-subject. Still, official susceptibilities, ever prone to look askance at
-anything that seems like civilian interference with military
-prerogatives, had to be considered. Tact was necessary at the very
-outset to avoid all possibility of friction. Colonel Lumsden had
-evidently foreseen this when he selected as the recipient of his cable
-message an Anglo-Indian of diplomatic temperament, great social
-influence, and varied experience. Few men, if any, could have been
-better qualified for the delicate negotiations, or could have appealed
-to the Indian public, Native and European, with more certainty of
-success than Sir Patrick Playfair, whose services then and for months
-afterwards entitle him to a niche in India’s Walhalla beside the founder
-of Lumsden’s Horse. Even at the sacrifice of continuity, it is
-appropriate to quote here an appreciative comment by one who knew how
-much Sir Patrick Playfair did towards the formation and equipment of a
-thoroughly representative force. From the moment of receiving Colonel
-Lumsden’s telegram he displayed the keenest interest in its object, and
-endeavoured to ensure a successful issue with all the energy that has
-characterised him in his advocacy and support of many public enterprises
-during a brilliant career. He was the prime mover in every social
-function organised in honour of Lumsden’s Horse, and in everything done
-for their benefit apart from military details while they remained in
-India. After their departure for the front he never lost an opportunity
-of identifying himself with them in every way, and none would have been
-keener than he to share their dangers and hardships if his position had
-enabled him to accompany them. In this connection Sir Patrick had an
-entertaining dialogue one day with General Patterson, of the United
-States army, who said, ‘What I have been wondering about is why you did
-not go yourself, Sir Patrick.’ To this the knight replied, ‘Well, you
-know, I am a busy man. Of course I should have liked to go above all
-things, but with my engagements it was impossible.’ ‘Ah, yes!’ said the
-General; ‘I guess you’re like Artemus Ward’s friend, the Baldinsville
-editor, who would “delight to wade in gore,” but whose country bade him
-stay at home and announce week by week the measures taken by Government,
-or, like Artemus himself, who, having given two cousins to the war, was
-ready to sacrifice his wife’s brother and shed the blood of all his
-able-bodied relations “rather’n not see the rebellyin krusht.”’ As it
-was, Sir Patrick took the pains to publish every item of interest sent
-to him by the officer commanding throughout the campaign. When, after
-twelve months of honourable service, the corps turned homewards again,
-he took the initiative in preparing a welcome worthy of them, and after
-Lumsden’s Horse had been disbanded he showed a kindly interest in the
-men by endeavouring to procure appointments for all who needed
-assistance of that kind, and thereby won their gratitude as he had long
-before gained their esteem. This is anticipating events, but, like the
-prologue to a play, it may help to give some idea of a character whose
-influence on the whole story is potent though not often in evidence.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Photo: Elliott & Fry_
- CURZON
-]
-
-Sir Patrick Playfair’s first step was to approach General P.J. Maitland,
-C.B., Military Secretary to the Government of India, to whom he made
-known Colonel Lumsden’s offer and explained something of its probable
-scope. General Maitland, who warmly supported the proposal, said he
-would place it before His Excellency the Viceroy, but intimated that the
-matter would then have to be referred to the War Office, without whose
-consent the Government of India could do nothing in connection with the
-war. At that time Colonel Lumsden was on his way to Calcutta, and had
-telegraphed again from Albany to find out what progress was being made,
-but got no answer. Sir Patrick, knowing his man, had no misgivings that
-he might turn back discouraged by the prospect of an official cold
-shoulder. Lord Curzon was still absent from Calcutta on tour, and the
-Commander-in-Chief, the late Sir William Lockhart, had not returned from
-his official round of inspection in Burma, so that no immediate
-opportunity occurred for placing the proposal before either of them at a
-personal interview. General Maitland, however, did more than he had
-promised by so urging the case in a communication to the Viceroy that
-His Excellency took it up, and immediately on his arrival in Calcutta
-telegraphed to the Commander-in-Chief, who thereupon gave his approval
-promptly. The headquarters authorities asked how many men were to go,
-and Sir Patrick said he thought from two hundred and fifty to three
-hundred. That suggestion was embodied in a telegram to the War Office,
-which, as usual, took time to consider it. Again Colonel Lumsden, who
-had then reached Colombo, cabled for information as to the state of
-affairs, but again no reply was vouchsafed. So he came on, fully
-prepared to meet disappointment at the end of his journey. When he got
-within sight of land, however, all India knew of his splendid offer and
-its acceptance by the Home Government. The whole story had been
-published in every newspaper two days before Colonel Lumsden steamed up
-the Hooghly to find himself a hero. Crowds of his friends and admirers
-were there to welcome him as chief of a corps that had neither a local
-habitation nor a name, nor even a substantial existence at the moment.
-With characteristic abnegation of self, he had offered his services in
-any capacity, but nobody doubted from the hour of his arrival in
-Calcutta that whatever force India might send to the front would have
-Lumsden for its leader. The newspapers even began to give his name to
-the contingent before it had assumed bodily shape or anybody knew
-exactly how it was to be raised. Some days later the popular choice was
-confirmed by publication of a War Office order couched in the following
-words:
-
- ‘Her Majesty’s Government having accepted the offer of the Government
- of India to provide a force of Mounted Volunteers for service in South
- Africa, two companies of Mounted Infantry, to be called the Indian
- Mounted Infantry Corps (Lumsden’s Horse), will be raised immediately
- at Calcutta under the command of Lieut.-Colonel D. McT. Lumsden, of
- the Volunteer Force of India, Supernumerary List, Assam Valley Light
- Horse.’
-
-With this order, giving unqualified approval of the project, came a
-mobilisation scheme in which the Government undertook to provide the
-necessary sea-kit for use on board ship only, the transport, the daily
-rations as for other soldiers, the weapons, the munitions of war, and
-pay at the rate of 1_s._ 2_d._ a day, but nothing else. The rest was
-left to private enterprise working on popular enthusiasm and the loyal
-sentiments of a great community. Towards the sum requisite for the
-complete equipment and maintenance of a mounted force in the field, even
-half a lakh of rupees would not go very far. The spirit that had
-prompted one man to offer that sum and his own services to boot proved
-contagious, however, and Colonel Lumsden had so little doubt what the
-result would be that he immediately announced his readiness to receive
-applications from men who might be willing to serve in South Africa for
-a year, or ‘for not less than the period of the war.’ That call was
-published by Indian newspapers on January 10, 1900, and in response
-Volunteers sent their names from every district far and near, until
-Colonel Lumsden might have enrolled a thousand as easily as the two or
-three hundred sanctioned by Government. His one difficulty, indeed, was
-that of selection, and there the experience he had gained from studying
-character closely under many different conditions came in. He was
-assisted by suggestions from officers commanding the Calcutta Light
-Horse, the Assam Valley Light Horse, the Surma Valley Light Horse, the
-Behar Light Horse, the Punjab, the Mysore, and the Rangoon Volunteer
-Corps. Authorities at home had by that time learned a very important
-lesson, the outcome of which was expressed in a phrase very different
-from the unlucky telegram that gave so much offence to Australians a few
-weeks earlier. Colonel Lumsden was told ‘preference will be given to
-Volunteers from mounted Volunteer Corps, but Volunteers belonging to
-Infantry corps who may possess the requisite qualifications will also be
-eligible.’ One of the qualifications laid down was that they should be
-‘good riders’ before joining Lumsden’s Horse. Here the value of previous
-training in military duties and of something more than haphazard
-horsemanship was recognised; and happily Colonel Lumsden knew exactly
-the sort of men who would meet both requirements, especially as the
-limits of age (between twenty and forty) brought the best of those who
-had the riding and shooting experiences incidental to a planter’s life
-into the category. It is not surprising if he showed a partiality for
-them when rival claims had to be decided upon. The fact that many of
-them offered to bring their own horses weighed nothing with him, though
-he knew that the companies would have to be mounted somehow and that the
-Government had explicitly declined to provide horses for that purpose.
-Either by private contributions in kind or by public subscription toward
-the necessary funds for purchasing, a horse for each trooper had to be
-furnished; but this consideration did not weigh for a moment against the
-chances of a man who could only give himself to the Empire’s service, so
-long as he had in essential points better qualifications than other
-candidates could boast. The wife of a prominent and popular soldier—now
-a general—asked, as a great favour, that her brother might be allowed to
-serve as a trooper in the corps. To such a pleader Sir Patrick could not
-say ‘no,’ so he arranged a little dinner at which the fascinating lady
-was to sit beside Colonel Lumsden. Whether her gentle persuasions
-prevailed or the brother’s merits were too obvious to be disregarded, it
-is certain that he joined the ranks of Lumsden’s Horse, and so
-completely justified the choice that he is now an officer of the Regular
-army and a Companion of the Distinguished Service Order. Naturally, the
-selection of two hundred and fifty men to represent all India from among
-a thousand who were anxious for the opportunity of seeing active service
-gave rise to much jealousy and heart-burning on the part of the
-rejected. Reading some of their vituperations, one might imagine that
-they had been aspirants to posts of high distinction, or at least to
-lucrative sinecures, rather than candidates for the khaki jackets of
-privates in a regiment about to share the hardships of a perilous
-campaign. One disappointed applicant, whose martial ardour was not to be
-quenched by rejection, wrote angrily to the ‘Englishman,’ suggesting
-that there was gross favouritism in the preference shown for planters
-over townsmen. His letter is worth quoting at length as typical of the
-fighting spirit that had been aroused everywhere by Colonel Lumsden’s
-patriotic manifesto. Thus he wrote:
-
- _To the Editor of the ‘Englishman.’_
-
- SIR,—I hope I am in time to draw the attention of the Government to
- the _Bahadur_[1] style in which the selection to the ‘Indian Yeomanry
- Corps’ of Volunteers is being conducted. Because a man is the son of
- his father, and owns a few ponies and a few hundred rupees, is he to
- be given the preference as a fighting unit?
-
- There are to-day in India, even in the city of Calcutta, men of
- unquestionable merit, men who are sons and the recipients of a
- heritage of blood shed in England’s and her Most Gracious Majesty’s
- cause from fathers who had bled and died for England and England’s
- prestige, and I beg to ask you, Sir, are these men to be shelved to
- suit the convenience of a few planters? I am not a planter, and, as an
- outsider, I put my claims forward as a test of merit. I am willing to
- shoot a match up the range with the best man selected from Behar, run
- him a given distance, ride him on strange nags (catch weights), and in
- the end with my weight and other recommendations beat him.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Photo: Bourne & Shepherd_
- BEHAR CONTINGENT OF LUMSDEN’S HORSE
-]
-
-There is quite a ring of mediaeval chivalry about that challenge to
-‘shoot up the range.’ One cannot mistake its blood-thirsty significance,
-and perhaps it is lucky for the Champion of Behar that he did not take
-up the gauntlet thus ruthlessly thrown down. It will be noticed that
-this duel, after the manner suggested by one of Bret Harte’s heroes, was
-to precede all other events in the prolonged ordeal; and imagination
-shudders at the picture of awful slaughter that would have been wrought,
-as the picked marksmen of Behar and Hyderabad and Oudh and Assam went
-down one by one, if they had dared to face the deadly rifle of that
-truculent citizen of Calcutta, without getting a chance to prove whether
-he could run or ride. Happily, the selected two hundred and fifty kept
-their heads, so that the trial by single combat never came off; but one
-must hope that a place was found in Lumsden’s Horse for the
-self-confident challenger, and that he proved as formidable on the field
-as in a printed column. Readers may scan the names of troopers, whose
-occupations before enlistment are all given in the Appendix, and yet be
-left speculating whether or not the writer of that letter was among the
-chosen after all. He will not be found in the first or second section of
-Company A, composed almost to a man of indigo-planters, or in the third
-section, whose tea-planters, mainly from Assam, have not a townsman
-among them; and the planters who make up an overwhelming majority of
-three sections in Company B would equally disclaim all knowledge of the
-fire-eating citizen. Can it be that he figures in the more casual fourth
-section of either company, under the vague designation of a ‘gentleman’
-or a ‘journalist’? A little levity may be pardoned now in reference to a
-matter which, at the time, aroused some acrimony. All that, however, was
-swept away by the wave of enthusiasm, leaving no bitterness behind it,
-even in the minds of those who at first thought themselves humiliated by
-rejection. If Lumsden’s Horse were almost entirely a corps of planters,
-few questioned the care and discretion with which Colonel Lumsden had
-chosen his men, and none could deny that they made a goodly show at
-manœuvres on the Maidan, where their camp was pitched within easy
-reach of the city. Though quartered there for six weeks in circumstances
-that exposed them to many temptations, those troopers behaved in a
-manner that would have been considered exemplary for the best regiment
-of disciplined Regulars. This is not surprising when we consider that in
-civil life they had been accustomed to exercise, command, and to exact
-obedience from others, even at the risk of their own lives. At the
-outset Colonel Lumsden made it a condition that he would have none but
-unmarried men in the ranks, and to this rule there were few known
-exceptions, though some Benedicts crept in undeclared. As a regiment,
-Lumsden’s Horse had an _esprit de corps_ to maintain from the day of its
-birth under auspices that made the occasion imperial, and every man of
-it was tacitly pledged to prove himself a worthy recipient of the honour
-conferred upon him as one of India’s chosen representatives. How that
-feeling prevailed over all other considerations in the moment when
-Lumsden’s Horse played their manful part in battle for the first time,
-and how it held them together in a comradeship that was akin to
-brotherhood through after-months of hard campaigning, will appear as the
-narrative unfolds itself. It began to have an influence while the corps
-was as yet but an invertebrate skeleton, and it helps to explain the
-anxiety of Indian Volunteers to join the ranks of a force that was
-destined by the nature of things to become historical. One can
-understand, therefore, the alternations of hope and depression that
-passed over certain districts where men who had offered their services
-waited anxiously for the decision on which their chances of distinction
-hung. Some glimpses of this may be got through the letters received by
-Colonel Lumsden from all parts of India at that time, and from the
-diaries in which thoughts as well as actions are recorded by the men
-themselves. One begins his notes—two days after Colonel Lumsden’s call
-for Volunteers had been published—with the entry: ‘An express came from
-—— to say he had sent in the names of twenty men from C Company.’ After
-waiting impatiently several days for news that did not come, the diarist
-got his friend to send two telegrams, one to Colonel Lumsden, the other
-direct to the Adjutant-General at Calcutta, offering a complete company.
-The next day somebody turned up with news that they had been accepted.
-Jubilation on this score, however, lasted no longer than twenty-four
-hours, when it gave place to dejection caused by rumours that they ‘were
-not accepted after all.’ This wave of depression passed away as speedily
-in its turn, dispelled by the rays of hope that burst out radiantly on
-receipt of a chit from —— ‘asking me to come in at once.’ Under the next
-day’s date comes the crowning triumph of that anxious time, told very
-simply but in a way that makes one feel the nerves of those men
-throbbing through every word. ‘Started for Chick,’ runs the entry; ‘met
-——, who told me we really were accepted. Then we met —— dashing along on
-his bike. He had already upset a woman.’ A week later, after many
-festive farewells, that contingent was on its way to Calcutta and
-foregathering with other contingents, whose experiences had all been the
-same, for every man of them was buoyant at the prospect of seeing active
-service, and would have regarded it as a personal slight, if not an
-indelible stigma on his reputation for courage, if he had been left
-behind.
-
-[Illustration: MYSORE AND COORG CONTINGENT]
-
-So day by day the ranks of Lumsden’s Horse gained strength until their
-numbers were complete and recruiting had to be stopped; while many
-candidates whom the Colonel would gladly have taken tried in vain for
-admission. It was a regiment of which any commanding officer might be
-proud, whether judged by physical or mental standards. A corps of
-planters it might have been justly called, for they outnumbered all of
-other occupations; but it represented many classes, and nearly every
-district in India where sport-loving Britishers are to be found. In its
-ranks were fifty-five indigo-planters, sixty-one tea-planters,
-thirty-one coffee-planters, and five of similar occupation not
-specifically designated. Beside these, the sixteen Civil Service men of
-various grades, three bank assistants, twelve railway officials,
-including civil engineers, three medical men from the planting
-districts, one inspector of mounted police, a brewer, a tutor, a
-journalist, and a few others whose peaceful days until then had been
-devoted to commerce, form a comparatively small proportion. Thus
-considerably more than half the fighting strength were planters. Among
-the remainder, townsmen must have been fairly represented, to say
-nothing of artificers who formed the Maxim Gun detachment under command
-of Captain Bernard Willoughby Holmes, whose services had been placed at
-Colonel Lumsden’s disposal by consent of the East India Railway Company.
-The Mercantile Marine also furnished its quota in the persons of a
-captain, a chief officer, a second officer, and two engineers of the
-British India Steam Navigation Company’s fleet, and a chief officer of
-the Hajee Cassim Line. A veterinary surgeon, police inspectors,
-policemen, clerks in the Military Accounts Department, travelling
-agents, hotel assistants, a photographer, a theatrical agent, and a
-superintendent of the Rangoon Boating Club joined the Transport, from
-which two very smart fellows were drawn into the ranks as troopers
-during the campaign, and one of them was subsequently gazetted to the
-West India Regiment as second lieutenant. Counting all these, the
-enrolled strength was just 300.
-
-Then came the difficult and delicate task of appointing company officers
-and section commanders—a difficulty enhanced by the fact that many
-Volunteer officers had enlisted as troopers. I have said that the
-Government had given its unqualified approval to Colonel Lumsden’s
-project. This statement, however, applies only to the general scheme. It
-must be remembered that he had made no stipulation as to his own rank,
-or the right of selecting officers, and it was not in the nature of a
-British War Office to let the prerogative of veto slip entirely out of
-its hands. Colonel Lumsden’s own appointment as commanding officer came
-directly from headquarters, on the suggestion probably of Lord Curzon.
-Two other conditions, not very irksome, the military authorities made at
-Colonel Lumsden’s urgent request. These were that captains commanding
-companies should be Regular officers on active service, and that the
-adjutant, who would also act as quartermaster, should be appointed from
-the Staff Corps or have graduated in it. These nominations were left to
-the Commander-in-Chief in India, and in the ordinary course of things
-they involved the appointment of Regular non-commissioned officers as
-quartermaster-sergeants and company sergeant-majors. Other subordinate
-posts for which military experience or special training is necessary
-were also filled by Regulars, who thus relieved the Volunteer troopers
-of some laborious duties. An officer second in command, four captains
-acting as senior subalterns, four lieutenants, a medical officer, and a
-veterinary surgeon had still to be selected, and the choice must have
-involved many anxious moments, seeing how much depended on the unknown
-qualities that are hidden in all men and may lie dormant for years, only
-to be developed for good or ill in the crisis of an emergency. How
-Colonel Lumsden succeeded in this, as in every other preliminary task
-that he imposed upon himself, is now a matter of history to be dealt
-with in proper sequence. The wisdom of his selections could only be
-proved by events, and to these, as narrated by men who were best able to
-judge, appeal may be confidently made. Naturally, some who had held
-commissioned rank previously, and thought their claims to consideration
-indisputable, felt sore at being passed over in favour of others who
-were junior to them in the Volunteer service. But this irritation was
-not allowed to show itself or interfere with loyal subordination in all
-military duties.
-
-To the inviolable pages of his diary one, whose merits were not at the
-time so well known as they ought to have been, confides the pregnant
-sentence: ‘Heard to-day that —— was to be a _captain_, I a _corporal_.’
-There the entry ends, leaving a blank more eloquent than any scathing
-comment could have been. For all that, the captain and the corporal
-remained on the best of terms, and, though they ceased for discipline’s
-sake to call each other by their Christian names, there is reason to
-believe that both soon came to the conclusion that no very serious
-mistake had been made in estimating their relative fitness for command.
-At any rate, after a little friction they shaped themselves like round
-pegs to round holes. But that is the habit of Britishers, who, however
-unaccustomed to discipline, are not slow in recognising its inevitable
-necessity and its inestimable value. They come to see that without it no
-concerted movement, whether big or small, is certain of success. You
-cannot conduct military operations to a definite end, any more than you
-can navigate a ship or rule a family, if individuality is allowed to
-take the form of insubordination. These lessons Colonel Lumsden began to
-inculcate in his peculiarly persuasive way directly he had got his men
-together and placed officers in authority over them.
-
-Men and officers, however, are not the only things necessary to keep a
-fighting unit going when once it has been formed and organised. Sir
-Patrick Playfair found the full equipment of such a force no less costly
-than he had estimated. Fortunately, however, he had foreseen all
-difficulties in this connection and provided for them. After
-consultation with General Maitland, General Wace (Director-General of
-Ordnance), Sir Alfred Gaselee (then Quartermaster-General), Sir E.R.
-Elles (Adjutant-General), and the late Surgeon-General Harvey, it was
-decided that nearly a thousand rupees per man would be necessary for
-equipping the force, buying horses in addition to those brought in by
-troopers themselves, and establishing a reserve fund sufficient for all
-emergencies that might arise while the men remained on active service.
-This meant that a sum amounting to two and a half lakhs of rupees, or
-about sixteen thousand five hundred pounds sterling, would have to be
-got together by public subscription. Until this campaign proved the
-depth and sincerity of Imperial sentiments among nearly all classes of
-the community, few people, even in England, believed that such a sum
-would be given to send a mere handful of Volunteers on active service
-far from their home. And most people, having but a superficial knowledge
-of Indian affairs, would have ridiculed the suggestion that native
-princes or merchants would contribute in proportion little less than
-Johannesburg millionaires to uphold British supremacy in South Africa.
-
-Sir Patrick Playfair, however, knowing by experience how liberal had
-been the response of those people to all calls on their generosity, and
-gauging with remarkable insight the genuineness of their loyal devotion
-in a time of possible peril to the Empire, had no doubt what the result
-would be. But even he was not prepared for anything like the unanimity
-of enthusiasm that his appeal evoked. It took simply the form of a
-general invitation to subscribe. The marvellous rapidity with which the
-subscription list filled may therefore be taken as a voluntary
-expression by Europeans and natives alike of staunch fidelity to the
-cause for which Lumsden’s Horse were being enrolled as a fighting unit.
-The contributors included His Excellency the Viceroy (Lord Curzon of
-Kedleston), His Excellency the Governor of Bombay (Lord Sandhurst), His
-Excellency the Commander-in-Chief in India (the late Sir William
-Lockhart), their Honours the Lieutenant-Governor of Bengal (Sir John
-Woodburn), the Lieutenant-Governor of the Punjab (Sir W. Mackworth
-Young), the Lieutenant-Governor of the North-West Provinces and Oudh
-(the Bight Honourable Sir A.P. MacDonnell, P.C.), and the
-Lieutenant-Governor of Burma (Sir F.W.R. Fryer). Princes, rajahs,
-landowners, mercantile firms, and European residents almost without
-exception, came forward, subscribing munificently, until the sum of
-227,000 rupees had been promised and received in cash, besides
-contributions from tradesmen in kind amounting to another 100,000
-rupees.
-
-No single subscription rivalled Colonel Lumsden’s splendid offer, or
-came anywhere near it in amount; but Sir Seymour King, K.C.I.E., M.P.,
-on account of Messrs. Henry S. King & Co., London, and two allied firms
-in Bombay and Calcutta, gave a lump sum of 10,000 rupees, while
-Maharajah Sir Jotendro Mohun Tagore, K.C.S.I., Rajah Sir Sourindro Mohun
-Tagore, Knt., C.I.E., Nawab Sir Sidi Ahmed Khan, K.C.S.I., Mr. F.
-Verner, Messrs. Apcar & Co., and Kumar Rada Prosad Roy sent 5,000 rupees
-each. The last named, a zemindar, or landed proprietor, was quite
-diffident and doubtful whether he ought to subscribe without being asked
-directly, but he expressed a hope that his contribution would be
-accepted. A great many merchants and others who were only known to Sir
-Patrick Playfair by name sent cheques for amounts varying from fifty to
-2,500 rupees. No fewer than twenty-eight mercantile firms in Calcutta
-subscribed 1,000 rupees each, and among the most liberal donors were
-native princes of nearly every State in the three Presidencies.
-
-His Highness the Maharajah of Bhownagar, whose palace is 2,500 miles
-distant from Calcutta, sent fifty Arab chargers and saddlery; the
-Maharani Regent of Mysore, twenty-two country-bred and Arab horses; and
-other potentates, like the Maharajah Bahadur of Soubarsa and the Rajah
-of Mearsa, gave handsome presents of a similar kind according to the
-resources of their studs. The natives of Aligarh, clubbing together,
-sent twenty-seven horses and one mule; while one, Mohammed Mazamullah
-Khan, gave two horses, a mule, a donkey, and two small sleeping tents,
-accompanied by a touchingly simple letter saying, ‘They are all I have
-to help to conquer the enemies of the Great White Queen.’ Other
-contributions in kind ranged from tents sufficient for the whole force
-presented by the Elgin cotton mills of Cawnpore, rough serge cloth for
-all coats requisite from the Egerton woollen mills at Cawnpore, puttees
-from Kashmir and Cawnpore, gaiters, Cardigan jackets, hats, horseshoes
-and nails, forage, tea, coffee, beer, whisky, and cigars, down to
-matches, of which no fewer than 7,000 boxes were sent by one thoughtful
-gentleman. The India General Steam Navigation Company, the River Steam
-Navigation Company, the East India Railway, and the Eastern Bengal State
-Railway combined to carry men and horses free of charge from all parts
-of India to Calcutta.
-
-A small executive committee was formed by Colonel Lumsden to carry out
-the arrangements for the equipment and despatch of the corps. Its
-members were:
-
- Colonel LUMSDEN, _President_.
- Sir PATRICK PLAYFAIR, C.I.E.
- Colonel GEORGE MONEY.
- The Hon. Colonel BUCKINGHAM, C.I.E.
- Major EDDIS.
- Mr. HARRY STUART.
-
-The work of organising naturally fell to Colonel Lumsden, who was also
-busily engaged in selecting officers and enrolling men; while Sir
-Patrick Playfair undertook the entire management of the collection of
-subscriptions in cash and in kind, assisted by Mr. Shirley Tremearne,
-Editor of ‘Capital,’ whose local knowledge enabled him to render
-valuable aid in appealing to the mercantile community where personal
-appeals were necessary, and in collecting the promised subscriptions for
-which personal application had to be made in accordance with traditional
-etiquette. Mr. Harry Stuart, formerly executive manager of the Bengal
-State Railway, took charge of all arrangements for receiving and messing
-the different detachments on their arrival in Calcutta from distant
-districts until a camp could be formed.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Photo: Bourne & Shepherd_
-
- MR. HARRY STUART SIR PATRICK PLAYFAIR, C.I.E.
- COL. MONEY COL. LUMSDEN, C.B. MAJOR EDDIS
-
- THE EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE
-]
-
-Though the mobilisation scheme—drawn up by the Indian Headquarters Staff
-and sent to Colonel Lumsden after approval by the War Office in
-London—promised no more substantial assistance than the provision of
-arms, ammunition, rations, and transport to South Africa, it furnished
-many suggestions of the greatest importance, and, as a model for use on
-any similar occasion hereafter, it is reproduced at length in the
-Appendix. This document will be found of interest also as giving a
-comprehensive idea of the many requirements for which provision had to
-be made by Colonel Lumsden and his colleagues. Their labours were
-lightened by the cordial co-operation of military officials, who went
-out of their way to render every possible assistance. Without the advice
-and practical aid thus given by heads of departments of the Government
-of India, it would have been impossible for Colonel Lumsden, or any
-other commanding officer in his position, to have carried out all the
-War Office conditions economically. Major-General Wace, C.B., as head of
-the Ordnance Department, gave every facility for Colonel Lumsden to
-indent on Government stores for clothing and accoutrements at regulation
-prices, and not only so, but he and Colonel Buckland, the Superintendent
-of Army Clothing, with Major-General T.F. Hobday, Commissary-General,
-and Surgeon-General Robert Harvey, C.B., were ready to place the fruits
-of their long experience and special knowledge of various details at the
-service of Colonel Lumsden whenever he felt the need of advice in such
-matters; and Captain A.L. Phillips, an officer on the Staff of Sir
-Alfred Gaselee, Q.M.G., was untiring in his efforts to make the movement
-a success so far as his personal efforts and influence could avail. So
-everything went well from the beginning, thanks in great measure to the
-lively interest taken in the corps by Lord Curzon, who was pleased to
-become its Honorary Colonel, and by all officers of his personal Staff.
-Her Excellency Lady Curzon was equally zealous and lent her influence to
-every good work by which the ladies of Calcutta sought to express their
-admiration, and perhaps their tender regard, for the heroes who were
-going forth to fight. What form that expression should take was a
-subject much debated and long in doubt. Of course Sir Patrick Playfair
-had to be consulted by a deputation of charming damsels. He thought a
-bazaar might give them the opportunity they wanted. Yes! that was just
-the thing; but then—and then came a string of fatal objections. A
-smoking-concert was next suggested, and the young ladies thought that
-idea splendid, only—well, in short, it wouldn’t do. Then, as if it were
-the last resource to be thought of—a sort of forlorn hope—Sir Patrick
-hinted that a dance might meet the case. To that his fair interviewers
-demurred most effusively; but then and without any hypnotic suggestion,
-so Sir Patrick avers, they began to see that something might be urged in
-favour of it, and at last, with a unanimity that was wonderful, they
-decided that a dance was the only means of fitly celebrating the
-occasion. Having come to that conclusion, all their coy objections
-vanished in a moment. Sir Patrick saw his opportunity and seized it to
-persuade them that, as it was to be a ladies’ enterprise, they must
-manage it entirely themselves. Thereupon they formed a committee, of
-which Miss Pugh was elected Honorary Secretary, invited Lady Curzon of
-Kedleston to become patroness, and set to work with an energy which no
-mere man could hope to rival. They had of course to enlist masculine
-services for subordinate duties. This they did with a sweet despotism
-that made revolt impossible. The men had to accept without a murmur the
-positions assigned to them as stewards, and obeyed every mandate like
-the willing slaves we all should be in similar circumstances. The
-committee of ladies showed a business-like promptitude in settling every
-detail and a faculty for organisation which won from a military admirer
-the approving comment that they could conduct a campaign if they would
-only give their minds to it. This or some other feminine attribute had
-such an effect on the wine merchants of Calcutta that they sent
-champagne for the ball-supper and gallantly refused to accept payment.
-So the Calcutta Ball in honour of Lumsden’s Horse became an assured
-success almost from the moment of its happy inception. Brilliant beyond
-the dreams of a _débutante_, it left on many a susceptible heart
-impressions which neither time nor the changing scenes of warfare could
-dim, as the secret archives, to which an editor alone has access,
-attest; and in a less romantic way it proved the unselfish devotion of
-those ladies, who, after paying all expenses, handed over a balance of
-6,000 rupees to the war-chest of Lumsden’s Horse.
-
- LIEUT. SIDEY LIEUT. PUGH CAPT. CLIFFORD LIEUT. CRANE LIEUT.
- NEVILLE CAPT. RUTHERFOORD
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Photo: Harrington & Co._
-]
-
- CAPT. CHAMNEY MAJOR SHOWERS COL. LUMSDEN CAPT. TAYLOR CAPT.
- BERESFORD
- CAPT. NOBLETT VET.-CAPT. STEVENSON
- OFFICERS OF THE CORPS
-
-Such financial aids came not amiss at the moment. Government transports
-chartered by the Royal Indian Marine for taking troops to Natal were
-delayed on the return, and, one vessel having broken down, Colonel
-Lumsden found that he would have to encamp his men on the Maidan for two
-or three weeks longer than he had anticipated, and this entailed an
-additional expenditure of nearly 1,000_l._ for extra rations and
-comforts. To soldiers of Spartan mould, who pride themselves on
-discarding luxuries at the first call to arms, this might have seemed
-like pampering the Volunteer troopers; but it must be remembered that in
-India men cannot give up the habits of a lifetime all at once and come
-down to bare soldier’s rations without danger to their health. And
-Colonel Lumsden’s first object after getting his men was to keep them
-fit. His care in this respect was justified by events no less than his
-judgment in the selection of men for mental and physical attributes. At
-the end of a year’s campaigning he was able to boast that his losses
-from sickness were proportionately less than in any other regiment. This
-delay had its advantages in so far as it gave Colonel Lumsden and his
-officers a chance of training the troopers for their duties and
-accustoming them to their horses before the day of embarkation. The
-postponement, we may be sure, was no disappointment to the people of
-Calcutta, who felt that the Maidan would be a cheerless blank without
-Lumsden’s Horse. It will be well to give here a few details of
-organisation. By War Office order the corps was to consist of two
-companies, each commanded by a Regular officer, and the Government also
-appointed a Regular adjutant to assist Colonel Lumsden in executive
-work; while Colonel Eden C. Showers, Commandant of the Surma Valley
-Light Horse, offered to serve as Major, and was gazetted with that rank
-as second in command. When other officers had been selected, chiefly on
-the recommendation of commandants under whom they had served in
-Volunteer Corps, they were posted in the following order:
-
- STAFF.—Lieutenant-Colonel Dugald McTavish Lumsden, Commandant.
-
- Major Eden C. Showers, Second in Command.
-
- Captain Neville C. Taylor, 14th Bengal Lancers, Adjutant and
- Quartermaster.
-
- Captain Samuel Arthur Powell, Medical Officer.
-
- Veterinary Captain William Stevenson, M.R.C.V.S., Veterinary Surgeon.
-
- A COMPANY.—Captain James Hugh Brownlow Beresford, 3rd Sikhs
- (commanding), Captain John Brownley Rutherfoord, Lieutenants Charles
- Edward Crane and George Augustus Neville.
-
- B COMPANY.—Captain Louis Hemington Noblett, Royal Irish Rifles
- (commanding), Captain Henry Chamney, Captain Frank Clifford,
- Lieutenants Charles Lyon Sidey and Herbert Owain Pugh.
-
- MAXIM GUN DETACHMENT.—Captain Bernard Willoughby Holmes (commanding).
-
-Each company had a Regular non-commissioned officer as Company
-Sergeant-Major and another Regular as Company Quartermaster-Sergeant for
-office duties under the Regimental Quartermaster-Sergeant. Regulars from
-the Artillery, Cavalry, and Infantry were also attached as
-Farrier-Sergeants, Saddlers, and Signallers, and from the Indian
-Commissariat as Transport Sergeant. The Maxim Gun Contingent, under
-Captain Holmes was raised and equipped by the East India Railway
-Company, who offered its services to Colonel Lumsden. The Calcutta
-Committee had decided, with the sanction of the Government, that
-Lumsden’s Horse should not want for adequate regimental transport in the
-field, but, on the contrary, should leave India as a thoroughly
-organised unit in that respect, with a complete train of transport
-carts, ponies, and pack mules, all properly equipped. It is hardly
-necessary to say that the grant of transport, saddlery, and draught
-harness, for which provision was made in the mobilisation order, did not
-comprise all that the committee desired; but the inexhaustible Ordnance
-Stores were again open to be requisitioned ‘on payment,’ and carts of
-the Indian Army Transport pattern were drawn in a similar way from the
-Commissariat Department. The ponies and mules, however, had to be
-collected by agents in the hill districts of Assam and Thibet, a
-distance of 1,000 miles from Calcutta. When all this was done, the corps
-could justly be considered fit for active service, and it is certain
-that no contingent, Volunteer or Regular, landed in South Africa with a
-more efficient transport than Lumsden’s Horse. It came near being upset,
-however, by a War Office decision. Almost at the last minute Colonel
-Lumsden was told that the native drivers would not be permitted to
-accompany the corps, and that no natives could go except one personal
-servant for each officer and a limited number of syces, or grooms, in
-the proportion of one to each charger, as laid down in the mobilisation
-scheme. This allowance of three native attendants to every officer was
-on a sufficiently liberal scale, but it did not meet the requirements
-for transport purposes. Therefore Colonel Lumsden had to enlist European
-drivers, of whom twenty-six were needed for each company. In ordinary
-circumstances Anglo-Indian prejudices would have combined to make this
-an insuperable difficulty; but so keen was the anxiety of men to see war
-service in South Africa that they volunteered to go in any capacity not
-necessarily menial, and so Colonel Lumsden got the full complement of
-drivers together just as readily as lie had filled the ranks with
-fighting men. War Office conditions stipulated that officers and
-troopers of the corps must provide their own horses and saddlery, though
-nearly all of the latter might be drawn from Ordnance Stores at cost
-price. Naturally the supply of suitable animals for Mounted Infantry
-work had to be made a corps affair from the outset. Very few of the
-enlisted troopers owned horses of a class that they would have cared to
-ride through the rough work of a campaign, even if they could be always
-sure of having their own; and Colonel Lumsden was not likely to
-countenance any claims of private ownership when once horses were
-numbered as of the troop. He therefore informed every man who brought a
-horse with him that it must be considered corps property, and might not
-be appropriated by its owner without the commanding officer’s sanction.
-No other arrangement could have worked satisfactorily. In consideration
-of this understanding Colonel Lumsden promised that he would endeavour
-to obtain from Government a scale of compensation for horses thus
-appropriated, and in the event of being successful the sums obtained
-under this head would be returned _pro rata_ to the owners of horses. It
-may be mentioned in passing that Colonel Lumsden’s efforts to this end
-were ultimately successful, the Government consenting to allow an
-average of 30_l._ per horse to the corps, so that every man who brought
-his own charger was compensated at last.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Photo: F. Kapp & Co._
- MESSING AT CALCUTTA
- _Under the Shamiana_
-]
-
-The men having drawn their Lee-Metford rifles with short bayonets and an
-abundant supply of ·303 ball cartridges, both for practice and the
-sterner work to come, were duly clothed and equipped, much to their
-satisfaction.
-
-Not many of these things, in addition to rifles and ammunition, were
-free gifts from Government, whose contributions in kind had to be
-supplemented by purchases out of store at the cost of corps funds and by
-gifts from the appreciative public to whom no appeals were made in vain.
-The troopers, at any rate, were troubled not a whit about these things,
-being quite satisfied with the completeness of their personal outfit,
-even before Mrs. Pugh and the ladies of Calcutta bethought them to work
-woollen comforters for presentation to every man of Lumsden’s Horse on
-the day of embarkation. They did not, however, take so kindly at first
-to the Lee-Metford rifle. It was a new weapon to most of the men, who
-had never handled anything more complicated than the old Martini
-carbine. So batches of men went to the ranges every morning to practise
-and accustom themselves to the peculiarities of a firearm that made no
-more noise than the crack of a whip and ‘had no kick in it.’ This was a
-time of gradual but sometimes painful initiation to the hardships and
-discomforts inseparable from camp life. Lessons, however distasteful,
-had to be learned, and it must be said that Lumsden’s Horse took the
-rough with the smooth cheerily enough, enlivening their daily routine
-with many pleasantries. They were always ready to laugh at a comrade or
-with him in a merry jest at their own expense. Some literary
-contributions from the ranks to local papers were amusing in their
-fanciful exaggerations, which nobody enjoyed more than did the troopers
-whose foibles were thus humorously railed at. For sanitary reasons they
-were one day ordered, by medical authority, to strike their camp and
-pitch it on fresh ground, whereupon one of them wrote:
-
- Like a bolt from the blue has fallen upon this camp the Æsculapian
- decree that we must go hence! It happened to-day that the medical eye
- of Lumsden’s Horse opened wide, and beheld strange sights. What the
- vision was has not been recorded owing to no ink being found in camp
- capable of expressing its blackness, but it is no secret that microbes
- as big as mastodons were observed freely gambolling in the immediate
- vicinity of the commissariat tent. The marvel is that a number of men
- can have lived on such a spot for ten days without coming to more
- serious harm.
-
- The green sward on the banks of the Tolly’s Nullah has presented an
- animated appearance within the last few days, for every train arriving
- in Calcutta has brought its quota to swell the corps. A number of men
- from the Assam Valley Light Horse are now in camp. The Mysore
- contingent is also established, while the Behar lads are expected
- to-morrow by 10 o’clock. These will number a few over fifty, and will
- prove no doubt the _crème de la crème_ of the corps. In a day or two
- the Maxim gun will come into quarters, and Oakley, of Kooch Behar and
- Tirah fame, has gone to some up-country sequestered spot whence comes
- a particularly quiet _jat_ of pony, where he will choose animals of
- gentle temperament and so small that falling off them won’t hurt—for
- Maxim gun men scorn to ride.
-
- This question of riding is no small one, and many gallant sportsmen
- may be seen tearing down the lines trying to get there before their
- horses. One like this was advised by a real Tommy Atkins to sit
- further back and so enjoy a longer ride. Not the least pleasurable
- sight in the camp is when bold Volunteers begin grooming their own
- horses. Some never do more than the neck, because of the risk attached
- to venturing within range of hind feet, with which country-bred horses
- are notoriously handy—if it may be so said of feet. Then saddling
- troubles others, because of the difficulty in distinguishing between
- cantle and pommel when a saddle hasn’t a horse inside to illustrate
- the difference.
-
-There is a touch of boyish imagination about that sketch, but it is not
-altogether fanciful. Some of the Volunteers who joined first were by no
-means experienced horse-masters, and, to nearly all, the equipments for
-Mounted Infantry in full campaigning kit were not less strange than
-military technicalities. There was a rich fund of amusement for
-Lumsden’s Horse in the unauthorised version of ordinary commands as one
-trooper construed them. When sections in line were crowding too much
-upon him he would say, ‘Fall off, man! Fall off to the left.’ The
-comrade thus admonished would murmur, ‘Hang it all, man, that is just
-what I am trying not to do.’ Still, young Malaprop would repeat, in
-defiance of the Sergeant-Major’s peremptory request for silence in the
-ranks, ‘Fall off! fall off!’ meaning all the time ‘Ease off.’ These
-simple incidents of every day gave a piquancy to camp ‘gup,’ and were
-the cause of more mirth than the elaborate jokes concocted by literary
-troopers could arouse. One civilian, in a playfully prophetic mood,
-devised a new coat of arms for Lumsden’s Horse, which was published in
-the ‘Indian Daily News’ as a clever play upon the cant of Heraldry;
-though the Earl Marshal and all the Kings-at-Arms and all the learned
-pursuivants of Heralds’ College might have been puzzled if called upon
-to emblazon the quaint conceit with its complicated quarterings, its
-proper shield of pretence, and its lurid crest of augmentation.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1:
-
- Hindustani for ‘cavalier.’—ED.
-
------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER II
- _PREPARING FOR THE FRONT—DEPARTURE FROM CALCUTTA_
-
-
-Life in camp on the Maidan was becoming somewhat monotonous to men whose
-ardent spirits panted for opportunities of distinction in the Empire’s
-service, and for freer movement on the vast South African veldt. For
-traces of this yearning one may search in vain through pages of diaries,
-to which men do not commit all their secret thoughts. Perhaps they
-regarded a parade of warlike sentiments as bad form even in the written
-impressions that were intended only for private perusal. So they
-contented themselves with noting briefly the minor events of listless
-days and the mild excitements of evenings that passed swiftly enough in
-such social pleasures as dining, theatre-going, or listening to the
-latest London melodies at a smoking-concert organised in aid of the war
-fund. Even a flower-show was regarded by some as an amusement. We come
-across frequent references to baths at the Swimming Club, tiffin at
-Pelité’s, and luxurious little dinners at the Bristol, the Continental,
-or the Grand; but only by inference, from the sudden importance given to
-these everyday incidents of civilian life, can we gather what a contrast
-they were to the coarser fare and rougher surroundings of meals in camp.
-There is not a hint of discontent at being reduced for the first time in
-their lives to soldiers’ rations or at the hard fatigue work they were
-put to as a necessary part of the daily routine. These manly young
-troopers were beginning to learn the soldier’s lessons of subjection to
-discipline and endurance of discomforts that must have seemed
-sufficiently like hardships to most of them, but they had not acquired
-the habit of grumbling which is Tommy’s cherished privilege. The visits
-of crowds to that camp on the Maidan every Sunday were evidence enough
-of the great interest taken by all classes of citizens in Lumsden’s
-Horse, who were properly appreciative of those attentions, and not quite
-insensible to the sweet flattery of admiring glances from pretty eyes.
-The motto that ‘None but the brave deserve the fair’ is one in which
-gallant soldiers from all time have found encouragement, and Lumsden’s
-Horse were beginning to appropriate it with other soldierly attributes,
-for were they not all brave and resolved to prove it? Their only fear
-was that the chance of doing knightly deeds might not come to them, and
-that they would land in South Africa only in time to learn that the war
-had been finished before the tardy transports could get there.
-Nevertheless, we know that they relaxed no efforts to make themselves
-fit for the fray. From contributions by troopers to the Indian papers we
-may learn how zealous they were to master the least attractive duties of
-military life, and Staff officers bear witness to the sincerity and
-success of these endeavours. Mere forms of discipline might have been
-lacking, and one cannot wonder that men who had lived similar lives,
-sharing the same sports and social pleasures, found it difficult at
-first to fall into their relative positions, some as officers, others as
-troopers, and to keep each his own proper groove, ignoring old
-associations. But the right spirit of subordination was there, and a
-commander of Irregulars does not ask for more if he has the true
-capacity for leadership. The daily routine of duties in camp on the
-Maidan was designed to foster this spirit without making the yoke of
-essential discipline too galling. A description of it as given by one in
-the ranks will show that Lumsden’s Horse were by no means pampered
-Sybarites even at that early stage of their soldiering:
-
- At 6 the ‘rouse’ sounds, and, some minutes later, men clad in khaki
- breeches, putti gaiters, and flannel shirts issue from the little bell
- tents into the clammy mist of early morning, and after obtaining a cup
- of tea at the mess, remove the jhools—which are a most necessary
- protection against the heavy dew—from their horses, and give them a
- rub down. At 7 we hear the bugle call ‘Saddle up,’ and at 7.30 the men
- are all fallen in on the Maidan in column of sections, and go through
- the various evolutions, special attention being given to mounting and
- dismounting on saddles packed with full kit, and the leading of
- horses, the correct and rapid performance of which is so important in
- Mounted Infantry work. The regiment is divided into two companies,
- each company consisting of 120 men formed into four sections, and
- these again divided into permanent sub-sections of four men each. As a
- rule the sections work independently, each under its own commander.
- Blank ammunition is liberally expended in order to accustom the horses
- to the rattle of musketry. Most of the men are mounted on
- country-breds; but several ride shapely walers averaging 14.2.
- Considering that 50 per cent. of the horses are quite untrained as
- chargers, they are astonishingly quiet and well-behaved; the
- C.B.s—with the exception of an occasional kicker, which plays havoc in
- the ranks, and is a source of some danger to his unfortunate
- companions, both men and horses—are quick, handy little brutes, and
- already they have learnt to lead steadily and well. There are, of
- course, a good number of trained horses in the ranks; the Mysore men,
- for instance, being almost without exception mounted on Silidar
- horses, which are proving most satisfactory chargers and are expected
- to do well in Africa. After parade the horses are watered, fed, and
- groomed by their respective owners, and then, as Mr. Pepys would have
- said, ‘to breakfast,’ under a large _shamiana_ placed at one end of
- the camp in the shade of sycamore-fig trees. The morning passes
- quickly while men are drawing and marking kit, cleaning rifles, or
- doing fatigue duty at pitching tents and other healthy exercises. At
- noon we water and feed the horses, and 1 o’clock is the tiffin hour.
- At 4.30 there is an afternoon parade, sometimes by companies, and
- sometimes the whole regiment parading under the Colonel or Major,
- after which water, feed and bed-down, and then dinner, and an early
- retirement to bed. But not for all is this happy rest. There are two
- guard tents, at opposite ends of the camp, each company providing a
- sergeant and three men for guard every twenty-four hours, while a man
- from each company is on sentry throughout the night, his duty being to
- see that the horses are properly secured—head and heel—and be on hand
- in case of sickness.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Photo: F. Kapp & Co._
- HORSES IN CAMP AT CALCUTTA
-]
-
-They were not all tyros in war. Burma ribbons on the breasts of some
-Surma Valley Volunteers who were at Manipur told of previous service in
-the field, though against enemies very different from the ‘slim,’
-evasive Boer. Others who wore no badges of distinction were believed to
-have fought in more than one campaign; at least, the fair visitors
-declared that such a martial mien as some men bore could only have been
-acquired on active service: it bespoke a consciousness of great deeds
-gallantly done. The heroes of these flattering tributes lived up to
-their reputations by putting on an air of mystery, which the Colonel
-alone could have dispelled, for none but he knew the history of every
-man in the regiment. Still, nobody would have thought of looking for
-suspected Boers or Boer spies in the ranks of Lumsden’s Horse. A good
-story, however, is told in this connection at the expense of an officer
-who overheard two men in the uniform of Lumsden’s Horse talking, in a
-tongue that was not English, at one of the hotel bars. The officer, not
-recognising either of them, listened curiously, and caught a few phrases
-which he declared to be German by the sound (and he claimed familiarity
-with that, though he did not know enough of the language to repeat the
-words he had heard). ‘It was German, and no mistake,’ he said, ‘and
-those two men in our uniform were talking it fluently. What could they
-be but Boer spies?’ One had a distinctly Boer face, he thought, and,
-deciding that something ought to be done at once, he assumed his most
-nonchalant air and asked the two men politely for their names. In reply
-they gave names so common in England that he could only regard them as
-aliases. His suspicions being thus seemingly confirmed, he took into his
-confidence two brother-officers, who, when the two ‘spies’ were pointed
-out to them, saw the possibility of playing off a joke on the amateur
-detective, for they recognised in the one with a ‘distinctly Boer face’
-a young planter from Behar whose fresh, boyish appearance had won for
-him the nickname of ‘Baby.’ He looked innocent enough to be capable of
-anything. Admitting that both these men had come with them from up
-country, the two mischievous friends added, ‘But we don’t know much
-about them.’ That was enough for the investigator, who rose at dawn next
-morning to prepare a circumstantial report for submission to the
-Colonel. He declared this to be ‘his duty,’ and announced a stern
-determination to go through with it in spite of pretended protestations
-from many comrades who had somehow got wind of the story. Their
-pleadings and wily persuasions only served to goad him on. The
-responsibility of silence, which they sought to impose upon him, was too
-much for one in his position to bear, so he hurried off towards the
-Colonel’s tent, eager to make his startling disclosures. On the way,
-however, he met a trooper, who unwittingly ‘gave the whole show away’;
-and the crestfallen officer learned that the men whom he was going to
-denounce as Boer spies had been coffee-planting for several years in
-Coorg, and that the language they talked when exchanging confidences in
-a public place was not German but Canarese. Such incidents as these
-helped to while away the tedium of life in camp when the iron hand of
-discipline was beginning to make itself felt lightly but firmly. A very
-little humour provokes much mirth when other entertainments are scarce.
-By that time even the sing-songs in camp were being cut short, and the
-only note of revolt that Lumsden’s Horse were ever known to have sounded
-arose on that account. It did not grow loud enough to reach the
-commanding officer’s ears, but is recorded in the diary of a trooper
-who, after describing a very pleasant little camp-fire concert, says:
-‘We were all packed off to bed at 9.30 by the Sergeant-Major, to our
-indignation.’
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Photo: Bourne & Shepherd._
- ON PARADE, CALCUTTA
-]
-
-Public efforts for their amusement, however, did not flag, nor were camp
-regulations always enforced so strictly. These facts we may gather from
-an entry that would have delighted the methodical Samuel Pepys. ‘After
-dinner drove to the Grand. Played snookers and won. Afterwards to the
-Biograph, to which we were invited for nothing. Rather a noise cheering
-for the Queen, Colonel Lumsden, &c. Marched back singing, though someone
-tried to stop us. The Colonel came too and bade us sing. Had supper and
-more songs, and three cheers for the Colonel, and to bed at two.’ These
-frank revelations are worth whole columns of detailed description as
-giving an insight into the character of the men who formed Lumsden’s
-Horse and their adaptability to circumstances that marked the later days
-of their camp life on the Maidan. The time for such festivities was
-drawing rapidly to a close, and none but Puritanical moralists would
-blame them for making the most of it after the manner of light-hearted
-youth. They had serious thoughts on occasion, however, and all their
-letters show how deeply impressed they were by one ceremony. The date of
-embarkation was still uncertain when on Wednesday, February 14, some two
-hundred officers and men under Colonel Lumsden’s command, headed by the
-band of the Royal Irish Rifles, marched from their camp to the Cathedral
-in Calcutta, where a special evening service of farewell was to be
-celebrated. The Viceroy and Lady Curzon, Sir John Woodburn,
-Lieutenant-Governor of Bengal, nearly every officer of the Viceregal and
-District Staffs, with regimental commandants and representatives of
-other Presidencies, attended, and a sympathetic congregation filled
-every part of the building. Soldiers and civilians joined in singing the
-Processional hymn, ‘Onward, Christian soldiers,’ their voices mingling
-with an effect never to be forgotten by anybody who took part in that
-devotional service. The Lieutenant-Governor read the First Lesson and
-Colonel Lumsden the Second. The choir sang ‘Fight the good fight,’ and a
-deep silence fell on the congregation when Bishop Welldon began his
-address to the contingent that numbered in its ranks many men whose
-course in life had been guided by the high principles instilled by him
-when he was master and they schoolboys at Tonbridge and Harrow. In a
-clear strong voice, the ring of which they knew so well, he spoke to
-them and their comrades, saying:
-
- This is a service of unique interest in the history of our city, and
- of our cathedral. It is one of those occasions which make us realise,
- amid many differences, the essential fact of our national spiritual
- unity. All who are loyal, all who are patriotic in Calcutta, are
- gathered or would have gladly gathered within this cathedral to-night.
- There is not in all this congregation—there is not, I think, in all
- Calcutta—a British heart that is not moved with sympathy and
- admiration for you, my brethren, who are going forth to the war in
- South Africa. And surely there is not a British heart but feels how
- just it is, how wise and how truly consonant with the best traditions
- of our race, that it should be your wish on the eve of your departure
- to seek the protection of, invite the benediction of, and to
- consecrate yourselves to the name and service of the Most High God.
- For if it has been possible at other times and in other places within
- the last few weeks to strike a note of felicity and festivity—I do not
- say that they have been unduly prominent, but who has not heard
- them?—if there has been excitement, merriment, and applause on your
- behalf, it is a note that I would not sound this evening. You are
- going, I know, with deep solemnity and resolution, and you are going
- as men who have undertaken a noble duty from which you might have held
- aloof without reproach, in the full consciousness of its cost and
- peril, and in the sure conviction that the part you are playing is not
- unworthy, as indeed it is not, of the British race and the British
- Empire. You are proud, then, of your self-chosen mission, but it may
- well be that someone who looks forward with eager anticipation to the
- future is yet, in his heart, possessed with the not ignoble anxiety
- that warfare is no child’s play. It is stern and awful. He who enters
- upon it with a light heart is no true soldier of God or man. You are
- assembled now within the sanctuary of religion. In a few hours or days
- you will set sail for a distant land. It is certain that you all will
- be exposed to the strain and danger of the battlefield, and it is by
- no means certain that all will return to their homes in safety. Some
- who hear me now will probably yield their lives for the Empire. Can I
- forget how, on the 24th day of last September, I shook hands at the
- Kidderpore Docks with the gallant officer commanding the
- Gloucestershire Regiment, and how within a few weeks from that day he
- had fallen—shot dead at the head of his regiment? As his fate was, so
- may be yours. That is the nobility and dignity of your service. The
- people of Calcutta would not throng into this cathedral to pray for
- you, with you, if it were not impressed upon their minds that you are
- inspired with the brave ambition that makes great Empires great. When
- they shall bid you farewell, as the troopship slowly passes into the
- distance, it will be with full hearts, and believing that you will be
- true even to death, that they will one and all say, ‘God bless you.’
- You go for the conservation of the Empire. I look upon the British
- Empire as the highest of human institutions, and realise that the
- Empire appeals to the spirit of chivalry, magnanimity, unselfishness,
- and devotion in all its members. Nobly, indeed, has India, European
- and Native, responded of late to that inspiring appeal. Who is there
- that has not felt his pride of Empire to be quickened by the generous
- loyalty not of Englishmen only but of the princes and nobles of India
- to her Majesty the Queen-Empress? For that loyalty, unexampled as it
- is in the history of other peoples, is itself a witness to the
- beneficence of British rule. May I venture, if only in passing, to
- express the hope that such an exhibition of loyalty may bring comfort
- to the sick-bed of that illustrious soldier, the Commander-in-Chief,
- who in a retrospect of his life can recall many a battle in which
- Europeans and Indians have fought side by side for the Empire? But if
- to the princes and nobles—may I not add to the people of India?—the
- thought of the Empire makes a paramount appeal, how much more to every
- man and woman of us.
-
- The Imperial spirit is in the air, it has passed from the chamber of
- philosophical thinkers to the common life of the nation. We are all
- Imperialists now, and it may be said in the sacred language, of our
- country in relation to her colonies and dependencies, that ‘her
- children have risen up and called her blessed.’ So in the hour of her
- stress and suffering there is not one colony that has failed to render
- her aid with the resources of its wealth, strength, and its armed men.
- Well is it, then, that Englishmen, Scotchmen, and Irishmen resident in
- India should take their stand with the colonists, not of South Africa
- only, but of Australia and Canada, in a cause which makes them one,
- for the Empire means not conquest alone. It means the principles upon
- which the modern Christian world is broadly based—justice, equality,
- freedom of thought and speech, intellectual progress, pure religion,
- and the sense of personal responsibility to God. You go forth, and by
- your going you assert that all the constituent members of the Empire
- are one. As the Apostle said of old, ‘We are members one of another’;
- and again, ‘If one member suffer all the members suffer with it.’ It
- is not nothing to you, and it is a matter which vitally and personally
- touches your interest, that to your fellow-subjects in South Africa
- should have been denied the elementary rights of citizenship and the
- common privileges of humanity. The injury that has been done to them
- is done to you. That you should go forth in a right and reverent
- spirit is the prayer of all who worship with you in this cathedral. Is
- it possible—I hardly like to suggest the reflection—but is it possible
- that we have lately thought too little of Almighty God? Is it possible
- that we have entered upon the war with something like levity in, the
- reliance upon our army and upon our pecuniary military resources
- rather than upon Him who has made and sanctified our Empire? Is it
- possible that we have forgotten that even if the ‘horse is prepared
- against the day of battle’ yet victory is of the Lord? If so, let us
- return to Him in penitence and prayer.
-
- Let us, confess our many failings and shortcomings, our imperfect
- sense of responsibility to Providence, and our disloyalty, if such
- there has been, to His commands. May you go forth, brethren, as
- trusting in Him, for you believe that your cause is just. If it were
- not just, if it were the cause of oppression or aggrandisement, may He
- Himself forbid that it should prosper; but if it be His will to use
- you in His service, to make you the instrument of His providence in
- the subjugation and pacification of the country which has flouted the
- majesty of the British Empire, if He has called you, and you have
- responded to His call, then His blessing will abide with you always.
- It is in this spirit that we bid you an honourable farewell. It may be
- that when you are severed by thousands of miles of ocean from the
- country of your birth or of your adoption, the memory of this service
- shall not wholly fade from your hearts. Here, in India, where the
- majesty of the Empire was most fiercely assailed and most successfully
- vindicated—here in this cathedral, where many monuments eloquently
- remind you of the courage, faith, and heroism of your race down to the
- memorial of those young Englishmen who laid their lives down for their
- country saying that they were not the last English—here, in the
- presence of the Power which controls the destinies of nations, we
- invoke the Divine blessing upon your arms. One last word, one
- inspiring motto, we will offer you. It is the watchword of our race:
- it is ‘Duty.’ ‘I thank God,’ said Nelson to Captain Blackwood, on the
- morning of Trafalgar, ‘for this great opportunity of doing my duty.’
- ‘Whatever happens, Uxbridge,’ said the Duke of Wellington on the
- morning of Waterloo, ‘you and I will do our duty.’ That the thought of
- ‘duty,’ inspired and sanctified by Heaven, may dwell in your hearts is
- our prayer for you all—the highest prayer that man may offer for man.
- May the God of our fathers be with you always, and help you to be
- brave, generous, and merciful, and vouchsafe to you safety; and if it
- be His will may victory and peace restore you to those who love you so
- well at home or in India, and grant you in life or in death to prove
- yourselves worthy citizens of the Empire, faithful servants and fellow
- soldiers of Jesus Christ our Saviour.
-
-The choir next sang
-
- ‘Soldiers of Christ, arise,
- And put your armour on,’
-
-and this was followed by two special prayers. Then came the National
-Anthem, in the singing of which the whole congregation joined, and then
-the Recessional hymn, ‘For all the saints who from their labours rest.’
-The service over, Lumsden’s Horse marched back to camp through roads
-that were thronged with enthusiastic spectators.
-
-The next ten days were crowded with necessary preparations that left the
-men little leisure for enjoyment of social entertainments arranged in
-their honour, yet they found time for a pleasant gathering as spectators
-at an amateur performance in the Calcutta Theatre, and possibly for some
-tender leave-takings of which no note was made. They were not, at any
-rate, allowed to go away without many manifestations of good-will from
-all classes and abundant proofs of appreciation and care for their
-welfare by the Government of India. It has already been said that his
-Excellency Lord Curzon accepted readily the rank of Honorary Colonel of
-the corps, while both he and Lady Curzon took every possible opportunity
-of identifying themselves with a force in which they continued to show
-the liveliest personal interest throughout its career of active service.
-Sir William Lockhart, then Commander-in-Chief, was lying in Fort
-William, Calcutta, dangerously ill of the malady from which he died not
-long afterwards, and was therefore unable to see the corps, but he sent
-to Colonel Lumsden and the executive committee several messages of
-kindly encouragement. The contingent was inspected on its parade-ground
-by General Leach, C.B., commanding the troops in the Presidency
-District. Sir John Woodburn, Lieutenant-Governor of Bengal and Honorary
-Colonel of the Behar Light Horse, also paid an official visit to Colonel
-Lumsden and made a farewell speech to the corps on parade the Sunday
-before its first company embarked.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Photo: F. Kapp & Co._
- TAKING HORSES ON BOARD TRANSPORT 28
- _A Company_
-]
-
-Orders for the front had come at last, but one of the transports had
-not. So it was necessary for Lumsden’s Horse to go off in detachments.
-The ‘Lindula’ was alongside the wharves in Kidderpore Docks, but she had
-no room to spare for more than a hundred and fifty troopers, with their
-officers and the necessary number of horses. Colonel Lumsden and the
-headquarters were to go in her with A Company and the Maxim Gun
-detachment, leaving B Company still camped on the Maidan, where Major
-Showers would take over the command. Delays and alterations of dates
-with regard to troopships, for which nobody in India was responsible,
-would have been still more serious but for the resourceful energy of
-Captain Goodridge, R.N., Director-General of Marine to the Government of
-India, and Captain Gwynne, R.N., the executive transport officer at
-Calcutta, who did all in their power to expedite matters and to meet the
-wishes of Colonel Lumsden, whose one anxiety was for the comfort and
-well-being of his men on the voyage.
-
-Before daybreak on Monday, January 26, 1900, bugles were sounding the
-reveillé for A Company, and from that moment its camp was a scene of
-liveliest activity. Though the men whose turn to embark might not come
-for a week or two longer went about their ordinary duties with assumed
-unconcern, they cast many wistful glances at the busy preparations of
-their envied comrades. Life in Calcutta had been pleasant enough to make
-parting ‘such sweet sorrow’ for many that they would fain have prolonged
-it at the last, but none gave a thought to such things in the dawn of
-the day so long desired. For them all, South Africa was then the goal of
-hope, and naturally the troops to go first were deemed most fortunate.
-An old campaigner might have told them of the days to come, when, in the
-weariness of a realisation more hollow than their dreams, they would be
-haunted by the music of that last waltz in Calcutta, and longing to hear
-once more the rustle of palm fronds under soft Indian skies, to breathe
-the sweet fragrance of oleanders and roses. These thoughts, however,
-were unspoken, and if anybody had ventured to hint at them he would have
-been rightly scouted as a sickly sentimentalist by Lumsden’s Horse, who
-were going forth to do the work of men. Yes; but somehow they were not
-all adamant when they heard the cheers of thousands greeting them as
-they marched through streets crowded with Europeans and natives. The
-service company, in full campaigning kit, took the lead, proudly
-conscious that all this was meant as an enthusiastic farewell to them
-and for the gallant Colonel at their head; and B Company followed,
-wearing simple drill order, with becoming modesty. An escort of ladies
-and gentlemen on horseback accompanied the marching contingent. So
-uncontrollable did the excitement of spectators become that they broke
-in upon and mingled with the ranks, a confused mass from which it was
-difficult for Lumsden’s Horse to disentangle themselves and pass in any
-semblance of military formation through the dock gates, within which
-they dismounted. Embarkation of their horses would in ordinary
-circumstances have occupied a whole day if the slow system of hoisting
-by slings had been adhered to. Major Taylor, however, suggested the use
-of zig-zag gangways, ascending by easy inclines stage above stage. To
-this arrangement the broad wharves of Kidderpore Docks were admirably
-adapted. Captain Gwynne, with a seaman’s ready appreciation of
-common-sense proposals, consented to this departure from former methods.
-The gangways were rigged accordingly, and so the horses walked quietly
-up the slopes to their berths on different decks instead of being slung
-on board in the barbarous old fashion. The whole operation thus took an
-hour instead of a day, and not a single horse was injured or had its
-temper upset. While horses were being got on board the companies drew up
-to await the Viceroy’s coming, where burning sunlight fell full on the
-white helmets that were not to be worn again for many a day. All their
-march from the Maidan had been like a triumphal procession, to the
-accompaniment of cheers and waving handkerchiefs; but a scene even more
-inspiring awaited them at the docks, where a great crowd had assembled,
-making the grimy wharves bright with the colours of dainty costumes.
-People lined the parapets of surrounding houses in masses uncomfortably
-dense, and a multitude thronged the jetty, alongside which the transport
-‘Lindula’ lay waiting to receive her full complement of troops.
-Enclosures reserved for favoured spectators were filled to overflowing,
-and at least 2,000 of the number assembled there had to stand, the 3,000
-chairs being mostly occupied by ladies.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Photo: F. Kapp & Co._
- EMBARKATION AT CALCUTTA
- _Kidderpore Docks, February 26, 1900_
-]
-
-Judges of the High Courts and senior officials of all departments were
-present. Lumsden’s Horse lined one side of a great quadrangle facing the
-flower-fringed daïs from which Lord Curzon was to deliver his farewell
-speech. Behind them, stretching from end to end of the line, were gay
-streamers bearing the time-honoured mottoes that served to inspire Roman
-legions when they set out in galleys to conquer the world. ‘Dulce et
-decorum est pro patria mori’ and ‘Fortes fortuna juvat’ are sentiments
-that have happily not lost their meaning or their power to influence the
-actions of men even in our unromantic age. The crowds had gathered there
-to bid ‘God speed’ to the first contingent of Volunteers that had ever
-left India to fight for their Queen and country. And each unit of that
-assemblage seemed eager to do or say something that might emphasise the
-heartiness of the farewell. So general and earnest was this desire that
-the police had great difficulty to keep the pressing spectators within
-bounds.
-
-On arrival at the dock gates, their Excellencies the Viceroy and Lady
-Curzon were met by his Honour the Lieutenant-Governor and officers in
-attendance, who conducted them to the Viceregal platform, above which
-the royal standard was hoisted. Lord Curzon then inspected the ranks of
-Lumsden’s Horse, chatting with their Colonel the while. This inspection
-over, his Excellency returned to the daïs, and, in a voice that carried
-far among the silently attentive spectators, addressed the corps in
-these words:
-
- Colonel Lumsden, Officers, Non-Commissioned Officers, and men of
- Lumsden’s Light Horse: In bidding you good-bye this afternoon, I feel
- that I may claim to speak for others besides myself. I do not appear
- here merely as the Honorary Colonel of your corps, proud as I am to
- fill that position. Nor am I merely the spokesman of the citizens of
- Calcutta, European and Native, among whom you have spent the past few
- weeks, and who desire to wish you all success in your patriotic
- enterprise. I feel that I am more than that, and that I may consider
- myself the mouthpiece of public opinion throughout India, which has
- watched the formation of this corps with admiration, which has
- contributed to its equipment and comfort with no illiberal hand, and
- which now sends you forth with an almost parental interest in your
- fortunes. At a time when the stress of a common anxiety has revealed
- to the British Empire its almost unsuspected unity, and its
- illimitable resources in loyalty and men, it would have been
- disappointing to all of us if India had lagged behind—India which,
- even if it is only peopled by a small minority of our own race, is yet
- the noblest field of British activity and energy and devotion that the
- world can show. Already the British regiments that we have sent from
- this country have helped to save Natal, and many a brave native
- follower has borne his part in the struggle. But as soon as the
- electric call for volunteer help to the mother land ran round, India
- responded to the summons. She has given us from the small civil
- population of British birth the 250 gallant men whom I am now
- addressing, and she would have given us as many more as Government
- would have been prepared to accept. I doubt not that had we been
- willing to enrol 1,000 instead of 250, they would have been
- forthcoming; and that had not one thousand but many thousand
- volunteers been called for from the native races, who vie with us in
- fervent loyalty to the same Sovereign, they would have sprung joyfully
- to arms, from the Hindu or Mussulman chief of ancient lineage and
- great possessions to the martial Sikh or the fighting Pathan.
-
- You, however, are the 250 who have been chosen, the first body of
- Volunteers from India that have ever had the chance of fighting for
- the Queen outside their shores; and you, Colonel Lumsden, to whose
- patriotic initiative this corps owes its being, and from whom it most
- befittingly takes its name, are the officer who is privileged to
- command this pioneer body of Indian soldiers of the Empire. Officers
- and men, you carry a great responsibility with you; for it will fall
- to you in the face of great danger, perhaps even in the face of death,
- to sustain the honour of the country that is now sending you forth and
- of the race from which you are sprung. But you will have this
- consolation. You are engaged on a glorious, and as I believe a
- righteous, mission, not to aggrandise an Empire, not merely to repel
- an unscrupulous invasion of the Queen’s territories, but to plant
- liberty and justice and equal rights upon the soil of a South Africa
- henceforward to be united under the British and no other flag. You go
- out at a dramatic moment in the contest, when, owing to the skilful
- generalship of an old Indian soldier and Commander-in-Chief, and to
- the indomitable gallantry of our men, the tide of fortune, which has
- too long flowed against us, seems at last to have turned in our
- favour. May it carry you on its forward crest to Pretoria itself! All
- India applauds your bravery in going. We shall watch your deeds on the
- battlefield and on the march. We wish you God speed in your
- undertaking; and may Providence in His mercy protect you through the
- perils and vicissitudes of your first contact with the dread realities
- of war, and bring you safely back again to this country and to your
- homes.
-
- Colonel Lumsden and men, on behalf of your fellow-countrymen and your
- fellow-subjects throughout India, I bid you farewell.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Photo: F. Kapp & Co._
- H.E. THE VICEROY ADDRESSING THE CORPS
- _February 26, 1900_
-]
-
-There is ample evidence from the letters of troopers themselves to prove
-that Lord Curzon’s eloquent words inspired them with an ideal which they
-determined at all hazards to live up to, and perhaps it is not too much
-to say that the conspicuous gallantry everywhere and at all times
-displayed by all ranks of Lumsden’s Horse is directly traceable to the
-high conception of their duty breathed in every sentence of the
-Viceroy’s speech, though they paraphrased it in more homely language,
-taking for their regimental motto ‘Play the game.’ For a while after
-Lord Curzon had finished speaking the troops were silent. Then they
-raised lusty cheers for his Excellency and Lady Curzon and the people of
-Calcutta, who in their turn cheered Lumsden’s Horse again and again. The
-Viceroy and his suite, accompanied by Colonel Lumsden, Sir Patrick
-Playfair, and other members of the executive committee, then went on
-board the ‘Lindula’ for a final inspection of the arrangements made for
-the comfort of the corps, whose horses had already been shipped.
-Meanwhile Mrs. Pugh had presented each officer and trooper with a
-Prayer-book, and in giving it she said a few simple words that touched
-all hearts. Some tender scenes of leave-taking had been enacted, and men
-came back to their places in the ranks with faces not quite so hard as
-they thought. There may have been sobs in the sweet voices that
-whispered ‘Good-bye!’ but if so they were lost in the loud chorus that
-rang out from comrades cheering each other. Then the band struck up ‘The
-Girl I Left Behind Me,’ and the troopers of A Company marched on board
-the ‘Lindula.’ As she cast off from her moorings amid many touching
-demonstrations and more enthusiastic cheers, the strains of music
-changed to ‘Auld Lang Syne.’ The sun had set then, but crowds lingered,
-cheering still and waving handkerchiefs until the transport disappeared
-in the gathering darkness. She dropped down to her anchorage in Garden
-Reach that night, and when Calcutta awoke next morning she had gone,
-bearing the first contingent of Lumsden’s Horse towards South Africa.
-Colonel Lumsden’s appreciation of all that had been done for the corps
-was expressed in the following letter:
-
- _To the Editor of the ‘Englishman.’_
-
- SIR,—On the eve of leaving India for South Africa with the corps which
- I have the honour to command there is one pleasant duty which I have
- to fulfil. This is to convey, in the most public manner, to all who
- have helped me in raising ‘Lumsden’s Horse,’ my grateful thanks for
- their sympathy and support. To the Viceroy, who has accepted the
- Honorary Colonelcy of the corps, I owe more than can be stated in this
- letter, for his Excellency removed all difficulties which lay in the
- way of sending an Indian Volunteer Contingent to the seat of war. To
- his Honour the Lieutenant-Governor of Bengal and his Excellency the
- Commander-in-Chief I am indebted for their support and sympathy. Sir
- Edwin Collen, Military Member; Sir Edmund Elles, Adjutant-General;
- Major-Generals Maitland and Wace; Surgeon-General Harvey;
- Brigadier-General Leach; Colonel Money and Captain Drake-Brockman;
- Colonels Buckland and Spenser, Army Clothing Department; Captain Gwyn,
- Royal Indian Marine; Captain Philipps; Colonel Mansfield, Commissariat
- Transport Department; the Commissariat Staff in the Presidency
- District; one and all gave me the benefit of their experience in
- military matters in addition to official assistance which was of the
- highest value. There were many occasions when their personal influence
- smoothed over difficulties connected with organisation and equipment,
- and made my task much easier than it would otherwise have been. I wish
- gratefully to acknowledge the special kindness of Major Pilgrim,
- I.M.S., who medically examined the members of the corps. To the
- executive committee—Sir Patrick Playfair, Colonel Buckingham, Colonel
- Money, Major Eddis, Major Dolby, and Mr. Harry Stuart—I am most deeply
- indebted, for they have all worked hard from first to last; to the
- general public who responded so handsomely to the appeal for
- subscriptions; to the Press, who gave full publication to the
- movement; to the donors of camp equipment, kit, and things in kind; to
- the railways for their assistance; and to the India General and River
- Steam Navigation Companies, who carried the Assam Volunteers free of
- cost; to these I must express the warmest thanks, not merely on my own
- part, but on behalf of every officer and man of the corps. They,
- indeed, rendered it possible for my scheme as a whole to be carried
- out. To Mrs. Pugh and the ladies of Calcutta we can only say that
- their labour of love will never be forgotten by ‘Lumsden’s Horse.’
-
- D.M. LUMSDEN.
-
- February 26.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Photo: F. Kapp & Co._
- B COMPANY LUMSDEN’S HORSE LEAVING CALCUTTA
- _March 3, 1900_
-]
-
-Four days later welcome orders came for B Company to be ready for
-embarkation, and, early in the morning of March 3, Major Showers, in
-command of all that remained of Lumsden’s Horse on the Maidan, marched
-out of camp, escorted by Europeans and natives principally on horseback.
-For them the enthusiasm that had marked the departure of their comrades
-was revived with even greater fervour, and though this second
-leave-taking was less ceremonious than the first, it lacked nothing of
-the heart-stirring eloquence that rings through the voices of people
-when they are moved by great impulses. The Viceroy, when he addressed
-Colonel Lumsden and A Company, had spoken his farewell to the whole
-regiment. This second demonstration, though accompanied by many signs of
-official interest, was in all essential characteristics a popular
-movement in which all classes joined with the more impressive warmth
-because it was the last tribute they could pay to Lumsden’s Horse before
-the corps might be called upon to take its place in the fighting line.
-The Lieutenant-Governor (Sir John Woodburn) and the Bishop of Calcutta
-made eloquent speeches that were emphasised by repeated cheering; and
-with many cordial words of farewell ringing in their ears, to the
-musical accompaniment of ‘Auld Lang Syne,’ Major Showers and his hundred
-troopers embarked on board the ‘Ujina.’ After she had steamed down the
-Hugli there was no more work to be done by the committee, whose members
-had laboured with patriotic self-sacrifice to raise and equip Lumsden’s
-Horse and send the contingent forth a perfectly organised force in all
-respects. The executive committee then practically handed over all its
-authority to Sir Patrick Playfair, who never ceased for a moment to
-watch over the interests of the Contingent, for which he had already
-done so much. The following letter shows how greatly Lumsden’s Horse
-were indebted for their rapid and complete organisation to the business
-capacity and indefatigable industry of Sir Patrick Playfair:
-
- S.S. ‘Lindula,’ _en route_ for South Africa: March 12, 1900.
-
- My dear Playfair,—I have felt ever since leaving Calcutta that I never
- half thanked you for what you did for Lumsden’s Horse, and no one
- knows so well as myself, or appreciates more to the full, the work you
- did on its behalf. Now, when I have time to think calmly over the
- events of the past two months, I can see plainly that the successful
- issue things were brought to, financially and otherwise, was entirely
- due to your energy and guidance; and this without in the slightest
- degree depreciating the valuable services of your fellow-workers on
- the committee, as I feel confident one and all of them would coincide
- heartily with my sentiments....
-
- Yours always,
-
- D.M. LUMSDEN.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER III
- _OUTWARD BOUND_
-
-
-Life on board a troopship does not offer much material for graphic
-description, and none but a Kipling could give to its ordinary incidents
-an absorbing interest for general readers. Nevertheless, it has charms
-for those who look at it with eyes fresh to such scenes, and for
-Lumsden’s Horse, at any rate, there was a novelty in the situation not
-wholly unpleasant in spite of the many discomforts they had to endure
-and the distasteful duties necessarily imposed upon them. They were
-learning there a harder lesson than any of which their experiences in
-camp on the Maidan could have given the slightest conception. It is one
-thing to go a long voyage on board a liner as first-, second-, or even
-third-class passenger, but quite another to be penned up between decks
-in a crowded transport with native servants and Lascars, eating coarse
-Government rations served in the roughest fashion, doing the work of
-grooms and lackeys, and sleeping on bare planks in an atmosphere odorous
-with exhalations from stables and galleys. They had enlisted for a
-soldier’s life, however, prepared to take the rough with the smooth,
-and, being in for it, they made the best of their circumstances after
-the first rude shock of feeling what military service really means had
-worn off. Discipline may become a property of easiness anywhere else,
-but on board ship the line that separates rank from rank must be sharply
-drawn even in the case of a Volunteer company. Comradeship and
-interchange of friendly greetings between officers and men may still go
-on as of old; but they cannot make a trooper forget for a moment that
-certain privileges follow rank, and disabilities cling to those who have
-it not, while these facts are thrust upon him insistently at every turn
-and dinned into his ears by every bugle call to duty or to meals. It is
-well that we also should remember these things in estimating the
-sacrifices that Volunteers make when they give up the comforts, if not
-luxuries, of home life and go forth to fight for country and for empire
-as private soldiers. The privations, the rough fare, the hard marches in
-all weather, exposure to rapid alternations of heat and cold, fierce
-sunshine where there is no shelter by day, and pitiless rain from which
-there is no escape at night, hunger, wounds, and sickness—all these may
-be cheerfully borne because they are the lot of all ranks alike. Not so,
-however, with the petty humiliations and drudgery inseparable from many
-duties on board a transport, where the mere trooper finds that a
-soldier’s uniform is a badge of distinction truly, but the distinction
-at times brings with it something closely akin to a sense of
-humiliation. The company or regimental officers may do all they can to
-take the keen point off this goading sentiment, but it will wound where
-there is the least protection against it and rankle too. One must say to
-the credit of Lumsden’s Horse that they did not allow such
-considerations to trouble. There is no trace of discontent in their
-published contributions to Indian papers, of which some extracts from
-the ‘Englishman’ may be made by way of giving a picture of the voyage as
-troopers looked at it. We left the ‘Lindula’ steaming down the Hugli
-apparently well on her way towards South Africa. Though lost to the view
-of interested crowds who looked for her soon after dawn on the morning
-of February 27, she did not pursue an uninterrupted course. At this
-point a trooper of A Company takes up the story in a lively narrative,
-writing thus:
-
- The absurd antics which the river Hugli thinks it necessary to go
- through ere flowing to rest in the bosom of its old mammy Ocean compel
- mariners to sail on it by day alone, and then to go as cannily as a
- cat on hot bricks. On Tuesday morning we dashed off letters and
- telegrams, and with a sigh of relief despatched them by the post boat,
- thinking we were fairly off for Afric’s sandy shores. But no! We had
- not reckoned with the lead line, which recorded much the same number
- of feet and inches that the good ship ‘Lindula’ drew, so with a Heave!
- Ho! Holly! the anchor fell overboard, and then we were stuck for a
- whole day.
-
- Fancy getting up at 4.30 in the pitch dark! And no chance of shirking
- either, for the decks are swabbed down and clean as a child’s plate
- after a penny dinner by 5 A.M. of the clock. Five-thirty heralds a cup
- of tea, and 6 o’clock sets every nag aboard neighing and whinnying,
- for do they not know it to be feeding time, better even than the
- Sergeant-Major, who marches about with a little stick marking time?
- Then stables—a pleasant job for the deaf and dumb, but trying to a man
- who wishes to retain the lily-white unstained purity of his mind. Nine
- o’clock is the signal for the bugler to tootle ‘Mary! come to the
- cook-house door,’ and before he gets to the ‘y’ in Mary, A Company is
- tumbling head over heels down the fore companion.
-
- Spinning down the river with the banks gradually receding from sight
- raises everybody’s spirits, and a merry lot we are when from the
- Sandheads comes a telegram announcing the capitulation of Cronjé—news
- greeted by loud and continuous cheers. A little way more and the pilot
- brig heaves in sight, and soon we lie to in her neighbourhood,
- listening to round after round of hoarse cheering from the
- white-hatted figures aboard. Our pilot drops over the side,
- accompanied by a great sheaf of our last messages to friends, and we
- get up steam, waving good-bye to India, and begin our voyage, never a
- man of us for whom the future does not loom big with adventurous
- hopes; never a man of us reckoning of the toil or peril. Young British
- blood, hot and eager, keen to flow more swiftly, keen to taste of the
- life that has given the world so many great names, so many great
- deeds. India, _au revoir_!
-
- The gentle reader must not imagine that we have nothing to do.
- Breakfast finished at 10 o’clock, the bugles wax busy, and call after
- call resounds through the ship, summoning sections to various tasks.
- One of the earliest parades of the voyage was that to practise the
- fire alarm and ‘boats.’ Every man has his appointed place, and lest
- any should hurry unduly for the boats, sentries have been told off to
- guard these, having their rifles loaded with ball cartridges, and
- orders to shoot the first man who may attempt a rush. This extremely
- important matter has been thoroughly impressed on our minds by
- practice, and should the alarm be given in stern reality we all know
- where to make for.
-
- Needless to say, rifle exercise is one of the chief things to which we
- must pay attention, and morning and afternoon the words of command
- ring through the ship as squad after squad is put through its facings.
- Fatigues are innumerable. Bringing forage and stores on deck is a
- daily task; oiling and packing away saddlery; cleaning spare arms;
- painting side arms; marking equipment and a dozen other things. Then a
- signalling class is terribly busy, and a row of otherwise
- intelligent-looking lads wave their arms wildly to the accompaniment
- of strange sounds bellowed by the signalling instructor.
-
- When the rifle exercises have sunk into the minds of men, they are
- allowed to practise shooting. Every day, at 12 and 2, parties assemble
- on the quarter-deck and shoot at wine cases, biscuit boxes, bits of
- paper, anything that affords a mark. In spite of the rolling and
- pitching of the ship, and, what is worse, the vibration caused by the
- screw, wonderful practice is made. A bit of paper a few inches square
- is hit several times at 200 yards, and as the larger obstacles recede
- they are repeatedly struck. Men firing have to judge their own
- distances, and the practice on the whole has been marvellously good.
- The Maxim gun has had a turn, too, and a very terrible weapon it is.
- In spite of the extreme disadvantage under which it labours when
- placed on a moving platform, excellent shooting has been made with it.
- An ordinary beer barrel at 800 and 1,000 yards was douched with spray,
- and then struck after three or four shots had been fired. The noise is
- atrocious, but it is grand to see the bullets striking the water, one!
- two! three! four! ever nearing the mark, and then, five! Plump in.
-
- Though we have lots of work to do we don’t forget to play, and many
- are the tasks indulged in. One of the favourite amusements is boxing,
- and morning and evening a ring is formed wherein all may enter for a
- round or two. A few matches have been got up, and desperate battles
- have been fought betwixt champions of the various sections. Naturally
- party feeling runs high on these occasions, and everybody in the ship,
- from the Colonel and the Captain down to Carpenter Chinaman John,
- takes up a place outside the ring, watching the fray with bated
- breath. The end is usually a black eye or blood drawn, neither of
- which temporary inconveniences prevents furious and friendly
- handshakings at the finish. Singlestick has supporters, but none so
- many as the gentle art of boxing. Cockfighting has many votaries, and
- wrestling a few, for both of these elegant diversions may be partaken
- of in the comparative dark. Duty and pleasure are combined in tubbing.
- A sail bath four feet deep and some six square is slung and filled
- with sea water. The bather, dressed ‘altogether,’ stands well back and
- runs at the bath, rolling in head over heels. Number one is followed
- quickly by more, one on top of the other, until the bath is nothing
- but a struggling mass of arms and legs. Then the hose is turned on,
- and every man must take his turn or pay the penalty of being thrust
- underneath.
-
- On our first Saturday night at sea the skipper—Captain Steuart—was
- kind enough to permit a smoking-concert to be held on the
- quarter-deck, where the saloon piano had been comfortably ensconced on
- a raised stage ornamented with flags. Corporal Blair took the public
- fancy tremendously with some of the comic songs that soldiers delight
- in. Corporal Skelton’s recitation about the Volunteer Instructor who
- complains of his squad that ‘They Largifies,’ fairly brought the house
- down. Among others who gave us pleasure were the brothers Wright and
- Private Woods, who, _à trois_, drew much melody from the banjo. The
- following morning (Sunday) we had service on deck, the Colonel and the
- Captain reading the Lessons. The little book so thoughtfully presented
- to every man by Mrs. Pugh was used.
-
- Crossing the line was a most unexciting experience, for no Father
- Neptune came on board, nor did any of the other time-honoured things
- befall us. Alas! for the merchant navy! We did not see Ceylon at all,
- but during the night we passed, in the distance, a light which shone
- out from somewhere on its coast. That was our last sight of the
- outside world until we had crossed the great Indian Ocean.
-
- On the whole, the horses have had a good time, very different from
- that endured by shiploads coming over from Australia. Most of them get
- a grooming of sorts every day, and many get an hour’s walking exercise
- round a small circle once or twice in the week. It is wonderful to
- behold an animal with legs puffed out like tea cosies begin his little
- tour and finish up with extremities clean cut as those of a racehorse.
-
- Still, there is a good deal of sickness among them in various forms of
- fever and colic. First, Private Case, from Behar, lost a very clever
- little horse. Since then two more have died, one a valuable mare, the
- property of Lieutenant Crane, of Behar, and the other the charger of
- Private Atkinson, from Mussoorie.
-
- The fifth officer of the ship, a braw lad frae Glescae, finds it very
- trying to hear us miscall the different parts—‘pairts,’ he says—of his
- beloved she. ‘A ship’s no like a house, wi’ upstairs an’ doonstairs,’
- he plaintively remonstrates. And when any of us join him in a cigar
- and throw the stump out of the ‘window’ instead of the ‘scuttle,’ the
- poor man almost cries. One continually finds him gravely pointing out
- to little knots of men the absurdity of referring to the back or the
- front of a ship. He explains how it ought to be ‘forrard’ and ‘aft,’
- and ‘above’ and ‘below.’ Then someone will mildly query where ‘astarn’
- comes in, and how it is possible to distinguish between port and
- starboard. And he tells. But, all the same, we continue to search for
- each other upstairs and down; we lie on the floor, forgetting it is
- deck, and it still passes our comprehension how ‘loo’ard’ can be at
- one side of the ship one day and the opposite to-morrow. This fifth
- officer is a bit of a humourist, too, and, finding an appreciative
- audience, plays off a rich fund of nautical yarns that have gathered
- raciness in the course of long centuries since they were translated
- from the Portuguese of Vasco da Gama. The narrator evidently thinks
- that Lumsden’s Horse are as credulous as ‘the Marines.’ Perhaps he
- takes them to be a mounted variety of that species, and, being a
- naturalist among other things, he has a scientific motive for studying
- their peculiarities.
-
- Colonel Lumsden confirmed the following non-commissioned appointments
- in A Company, some of which were provisionally made before leaving
- Calcutta:
-
- Regimental Sergeant-Major: C.M. Marsham (Behar L.H.); Company
- Sergeant-Major E.N. Mansfield (Punjaub L.H.); Sergeants: H. Fox (Behar
- L.H.), E.M.S. McNamara (Behar L.H.), R.S. Stowell (Poona V.R.), and W.
- Walker (Assam V.L.H.); Lance-Sergeants: F.L. Elliott (Assam V.L.H.),
- D.S. Fraser (Oudh L.H.), J. Lee Stewart (Coorg and Mysore R.), and
- R.E. Dale (E.I.R.V.C.); Corporals: Percy Jones (Behar L.H.), G. Lawrie
- (Oudh L.H.), E. Llewhellin (Behar L.H.), and H. Marsham (Behar L.H.);
- Lance-Corporals: A.M. Firth (Behar L.H.), A.C. Walker (Assam Valley
- L.H.), E.J. Ballard (Punjaub L.H.), H.F. Blair (Behar L.H.), D.J.
- Keating (Calcutta Port Defence), W.S. Lemon (Calcutta V.R.), A.
- Macgillivray (Behar L.H.), and J.W.A. Skelton (Assam V.L.H.).
-
- Transport Establishment: Lance-Corporals R.P. Estabrook, C.T. Power,
- J. Charles, S.W. Cullen, and G.W. Palmer.
-
- It could not be expected that 150 men would be together on board ship
- for three weeks without a certain proportion going sick.
- Lance-Sergeant Lee Stewart, of the Coorg and Mysore Rifles, was struck
- down with pneumonia. Shortly afterwards Private H.H.J. Hickley, of the
- Behar Light Horse, was attacked by the same illness aggravated by
- pleurisy. About this time a large number were bowled over. Blame was
- laid on the tinned provisions, but, probably, if men had worn the
- mufflers, so tenderly knitted for us by Calcutta ladies, about their
- waists instead of round their necks much pain and trouble would have
- been avoided. The decks at night were covered with sleeping figures,
- clad and unclad in every degree. At turning in, a gentle zephyr that
- wouldn’t disturb the ringlets on a fair lady’s neck might be blowing,
- and in an hour a sharp breeze laden with heavy rain would sweep down
- and drench the unconscious sleepers. Then one of the immediate results
- of an order for men to go about barefooted was that Private
- Clayton-Daubney, of the Behar Light Horse, took a fall when turning a
- slippery corner and broke his collar-bone.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Photo: Bourne & Shepherd._
- THE REGIMENT IN CALCUTTA
- _Part of A Company_
-]
-
-To Sir Patrick Playfair Colonel Lumsden wrote while at sea a letter that
-is interesting as a proof of his interest in and care for the men under
-his command. They paid many glowing tributes to him afterwards, but none
-that gives a better key to the hold he had on their respect than his own
-simple words as they appear in the following extract:
-
- I regret to say Hickley, from Behar, is in a very bad way. He had
- fever and pneumonia to start with, and has now gone clean ‘pāgāl,’[2]
- and, though quite quiet and harmless, has to have two men in close
- attendance day and night. I had him taken into the saloon yesterday,
- in a cabin near my own. I am intensely sorry for the poor chap, as,
- unless a sudden recovery takes place, we shall have to make
- arrangement for the authorities to look after him when we land. We
- have one more case on board, which I was in hopes it might not be
- necessary to mention. Stewart, the planter from Mysore, had an attack
- of pneumonia which has taken a chronic form, and I fear there is small
- chance of immediate recovery. He may have to go into hospital at
- Durban—whether we land there or not—and I much doubt his ever being
- able to join us again. You will remember my telling you about him, a
- man of independent means (married, with a family), who came for the
- love of the game. He was a most useful man, knowing a lot about
- horses, and was made an acting sergeant almost as soon as he arrived,
- and put on to help Veterinary-Captain Stevenson. He did excellent work
- on board until he got ill, and I shall miss him much. It is his own
- wish to land if he is not better.
-
- Beyond this we have had a most delightful voyage, simply perfect
- weather, and a sea like glass. The men act up to our corps motto
- ‘_Play the game_’ like the good chaps they are. You should see them at
- stable work in the morning, with nothing on but trousers rolled up to
- their thighs, or pyjamas ditto, and later in the day, washing their
- kit or making up puddings and cakes of sorts—some of the latter are
- works of art! We have a lot of musical talent on board, and have had a
- couple of excellent concerts. Captain Steuart added to the enjoyment
- of the last by giving a magic-lantern show. He is a very good sort,
- and has done everything in his power to ensure the comfort of the men.
- After finishing our daily inspection to-day he confided to me that he
- had never seen a troopship better kept, as regards order and
- cleanliness. The men are being practised daily in the use of the
- rifle, dropping boxes and wisps of straw overboard for targets, and I
- am more than pleased with the way they are shooting, at a moving
- target from a moving ship. You might also mention to my friend General
- Wace that Holmes is making excellent practice with his Maxim gun.
-
-[Illustration: C.V.S. DICKINS]
-
-[Illustration: N.J. BOLST]
-
-[Illustration: CAPT. HOLMES]
-
-[Illustration: P.T. CORBETT]
-
-[Illustration: SERGT. DALE]
-
- MAXIM-GUN CONTINGENT
-
-This is one picture of life in a troopship under the happiest
-conditions. There is another side to the picture, of which we may get
-glimpses in the experiences of men in Company B, to whom Calcutta’s
-citizens gave a hearty ‘God speed’ when they embarked in the ‘Ujina’
-at Kidderpore Docks on March 3. Before she had cast off from her
-moorings the troopers had been called to dinner, and that feast was a
-revelation to them of all they were leaving behind. One corporal
-described it as ‘a sort of stew in stable-buckets, too filthy for
-anything’; but that may have been merely a little ebullition of
-aristocratic prejudice. Nevertheless, he and two comrades hurried on
-shore, and drove as fast as they could to Madan’s in the town, where
-they invested 200 rupees in sundry things which they regarded as
-necessaries for their sustenance during the voyage. They were back in
-time to hear the Lieutenant-Governor’s and Bishop Welldon’s speeches,
-and then to join in a parting cheer for their old adjutant, Captain
-Martin, who only left them to go on shore as the ‘Ujina’ cast off. The
-subsequent proceedings of that day are not recorded in the corporal’s
-diary, who contents himself with noting that he ‘had some tea—no milk,
-and awfully sweet.’ When he awoke next morning, after a restless night
-on bare planks between decks, the thought of creature-comforts must
-have been uppermost still, for he was aware of ‘gnawing pains—result
-of nothing to eat,’ and his morning reflections begin with the
-disjointed phrases: ‘No knives and forks. No salt. Those who had
-penknives were lucky. Fortunately we all had fingers.’ Was there in
-those last words a prophetic suggestion that some of them might not
-even have fingers for such uses after a while? If so, the gloomy
-foreboding passed without record, giving place to action, for at 6
-o’clock that morning the corporal whose notes throw a glimmer of light
-on much of the darker side that is too often ignored, found himself in
-charge of a stable fatigue, wading at the heels of the horses in a
-foul, dark, unventilated drain about thirty inches wide, from which
-nothing ran off. He mentions incidentally that the four unfortunate
-men who had to clear away this accumulated filth were ‘very
-indignant’; and from this we may gather that they used adjectives to
-express their opinion of that first stable fatigue on board ship. It
-does not read like the best possible means of promoting a healthy
-appetite, but when called to breakfast three hours later they looked
-with dismay at a loaf that was to last each of them the whole day, and
-when one small tin of brawn was put before them for division among
-sixteen men at a table, they came to the conclusion that it ‘seemed
-very short commons indeed.’ Some of the men found that their
-carefully-arranged kits had been thrown aside in a confused heap to
-make room for native followers, and they ventured on a mild
-remonstrance, but were told, ‘You must look after your own things; you
-don’t have your bearers here.’ That obvious truth had impressed itself
-upon them very forcibly some hours earlier, while they were doing
-stable fatigue, and it needed no rubbing in. Other trials followed, as
-we gather from a brief but expressive note: ‘Dinner at 1.0. Soup and a
-messy stew in buckets, as before. Tried to get some salt
-unsuccessfully, and, returning, found the stew all gone. Beer was
-served out, which I didn’t drink. Gave my bottle away and drank water,
-hot and cloudy, out of a bath-tin. No knives or forks yet. Through our
-mess-room, while we feed, files a long procession of syces, transport
-wallahs, servants, Candaharis; sometimes a herd of goats, and always
-Lascars, carrying ropes, hoses, or buckets. Now they have kicked us
-out from where we were making ourselves comfortable below, and I miss
-much a corner, even such as my horse has, where I could put my things
-in safety. At night we throw our straw mattresses wherever we can find
-a vacant space, and scramble in confusion for our kits out of a heap
-of exactly similar ones. We would gladly have paid our own expenses
-for a little more comfort. The last straw came at 7.30, when the
-“cook-house” bugle went again, but the _chef_ said, “No orders to cook
-anything more,” and shut the door in the faces of orderlies. The
-N.C.O.s then went in a body and complained. Result—bread and beer were
-served out. It was bread and water for me. Lay my mattress down among
-the horses, and was comfortable in spite of the stuffy smell and
-stamping about all night.’ Still, his thoughts seem to have dwelt on
-the idea that there was much to complain of—the coarse tin pots, the
-tea extremely sweet and without milk, the hot and dirty water—not even
-a dry canteen from which to supplement the scanty fare, and so on
-until he dropped into sweet sleep. That sleep must have been very
-refreshing, or a considerable change had come upon the ship by the
-next morning, when the food had improved greatly, and at supper the
-‘men were merry enough, with great singing of songs.’ Later entries in
-this diary show that the first highly-coloured outbursts of discontent
-were due mainly, if not wholly, to a sudden change from the luxury and
-plenty of a planter’s _ménage_ to the comparative coarseness of a
-simple soldier’s fare—otherwise Government rations—in necessarily
-rough circumstances. The additional comforts thoughtfully provided by
-the Calcutta Committee for consumption on the voyage were by mistake
-stowed away with baggage and other stores below. Thenceforward matters
-mended day by day, and, though there were still some discomforts to be
-endured, they seem to have been relieved by more amusements than
-appear in the letters sent for publication to the Indian newspapers.
-On the whole, however, a fairly comprehensive idea of the way in which
-B Company passed its days on board the ‘Ujina’ may be formed from the
-following letter, parts of which were published in the ‘Indian Daily
-News’:
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Photo: Bourne & Shepherd._
- SURMA VALLEY LIGHT HORSE. CONTINGENT OF LUMSDEN’S B COMPANY
-]
-
- Hard work and plenty of it has been the order of the day ever since we
- came on board. The greater part of this is in connection with the
- horses. It is, of course, of very great importance that we should be
- in a position to move forward as soon as possible after landing, and,
- bearing this in mind, Major Showers and his officers are doing their
- utmost to keep the animals fit. For the first day or two bran mashes
- were given the horses, with as much hay as they could eat. This has
- been gradually augmented, until they are now getting a mixture of bran
- and gram or linseed three times a day. The watering and feeding are
- carried out with the greatest regularity, each section officer
- personally superintending the work. Our daily routine may prove
- interesting to the uninitiated in these matters. Awakened by reveillé
- at 4.30, we have time to put our kits in order before getting a cup of
- tea at 5.30. Half an hour later the bugle sounds ‘stables,’ and the
- men immediately assemble on the lower deck, each section separately,
- to answer the roll. Absentees who are not on the sick-list, or engaged
- in fatigue or other duties, have their names noted down, and are dealt
- with afterwards. Each horse is taken out of his stall and thoroughly
- groomed, and the stall itself cleaned and disinfected daily. The
- horses are then watered, a certain number of men being told off for
- this duty; the rest are occupied in drawing and mixing the feeds,
- which they place in tin troughs, one in front of each horse. As soon
- as word is passed that watering is completed, the command ‘Feed’ is
- given, and the troughs are immediately lifted and fixed on the
- breast-boards attached to each stall. The hay is then served out in
- bundles, each horse getting six. These are opened and put in the bags
- hung over the horses’ heads.
-
- The stable picket, consisting of three men from each section, is
- posted at 7 o’clock in the evening, and is on duty for twenty-four
- hours—till seven the following evening. Each man takes his turn as
- stable sentry for eight hours altogether out of the twenty-four—two
- hours on and four hours off. A non-commissioned officer is in charge
- of all four section pickets, and he also is on duty for twenty-four
- hours until relieved when the guard is changed next evening. He is
- expected to go round the pickets two or three times during the night,
- and see that the sentries are at their posts all right. The orderly
- officer also visits the pickets twice during the night. The duties of
- each sentry are to see that the horses do not get loose, or injure
- themselves, or ‘savage’ each other, and that they are fed properly.
-
- After breakfast, at 8 o’clock, the men’s time is generally taken up in
- cleaning rifles and accoutrements, and washing and dressing themselves
- for a general parade at half-past 10.
-
- The men are then kept busy at the manual and firing exercise for about
- an hour, and also bayonet exercise occasionally. The inspection of the
- steamer by the Captain, accompanied by Major Showers and officers,
- including the doctor and veterinary officer, also takes place at this
- hour, and Major Showers afterwards inspects the company. For the next
- hour or two we have little to do bar fatigues until the time comes for
- watering and feeding horses at midday stables.
-
- During the afternoon the men usually employ themselves in playing
- cricket, boxing, wrestling, football, and tugs-of-war, until the
- bugles sound for evening stables at 5.30. Sunday is a day of rest, as
- far as possible, only necessary work, such as ‘stables,’ being done,
- and church parade is held at 10.30, the service lasting about half an
- hour. There are almost daily calls for fatigue parties, a few men
- being taken from each section to bring up stores or forage from the
- hold, and this is pretty hot and dirty work. At 9 o’clock every night
- the ‘last post’ sounds, and half an hour later ‘lights out.’ After
- that ‘there is naught but the sound of the lone sentry’s tread’ or the
- squeal of an angry horse to disturb the peaceful slumbers of snoring
- troopers on board the ‘Ujina,’ until the notes of reveillé, shrill if
- not always clear, wake them at dawn to another day of similar routine.
-
------
-
-Footnote 2:
-
- Hindustani for ‘off his head.’
-
------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IV
- _NEARING THE GOAL—DISEMBARKATION AT CAPE TOWN AND
- EAST LONDON_
-
-
-Though something went wrong with the ‘Ujina’s’ engines, which had to be
-stopped twice for repairs in the Bay of Bengal, she covered the
-remaining fifteen hundred leagues or so in very good time, and, passing
-Madagascar during the misty night of March 18, was within sight of the
-South African coast by daybreak of the 24th, and at midday she anchored
-off Durban, being unable to get nearer that port than the troubled
-roadstead two miles from shore. Thus her time from the Hugli to Port
-Natal was just three weeks, and those on board had the satisfaction of
-hearing that the ‘Lindula,’ with A Company, must be still at sea, having
-left Durban for Cape Town only three days before the ‘Ujina’s’ arrival.
-The man who brought that good news had evidently acquired a Kaffir or
-Oriental habit of saying the things that are pleasant whether true or
-not. In sober fact, the ‘Lindula’ had gone a week earlier, and was by
-that time landing her troops at Cape Town. As nobody was allowed to
-land, Lumsden’s Horse did not get the exciting experience of being
-lowered in a cage from the troopship’s gangway to a tug plunging and
-tossing and wriggling among the ‘rollers’ twenty feet below. But they
-had an opportunity of seeing how the thing was done when a Transport
-officer came on board that way with an order for the troops under Major
-Showers’s command to disembark at East London. This officer was
-accompanied by three of the Natal Carbineers, who had been with Sir
-Redvers Buller’s force to the relief of Ladysmith, and whose thrilling
-tales of adventure were as welcome as a newly-discovered series of
-Arabian Nights’ stories might have been to men who had heard no news for
-twenty-one days. The general situation was not quite as those Carbineers
-described it, but their account of Boer resistance in Natal did not by
-any means convey the idea that war was nearly at an end, although rumour
-magnified Lord Roberts’s successes to the extent of placing him within a
-march or so of Kroonstadt at a time when his troops were still hung up
-at Bloemfontein waiting for food and transport. As B Company had heard
-of Cronjé’s surrender and the relief of Ladysmith before leaving
-Calcutta, it would hardly have surprised them to learn that the Union
-Jack was floating over Pretoria. To them the mere occupation of
-Bloemfontein seemed a comparatively small matter, so they at once turned
-and began to rend with keen sarcasm the croakers who had predicted that
-B Company at least would be too late for anything. Too late! Why, their
-orders were to disembark at East London, and did not that mean an
-immediate start for the front? One sanguine trooper in the gladness of
-his heart wrote, ‘We go on shore at 11.30 to-day, leaving for
-Bloemfontein by train about the same hour to-night, and expect to arrive
-in forty-eight hours. We shall probably train to Bethulie and march from
-there to Bloemfontein, about 120 miles.’ His faith in the marching
-powers of Lumsden’s Horse must have been great indeed if he thought they
-could trek 120 miles across unknown veldt after travelling from East
-London to Bethulie by rail, and all in the space of forty-eight hours.
-There is something very fascinating about that picture of troopers so
-eager to be at the taking of Kroonstadt (‘which, it would seem, will be
-a big affair’) that they would perform superhuman feats to be there in
-time. No admirer of Lumsden’s Horse would venture to suggest that a
-march of forty leagues in less than two days was beyond the compass of
-their powers, but the man must be brimful of hope who could believe that
-there would be any time left for marching, or any inclination to march
-left in the men, after a South African railway, working under war
-pressure, had done with them. But in fact there was no such need for
-haste. B Company was quite in time for the ‘big affair’ at Kroonstadt,
-though it took more than twenty times forty-eight hours in the getting
-there. Colonel Lumsden, going ahead with A Company to land in Cape Town,
-had still more reason for entertaining sanguine views, though in his
-case they were modified by a fuller knowledge of events. When in sight
-of Table Mountain he added a postscript to his letter: ‘Off Cape. Just
-got orders. May be in for Pretoria. Hope so.’ The two companies,
-however, were not fortunate enough to come together under one command
-until nearly a month later. Their fortunes as separated units must
-therefore be dealt with in somewhat disjointed form still. How A Company
-fared after casting anchor off Durban may be told in the words of a
-special correspondent pf the ‘Englishman’ who had joined the corps for
-active service:
-
- As we came in sight of Durban everybody was expecting that some
- official would dash on board directly he knew it was Lumsden’s Horse,
- to order us off down the coast, and that in a minute we should be
- steaming hard for our destination. But it happened otherwise. When
- fairly close in we signalled to the Coastguard station what ship we
- were and what she contained. Then a deep silence settled over things.
- Lots of shipping lay at anchor there, and every ship except ours had a
- steam launch calling upon it. But we, waiting with beating hearts, had
- no one to pay us a visit until a great puffing, rolling,
- important-looking tug bore alongside, churned up the blue water into
- white foam, dropped a tiny boat, and in a jiffy a blue-suited,
- gold-braided gentleman was on board and the tug had gone away over the
- waters. So we thought that meant orders to bring us ashore. But, alas!
- it was only a pilot come aboard to have a buck with the captain. Then,
- while we waited and waited, our signalling class set to work, and an
- energetic waving of arms and little flags elicited the reply from
- neighbouring ships that Ladysmith had been relieved. They also
- confirmed the news, which we had received at the Sandheads, of
- Cronjé’s surrender. Close by lay H.M.S. ‘Terrible,’ from which a naval
- contingent had been sent with her big guns to reinforce Sir Redvers
- Buller on the Tugela, and our first sight of one of the consequences
- of war was a launch full of wounded Bluejackets returning to their
- ship after relieving Ladysmith. While we lay peacefully swinging at
- anchor a great white ship flying the Stars and Stripes and Union Jack
- steamed slowly out of the harbour, and swung off to the left. As she
- passed a big transport the troops on board broke into ringing cheers,
- and when she neared us those with glasses read her name. It was the
- ‘Maine’ full of wounded soldiers from Sir George White’s gallant
- garrison. She went right round the harbour, visiting all the ships
- with troops. Last of all she came to us, and as she passed by, and we
- could see the white-aproned nurses and the bandaged figures with pale
- faces we gave them three times three, and still cheered again for the
- plucky ladies who had come all the way from America to care for our
- wounded. The poor chaps aboard did their best to answer our cheers,
- and then the ‘Maine’ steamed away down the coast on her way home to
- England.
-
- However, the long-delayed _hookum_[3] came at last, and a great shout
- broke forth when it was announced that we were ordered to proceed to
- Cape Town. We sat down to dinner at 7.30, and as we toasted Ould
- Oireland because ’twas St. Patrick’s Day, the ‘Lindula’s’ anchor
- heaved, and the screw that for twenty days had toiled without ceasing
- began its unremitting task again. When morning broke we had steamed
- well down the coast, passing the lights of East London in the night.
- Ten miles away was the seashore, bare, and uninteresting, but still
- the Africa that we had come some six thousand miles to argue about
- with the redoubtable Boers. And now we had to reckon with a foe that
- used no weapons nor fought with hands. This was Mother Ocean, who must
- have been troubled in her mind, for her breast heaved and tossed, and
- our good ship rolled until—well, better change the subject. The coast
- slipped by, and on the forenoon of the 20th we sighted afar off the
- flat top of Table Mountain. Steaming across the wide mouth of Simon’s
- Bay we saw hundreds of sharks—brown brutes that scooted away, showing
- a black fin, as the steamer ploughed her way through the waves. Then
- rounding the Point we sailed into Table Bay, and dropped anchor with a
- grand feeling of satisfaction that the voyage had ended. Journeying by
- sea is pleasant enough when you do it first class by P. and O., but
- when you go no class at all, and sleep on the deck, and get turned out
- before 5, and spend a big part of the day clearing out horse stalls or
- cooking your own food, and enduring lots of other discomforts, it’s no
- catch at all; and it was with intense relief we took our place among
- the lines of troopships in Cape Town harbour. And what a sight it was!
- Ships! ships! ships! And everywhere more ships! And most of them
- transports. From great 10,000-ton White Star Atlantic liners down to
- little coasters like our own ‘Lindula.’ All around us were vessels
- full of troops. Every hour or two a new one came in, or one weighed
- her anchor and steamed slowly by into the dock to disembark her living
- freight. Other ships were crammed from stem to stern with cattle,
- sheep, horses, leaving barely enough room on deck to turn the wheel.
- Vessels were packed like herrings in the harbour: so thick did they
- lie in places you could hardly see the water for ships. There we
- waited, and next morning the Health Officer came on board and gave us
- _pratique_, which meant a clean bill of health and freedom to land.
- Another day of waiting for the pilot. Then after a great rush and
- scurry collecting kit we slowly slid into harbour. And, lo and behold!
- it was Cape Town—Africa at last.
-
- Disembarking is not a pleasant pastime, especially when 150 men have
- had three weeks in a ship during which to lose and mix up their
- belongings. But the order to clear out and make room for another ship
- was given, and had to be obeyed in a hurry. So we said good-bye to the
- ‘Lindula.’ Poor thing, she had done her best for us, though in her we
- lost four of our chargers and two transport ponies, a big proportion
- of our total of 180 animals, but nothing like the number that died on
- some other ships. A transport lying near us with Imperial Yeomanry
- lost 39 out of 450 in a three weeks’ voyage—nearly all from pneumonia.
-
- Our orders were to proceed to Maitland Camp, some four miles to the
- north of Cape Town, and thither we marched, leading the horses, which
- of course were hardly in a fit state to ride. However, the walk seemed
- to do them good, and after a week in camp, with good feeding and
- gentle exercise, they picked up condition rapidly.
-
- The men have little that is good to say of Maitland Camp. It is a
- place stale, flat, unprofitable, and altogether accursed. When we
- arrived the wind blew a hurricane, and setting up the tents was a task
- to try a Stoic. Once they were up the sand crept in at every crevice
- and lay thickly on everything, especially butter and food of every
- sort. Men went to sleep, or tried to, with the feeling that the bit of
- the earth on which they lay must surely be swept into the next world
- ere morning broke. But day dawned and we were still in Maitland Camp,
- with the rain pouring in torrents and turning the sand and earth into
- mud puddings, which clogged and wetted and dirtied every scrap that
- belonged to us. However, the third day recompensed us, for the sun
- shone hot and bright, and a gentle breeze wafted delicious scents from
- the woods of eucalyptus and fir trees all around. Boys came to us with
- delicious grapes, great bunches weighing one to two pounds apiece,
- each grape being as large as a pigeon’s egg and as full of juice and
- flavour as fruit can be.
-
- Of Cape Town we saw very little, but liked that little much; only the
- price of things is terrible, and it seems much more serious parting
- with shillings than with rupees. Lumsden’s Horse had many eyes for the
- beautiful, and while declining to play the part of Paris in deciding
- on rival charms, they wax eloquent when their theme is the sex which,
- as one gallant trooper says, has done much to make this world the
- habitable place it is. In Cape Town the ladies are charming to look
- at. They dress just as they do at home in summer, and their cheeks are
- rosy, and they are altogether delightful to look upon. But still it
- matters little whether the cheeks be pale or rosy, we are all ready to
- back our ladies of India against any in the wide world for kindness
- and every other feminine attribute.
-
- Having inspected our transport, the Army Service Corps officers at
- Cape Town approved of our carts, and reported favourably on them to
- Lord Roberts; but at the same time stated that they considered a team
- of two ponies inadequate to draw the load we had designed through
- sandy tracts, and suggested two leaders to each cart, an increase of
- 200 lb. in the load, and a decrease in the number of carts. The Chief
- of the Staff having approved of this suggestion, we handed over to the
- military authorities twenty ponies (not our best) and ten carts, and
- harness complete, receiving in exchange seventy-six mules, with
- harness, and twelve Cape boys to assist as drivers, so that when B
- Company arrives our united transport establishment will consist of
- thirty-six carts and two water-carts, with two mules as wheelers and
- two ponies as leaders to each cart, and there is little doubt that we
- are as well provided with transport as any troops in the field—indeed,
- much better than most. The Remount Department in Cape Town were very
- good to us, and replaced not only our losses on the voyage, but a
- number of horses which on landing appeared unfit for service, giving
- us in all twenty-four chargers. The animals cast in Cape Town were old
- and unlikely to get into condition for a long time, if ever they did
- so. Our Calcutta purchases and horses brought by troopers themselves
- are nearly all doing well. In place of those we had lost on the
- voyage—six or seven altogether—Government gave us thirteen fine
- Australian cobs, which were told off as remounts for the Ceylon
- Contingent. But, the latter having been mounted in the meantime by the
- military authorities and sent to the front, their horses were very
- properly handed over to us. In Cape Town we found it necessary to make
- several purchases to supplement equipment and replace losses. These
- consisted of grass nets and picketing pegs for the horses, and
- _vel-schoen_ and canvas water-bags for the men; besides stores
- amounting in all to about 150_l._ worth.
-
- Unfortunately, we have to leave four men in hospital. Sergeant Lee
- Stewart, whose illness was mentioned in the last letter, is much
- better, but greatly debilitated from the trying time he has had. He
- has hopes of joining us later. Another bad case is that of K. Boileau,
- from Behar, who was attacked with pneumonia and was very ill indeed at
- one time. However, we have good reports of him, and hope to hear in a
- few days that he is all right again. Shaw, of the Assam Contingent,
- and Doyle, of the Transport, are also in hospital from trifling
- ailments, and they ought soon to be able to join us. Many of the men
- are suffering from cuts and sores on hands and feet, which do not seem
- to heal up as fast as they ought. Hickley, who was pretty bad when the
- last letter went, is now all right again, but Daubney has still to be
- careful of his broken collar-bone. When we arrived at Cape Town we at
- once heard we were to proceed to Bloemfontein, to join Lord Roberts,
- as speedily as possible. But the movement of large bodies of troops
- with supplies caused a block on the railway, and we were delayed eight
- days. The wait, however, did the horses good, and they picked up hand
- over fist at Maitland Camp.
-
-All these details, when looked at in the long perspective where more
-recent events show up sharply and perhaps a little out of focus, may
-seem insignificant as objects seen through the wrong end of a telescope.
-At the time of occurrence, however, they had an importance that
-impressed itself on the minds of men to whom nearly every incident of
-active service was then a novelty. And the historian’s duty in such a
-case is rather to reproduce impressions than to preserve an exact
-proportion. Moreover, some incidents that may appear trivial by
-comparison with great episodes, or with decisive actions on which the
-fate of an army hung, were potent in shaping the fortunes of Lumsden’s
-Horse as one small unit of a mighty whole, and in this respect, if for
-no other reason, they are worthy to be chronicled. It is the story of
-Voltaire’s miller and the King of Prussia. What a division is to the
-general in chief of an army corps a company is to the regimental
-commander, and, for Lumsden’s Horse, the smallest adventures of their
-own comrades had an interest which the civilian reader may perhaps begin
-to share when he comes to know more of them.
-
- At Cape Town Colonel Lumsden got the first news of B Company since
- leaving Calcutta. They had been ordered to East London to disembark
- there, and entrain at once for Bethulie, ‘right in the Orange Free
- State,’ as Colonel Lumsden remarked, adding, ‘So they bade fair to get
- there before us, despite our week’s start. But our latest news of them
- is that they have stopped at Queen’s Town, and we know no more of them
- except that they had a most successful voyage.’
-
-A corporal of the Surma Valley Light Horse, however, supplies the
-necessary information. He tells how he went with an ambulance fatigue
-party, to which, among others, Dr. Woollright had been told off as an
-orderly, in charge of Trooper Seymour Sladden, who was very bad and had
-to be taken on shore at East London before the company knew its probable
-destination. From a little jetty that juts out from the wooded banks of
-the Buffalo River they drove in an ambulance with the sick man up those
-steep winding roads past the luxuriant Queen’s Park, with its odorous
-gum-tree groves, to the hill top. There they carried Sladden ‘into a
-nice clean hospital and left him in charge of kindly nurses, where
-everything looked very comfortable.’ Then, somehow, they managed to miss
-their officer and made inquiries for him in vain at Deel’s Hotel, with
-the result that when the corporal and his comrades reached the
-landing-stage they found to their ‘extreme joy the crew gone and no way
-of getting off to the ship, so returned to the hotel and had dinner.
-Afterwards very sleepy and went straight to bed, and slept like a hog.
-First time in bed for many weeks, and found it comfortable indeed.’
-Other non-commissioned officers and troopers of B Company carry on the
-narrative in notes that diverge frequently and wander off to alien
-topics, so that for the sake of coherence they must be dovetailed
-together here in proper order, each chronicler in turn taking up the
-story. When those troopers who had not begun to realise the enormity of
-breaking leave returned to their ship early in the morning of March 27,
-they met with quite an ovation, which does not seem to have been
-disinterested, seeing that they were supposed to have brought off with
-them fruit, cigarettes, and other delicacies much in request. What they
-had would not have gone far to satisfy the cravings of a whole company
-for some change from bare rations. News that orders had come for
-Lumsden’s Horse to disembark, however, put everybody in high spirits at
-the prospect of being allowed to go on shore with freedom to forage for
-himself. But they reckoned without their host—the military
-commander—whose instructions brooked no delay. Kits had to be packed in
-a hurry while the ‘Ujina’ was being towed on a flowing tide across the
-troubled bar into port, where she moored alongside the railway wharf.
-Horses were then got on shore, but only to exchange cramped stalls for
-cattle-trucks, where they had still less room for movement. At this task
-the troopers toiled and sweated all through the fiercest heat of a
-summer noon, learning another lesson and not liking it much.
-Unaccustomed to such work, many got their toes trodden on by horses
-rushing down the steep gangway or narrowly escaped more serious injury
-before every fretful animal could be coaxed or lifted into the crowded
-trucks. Then there were saddles, kits, heavy baggage, and ammunition to
-be landed, and so without leisure for a single meal the troopers worked
-on far into the night. It was nearly 11 o’clock before the last section
-took its place in the train. ‘Something attempted, something done, had
-earned a night’s repose’; but there was little chance of getting that,
-packed together as they were nine or ten in a carriage. Time must have
-softened the impressions of these discomforts on the mind of one
-trooper, who, some days later, wrote:
-
- We left East London on March 28 by rail _en route_ for Bethulie, where
- it was intended we should quit the railway, mount our horses, and trek
- to Bloemfontein.
-
- East London turned out in force to see us off. Little boys and girls
- (some of the latter not so very little, after all) were very keen to
- get hold of our shoulder badges as mementoes, and, needless to say,
- the susceptible ones of our corps were unable to resist the entreaties
- of the fair ones, and daylight showed a vacant place on many a
- shoulder-strap. This badge-collecting seems to be a great hobby out
- here just now; one boy showed me a belt simply covered with badges,
- which he had secured from the men of the different regiments that had
- passed through. We travelled in second- and third-class carriages, ten
- men in each, but it being quite cool we were not uncomfortable.
-
-Another correspondent, whose experiences were evidently not so pleasant,
-takes a less roseate view. He says hard words about the South African
-war method of standing men, some forty-five or so in a cattle-truck,
-encumbered with heavy coats, rifles, and other baggage—a leaky roof, and
-no sides.
-
- This may be economical, as the Major said, but on a wet blustry night,
- when buckets of rain, mixed with soot from the engine, are falling, it
- is not a style of travelling that conduces to comfort. Then there is
- still another African style—namely, ten men with rifles, &c., in a
- third-class carriage meant to hold eight only. Both of these methods
- we sampled on our way up to Bloemfontein. And right glad I was when we
- had done with it, and took to the saddle. Some, however, confessed to
- having slept very well that first night in such strange circumstances,
- tired out as they were by hours of previous toil, though they woke
- next morning very cold, with nothing to eat but one loaf, which ten
- men divided between them.
-
-They had eyes for the picturesque as well as for the agricultural
-possibilities of a country where Nature does much and man apparently
-very little, except to stroll about watching the cattle graze and the
-crops grow, unless he happens to be a Kaffir, which makes all the
-difference. Chiefly, however, Lumsden’s Horse must have been struck by
-the barren, rocky kopjes that seemed to spring suddenly in the midst of
-fertility and rise range behind range, stretching away to the mountains,
-which looked so near that it was impossible for imagination to measure
-the breadth of intervening plains. As one of them wrote, acquaintance
-with this country for the first time ‘made us realise the fearful odds
-that Buller had to tackle’; and no doubt many other troopers went on
-fighting fanciful battles against a wily enemy who, driven from one
-position, would gallop off to occupy another kopje still more
-formidable, and so prolong that imaginary fight, while the train, like a
-British column, wound its slow way through tortuous defiles. Lumsden’s
-Horse, however, had eyes for other things also, as a candid chronicler
-admits in his simple narrative, which may now be allowed to run its
-uninterrupted course:
-
- At several stations on our way there was the usual crowd of ‘loyal’
- ladies of mature age, and the still larger crowd of schoolgirls. The
- people seemed very glad to see us. There was a lot of cheering and
- waving of handkerchiefs and pleasant greetings at every station. They
- gave us cigarettes and cheroots, and some men were seen to be sporting
- bows of red, white, and blue when we left—little attentions from some
- fair hands in return perhaps for Lumsden’s badges, of which many
- shoulder-straps were by that time bereft.
-
- Early next morning saw us at Cathcart, where we stopped about two
- hours, and took the opportunity to water and feed our horses. There is
- a nice little inn here, and we went down in a body and indulged in
- delicious bread, butter, and milk. Oh, such a contrast to the same
- articles of diet in India! The weather at this time of the year is
- nearly perfect, the air being fine, dry, and invigorating; to the eye
- wearied by the flatness of the plains of India the undulating country,
- small hills and green valleys between, is very refreshing; but what
- strikes one, more especially in the Free State, which we marched
- through later, is the desolateness of the country, miles and miles of
- veldt dotted here and there with small houses. Cattle-farming seems to
- be the principal thing they go in for here, but the farmers say that,
- what with rinderpest and drought, it is very disheartening work. The
- cattle are very fine, and strike us especially coming from India,
- where one sees such miserable specimens. About midday we arrived at
- Queen’s Town, and were very much disgusted to hear that Lord Roberts
- had wired down that we were to detrain and go into camp, as he needed
- all the horse-waggons and cattle-trucks for carrying remounts (several
- thousands of which were collected at Queen’s Town) to troops at the
- front. The camp is situated about two miles from the railway station,
- but they have run a siding into it, so that the carriages containing
- ourselves and our horses were simply detached from the rest of the
- train and we were run into the camp. We did not take long in
- detraining and picketing our horses; the poor brutes were simply
- delighted to get on firm ground again, and when let loose indulged in
- all sorts of antics—rolling on the grass, kicking up their heels, and
- larking like colts, to show appreciation of their freedom. As our
- tents had not arrived yet, we were obliged to sleep out in the open;
- but, knowing this would be a matter of course sooner or later, we made
- no bones about it. Unfortunately it came on to rain at night, and this
- made things generally uncomfortable. The mufflers so kindly knitted
- for us by the ladies of Calcutta proved simply invaluable; with these,
- Balaclava caps, and greatcoats on, we made ourselves perfectly
- comfortable. There were about twelve men of the Army Service Corps
- stationed here, and, with the proverbial hospitality of Tommy Atkins,
- they very kindly supplied us with hot cocoa and coffee, and offered to
- put up as many as possible of us in their tents. We found several of
- the Queensland Mounted Volunteers encamped here, also a part of the
- Militia Battalion of the Cheshires awaiting marching orders like
- ourselves. Next day our tents arrived, and we were soon quite settled
- down, ten men in a tent—a bit of a squash, but all right when one gets
- accustomed to it.
-
-There they may be left for a time chuckling over the good story of a
-Militia regiment whose officers complained to Major Showers that they
-could not stand the language of which Lumsden’s Horse made such free and
-frequent use at ‘stables’ and other daily duties. Of course that
-language was only the mildest of mild Hindustani put into terms of
-endearment with certain genealogical references that sounded mysterious
-to the uninitiated.
-
------
-
-Footnote 3:
-
- Hindustani for ‘order.’
-
------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER V
- _AN INTERLUDE—THE RESULTS OF SANNA’S POST_
-
-
-At Maitland Camp and Queen’s Town the two companies of Lumsden’s Horse
-would probably have remained many weary weeks, eating their hearts out
-with the fever of impatience, but for circumstances which must
-necessarily be explained at some length in order to give a clear view of
-the general situation. With events leading up to that situation
-Lumsden’s Horse had nothing to do, but incidentally the crisis had a
-great deal to do with them as influencing their movements immediately
-afterwards. It will be remembered that Lord Roberts had found it
-necessary to halt at Bloemfontein a fortnight earlier, his victorious
-advance beyond that point being checked by the loss of a very valuable
-convoy which had fallen into the hands of the Boers at Waterval Drift.
-With characteristic cheerfulness he made light of a mishap that would
-have been regarded by many generals as almost disastrous in the
-circumstances, seeing that the convoy contained supplies without which
-no forward movement of troops beyond Bloemfontein would be possible
-pending the repair of railways and the opening up of communications with
-a secure base. In his despatches Lord Roberts makes but a passing
-reference to the Waterval Drift affair, as if it were of comparatively
-little importance, yet he knew perfectly well that its consequences
-would be a temporary paralysis of his whole force and heart-breaking
-delay at a time when energetic action might have brought the campaign to
-a decisive issue.
-
-The relief of Ladysmith, far from improving matters in this respect, had
-simply set free a number of Boer commandos, whose leaders, baulked in
-their ambitious schemes for the conquest of Natal, were burning with
-desire to achieve successes in the Orange Free State. From their point
-of view it was still possible to retrieve the disaster of Paardeberg,
-and they knew that a severe blow struck at the British lines of
-communication would bring them many adherents from Cape Colony who were
-only waiting for such an opportunity. It would also inevitably prolong
-the campaign by cutting off sources of supply, on which Lord Roberts was
-dependent; and it might even turn the scale in their favour by bringing
-about European intervention. To that hope they clung always, as their
-State documents and correspondence prove abundantly. Therefore it was of
-the first importance that they should assume the offensive before Lord
-Roberts could strengthen his lines of communication and bring up ample
-supplies to form an advanced base at Bloemfontein. If circumstances had
-permitted him to push on at once, the moral effect on enemies already
-disorganised and disheartened would have been enormous. As it was, his
-inaction revived the drooping Spirits of Boers who were previously on
-the point of accepting defeat as inevitable. They saw the inherent
-weakness of a force that could not move far in any direction until the
-means of feeding itself had been secured, and their thoughts turned at
-once to the possibility of frustrating that object by vigorous raids at
-every vulnerable point. In such an emergency the presence of men like
-Louis Botha and Christian De Wet was worth more than a thousand rifles.
-They had the brain to plan and the intrepidity to attempt any enterprise
-that might bring them an advantage by embarrassing their adversaries,
-and every day’s delay on our side was an opportunity given to them for
-more complete concentration. This last word must not be misunderstood.
-When applied to Boer strategy or tactics it does not necessarily mean,a
-gathering of units into one great force, but rather a concentration of
-efforts on one object which they often secure while seeming to aim at
-something entirely different by a distribution of their commandos in
-many directions. Necessarily such distracting operations can never bring
-about decisive results, but they served the Boer purpose admirably then,
-and De Wet got the opportunity he wanted to prove himself an ideal
-leader for work of that kind.
-
-From some points of view this may be regarded as the most important
-phase of the whole campaign; it taught the Boers how to harass our
-forces with the greatest effect while exposing themselves to
-comparatively little danger. First of all, however, they set themselves
-to the task of showing that there was life and power for mischief in
-them yet, their object evidently being to effect surprises that might
-create panic among our troops and so render raids less difficult of
-accomplishment. In the development of that idea we recognise the
-peculiar craft of Christian De Wet, who at that time had less respect
-for the courage of ‘rooineks’ than he began to entertain soon
-afterwards. Sanna’s Post was a lesson to him not less than to us. With
-the exaggeration which characterised a great deal that was written in
-those days some critics at home described this affair as a ‘black
-disaster,’ thereby meaning apparently that it was something rather
-disgraceful and a stain on our military reputation. A disaster it was in
-the literal sense, for the stars in their courses seemed to be turned
-against us; but they were certainly not blotted out, and they never
-shone on soldiers whose deeds could better bear the light. The story of
-Sanna’s Post or Koorn Spruit is worth telling again, not only because it
-marks emphatically the revival of Boer hopes, after Ladysmith and
-Paardeberg and Kimberley had done much to shatter their self-confidence,
-but because it furnishes a splendid example of British valour, defiant
-in the moment of defeat, and all the brighter by contrast with the gloom
-through which it shines. In details the following version of what
-happened may not be more accurate than others, and it lacks the
-completeness that subsequent access to official documents might have
-given; but at least it has the merit of having been written at the time,
-and of showing what was the impression conveyed to the minds of people
-who were in the midst of those stirring events and could gauge their
-significance without exaggeration. This description by the Editor, who,
-as War Correspondent of ‘The Daily News,’ was then at Bloemfontein, may
-be given almost in its original form.
-
-We knew that Colonel Pilcher, in attacking Ladybrand, had roused a
-hornet’s nest, and that Brigadier-General Broadwood, in command of a
-small mixed column, was retiring along that road from Thaba ’Nchu, hard
-pressed by Boers, whom he could only keep at a distance by the skilful
-disposition of his forces in successive rearguard actions. His movements
-were hampered by the slow progress of a convoy. He was falling back on a
-post at Sauna’s near the waterworks from which Bloemfontein draws its
-main supply, and expected to be there some time during the night of
-Friday. He had made application for reinforcements when the Boers,
-gathering strength as they came, began to overlap him on each flank, in
-spite of anything that his men could do to check every move of that
-kind. Thereupon Lord Roberts sent General Colvile’s Division, with
-artillery, and Colonel Martyr’s brigade of Mounted Infantry and
-Irregular Horse eastward by a forced march. They left Bloemfontein hours
-before daybreak on Friday, but even then it was too late. Colonel
-Martyr, pushing on as fast as the condition of over-worked horses would
-permit, only reached Boesman’s (or Bushman’s) Kop with his leading
-troops about 7 o’clock. There was still six miles of veldt between him
-and the scene of disaster. Before he could cross that in force
-sufficient to be of any use, the worst had happened, and nothing
-remained for him but to cover the retreat of detachments that had
-already got through the Boer lines before going to help those who were
-still beset.
-
-What were the causes leading to disaster we did not know then—we do not
-know with absolute certainty even now. No special correspondents were
-with General Broadwood’s column when sudden misfortune fell upon it. All
-details had to be gathered at second hand, and many of the combatants
-who were best qualified to give an impartial account of the trap in
-which our troops were caught were either dead or prisoners in the hands
-of the enemy. In the excitement following that swift surprise those who
-had to fight hard for their lives could not see much on either side of
-their immediate front. They were mainly concerned with the necessity for
-shooting quick and straight. It is therefore not surprising that stories
-of the fight, as seen from many different points of view, should vary so
-that it becomes a little difficult to follow the exact sequence of
-events.
-
-Two or three points, however, seem tolerably clear. When
-Brigadier-General Broadwood halted his troops to bivouac at 4 o’clock on
-Saturday morning, March 31, after crossing the Modder River, they were
-worn out by a long night march that had entailed incessant watchfulness.
-He was then in touch with the small force of Mounted Infantry holding
-the waterworks, and, naturally supposing that their commander had taken
-all precautions to safeguard the drift across Koorn Spruit, he did not
-call upon his weary column to furnish additional patrols for duty in
-that direction, but formed a chain of outposts along ridges in rear
-towards the known enemy, who had been harassing his march all the way
-from Thaba ’Nchu.
-
-It is known that the officer who was in command at Sanna’s Post did take
-more than ordinary precautions before dawn that morning by sending a
-company of Mounted Infantry westward across the drift near Pretorius’s
-Farm, and, if a Boer prisoner may be trusted, that very precaution
-contributed to the disaster. According to his story, a party of three
-hundred Boers, who had been cut off from the main Brandfort body by
-General French’s Cavalry, on Thursday, were making their way across
-country to join Grobelaar’s (or, rather, as it had then become, De
-Wet’s) command on the Ladybrand side. Hearing Koorn Spruit, this party
-saw the Mounted Infantry patrol, and, the first principle of Boers in
-warfare being to hide themselves from the enemy, they at once took
-shelter between the high banks of a water-course which is, in places,
-nearly as dry as a khor in the Soudan. Then they began to plan an
-ambush, with the object of cutting off that isolated Mounted Infantry
-company. Until that moment they had not thought of laying a trap for the
-convoy, about which, indeed, they knew nothing. Such is the story told
-by a Boer prisoner. If true, it proves that the capture of Broadwood’s
-convoy was by a force entirely independent of the one against which he
-had been fighting his rearguard actions, and therefore unpremeditated,
-or, at any rate, not the calculated result of skilful tactics.
-
-At first it was hastily assumed that one of the ablest scouts in the
-British Army had been out-manœuvred, and allowed himself to be
-surrounded by Boers. That the officer who gained distinction for
-boldness, dash, and caution when reconnoitring successive Dervish
-positions in the Soudan, should allow himself to be caught in a trap by
-Boer farmers was almost inconceivable. It now seems as if the enemy had
-merely stumbled on an opportunity, of which they took advantage, not
-quite realising what it meant.
-
-Against this, however, was the evidence of a civilian refugee who
-declared that there were many more than three hundred Boers concealed in
-Koorn Spruit, and believed that secret information must have been given
-to them of the fact that no force had been posted to guard the drift by
-which Broadwood’s column must cross. On Pretorius’s Farm he met a
-burgher who had given up his arms, and received a pass from our military
-authorities permitting him to return to his home and settle down in
-peace, secure from all fear of molestation at the hands of British
-troops. This disarmed burgher, who had been fighting against us up to
-the occupation of Bloemfontein by Lord Roberts, showed such an accurate
-knowledge of the Boer movements that he must have watched them very
-closely. He could tell the exact position from which every gun would
-open fire on the English, column before it came into action. This
-knowledge he imparted without reserve, and yet, apparently, he had no
-apprehensions of ill-treatment from his former comrades as the penalty
-for deserting them. The incident, whatever interpretation may be put
-upon it, is curious, and will, perhaps, help to explain many things that
-happened when submissions were accepted and passes granted with too
-lavish leniency.
-
-It is more than probable that a Boer attack on the waterworks in order
-to destroy the pumping machinery there was part of a plan conceived
-directly after the occupation of Bloemfontein by our troops, but it
-could not be carried out before the column holding Thaba ’Nchu had been
-forced to retire. The artillery positions may therefore have been
-selected some time previously for the purpose of shelling out any force
-that might make a stand at the waterworks, and it is all consistent with
-the Boer prisoner’s statement that no deliberate attempt was made by
-General Broadwood’s pursuers to surround him until they found that his
-convoy had been accidentally headed off and partly destroyed at the
-drift across Koorn Spruit by a comparatively small body lying in ambush
-there for another purpose. Such a combination of accidents seems
-improbable, but certainly not more so than the assumption that a Boer
-commander, calculating all the chances to a nicety, had ventured to
-detach such a small force and send it round by a wide _détour_ across
-some miles of open plain with the object of intercepting, by an ambush,
-a column that had been able to hold its own against odds for some time.
-If so, he gave more hostages to fortune than the Boers have risked
-elsewhere.
-
-Whatever may be the truth in this respect, it is clear that neither the
-officer in charge of communications, whose Mounted Infantry held Sanna’s
-Post, nor Brigadier-General Broadwood, had reason to suspect the
-presence of any hostile force in that immediate neighbourhood.
-
-When the retiring column got touch of its friends near the waterworks,
-bivouac was immediately formed, and tired men no sooner lay down, with
-saddles for pillows, and rifles by their sides, than they were sound
-asleep, leaving the duty of watchfulness to their rearguard, which, in
-outpost line, occupied a range of rough hills southward, overlooking the
-road by which they had retired from Thaba ’Nchu. It was then 4 o’clock.
-Little time could be given to rest, for the column had to start again in
-two hours. Just before 6 o’clock the convoy of a hundred waggons with
-mule-teams began to move off towards Koorn Spruit Drift. Such was the
-false sense of security that no armed body went ahead. Some dismounted
-men, whose horses had been shot or otherwise used up, marched as a
-baggage-guard, but most of them had stowed their rifles on the waggons
-while helping to get the column in marching order. Nothing warned them
-that danger was near as they approached the drift. Not a movement was to
-be seen across the broad veldt but dark shadows of hills creeping
-backwards as the sun rose.
-
-At that moment, from a distant hill in rear, overtopping the outpost
-ridge, darted the flash of a Boer gun, then another and another from
-different positions, followed by the shriek of shells and the crash of
-bursting charges. Every shot, well aimed, struck with a dull thud, and
-threw up columns of earth among or near the masses of men who were
-saddling up or inspanning teams for the march, but did no damage beyond
-frightening mules and increasing the confusion, where Cape boys, in
-their haste to obey a peremptory order, got harness entangled and
-themselves bewildered. Our Horse Artillery, being in a hollow, and
-masked by the movement of troops about them, did not reply, but limbered
-up and followed the transport waggons, which by that time had begun to
-cross the drift. Nearly half of them had cleared it, when from behind
-steep banks in the winding spruit on each side Boers galloped forward in
-dense troops, and, halting with rifles at the present, summoned
-everybody to surrender.
-
-Some men of the baggage guard got to their arms, and, lying between
-waggon wheels, opened fire, but they were few, and the Boers many. The
-others, unarmed, could do nothing but obey the stern mandate: ‘Hold up
-your hands; come this way and give us your bandoliers.’
-
-Then U Battery of the Royal Horse Artillery, following close upon the
-waggons, was surrounded before a gun could be wheeled about for ‘Action
-front,’ and the drivers were ordered to dismount and outspan. Gunners,
-however, do not yield without a struggle, even when their eyes look into
-the barrel of an enemy’s levelled rifle. Hands were on revolvers in an
-instant, but before these could be drawn shooting had begun, and many a
-gallant fellow fell. Horses, too, were shot down, or, being wounded,
-plunged madly over the traces. One team, startled by the din about it,
-stampeded, and galloped off with gun and limber, but no drivers. Thus
-one gun was saved. The other five fell into Boer hands, their gunners
-being either killed, wounded, or taken prisoners.
-
-Sergeant-Major Martin escaped and ran back to warn Major Hornby, who, in
-command of Q Battery, was then scarcely a hundred yards from the scene
-of disaster. That officer gave the order to unlimber and come into
-action, but could not open fire while our men and the enemy were mixed
-up together among baggage-waggons, and at the same time his own gunners
-were being shot down. A small body of Remington’s Scouts made one plucky
-effort to get near the captured battery, but suffered heavily. Then two
-troops of Roberts’s Horse, acting as escort for the convoy, dashed
-forward to cross the spruit and take the Boers in flank, but they were
-confronted by enemies from another ambush, who, at a distance of only a
-few yards, had them covered and called upon them to surrender. Their
-only answer was ‘Fours about—gallop’; but it came too late, and before
-they could get out of range nearly every saddle was emptied. Only five
-men got away, and of these four were wounded. Among the missing, nine
-officers had either been killed or fallen into the enemy’s hands.
-
-Emboldened by success, the Boers came into the open, as they had never
-done before. They galloped up to groups of men who were fighting
-shoulder to shoulder, reined in, and shot as they sat in the saddle,
-reckless of the bullets that whistled about them. One body charged close
-up to a Maxim gun that was pouring out a deadly torrent of bullets, and
-silenced it for a time by shooting down the detachment, but whether they
-got away or fell victims to their own bravery could not be seen as the
-struggle surged round them. Three New Zealanders whom I met coming out
-of the fight told the story, and spoke with admiration of the daring
-displayed by many of their foes, but still more enthusiastically of the
-splendid courage of our Horse Artillery. Of these three, one was a fine
-type of the half-caste Maori, the others hardy Colonists, who looked as
-if they had faced death more than once—cold-eyed and calm. They had
-evidently taken mental note of all that passed within sight of them,
-while they with others held a group of buildings, keeping the enemy in
-check by steady shooting.
-
-Major Hornby, finding that he could not bring his guns to bear at short
-range without shooting down friend as well as foe, limbered up to get
-clear of the close _mêlée_. In wheeling round on rough ground one gun
-capsized, bringing all the team down with it—horses and drivers together
-in a confused mass. The Boers saw their chance, and brought a withering
-rifle fire to bear, so that every attempt to right the gun failed. Under
-this fire the two wheelers of another team fell. The leaders struggled
-on for a time, dragging their maimed comrades, then came to a
-standstill, and that gun also had to be left behind. Marksmen of the
-Durham Light Infantry did their best to keep down the enemy’s fire,
-while volunteers ran out to help the distressed gunners, who, managing
-to escape, went off for fresh horses.
-
-Captain Gore Anley, commanding the Essex Regiment’s Mounted Infantry,
-aided by two of his men, brought a wounded gunner from under that
-terrific fire to safety, and then went out with a brother-officer to
-help at the guns. Time after time the artillerymen brought up fresh
-teams, which were shot down before they could be hooked to the limbers.
-One driver had nine horses killed or wounded before he gave up the
-attempt as hopeless.
-
-Meanwhile Major Hornby, with four guns of his own command, and the only
-one remaining of U Battery, which had been recaptured after stampeding,
-moved southward to a position twelve hundred yards from Koorn Spruit
-Drift. There he brought them into action with a cool audacity and effect
-that paralysed the enemy. Though he could not save the guns that had
-been left behind, he could cover the retirement of Cavalry and Mounted
-Infantry of the rearguard, who, unable longer to hold the low ridge
-against heavy odds, were being forced back from the waterworks, fighting
-stubbornly, though threatened in flank by the force that had captured
-our convoy. Shelled at from right and left, smitten by storms of rifle
-bullets, the gunners of Q Battery never budged. Coolly, as if at target
-practice, they loaded and aimed. The shells burst among the Boers,
-checking more than one attempt at a rush, and then the remnants of a
-shattered brigade were enabled to retire upon their supports, who had
-rallied for a stand at the station buildings.
-
-All the time officers and men of the Army Medical Corps were covering
-themselves with honour by brilliant services rendered to stricken
-soldiers, who lay helpless where the ground was torn by bullets. The
-coolest deed of all, however, was done by an American named Todd, a
-trooper in Roberts’s Horse. With a comrade he had first volunteered to
-go out and bring in some stray horses for the disabled guns. Before they
-had ridden fifty yards the second trooper was shot dead, but Todd
-galloped on straight towards the Boers, rounded up both horses, and had
-nearly brought them back when one was killed. When he rejoined his
-detachment Todd heard an officer asking for volunteers to go out in
-search of their doctor, who was lying wounded in a donga. Without
-waiting to hear more the trooper turned his horse’s head towards the
-Boer lines again and galloped off. Twenty minutes later he rode back
-slowly, bearing a heavy burden on his arms. ‘I couldn’t see the doctor
-anywhere,’ he said, ‘but I have brought back the only wounded man that I
-found alive there.’ If ever a man earned the right to wear the grim
-badge of Roberts’s Horse it is Trooper Todd. Deeds of heroism, however,
-were not rare that day. They could not avert disaster, but they shed a
-light upon it that dispels the shadow of humiliation.
-
-Our men had still hard fighting to do before they could hope to
-extricate themselves. Brigadier-General Broadwood’s retirement upon the
-station buildings was not effected without difficulty, and it is
-wonderful that he should have been able to keep the remnants of so many
-broken squadrons in hand, while they were weakened by further losses
-every minute, and the on-coming enemy gathered strength. Several
-horsemen, escaping, got away across the veldt, and then, forming groups,
-headed towards Boesman’s Kop, Boers pursuing for some distance. But the
-main body made a stand at the station buildings, and fought it out for
-two weary hours, so fiercely that the enemy did not dare to come to
-closer quarters. The company of Burmese Mounted Infantry that had been
-on outpost duty west of Koorn Spruit, when they found themselves cut off
-by Boers in ambush, made an attempt to rejoin the main body, but were in
-turn surrounded. Having some advantage of ground, though outnumbered,
-they were enabled to hold their assailants off until 7 o’clock.
-
-Then the scene changed. Troops appeared on Boesman’s Kop. They were the
-advanced guard of Colonel Martyr’s Mounted Infantry brigade, which had
-made a forced march to relieve the beleaguered column. Their commander
-halted only long enough to let the main body close up, and then
-‘Queenslanders to the rescue’ came sweeping across the veldt as fast as
-their jaded horses could move. But the Boers were at their old tactics
-again, and the Queensland Mounted Infantry fell into a trap skilfully
-laid for them. Before the enemy could reap much advantage, however,
-Colonel Henry was at them with all his companies of Regular Mounted
-Infantry, which the astute Brigadier had ordered forward when he saw the
-Queensland men in difficulties. The young officer, who has spent many
-years with Egyptian Camel Corps, chasing Dervish raiders and scouting
-about their strongholds, was not to be caught by a Boer ambush. He
-advanced upon them in a formation too flexible even for their mobility,
-and gradually drove them before him until the Burmese and Queensland
-Mounted Infantry were enabled to fight their way through the weakened
-cordon.
-
-This timely diversion gave General Broadwood his opportunity, Major
-Hornby’s battery fell back to another position, covering the retirement,
-and then the column, leaving its wounded under care of our own surgeons,
-retired slowly to join the welcome reinforcements. They had to turn
-again and again to face the foe, who still hung on their heels, and all
-the way they were shelled by Boer guns, until a final stand was made
-near the waterworks, where the enemy dared not attack, though the
-artillery fire continued for nearly two hours longer.
-
-Late that afternoon the Highland Brigade, under General Hector
-MacDonald, passed Boesman’s Kop, and advanced to get touch of the enemy,
-near Modder River; but except for a few shells and sputtering rifle
-fire, no attempt was made by the Boers to resist this advance. When
-General Smith-Dorrien’s brigade, and other troops of the Ninth Division,
-joined MacDonald, the column that had fought so well after disaster fell
-upon it, dispersed into scattered remnants once more, each unit making
-for the appointed bivouac in any want of formation best adapted to the
-needs of weary men who had to walk because their horses were more tired
-than themselves.
-
-What a roll-call it would have been if the Brigadier had not in mercy
-spared them that melancholy ordeal! When the losses came to be counted,
-they numbered, in dead, wounded, and prisoners, nearly a third of the
-force that had marched out of Thaba ’Nchu forty hours earlier. Of U
-Battery, Royal Horse Artillery, only a mere handful remained, and Q
-Battery had suffered heavily too. Seven out of twelve guns had been left
-in the enemy’s hands, with some eighty baggage waggons full of stores.
-Household Cavalry, 10th Hussars, and Mounted Infantry had losses to
-mourn, and Roberts’s Horse the most of all. Unhappily, it was too late
-to hope that either guns or convoy could be recaptured. They had all
-been taken off during the afternoon towards Thaba ’Nchu, and Boers were
-in possession of the waterworks, with artillery on heights behind,
-covering the road.
-
-Next day a demonstration of the whole force under General Colvile’s
-command was made, as if to drive every Boer from the waterworks, where
-mischief had been done by the destruction of pumping engines; but it
-ended in nothing, and then we gradually drew in our forces. The Boers
-assumed the offensive again, and began to threaten our line of
-communications at several points.
-
-These were the conditions that made Lord Roberts anxious to secure the
-services of every mounted corps on which he could rely for meeting the
-new Boer tactics by swift counter-strokes. Most of them he had foreseen
-when orders were sent for Lumsden’s Horse to be supplied with all the
-remounts necessary for repairing losses and pushed on to the front.
-Sanna’s Post with all its consequences had not been counted on; but it
-made the need for mounted troops all the more urgent in order that
-pressure round about Wepener might be relieved and lines of
-communication cleared. That action, lamentable because of the sacrifices
-it entailed, but glorious in its heroic incidents, gave to Lumsden’s
-Horse not only an opportunity, but an example; and we may be sure that,
-when the news reached them at Maitland Camp and at Queen’s Town, every
-trooper made up his mind to be a worthy comrade of the men who had
-risked their lives so nobly and fought with such stubborn valour in vain
-attempts to save the guns at Sanna’s Post.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VI
- _BY RAIL AND ROUTE MARCH TO BLOEMFONTEIN_
-
-
-A week was more than enough in which to exhaust all the charms that A
-Company could find round about its dusty camp at Maitland. The fragrance
-from woodland belts of pine and eucalyptus trees soon began to pall;
-there was little to refresh the eye in that changeless view across
-unbroken flats, where a grey haze hung morning, noon, and eve, veiling
-the distant mountains northward; the beauty of Table Mountain, as seen
-from there, with kloof-fretted steeps towering up to the clouds, is not
-a joy for ever; and Cape Town shows its least attractive side towards
-Maitland, which in itself is the embodiment of suburban dreariness,
-having but two places of entertainment—a swimming bath and an
-observatory. As admission to the latter can only be gained by a special
-permit from the Astronomer Royal, Lumsden’s Horse had few opportunities
-to appreciate the wild dissipation of ascending its quaint old tower,
-which, indeed, most of them mistook for a dismantled windmill. And the
-amusements that Cape Town offers to soldiers of less than commissioned
-rank had few temptations for troopers of Lumsden’s Horse. Mount Nelson,
-with its gay crowd of fair women and maimed heroes, was to them but a
-vision of the life that had been. How those dainty damsels would have
-been shocked to see a trooper in weather-stained khaki and ammunition
-boots treading the glades and terraced heights of that South African
-Olympus! But not more shocked than a man of Lumsden’s Horse would have
-felt at finding himself in such a situation. Ridiculous prejudice, of
-course, and to be condemned by all right-thinking people in whose
-opinion the soldier’s uniform is a badge of honour. Yes! but like many
-other badges it has to be worn with a difference; and nobody knows
-better than those who have tried the experiment of putting it on that a
-private soldier’s service kit is not the garb in which one would choose
-to appear where fashion and beauty congregate. A man may have served
-through a whole campaign in the lowest ranks, obedient to every command,
-however humiliating or distasteful, and not have felt the yoke gall him
-half so sorely as it does when he first realises the social inferiority
-that it implies. Let us have done with cant and confess at once that a
-man who puts on the common soldier’s uniform for active service, whether
-he be Volunteer or Regular, thereby renounces all claims to the rights
-and privileges of a gentleman. The gay haunts of a city are not for him
-then, if he cherishes his self-respect, and the troopers of Lumsden’s
-Horse had that truth impressed upon them long before their week of rest
-at Cape Town came to an end. They were no more squeamish than others,
-and their experiences in this direction have been shared by every
-Yeomanry corps and Volunteer detachment, after the first burst of
-enthusiasm on their account exhausted itself. Cheerful endurance of
-these things may be counted not least among the merits of men who gave
-up much to serve their country in her hour of need, and to ignore them
-would be to misunderstand the nature of many sacrifices made by the
-rank-and-file of a regiment like Lumsden’s Horse. In times more
-propitious they would have appreciated fully all the charms that Cape
-Town can offer; but, as it was, the parting had no great pang for them,
-and A Company hailed with unalloyed delight the order for an advance
-northward into the land of infinite possibilities. There was to be no
-route marching for that detachment, the Cape Colony lines being
-comparatively clear of troop traffic; so that the prospect of reaching
-Bloemfontein by rail without serious interruption seemed almost a
-certainty. It was on Friday, March 30, that Colonel Lumsden received,
-direct from headquarters, the welcome intimation that he and his two
-companies were wanted at the front. Colonel Lumsden naturally felt
-himself very fortunate in receiving orders by which his corps was chosen
-for active service while Regular regiments and Yeomanry companies waited
-impatiently at the base in Cape Town; but Lord Roberts needed mounted
-troops more than infantry just then. Everybody accepted this as the
-first real step of the great march on which their hearts were set, and
-its crowning triumph at Pretoria. They were not to be out of it after
-all. And we may be sure that they wanted no second call when the warning
-came for them to get their kits packed and be ready for a start by train
-the next morning. This was glad news for all except four unfortunate
-troopers who, much to their sorrow, had to be left in hospital at Cape
-Town. These were James Lee-Stewart, of whose case Colonel Lumsden wrote
-a week or so earlier; Knyvitt Boileau, of Tyrhoot; Hubert Noel Shaw, of
-Palumpur; and John Canute Doyle, of the Transport Detachment. Of others,
-who were invalids on the voyage, Howard Hickley had quite recovered, and
-Clayton-Daubeny, pleading hard that he was quite fit to ride and shoot,
-in spite of a broken collar-bone, got permission to rejoin his section
-for duty. So keen were the men to be near the fighting line that they
-have hardly recorded their impressions of the strange country through
-which they passed; and but for an incidental note here and there, like
-the opening paragraph of the following letter, we might almost imagine
-that profound peace reigned throughout the country. Yet the letter was
-dated only three days after our troops had suffered so heavily at
-Sanna’s Post. Writing on the morning of April 3, a trooper whose letters
-were sent to the ‘Englishman’ said:—
-
- It is wonderful to think that this very afternoon we shall be in
- Bloemfontein, and may see the great old man whose masterly tactics
- have so completely turned the tide of war.
-
- On Friday we heard the line was clear, and this news was quickly
- followed by a warning to hold ourselves in readiness. Immediately on
- top came the order to be at the railway station the following day by 1
- o’clock. A mighty packing up of kit and piling up of supplies resulted
- in a successful transference of our goods and chattels to the station
- by the appointed time, and at 6 o’clock we steamed out of Cape Town in
- two trains, one following the other. When we left camp ammunition was
- served out, fifty rounds a man, and the weight of it has not added to
- our comfort.
-
- The railway journey has proved very pleasant so far. However, some
- slight description of how we are packed aboard may be interesting. We
- heard, with no little misgiving, that we were to be eight in a
- compartment, for we expected nothing but the ordinary straight-backed
- wooden carriage, and no chance of lying down at all during the three
- days to be occupied in journeying to the Free State capital. So it was
- a pleasant surprise to find first-class corridor carriages comfortably
- upholstered in leather, with sleeping accommodation in each
- compartment for four men at a time. There were one or two second-class
- carriages equally comfortable, with the additional advantage of an
- extra tier of berths, accommodating six sleepers, one on the floor and
- one in the passage, and the whole boiling of us slept the sleep of the
- just the whole night through. Rations consisted of tinned corned beef
- and biscuits, suspiciously like dog biscuits, but good to eat
- nevertheless—for people with sharks’ teeth and stomachs of brass. But
- nearly everywhere we stopped there were coffee-shops, where you paid
- sixpence for everything, and an ordinary chota hazri sort of meal ran
- up to about half-a-crown. As we travel up country we find everything
- very dear, and we wonder Government does not make some effort to
- arrange that the troops should be supplied with tinned goods at
- reasonable prices. If private contractors can get stuff up, certainly
- Government, which has first call on the railways, can too.
-
- The horses—poor devils!—are packed ten, eleven, and twelve in a
- cattle-truck, and the way they kick at times is a caution. All along
- the train the trucks are broken and splintered. Oh! for the luxury of
- our Indian horseboxes. However, three times a day we manage to feed
- and water the poor brutes, and though their meals are somewhat scratch
- they don’t do so badly. Forage is of the best—splendid compressed hay,
- and English oats and bran.
-
- De Aar was the first place of real interest we came to, and there we
- beheld a battered armoured train, covered with bullet marks. Then we
- touched at Naauwpoort, which was crowded with soldiers. The train
- stopped just opposite Rensburg, so we got out and had a game of
- football, with an empty tin for ball and broken saddles for
- goal-posts, right on the place where the battle of Rensburg had been
- fought a few months previously. From there we could see the
- flat-topped broken cone of Cole’s Kop rising from a rock-roughened
- plain like a huge step-pyramid, with sheer escarpments, up which the
- Naval Brigade hauled two fifteen-pounders by means of a wire rope, and
- struck terror into the Boers at Colesberg when those guns opened fire
- from that apparently inaccessible height. Afterwards came Norval’s
- Pont, where we prepared to cross the Orange River. Unluckily, we
- crossed at 1 in the morning, when very little could be seen. It is
- wonderful how the Sappers have repaired the bridge. We spun across in
- pontoons with the water swirling within two feet of us. Shortly after
- crossing the river we were halted and ordered to draw another fifty
- rounds of ammunition per man, and to post two sentries to each
- carriage; every man to wear his bandolier, have his rifle handy, and
- be ready to turn out at a moment’s notice. Firing had been heard that
- evening, and there was no doubt Boers were in the vicinity. Later,
- some thirty miles south of Bloemfontein, we heard that the troops
- stationed to protect the railway line had been out in the surrounding
- kopjes during the night, and that a Boer commando, 600 strong, had
- been seen travelling south. So we are bang in the thick of it now, and
- ere many more hours have passed we shall be within sound of the
- firing, for we hear fighting is going on steadily to the north of
- Bloemfontein. The men are in splendid spirits and health, and wild to
- get a turn at the enemy. Altogether we have every reason to
- congratulate ourselves on the comfortable and speedy journey we have
- made to the front.
-
-The man who could regard De Aar—sun-scorched, arid, dust-stifled De
-Aar—as the first place of interest on that long railway journey, simply
-because an armoured train ‘covered with bullet marks’ was standing in
-the station, must have been in a very warlike frame of mind indeed. But
-perhaps the comfortable railway travelling, so conducive to the ‘sleep
-of the just,’ may account for much. Probably the slumberous heat of
-afternoon had caused him to doze before the train slowed down at
-Stellenbosch, which was a place of much notoriety at the time; and
-picturesque, too, with its great oak avenues, dating from a day when
-Commandant Van der Stel, the planter of them, was there with his young
-wife in the very foreposts of Dutch civilisation, not much more than
-thirty miles from Cape Town; and more picturesque still because of its
-quaint thatched houses as old as the oaks. Stellenbosch is a great
-centre of education, and, according to the guide-books, it has a home
-for the training of a limited number of poor whites. We know the ‘poor
-whites’ for whose training a home was provided at Stellenbosch about the
-time when A Company of Lumsden’s Horse passed that way and afterwards.
-They were mostly officers of high rank who had not distinguished
-themselves, and for whom a refuge had to be found where they could do no
-greater mischief than send useless remounts from that depôt to the
-front. So Stellenbosch grew in repute, and visits to it (without return
-tickets) were so frequent, that an expressive verb had to be coined for
-use in everyday conversation. The phrase ‘I’ll be Stellenbosched if I
-do,’ became quite familiar, and many a gallant officer knew to his cost
-what it meant. Rustication in that old Dutch settlement under leafy
-arcades, where, in ordinary times, ‘the stillness of the cloisters
-reigns,’ was not the only penalty. These, however, were things not known
-to recent arrivals like Lumsden’s Horse, who might have met and
-hobnobbed with the latest candidate for Stellenbosch and have been none
-the wiser. So they went on their way thinking nothing of the old Dutch
-town and its new notoriety, and in the darkness of night, when the new
-moon showed no more than a crescent thread of silver, were winding by
-sharp curves and steep gradients up the kloofs of Hex River Mountains
-towards the Great Karroo. Lumsden’s troopers saw little of the glorious
-landscape that is opened up at that height. Those who were not asleep
-had no light to see it by but the cold light of the stars, and that
-seemed to be swallowed up in the depths of impenetrable shadow, except
-where the lamps of Worcester Town, in the plains 2,500 feet below,
-twinkled like feeble reflections on a wine-dark sea. Then the swift dawn
-came, and when the sun rose they were crossing the Great Karroo, which
-at that time of year—the true winter of Cape Colony—wore its least
-attractive garb. Bare patches of sandy soil gaped between scattered
-clumps of blue-green scrub, where a month or so later it would be
-glowing with the purple and gold and scarlet flowers of lilies and
-asters innumerable, and the gorgeous crowns of mesembryanthemums of
-every conceivable shade, from white through primrose and orange to the
-deepest crimson. In its winter state the Great Karroo brings back to
-travellers of wide African experience clear memories of the Northern
-Soudan. In all chief physical features the two regions, so widely
-separated, are curiously alike. Here are pyramidal mountains with
-flat-topped crowns rising wall-like above the conical base exactly
-resembling the ‘Jebels’ on which one has looked with weary eyes, day
-after day, through the rippling heat of the Soudan deserts. In some
-parts of the Karroo these mountains close upon narrow gorges, along
-which the railway winds, and its sudden turns round rocky buttresses
-seem so familiar to one who knows the old military line above Wady Halfa
-that he can imagine himself travelling once more through the desolate
-Batn el Hagar towards Khartoum. To men for whom the rugged Karroo had no
-such associations with the land of mysterious fascination, there may
-well have been a wearisome monotony in the unvarying repetition of
-similar forms—the vast plains whereon no tree bigger than the _Acacia
-horrida_ grows, and where the houses, if any, are so widely separated
-that they only serve to deepen the impression of melancholy solitude;
-the waterless rivers, the bare brown kops. For full appreciation of the
-Karroo one must have breathed its invigorating air from childhood, and
-seen it in seasons of beauty with all the glory of its summer raiment
-on. De Aar Junction is no more than a huge collection of railway sheds
-and equally hideous houses set in the most barren plain of the Great
-Karroo; but Lumsden’s Horse saw it busy with many signs of military
-preparation for a forward movement, and so it seemed to them the very
-gateway of the fateful future, in the shaping of which they were to have
-a hand. That night they crossed the Orange River at Norval’s Pont, where
-Railway Pioneers, mostly skilled artificers from the Johannesburg mines,
-under Major Seymour—‘the greatest of mechanical engineers,’ as Colonel
-Girouard styled him—were hard at work, night and day, repairing the
-broken bridge, while baggage was being transferred by the wire trolly
-high overhead. Lumsden’s Horse crossed the pontoon ‘deviation’ to a
-train on the farther side, and when morning dawned they were journeying
-slowly—with many precautions against possible surprises by marauding
-Boers—to the goal of their hopes. Bloemfontein was reached by A Company
-in the afternoon of April 3, when they went into camp at Rustfontein,
-two miles from the town, and became part of the 8th M.I. Regiment, under
-the command of that very able leader, Colonel ‘Watty’ Ross, whose
-portrait appears on the opposite page. Of him Colonel Lumsden writes:
-‘No better man could have been chosen to command a body of Irregular
-Horse. Capable, tactful, with a keen eye for a country, and a man hard
-to beat in the saddle, he was in fact an ideal leader at the game he had
-to play. We were under his command from the time the 8th M.I. was formed
-at Bloemfontein, early in April 1900, taking part in every action of
-that eventful march to Pretoria, and the 8th M.I. had the honour of
-scouting in front of headquarters throughout.’ After the memorable June
-5, when the capital of the South African Republic fell into our hands,
-Lumsden’s Horse were placed for some time on communications at Irene and
-Kalfontein, but their Colonel, tiring of this inaction, applied to
-General Smith-Dorrien for more congenial employment. His wish was
-shortly afterwards gratified, and Lumsden’s Horse, with mutual regrets
-on both sides, were transferred to another column, thus severing their
-connection with the 8th M.I. and the leader whose soldierly qualities
-had endeared him to all ranks. Their respect for him found appropriate
-expression long afterwards, when every man of the corps, from Colonel
-Lumsden downwards, subscribed for a badge, the regimental ‘LH’ in
-diamonds, and this they presented to Mrs. Ross in token of their
-admiration for her husband as a commander and in appreciation of the
-considerate kindness he had shown to all ranks while they served under
-him. That the admiration was not all on one side may be gathered from an
-incident that occurred some time after Lumsden’s Horse were embodied
-with the 8th Mounted Infantry Corps, and Colonel Lumsden thinks justly
-that no better proof could be given of the able and smart class of men
-he had in his command than the following remark from Colonel Ross:
-‘Lumsden, whenever I ask you to send me an A.D.C. or galloper, never
-mind sending me one of your officers; your troopers are just the class I
-want.’
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Photo: Dickinson_
- MAJOR (LOCAL COLONEL) W.C. ROSS, C.B.
-]
-
-Some months after the severance of associations that had been so
-pleasant for commander and commanded, when Lumsden’s Horse had seen
-their last of South African fighting, Colonel Ross had the lower part of
-his face shattered by a bullet while attacking a Boer position at
-Bothaville with the gallant dash which his old comrades remember so
-well. In that fight De Wet’s forces were completely routed, and lost
-nearly all their artillery; but the victory was not achieved without
-heavy sacrifices on our side. Colonel Le Gallais, who commanded the
-Mounted Infantry, and also Captain Williams, formerly Staff-Officer of
-the 8th M.I. Corps under Colonel Ross, were killed, while going to the
-assistance of their brother-officer; and, in the same fight, Lieutenant
-Percy Smith, who had gained honours as a trooper of Lumsden’s Horse at
-Ospruit when he went out with his Colonel to bring in a helpless
-comrade, was wounded in the performance of a gallant action by which he
-won the D.S.O.
-
-For the sake of finishing a story events have been somewhat anticipated,
-and B Company may resent the interpolation, at this stage, of a
-flattering comment that belongs properly to a later period. In the
-actions from which Colonel Ross formed his high opinion of Lumsden’s
-troopers, B Company had taken its full share. Before resuming touch with
-the movements of that body, however, reference must be made to another
-incident in which A Company had the proud distinction of representing
-the whole corps. The occasion was a visit on April 4 by Lord Roberts,
-who, after inspecting the company, called out and shook hands with
-Trooper Hugh Blair, whose brother, an officer of the Royal Engineers,
-had been badly wounded in the Candahar campaign. The Commander-in-Chief
-then made a brief speech to Colonel Lumsden and his troopers. Of this no
-shorthand note or transcription from mental tablets seems to have been
-made, but its meaning is probably expressed in the following letter
-which Lord Roberts wrote to Sir P. Playfair, C.I.E., Chairman of the
-Executive Committee of Lumsden’s Horse: ‘Dear Sir Patrick,—Many thanks
-for your letter of February 26. A few evenings ago I had great pleasure
-in inspecting Lumsden’s Horse immediately after their arrival here. I
-sent a telegram to the Viceroy to inform him that I had done so. They
-are a workmanlike, useful lot. I am sure they will do splendidly in
-whatever position they may be placed. It is most gratifying to hear the
-way in which the corps was raised. The sum subscribed by the public
-generally is the proof of the patriotism of the subscribers, especially
-Colonel Lumsden himself. You will have seen in the papers that we are
-detained here for a while until we can refit, but when this is done we
-shall move northward. I am confident that during our advance Lumsden’s
-Horse will do credit to themselves and to India. Believe me, yours very
-truly, (Signed) ROBERTS.’
-
-A few days after that inspection the Commander-in-Chief sent to Colonel
-Lumsden a telegram he had received from the Viceroy. Lord Roberts’s
-secretary wrote as follows: ‘Dear Colonel Lumsden,—The Field-Marshal
-asks me to send you the enclosed telegram from the Viceroy, and to say
-that he fully agrees with the last sentence of it.—Yours sincerely, H.V.
-Cowan, Colonel, Military Secretary.’ Lord Curzon’s telegram said: ‘Lord
-Roberts, Bloemfontein.—We are delighted to hear of your kind reception
-of our Indian Volunteer contingent, and hope that they may have a chance
-of going to the front, where we are confident of their ability to
-distinguish themselves.—VICEROY.’
-
-Carrying on the narrative from this point, but leaving the lighter
-incidents of life in Bloemfontein for other pens to chronicle, Colonel
-Lumsden deals briefly in his diary with the remaining period of A
-Company’s isolation, and brings it down to the day when the corps was to
-be reunited under his command. With natural gratification at the
-position assigned to him, he says:
-
- General Ian Hamilton is to command a division of 10,000 Mounted
- Infantry, of which Colonel Ridley’s brigade forms nearly a half,
- consisting of four corps of about 1,200 strong each. We are embodied
- with the 8th Mounted Infantry Corps, consisting of Loch’s Horse,
- ourselves, and various companies of Mounted Infantry from Regular
- battalions, under the command of Colonel Ross. Both Colonels Ridley
- and Ross are well known in India, and we are fortunate in being under
- their command and in having such a dashing divisional commander as
- General Ian Hamilton. Our first camp in Bloemfontein proved a sickly
- one, water being scarce owing to the Boers having blown up the
- waterworks and cut off the main supply. This, no doubt, has been the
- cause of numerous cases of dysentery, and our camp was shifted
- yesterday to a healthier locality, with a more plentiful water supply.
- Strange to say, we have had an attack of mumps among the men,
- emanating, we believe, from a native servant who developed that
- disease on board ship. I regret to say that Captain Beresford had to
- be taken to hospital yesterday, suffering from an acute attack of
- dysentery; but a few days of careful dieting will enable him to rejoin
- us, I hope. B Company, owing to the congested state of the railway
- traffic from Cape Town to Bloemfontein, was landed at East London, to
- proceed thence by rail to join us. Transport, however, was found to be
- equally difficult by that route, and in consequence the company had to
- march the greater part of the way.
-
-What meanwhile had befallen that force under the command of Major
-Showers may be told in the words of a trooper whose lively contributions
-to the ‘Indian Daily News’ do not seem to have been regarded as an
-infringement of a rule laid down in the mobilisation scheme by which
-volunteers for Lumsden’s Horse were warned that they would on no account
-be allowed to act as special correspondents for newspapers. This
-regulation, like many others, seems to have been more honoured in the
-breach than the observance. Taking up the broken thread where it was
-dropped some pages back, he writes:
-
- At Queen’s Town we had a fairly pleasant time, except on nights when
- it simply rained cats and dogs and hailed as well. Most of our tents
- leaked badly, so we were rendered thoroughly uncomfortable. The horses
- and the unfortunate stable pickets (I was one, and speak from personal
- experience) were in a wretched plight, without shelter of any kind.
- When the storms were at their worst, and picketing pegs would not hold
- in the soft ground, we may have used words that were not endearing to
- horses that got loose. On April 2 we were told that the company would
- start on the 4th, marching to Bethulie, waggons for our horses not
- being available then, but that we should probably entrain a few
- stations further up. We were informed that all superfluous clothing,
- &c., would have to be packed up and returned to East London, and each
- man would only be allowed to take one kit bag, weight not to exceed
- thirty pounds. We therefore set to work, and cudgelled our brains
- trying to decide what to take and what to leave behind—no easy task, I
- can tell you. However, the die was cast at last, and we were ready for
- kit-bag weighing next morning. Several of the men had evidently rather
- vague ideas on this point, and, after filling their bags to a weight
- of forty or fifty pounds each, had to repack them, much to their
- disgust. We left next day, our destination being Baileytown, a small
- place about thirteen miles distant. We were all, of course, in full
- marching order—supplied with water-bottles, haversacks, bandoliers,
- rifles, and corn-bag. The first three were hung round our shoulders,
- the rifles in the bucket on the off side of the saddle, and the
- corn-bag slung to the saddle. I was not accustomed to it; the strain
- on the shoulders is pretty severe; and we were all glad when
- Baileytown drew in sight. This march gave us a very good opportunity
- of examining the country, and as we passed kopje after kopje it was
- very easy to realise how difficult a task it is to dislodge the Boers
- from their veritable strongholds. Arriving at Baileytown about 5 p.m.,
- and finding no tents there, we bivouacked, and found the bare veldt no
- such uncomfortable bed after all. We spent the whole of the next day
- there, and as very good grass was plentiful on the slope of the hills
- the opportunity was taken of knee-haltering and grazing the horses.
- Resumed our march next day; did about twenty-two miles by 3 o’clock in
- the afternoon, when a halt was made at a place called Sterkstroom.
- Here, to our delight, orders came for us to be sent off at once by
- train. We spent a very busy afternoon unloading kits from the
- transport carts and reloading them into railway waggons, and
- entraining horses. The animals seem to be getting reconciled to this
- constant training and detraining, and behaved very well indeed. By
- 8.30 we were all ready to board the train. No more luxurious second-
- and third-class carriages for us poor privates now. We were packed
- like sardines in a box into three covered trucks, about forty or fifty
- men in each. It was quite dark, and no lanterns were given us, or,
- rather, there was an apology for a lantern in our truck, but it hardly
- made darkness visible; kits and men all over the place, and little, if
- any, room to sleep—a very weary night indeed for most of us. We
- arrived at Burghersdorp at 11 A.M. next day, and stayed there about
- two hours. All sorts of rumours were current about the close proximity
- of the Boers. We were informed that fighting was expected at a station
- north of Bethulie. At this latter place the troops had slept in the
- trenches all night in momentary expectation of an attack. There were
- said to be three or four thousand Boers hovering round in the hills
- adjacent to these places, having been cut off in an attempt to retreat
- beyond Bloemfontein. We did not reach Bethulie till 8 o’clock that
- evening, having to wait at various sidings for down trains, of which
- there were a good many. Not expecting to detrain till the following
- morning, we had made ourselves as comfortable as circumstances
- permitted for the night when orders were issued to get out and encamp
- close by at once. In a moment all was excitement, orders ringing out
- constantly, and men hurriedly getting their kit together—an almost
- hopeless task in the darkness.
-
- However, it was not long before all the men, horses, and kit were out
- and on their way to camp. Arrived there, we picketed the animals, and
- by 2 A.M. had quite settled down for the night. No peace for us,
- however, as orders went round that we must be ready saddled by 4.30,
- in case our services should be required. It turned out to be a false
- alarm, however, so after waiting till 8 o’clock we took the horses out
- to exercise. Bethulie, straggling along the northern bank of Orange
- River, is just on the borders of the Free State. The railway bridge,
- an eight-span one, has been completely destroyed by Boers, and I must
- say they have done their work very cleanly; five out of the eight
- spans have been cut right through by charges of dynamite. Fortunately,
- however, there is a waggon bridge here also, which reinforcements,
- coming up in time, were enabled to save from destruction, and, lines
- having been placed across this, one truck at a time is taken over.
- This important point of communication is now very strongly guarded by
- regiments of Infantry on each side of the river. Nearly all of us took
- the opportunity of having a glorious bath in the river, and did a
- little amateur clothes-washing. Practice will make perfect, no doubt,
- but at present we don’t take very kindly to it. At 3 in the afternoon
- we got orders to saddle up in readiness to march as an escort to 600
- transport mules for Bloemfontein. The rearguard came on with our own
- transport, and, as the latter only move very slowly, they marched all
- night and did not arrive at Spytfontein—the halting-place, nineteen
- miles distant—till about 3 A.M. Fortunately, there was brilliant light
- from the new moon; otherwise the slow progress with refractory mules
- would have been dreary indeed. As it was, we marched along as silently
- as possible, and had the feeling that we might be attacked at any
- moment. The Kaffir drivers, however, could not be restrained from
- shouting in shrillest notes and cracking their long rhinoceros-hide
- thongs with sounds like rifle-shots as they ran to head off wayward
- stragglers. All night long the red dust rose from the hoofs of those
- 600 mules in stifling clouds.
-
- This is a most desolate-looking country, miles beyond miles without
- passing a single human habitation. Towards the end of the march,
- whether through sheer exhaustion or from the effects of the moonbeams
- (one of our sages started this theory next day), half the men went to
- sleep in their saddles. I was one of the somnolent ones, and my horse
- took me several yards in front of the main body, and I awoke with a
- start to hear my companions silently chuckling at the situation. The
- only remedy was to get off and march alongside our horses, and several
- of us did this. Natives told us afterwards that Boers had been hanging
- on our flanks all through that march, and the only thing that saved us
- was our water-cart, which they mistook for a gun-carriage. The Boers
- must have changed a good deal since then if they could be so easily
- deceived.
-
- We left Spytfontein about 7 o’clock that morning and arrived at
- Springfontein at 3 in the afternoon. Here the orders were for us to
- start again next morning, escorting a Maxim battery of four guns to
- Bloemfontein, in addition to the 600 mules we already had under
- convoy. I may mention that one section of our company always acted as
- advance guard, throwing out scouts in front and on the flanks; the
- duty of these scouts being to search the kopjes on either side of the
- road, and communicate with the main body by hand signals should any
- enemy appear in sight. Starting from Springfontein early on April 10,
- we did a march of fifteen miles to Jagersfontein. Here Jim, having
- pity for my lameness, took my horse to water while I, in return,
- prowled round and found a little house where the womenfolk agreed to
- let us have tea. I was shown into the drawing-room, which looked very
- cosy by comparison with the dreary veldt. Ordered tea for six and went
- to gather my pals for the feast. After I had groomed my horse, fed
- him, and put his _jhool_ on, we went off to the small house. But,
- alas! the tea was all gone. Six other men had been there and declared
- that I had ordered it for them. This is the first example of
- ‘slimness’ recorded to the credit or otherwise of Lumsden’s Horse. At
- 4 o’clock next morning a party of us went out on patrol duty among the
- surrounding hills. We had our magazines loaded and in the dim morning
- light it was rather exciting work marching silently along with the
- chance of meeting the enemy at any moment. We stayed out till about 7
- o’clock, having thoroughly examined the surrounding country from the
- top of a high kopje, without discovering any traces of Boers. After
- half an hour for breakfast, we started on the day’s march, which it
- was intended would be a short one of fifteen miles; but it rained so
- heavily about noon, and for an hour or two afterwards, that on arrival
- at the camping-place we found it to be a mass of liquid mud and grass,
- and the Major decided to keep marching on for Edenburg, about eight
- miles distant, in the hope that it would be drier there. But it
- continued to pour steadily all the afternoon, and we arrived to find
- our camping ground at Edenburg inches deep in water. We had no tents,
- so simply wrapped ourselves in our blankets and slept where we could.
- Many of us woke an hour or two afterwards, and found ourselves wet to
- the bone, and in preference to trying to sleep again we made a good
- fire and sat round this all night. There were a few men of one of the
- New Zealand Volunteer regiments encamped here also, in charge of sick
- horses, and they very kindly supplied us with hot cocoa—a most
- grateful and comforting drink on such a night. They gave us very
- graphic descriptions of hard times in the field. They had seen lots of
- fighting, being used mainly, if not entirely, as scouts. They told us
- how difficult it was to find the enemy, who kept hidden among rocks on
- the kopjes and never fired till our men were within about a hundred
- yards. As soon as the first shot was fired, the scouts turned and
- galloped for their lives, and the artillery then began to shell the
- kopjes. Next morning we saw several Boer prisoners, among them being a
- lad of about eighteen, who had killed a Major in one of our regiments
- while coming towards him with a flag of truce in his hand. Near the
- place where we had bivouacked quantities of buried Boer ammunition and
- guns were discovered. We continued our march at about 1 A.M., and
- encamped in the afternoon at a small place called Bethany. Here a
- night attack was expected, a Boer commando of several thousand men
- being reported in the vicinity. The men of the Maxim battery stood to
- their guns all night on a kopje close by, and about thirty of us
- accompanied them as an extra precaution. Cossack posts were also
- thrown out. Locusts, of which we had already met several swarms on our
- march up, literally covered the hill-sides here, and, getting down our
- backs and up our sleeves, took some dislodging. No alarm was given, so
- we passed the night in peace. We resumed our march on Good Friday,
- and, reaching Kaffir River in the afternoon, encamped there for the
- night with Regular regiments—Guards, Highlanders, and several others.
- Camps were fairly far apart, and after picketing horses, drawing
- forage, and eating our frugal meals, we had no time for exchanging
- visits or getting any news from the various regiments we met at our
- stopping-places. However, there was consolation for us when we
- received our first budget of home and Indian letters, one of the men
- from A Company, then at Bloemfontein, having been sent down with them.
-
- Up to this point the march had been across monotonous veldt, mostly
- flat, treeless, and uninteresting. Here and there, where the ground
- held moisture, little pink flowers of a wood sorrel showed, and nearly
- every mile one came across some fresh variety of aster or daisy-like
- flower with composite crown shining brightly in the coarse grass.
- Occasionally the ridges were rich with clumps of heath, scarlet,
- yellow, and white, but not enough to relieve the general dreariness of
- distances across which one often looked in vain for any sign of
- cultivation. Ant-hills and the burrows of ant-bears were on all the
- veldt, and we had to wind our way among them, following no
- well-defined road, but only a track, the general direction of which
- was marked by a browner thread running across the tawny veldt. Several
- horses blundered into the bear-holes and brought their riders to
- grief, much to the general amusement. One trooper who rode ahead
- waving his hand and warning those who followed by frequent cries of
- ‘’Ware hole! ’Ware hole!’ suddenly disappeared, and we heard him groan
- as his horse rolled over on top of him, ‘Here’s one, and I’m into it.’
- It was nearly dark then; but dead horses, mules, and dying oxen marked
- the track by which other convoys had gone. We felt glad that our
- transport ponies were not to share their fate. They had proved quite
- useless for drawing the heavy loads in this country, so we left them
- behind at Sterkstroom, sending all our baggage-carts on by train,
- while we marched and bivouacked with only the blankets and supplies
- that could be carried on our own horses. It was at Edenburg, I think,
- that after a wet march we got leave to go into the town, hoping it
- might be possible to get something better than the perpetual ‘bully
- beef’ and biscuits, but the only room we could find in the only decent
- hotel was wanted for officers. However, a little man of the Derby
- Militia came and showed us a small Boer ‘Winkel,’ where we got
- excellent tea, bread, and jam. The Derby man said he knew where he
- could buy some butter, which was all we wanted to make us happy. C——
- gave him 2_s._ to go and get it. We finished our meal without that
- butter, and the Derby man didn’t return. So we went back to find
- everything in camp wet, muddy, and beastly. To add to our misery, a
- thunderstorm came on, and while we wallowed in slush there were empty
- houses with roofs to them not half a mile off. From Kaffir River we
- might easily have done the distance to Bloemfontein in one march, as
- it was only nineteen miles; but there was apparently no reason for
- hurrying, so we spent one more night in bivouac at Kaalspruit, and on
- Easter Sunday, in the afternoon, marched through Bloemfontein to our
- camp, which was three miles beyond. We only got a glimpse of the town
- in passing through its central square and along the main street, but,
- considering it was the capital of the Free State, I don’t think any of
- us were very much struck with it at first sight. Colonel Lumsden and A
- Company welcomed us very warmly. Our tents were already pitched and
- food prepared, so we soon settled down in our new quarters, A
- Company’s men receiving us as their guests and treating us most
- hospitably.
-
-There the trooper’s narrative ends, and Colonel Lumsden follows with a
-well-deserved tribute to Major Showers and the men of B Company, saying:
-
- They made a very plucky march up, the officers and men carrying
- nothing but their greatcoats and blankets, and sleeping out every
- night in the rain. It was too much of a trial for the ponies to pull
- their carts over the hilly and heavy going; and, as I said before,
- this method of transport had to be abandoned, and their carts and
- baggage railed up.
-
- Considering the long and trying marches they had undergone, I consider
- both men and horses looking wonderfully fit. A certain proportion of
- them, however, were not in condition to resume immediate work.
- Therefore, to replace these and in lieu of thirteen casualties on
- board ship and _en route_, I have procured from Prince Francis of
- Teck, the remount officer, twenty-six Argentine cobs, which, although
- not up to the standard of our Indian mounts, are nevertheless a boon
- to us in the circumstances, in a situation where horseflesh is at a
- premium. A certain amount of kit and necessaries had been lost by both
- companies during our journey here; but, it being our first demand on
- the military authorities for such, we had no difficulty in getting our
- requirements satisfied.
-
- We are now (April 18) under orders to move to-morrow for Spytfontein,
- five miles to the east of Karree Siding station, halting for the night
- at Glen. There has been heavy rain for the past four days, and it will
- be bad travelling, especially crossing the drift at Modder River. I
- have been fortunate in being able to retain the whole of our
- transport, which privilege has not been granted to any other unit, and
- shall to-morrow be complete in every respect. The men are in keen
- spirits, as our post is to be an advanced one and within range of the
- Boer outposts.
-
- I regret to say that Captain Beresford is no better, and will, I fear,
- have to be invalided home.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VII
- _IMPRESSIONS OF BLOEMFONTEIN—JOIN THE 8TH MOUNTED
- INFANTRY REGIMENT ON OUTPOST_
-
-
-Long streets, ill-paved and deep in mud or dust; a low stoep-shaded
-cottage with vines trailing about its posts here and there between long
-rows of featureless shops; a large market square where no farm produce
-is displayed; a club frequented by British officers who have little time
-to lounge; several churches of the primmest Dutch type, with tall
-steeples that cut sharply against the clear sky in lines
-uncompromisingly straight; some public buildings, pretentious without
-grace or beauty; on one side a steep hill terraced with houses of which
-little but the corrugated iron roofs can be seen; on the other, roads
-that straggle off to level outskirts, where villas painfully new stand
-in the midst of flowerless gardens surrounded by barbed wire. These were
-the first impressions of Bloemfontein gathered by Lumsden’s Horse, and
-few troopers had any opportunity to modify these impressions in more
-favourable circumstances afterwards. The camp to which A Company went
-originally at Rietfontein was within two miles of the town, and might
-have been pleasant enough if thousands of hoofs had not cut up its turf,
-and the ground had not been used as a dumping-place for rubbish which
-Boer commandos could not turn to any use. Some of them had been there
-before Lumsden’s Horse, and several British regiments also. So many tens
-of thousands of soldiers were camped round about the town that they may
-have interrupted the currents of salubrious air which made Bloemfontein
-famous in other days as a resort for invalids. There were plenty of
-invalids to be seen there in the early weeks of April 1900, but they did
-not regard it as the best type of sanatorium, and men who had to sleep
-in small tents on the reeking ground of Rietfontein would not willingly
-go there again in search of health. They had hardly begun to realise how
-serious was the stoppage of a fresh water supply which the Boers had cut
-off from the main at Modder River. Hundreds of old wells existed in the
-town and its outskirts, and by opening these enough water could be drawn
-for immediate wants. But, alas! the water had been undisturbed since
-Bloemfontein began to draw its supply from the distant waterworks some
-six or seven years earlier. What impurities had drained into the wells
-during all that time nobody knew until hospitals filled rapidly with
-patients suffering from enteric and dysentery. Rietfontein was showing
-symptoms of an outbreak, and so, after a week under canvas there,
-Lumsden’s Horse got the welcome order to strike camp and form a new one
-some three miles farther north, by Deel’s Farm, where a clear spruit
-flows over its bed of white gravel between banks that are shaded by tall
-eucalyptus trees and drooping sallows.
-
-After days on duty, in which they were not allowed to be slack, troopers
-felt little inclination for walking the four or five miles to
-Bloemfontein, which did not become more cheerful as the number of troops
-increased, except for the traders, who were rapidly getting back all
-they had lost by the war and a great deal more. Officers had always the
-chance, whenever they could get away from camp for an hour or two, of
-pleasant social meetings at the Bloemfontein Club, where generals,
-regimental commanders, and company officers from other brigades came
-together for a little while at lunch or afternoon tea and exchanged all
-the rumours that could be told in a few minutes—and they were many. It
-was a place of strange meetings. Men from the uttermost corners of the
-earth, who had perhaps not seen each other for years, foregathered
-there, only to separate a little later and go on their ways with
-different columns, none knew whither. Troopers had similar experiences
-in the streets and inns of Bloemfontein, where nearly every regimental
-badge of the British Army and every distinguishing plume adopted by
-Irregulars who had come to fight as ‘soldiers of the Queen’ were to be
-seen in a variety that seemed endless. Brothers whose paths in life had
-parted when they left school, one going east, another west or south,
-came face to face in the streets of that little Free State town or
-rubbed shoulders in a motley crowd of khaki-clad soldiers, sometimes
-without recognising each other, until accident gave them some clue. A
-rough word or two of careless greeting, a tight hand-grip, a steadfast
-look into eyes that remind the boys of father or mother, a light laugh
-on lips that might otherwise betray too much feeling, a drink together
-(if it is to be had), for ‘Auld Lang Syne,’ and then with a jaunty ‘So
-long, old chap,’ they part again. It is a superstition, or at any rate a
-recognised custom, not to say ‘Good-bye’ in such circumstances. But if
-men only thought of its literal meaning, what better wish could there
-be? Yet, for all its stir and bustle and dramatic incidents,
-Bloemfontein was a dull place in those days for any man who entered it
-and found no intimate friends there to greet him. Comrades they all
-were, but in a rough-and-ready sort of comradeship that needed the fire
-of the battlefield to try it and perchance anneal it into something
-stronger than the ties of mere kinship. But this is a thing which only
-soldiers understand, and seldom even they. Lumsden’s Horse knew it not
-then, but for some of them the secret was to be disclosed before many
-days had passed, and in a form that will never fade from their memory.
-Meanwhile, they went about their duties methodically enough in camp or
-took their pleasures sadly in streets where thousands of soldiers
-wandered daily, finding no entertainment, no place of resort except
-dingy bars, where liquors of more than alcoholic potency were sold, and
-very little change from campaign fare except at a price that made even
-the necessaries of life prohibited luxuries for a man who had no more
-than his shilling a day to spend. One of Lumsden’s Horse who was sent
-into Bloemfontein on orderly duty gives a vivid sketch of all this in a
-few touches that are the more graphic because they only pretend to note
-passing impressions. Writing a day after B Company’s arrival at Deel’s
-Farm, he shows how the men had to rub their horses down while standing
-inches deep in mud. So much rain was out of season, but South Africa is,
-like other places, occasionally fickle in this respect. To troopers it
-did not seem an ideal way of spending Easter Monday, and the whistle, of
-which officers made free use, must have been irritating to nerves
-already overstrained, for it is never mentioned without a forcible
-prefix. However, when rain ceased and sunshine appeared for an hour in
-the afternoon, these men were merry enough at a game of cricket, which,
-by violating all the higher rules, must have reminded them of similar
-sports in England when they were boys and welcomed Easter Monday as the
-day of all others appropriate to cricket. The next morning a great cheer
-rolled from camp to camp, and Lumsden’s Horse, responding lustily,
-passed it on to the next without asking what the unusual excitement
-meant. When they heard afterwards that troops were cheering because
-‘Kruger had surrendered,’ a strange depression took hold of them. At
-that moment all the discomforts and drudgery of a soldier’s life were
-forgotten in the humiliating thought that the corps would have to go
-back to India without a chance of proving itself in battle. It turned
-out, however, to be all mere rumour, though not so baseless as some of
-which Lumsden’s Horse had after-experience. The Transvaal President’s
-offer to negotiate for peace on terms all in his own favour must have
-been known in England then, and in some mysterious way a reflex of it
-came to camps on the veldt, where troops, who had seen plenty of the
-fighting that Lumsden’s Horse were eager for, welcomed the illusive
-tidings with a cheer. In its train, however, came something nearly as
-good—a post bringing letters from ‘England, home, and beauty,’ and for
-one non-commissioned officer at least ‘a parcel full of excellent
-things.’ Before he had time to enjoy these he was under orders for
-Bloemfontein, and after a ride through pouring rain he got there in time
-to hear another disconcerting rumour, and to find some of his comrades
-selling their kit because ‘they had been ordered back.’ Wisely resolving
-not to act on anything but definite orders, and, taking the advice of a
-corporal in the City Imperial Volunteers, who persuaded him ‘to sit
-tight,’ he waited, making the best of circumstances that were by no
-means bright according to his own brief record, which runs, ‘No dinner
-to be had at the station. Got tea sixpence a cup, bread and jam
-sixpence.’ Hungry and dispirited, he turned in and went to bed at the
-station, which means something very different from the untravelled
-civilian’s idea of a bed. Then next morning ‘bought a bob’s worth of oat
-straw for horse—groomed and fed him. Put my wet things out to dry, and
-sallied forth to the station. Had an excellent breakfast: porridge,
-haddock, chops, and two cups of coffee, for three shillings. Went to the
-hospital to try and get my leg dressed, but couldn’t find anybody to
-speak to. Thence to a most pleasant chemist—a Dutchman. Went to the
-station for lunch—another three bob.’ Not a profitable day’s work for a
-corporal on Cavalry pay without ‘colonial allowances.’ After that came
-tea and dinner, so that he was evidently doing his best to prove the
-wisdom of Mark Tapley’s philosophy. Having found circumstances in which
-it was a credit to be jolly, he made the most of them. It is not every
-soldier, however, who, having indulged in a little extravagance of that
-kind, could write, ‘Afterwards to the bank, and had an agreeable
-interview with the manager’; nor every man, with a balance to his
-credit, who would have turned cheerfully again towards the rough life of
-a camp and the unknown hardships that were to follow. When orders came
-next day for all Lumsden’s Horse to rejoin their corps in readiness for
-an immediate advance, this non-commissioned officer paid another visit
-to his friend the chemist and asked how much he owed. ‘The chemist
-refused to take anything. Pretty good that for a Dutchman and evidently
-a pro-Boer.’ With that pleasant experience blotting out all unfavourable
-impressions of Bloemfontein, the corporal rode back to camp at Deel’s
-Farm to find all the tents being struck.
-
-So they had to spend a miserable night by the bivouac fire and get
-what amusement they could out of good stories. One, suggested perhaps
-by talk of chemists and surgical operations, is worthy to be
-preserved. To appreciate the point of the joke you must know that a
-lieutenant-general’s badges of rank are a sword and bâton crossed,
-with the crown above them. A man of the —— Yeomanry, then quartered in
-Bloemfontein, was suffering agonies from toothache, and, like our
-friend the corporal, had searched every hospital in vain for a surgeon
-who might have leisure to extract it. As he crossed the Market Square,
-a general of division whose kindness of heart is as notorious as his
-strength of language, was coming out of the Club. To him the yeoman
-advanced, and, after a hesitating preface, asked the General whether
-he would mind drawing a tooth. For a moment the General was
-dumbfounded, but then his powers of expression came back to him. ‘What
-the devil do you mean?’ he roared, thinking the yeoman was
-unpardonably familiar. The man’s face fell. ‘I’m very sorry, sir,’ he
-said, ‘but our doctor’s on leave, and——’ ‘But,’ said the officer,
-smiling at the man’s mistake, ‘I’m not a doctor; I’m General ——’ The
-yeoman stammered, ‘But—but—your badge, sir!’ The General
-good-humouredly turned his shoulder to the abashed trooper. ‘Here you
-are, my lad; what’s the matter with the badge? “Crossed swords, bâton,
-and crown.”’ ‘Good heavens!’ said the man, ‘I hope you’ll forgive me,
-sir. I thought it was the skull and cross-bones!’
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Photo: F. Kapp & Co._
- TRANSPORT AND WATER CARTS
-]
-
-Before daybreak in the morning of April 21, Lumsden’s Horse were roused
-to pack kits and saddle up for their march. Impartial observers said
-they were very smart about it, but a story went round that the Colonel
-had expressed himself as much disappointed with B Company, saying that
-the others would have saddled up and walked round them three times. This
-was apparently only a playful invention, but it so angered one trooper
-that he could only express his feelings in choice Hindustani. He was
-mollified afterwards on learning that A Company had really admired the
-soldierly way in which B Company got ready, and then he excused his
-strong language by writing, ‘I understand now the expression “Swear like
-a trooper.” We hear and do more of it every day.‘ It was a painful
-confession for one of Lumsden’s Horse to make, but the incident,
-apparently trivial, shows that a wholesome spirit of emulation in deeds
-was animating the men, and that would always be regarded by soldiers as
-ample atonement for unnecessary rivalry in linguistic attainments. The
-time was close at hand, too, when Lumsden’s Horse would have more
-serious things to think about than these. Yet nobody knows better than
-old campaigners how little things occupy the thoughts of men even when
-they are doing great deeds. No opportunity for achieving greatness came
-to the corps during its first day’s march through a country where the
-enemy’s appearance might be looked for at any moment, but in another way
-the men showed their fitness for a soldier’s work—by helping the
-transport out of difficulties. It was in crossing a drift at the Little
-Modder River that carts stuck with wheels jammed tightly in deep holes
-between slippery boulders, and teams floundered in fruitless attempts to
-recover their footing. The Editor, having been in one of those holes,
-horse and all, has reason to remember the place and the swirl of water
-where it rashes over rocky ledges into a deeper pool. By dint of manful
-work, Lumsden’s Horse got their carts clear of the drift, only to find
-them axle deep in the treacherous soil of a neighbouring vlei some
-minutes later. Then ammunition had to be taken out and carried to firm
-ground and carts lifted bodily out of the mire. It was an experience by
-which the transport drivers learned not to trust appearances and to
-beware of grass that looked unusually green. Still, as Sergeant
-Stephens, of the Transport, wrote in relating his experiences, ‘If
-anything ever frightened our drivers it was the word “drift”; you should
-have seen the worried looks when they heard there was a drift ahead.’
-That night the corps bivouacked beyond Glen, where General Tucker’s
-division had been in touch with the enemy for nearly a month and warding
-off frequent attempts to interfere with Engineers who were hard at work
-on a ‘deviation’ near the ruined railway bridge. There they had to
-bivouac with nothing but blankets to protect them from the bitterly cold
-wind, and they went to sleep supperless because the transport, delayed
-by many causes, had not come up. No alarms or excursions disturbed their
-rest that night, but their march next morning was to the accompaniment
-of distant pom-poms and heavier guns and the sounds of fighting not far
-off. They did not know the meaning of it all then. It seemed to them but
-a local skirmish, and not the penultimate phase of a great movement in
-which Ian Hamilton, French, and Rundle had been sweeping the Boers
-before them from Wepener to Thaba ’Nchu and thence eastward and
-northward, clearing the country for a still greater movement. No shots
-came near the marching column. The screen of outposts holding
-inquisitive Boers in check was miles away from the drift where Lumsden’s
-Horse crossed the main Modder River, and, for all they could see, it
-might have been still miles off when they marched up a steep track and
-bivouacked on the pleasant hillside, relieving some New South Wales
-Mounted Rifles, whose horses had been used up by incessant patrolling.
-They were, however, in the outpost line there as part of the 8th Mounted
-Infantry, commanded by Colonel Ross, to whom Colonel Lumsden reported
-himself that afternoon. Some officers of Regular regiments whose pickets
-were near at hand came to have a look at these Indian Volunteers, who
-were quite gratified afterwards to hear that the Colonel of the Norfolks
-thought them ‘a very fine set of men, but undisciplined.’ It was true
-enough they had not much discipline of the parade-ground type, but they
-were held together by bonds stronger than any rules or regulations can
-weld, and inspired by a sentiment that would have made them ‘play the
-game’ wherever fortune might place them. And part of that game was for
-them to be soldiers in deed as well as in spirit, though they might lack
-the mere outward show of subordination. Spytfontein, which formed the
-centre of a position held by Lumsden’s Horse, is an outwork of the
-rugged range that sweeps from east to west in an irregular curve just
-north of Karree Siding, and from which General Tucker’s division, aided
-by a turning movement of Cavalry and Mounted Infantry under General
-French, dislodged the Boers a month earlier. Though they had made
-several attempts to reoccupy that range in the hope of being able to
-shell us out of Glen, they lost ground each time, and finally retired to
-an entrenched position in front of Brandfort, to which Spytfontein was
-our nearest approach. Trooper Burn-Murdoch in one of his clever letters
-to the ‘Englishman’ gave an admirable sketch of outpost work when it was
-a new experience to Lumsden’s Horse:
-
- Spytfontein consists of several kopjes with rocks between and, so far
- as I could see, only one farmhouse, so you will not find it marked on
- the map. We took the place of some Australians, as they had been
- pretty busy and their horses were all knocked up. To the north of us
- were Loch’s Horse about 500 yards off, and quite close to our southern
- flank were some companies of East Lancashire Mounted Infantry. What
- with outlying pickets, guards, horse pickets, and such like, we did
- not find time hang heavy on our hands. And, as our nearest neighbours
- over the kopjes were large bodies of Boers with heavy guns and other
- arms, we had, as the saying is, to sleep with one eye open, and that
- one well skinned. I have many a time steered my way by Old Crux away
- down south. But I found that gazing at it over the icy-cold muzzle of
- a Lee-Metford was, though possibly just as profitable and useful a
- job, very much less romantic.
-
- One reads in Olive Schreiner and in other African authors’ books of
- the never-to-be-forgotten pleasure of sleeping out on the great South
- African veldt, the pale calm moon overhead, and only the shade of the
- waggon for covering, around which the trek oxen rest after their day’s
- toil, the monotonous crunch, crunch of their jaws as they chew the cud
- being the only sound that breaks the awe-inspiring silence. My
- personal experience was vile—cold winds, little or no moon, wet grass
- and rocks to lie upon, soaking wet feet and clothes, one wet blanket
- and ditto coat, the only change to this being two hours’ sentry-go
- every four hours.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- OUTLYING PICKET TAKING UP POSITION
- (_From a sketch by J.S. Cowen_)
-]
-
- We were not allowed to walk about as on ordinary sentry-go, but had to
- keep quiet and sit or lie down for the most of the time, with our eyes
- straining out into the dark north, where every piece of scrub or large
- stone rapidly grew into a slouch-hatted Boer, as our brains became
- hypnotised with ceaseless gazing. And on our keen sense of hearing and
- sight depended the lives of all the corps!
-
- One afternoon the alarm was given, and we promptly ‘stood to arms’ in
- excited expectation of an attack. But it proved to be a false alarm;
- and I was not surprised that it was so, as our valiant signaller
- standing on the sky-line of a neighbouring kopje flagged the news down
- to us, and of course all the Boers between our pickets and Kroonstad
- at once knew that Lumsden’s Horse were awake _and there_—so they
- thought better of it. Some few days afterwards we got orders to parade
- at 2.30 A.M. to take part in an attack on a Boer force which had been
- ‘located’ on some hills to the south-west of us and skirting the
- Modder River. I was horse sentry that night, so got practically no
- sleep. At 2.30, however, amid a thundercloud of English and
- Hindustani, Lumsden’s Horse awoke and managed to saddle up in the
- darkness; and then, by dint of shouting out each other’s names, we
- managed to wriggle into our proper subsections. As one man put it,
- ‘the bundabust was shocking.’
-
- From the midst of this noisy dark chaos emerging, away we marched.
- Bitterly cold and cheerless was that morning, every second man’s teeth
- chattering like so many castanets, while one’s feet felt _en masse_
- with the stirrup irons. In a short time we were joined by Loch’s
- Horse, the Victorian Mounted Rifles, the Artillery, and Lancashire
- Mounted Infantry, and silence was the strict order of the march; and
- silence it was pretty well, until one of Loch’s Horse, with his
- cut-off open, let bang two shots—phew! phew! went the two nickels over
- the lot of us, and half of us ‘bowed our heads’ reverently. I believe
- Mr. Loch got fourteen days’ for that, and served him jolly well right.
-
- The sun coming out, our spirits rose somewhat, and our fingers became
- warm enough to pull out bits of biscuit from our haversacks and so
- have a sumptuous breakfast on horseback. An hour and a half’s march
- brought us to a deep creek with a good drift over it, and this we
- crossed in safety. On the other side we found a long and broad expanse
- of plain gradually sloping up to a ridge of high kopjes some four
- miles in front of us. On these kopjes our friends the Boers were
- supposed to be waiting for us, so we spread out into extended single
- ranks with about eleven yards interval. A kind friend having given me
- a cheroot, I lit up and enjoyed a peaceful smoke, while at the same
- time I could not help wondering how many more smokes the Boers would
- allow me to have. Shortly afterwards we got the order to advance at
- the canter, which we did; as our scouts were barely 1,500 yards ahead
- and had not had time to ‘search’ the kopjes properly, this was, in my
- opinion, a risky order. However, we got there.
-
- Firing had meanwhile commenced on our left, and two of our Victorian
- scouts were bagged. Our pom-poms and guns then tuned up; boom!
- pom-pom-pom, pom-pom! boom—and after a little of this double-bass tune
- the Boers bolted and left us in possession. Skirting along the
- scrub-covered banks of the Modder River, we at length reached Waggon
- Bridge, over which my subsection took the lead as scouts; and about
- midday arrived at a Boer farm some two and a half miles further on.
- Here we stayed the night, camping out on some commanding kopjes. A
- strict watch was, of course, kept up all night. Next day we duly
- received some nice compliments from the General in command on our
- rapid march and successful capture of Waggon Bridge; and then, like
- the celebrated Duke of York’s Army, we marched back again to our camp.
-
-An officer of the corps, writing to friends at Calcutta, adds some
-interesting details:
-
- We are right up at the front now holding a line of kopjes overlooking
- a large plain all round. There is nothing in the plain except one or
- two small kopjes occupied by the Boers between here and Brandfort.
- They come close in every night, and often do a little sniping at our
- outposts, but they disappear at daybreak. The other morning four
- Australians went out to a farm about three miles off; there were
- supposed to be only women there, and they had a couple of white flags
- up; but as soon as the first man got into the yard several Boers
- jumped out of the pigsty, shot his horse, wounded him and took him
- prisoner—the others had to clear. They say about a dozen Boers come
- there every night. The Australians have a picket a mile off, but they
- have not succeeded in catching anybody. The General won’t allow firing
- into the farm, because he says the women can’t help the Boers coming
- for supplies and things. The farm where we get our milk and stuff is
- owned by a Boer who has given up his arms; he fought against us, and
- bucks that he shot a Gordon Highlander officer at ten paces at
- Magersfontein. This Boer was in an awful funk lest his old friends
- should reach his farm and shoot him; at least, he said so. The night
- before last our sentries on one of the pickets were quite certain they
- saw our Boer friend lamp-signalling, and our signallers on the kopje
- noticed it also. Twenty Boers were seen in the distance in the
- afternoon, and he was evidently signalling to them. To-day there was a
- quantity of ammunition found in one of his kraals, so he will probably
- find himself in chokee. The day before I rejoined from hospital we
- attacked, or, rather, the Boers attacked us, but were shelled out of
- their position. Two of our officers who were left in camp saw from one
- kopje a shell burst in the middle of five men, and saw them all go
- down.
-
- On the 23rd, when our men were sent away to the right with some other
- M.I. and the Cheshires to seize a bridge and to drive Boer raiders
- from some kopjes, they did not apparently wait to be turned out, but
- cleared and trekked across the plain to Brandfort. Our men never fired
- a shot, though Loch’s Horse on their left had a little shooting and
- lost one man, an advance scout. The Boers let him walk right into
- their midst, and as he turned round to bolt his horse came down and
- they took him prisoner. Our position is about, as far as I can make
- out, the centre of a half circle from Karree Siding to the Glen. One
- quarter circle is held by the 7th Division, two batteries, and various
- M.I. The other afternoon some Boers started sniping at our
- signal-post, but came nowhere near hitting; we all stood to arms, and
- when thirty men were sent out they cleared. They generally amuse
- themselves sniping at our outposts at something like 2,000 yards with
- no effect. We have to furnish three night pickets—three officers, five
- non-commissioned, and sixty men every night; it falls rather hard on
- the section officers, as one is sick, and the company commanders and
- the staff, of course, don’t do it, so it means three of the seven are
- out every night. There is not very much to do on picket except post
- the sentries, visit them two or three times in the night, and get them
- in again a little before sunrise, when they return to camp. There is
- also a day outpost of twenty men and two non-commissioned officers,
- and generally a convoy of similar size into Karree Siding; so the men,
- too, have enough to do.
-
- There was a fight expected to-day (29th), but it has not come off,
- only a few shots on our left. The order has just come for us to go out
- to-morrow, leaving a sufficient guard to strike our tents and bring
- them on if necessary. We hope it is the real advance this time.
-
- Douglas Jones proved himself such an excellent Assistant-Quartermaster
- that, as B Company’s appointments were all probationary, he has been
- made Company Quartermaster-Sergeant. We lost poor old Roger at Kruger
- Siding on the way up. He had quite turned into a regimental dog, and
- on the march used generally to come along with the rearguard. We
- halted to feed there one march, and he may have stopped with the Royal
- Scots. It is quite possible he went back to Jagersfontein, and made up
- to the Gloucester Yeomanry. They are bringing in two of our lame
- horses, so if he did we may get him again.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Photo: Bourne & Shepherd_
- CAPTAIN NOBLETT (MAJOR ROYAL IRISH RIFLES)
- (Commanding B Company Lumsden’s Horse)
-]
-
-Another correspondent who was kept in camp by a slight ailment while his
-comrades were away on patrol or some more exciting expedition records
-how he got out kits and collected firewood, ‘a thing I never did
-before,’ and how when others of his section came back they lay by the
-dying embers to keep themselves warm and occasionally made the fire
-flicker up by throwing more wood on it, reckless of danger from snipers,
-who were always on the prowl. While the main body of Lumsden’s Horse
-were away on that dash for Waggon Bridge the Boers made a counter
-demonstration from Brandfort, supported by pom-poms, and got within a
-thousand yards of the Red House Farm, but did no damage beyond
-interfering with the domestic arrangements of a Regular regiment, whose
-officers, being too far from the point of attack to see what really
-happened, thought their position was being seriously threatened and
-wanted 28,000 rounds of ammunition brought up from Karree Siding for
-emergencies. The orderly corporal who sent that request on got jeered at
-as an alarmist, when nothing happened except a retirement of the Boers.
-The next day Lee Stewart, who had been left behind in hospital at Cape
-Town, rejoined, and got a cordial welcome from all his comrades when
-they marched back from their first little expedition. The section mess
-was enabled to regale him at dinner that night on ‘chicken cooked by N——
-and beefsteaks,’ so that one hardly wonders to find in the next day’s
-record the melancholy note, ‘There little was to eat; sat round the
-cook-house—two tins on the open veldt—and talked.’
-
-In his official report Colonel Lumsden sums up all this in a few brief
-sentences, having matters of more serious weight on his mind at the
-moment:
-
- Our departure for Spytfontein was delayed from 19th to 21st ult.—on
- which date we left Bloemfontein, halting at the Glen _en route_,
- arriving at Spytfontein midday on the 22nd ult. There I reported to
- Colonel Ross, who commands our corps, consisting of the following
- units, of which the approximate strength is given:[4]
-
- Lumsden’s Horse 240
-
- Loch’s Horse (a squadron) 220
-
- West Riding and Oxford L.I. Companies of 220
- M.I.
-
- 8th Battalion M.I. 420
-
- ____
-
- Total 1,100
-
- Late that evening I received orders to hold myself in readiness at
- 4.30 A.M. for Kranz Kraal, whither we marched in company with the 14th
- Brigade, our object being to protect a bridge about eight miles
- distant on the main road to Bloemfontein, which the Boers intended to
- destroy. We were only just in time to prevent them carrying out their
- object, by getting there before them, with only a couple of casualties
- among the Australian contingent. We spent the night at the bridge,
- returning the next day to Spytfontein. While at the latter place we
- were fortunate in securing a few more Government remounts to replace
- several unfit horses. I may mention that at Spytfontein we were in
- easy sight of the Boer outposts, being only eight miles distant from
- Brandfort. A long flat plain separated the Boer boundary from our own,
- and their scouts were distinctly visible to us every morning. Nothing
- eventful occurred during the next few days, but on the 30th we
- received our baptism of fire as far as we are personally concerned.
-
-[Illustration]
-
------
-
-Footnote 4:
-
- The Suffolk Company M.I., numbering 120, joined later.—ED.
-
------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VIII
- _THE BAPTISM OF FIRE—LUMSDEN’S HORSE AT
- OSPRUIT (HOUTNEK)_
-
-
-How often ignorant critics have sneered at that phrase ‘the baptism of
-fire,’ which expresses finely, with literary completeness and force, a
-truth of which men who have never been in the front line of battle can
-know nothing! However much the phrase may have been degraded by
-melodramatic application, it is a gem in its clearness of thought and
-perfection of finish. The soldier’s first fight is a plunge from which
-he emerges a new being. Whether the change may be for better or worse
-depends probably on temperament and previous associations. The fire of
-battle does not purify a sinner or sear the soul of a saint, but neither
-is quite the same after as he was before passing through it. He has seen
-things which, in some subtle way, unfelt, perhaps, and certainly
-unacknowledged, will influence the remaining years of his life. It is
-not only because he has looked death in the face—that is a common enough
-experience elsewhere and leaves no perceptible trace—but he has stood
-where dear comrades fell beside him in the midst of scenes that at other
-times would be heartrending, and, as if in a state of complete
-detachment from himself, he has passed callous through it all. The
-braver a man is, the more surely some consciousness of that strange
-state clings to him. To call it selfish indifference or the numbness of
-fear, as some insolent ignoramus might, would be to falsify the history
-of war. Selfish men and cowards do not walk with eyes open into the very
-jaws of death to help a wounded comrade, nor would dazed brains be
-capable of the swift thought that characterises soldiers in the direst
-danger. Yet men who at such times have done deeds worthy of the Cross
-for Valour will [Blank Page] not be able to tell you what sensations
-possessed them, simply because feeling in the ordinary sense was for a
-moment, or for an hour it may be, dead. The mental faculties were clear
-enough—so clear, indeed, that they took impressions, photographic in
-sharpness and detail, of every immediate surrounding, yet with no power
-of communicating those impressions in any sentient form. They knew, but
-did not feel. There are people who will tell you gravely that the
-Victoria Cross is an evil because it inspires men to do reckless things
-out of sheer desire for the glory of that decoration. It is all
-nonsense. I have known a great many Victoria Cross heroes, but not one
-who gained that high distinction because he tried to or was conscious at
-the moment of deserving it. There are soldiers of some countries in the
-world to whom glory and the lust of fame are incentives to valorous
-deeds. They love to think that the eyes of the world, and especially of
-its fairer half, are on them as they march to battle, and for the sake
-of these things they will volunteer to lead forlorn hopes; but once in
-the fight they behave as Nature or Fate decrees. The mere outward
-trappings of gallantry avail nothing then.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- MAP OF
- HOUTNEK
- shewing positions of
- British and Boer troops
- on 30th. April.
-
- Drawn by Major Neville C. Taylor,
- 14th. Bengal Lancers.
-
- _Contours shewn at intervals of 10 feet._
-]
-
-Of the curious duality that can only be described as detachment of mind
-from body, memory recalls two conspicuous examples which occurred within
-my knowledge, if not both within my actual range of vision, on the
-battlefield of Elandslaagte. One was when the Imperial Light Horse were
-rushing up the last slope to that wonderful rallying cry of theirs in an
-onslaught that rolled like a resistless wave across the shot-torn crest
-and crowned the day with victory. One trooper dropped out of the ranks
-as if a bullet had struck him, yet he knew that only his legs had given
-way, suddenly refusing to carry him any further. Speaking frankly of
-this incident afterwards, he said that at the moment no thought in his
-mind was so strong as the desire to be with those who were charging up
-the stony heights, waved on by their intrepid Colonel, Chisholm. He had
-no sensation that could be akin to fear, and yet he was powerless to
-move a limb. Then suddenly a strange thing happened. A Mauser bullet
-ploughed along his cheek and stung him. In another moment mind and body
-were leaping together up that hill, each striving to be first in the
-race, and behaving with a gallantry at which even brave men wondered.
-But for that accidental shot the trooper might have stopped where he
-fell and been branded as a coward. The other illustration occurred
-almost simultaneously, but in a different way. Some wounded men of the
-same dauntless corps were lying on an opposite slope exposed to a heavy
-fire from some Boers who had crept back to a rocky ledge from which they
-were raking the whole of that ground with a shower of nickel. John
-Stuart, of the ‘Morning Post,’ and I went to help two or three who were
-too badly hit to move, and succeeded in getting them from the bare veldt
-to comparative safety behind small boulders. One of them told me
-afterwards that his mind was full of nothing but profound gratitude and
-admiration when he saw us tucking a comrade into one little sheltered
-nook, and yet the words that his tongue all the while hurled at us for
-our folly in not taking cover were quite unfit for publication. No man
-can pass through experiences of that kind and be in all things the same
-again. The ‘baptism of fire’ has changed him, though he may never admit
-it to himself or betray it to his friends.
-
-And the time was at hand when Lumsden’s Horse were to take their plunge
-and emerge from it with the reputation of soldiers in whom trust could
-be placed from that day forward. The share they had in operations that
-extended over a front of nearly thirty miles, from Thaba ’Nchu to
-Ospruit, was comparatively small. But for them it was the most eventful
-episode of the campaign—their first fight, their passing of the
-threshold beyond which was the secret of more of human life than they
-had ever known. In that one day they were to look death in the face, to
-see comrades, the friends of their youth, fall beside them, to have
-thoughts of sorrow in their minds but no pang in their hearts. Grief was
-to come days, perhaps months afterwards, when a chance word or the touch
-of a hand might set the pent-up currents flowing in channels that war
-had closed. Above all, they were to know the British soldier as he is in
-fight—a creature of strange impulses, of wonderful tenderness, when he
-might be expected to show the roughest qualities with which habit has
-endowed him, and of sublime endurance. Writing after the plunge, one of
-Lumsden’s Horse thanks God that he had seen it all:
-
- For such is the British Tommy—taken from the lowest classes, so our
- sixth-class paper editors take care to blazen forth. Drunken louts in
- the streets, not allowed into a decent theatre, knocked about if a bit
- drunk by an officious policeman—everything that is bad, in fact.
- Change the scene, and what do we see? Mile after mile of ‘the thin red
- line,’ now changed to ‘the dirty khaki rag’; the battered khaki
- helmet, Tommy’s only pillow at night; the coarse, hard ammunition
- boots. Dirt and vermin cover him from head to foot—no water to drink,
- much less to wash with—a heavy marching kit, rifle, and cartridges,
- and as for food, why, not enough to feed a dog. Ay! Many and many are
- the dogs that would have refused Tommy’s South African _menu_ with
- turned-up noses. Overhead at times a scorching sun; at others a
- blinding, cold, blustering rain; and at night always the bleak, cold,
- north-west wind. March! March! March! On they go, bravely, truly,
- sturdily, hardly a grumble, while safely at home you have your
- collar-and-tie renegade telling us of the atrocities these brave men
- are committing. Lies! all lies, I say. I’ve met some of those people
- since I came back, and my one wish has been to have them out against a
- brick wall with six good brave Tommies to fire a volley. Yes. I am
- glad, ay, more than glad, spite of wounds and hardships, that I have
- seen our good brothers of the khaki as they ought to be seen—no swell
- uniforms there, no pipeclay, no shining cuirasses and polished helmets
- to ‘catch on’ with a non-military public. Ye gods, no! all khaki,
- khaki; all one great army, be it a Colonial, be it a London slum, or a
- Highland bracken born lot of men. They are all brothers in arms, one
- in object, one in deeds of bravery and devotion to an Empire.
-
-That eloquent passage, written by Trooper Burn-Murdoch, gentleman and
-tea-planter, should be enough to silence the tongue of calumny and
-convince any unprejudiced mind that whatever war may do it does not
-brutalise. In illustration of that truth many other instances will have
-to be given before this narrative runs its course to an end.
-
-Now, however, it is necessary to describe briefly the general scope of
-operations whereby Lumsden’s Horse were drawn, much sooner than they had
-any hope of, into their first fight. Attempts had been made by Generals
-Rundle, Ian Hamilton, and French to surround Boer forces that were
-retiring sullenly from their futile siege of Wepener. But De Wet was in
-command there, and his mobile ‘slimness,’ aided by secret information
-from Free State burghers, who, having taken the oath of neutrality, were
-allowed to live on their farms or to move about freely without any watch
-being kept on them, frustrated every attempt to hem in the commandos.
-General Brabant’s Colonial division, following Sir Leslie Rundle’s, was
-still some distance off, and General Pole-Carew’s retirement to
-Bloemfontein for fresh orders at this juncture unfortunately left a gap
-open between General French’s left and the force under Sir Ian Hamilton,
-which was by that time extended along the Modder valley near Sanna’s
-Post, facing north-east. Through this opening the Boers slipped back to
-the high ground round about Thaba ’Nchu. Pressed hard by French, they
-were driven from the southern and western spurs of these hills, but
-still clung to the commanding mountain itself, where they gathered
-reinforcements day by day. Then French ceased to press, and the turn
-came for Ian Hamilton to strike, in the hope that he might drive a wedge
-across the lower ridges between Thaba ’Nchu and Brandfort, which would
-not only tear the chain of Boer positions asunder, but also open the way
-for a combined movement by which their left wing, under De Wet, should
-be enveloped if he attempted to prolong his stand in the Thaba ’Nchu
-range. It was cleverly designed; but we all know what often happens with
-the best-laid plans, especially when there are spies free to move about
-without danger to themselves. It was at this phase of the extended
-operations that Sir Ian Hamilton began to advance towards Houtnek, where
-he found himself confronted by a formidable gathering of commandos under
-General Louis Botha, and they were being reinforced from all directions,
-the Boers having regained hope and courage from the presence of a leader
-whose reputation then stood incomparably high among them. Though the
-numerical strength and boldness of his enemies were something of a
-surprise to General Hamilton, he had in some measure prepared for the
-unforeseen by calling upon General Tucker to make a diversion by which
-the Boers under De la Rey’s command in Brandfort might be discouraged
-from sending reinforcements to Houtnek. With the Seventh Division, or
-rather in advance of it as a covering screen, the Mounted Infantry
-brigade under Colonel Henry was ordered to co-operate, supported by
-General Maxwell’s brigade of Infantry. Of the Mounted Infantry, to which
-a post of honour was thus assigned, the 8th Battalion, commanded by
-Colonel Ross, was to form the advance guard. Thus Lumsden’s Horse were
-destined in their first fight to bear the brunt of the attack if it
-should come; and, in high spirits at the prospect, they looked with an
-interest they had never felt before towards the rugged line of low
-kopjes far away across the broad plain with light from the setting sun
-full upon them. That the orders were thus made known to all ranks twelve
-hours before they could be acted on is a proof that they had not been
-drawn up on the spur of sudden emergency, and, indeed, Sir Ian Hamilton
-was only then feeling for his enemy in the direction of Houtnek. At this
-point the picturesque pen of the ‘Englishman’s’ correspondent goes on
-with the narrative:
-
- On April 29 we got warning to be ready to take part in a general
- attack early the next morning. So we bustled round and got everything
- ready. At 5 P.M. I and two other men of my sub-section were ordered
- out on outlying picket, leaving Trooper Thelwall to saddle our three
- horses before daybreak as well as his own, when we were to march into
- camp again and get mounted and ready to start with the rest. So, just
- having time to get half a pint of tea and some dry bread, we hurried
- out on picket for the night. And that was, practically speaking, the
- last food I tasted until 8 o’clock the next night. Not what you could
- call ‘’igh livin’,’ is it? It was bitterly cold, and, what with the
- everlasting night wind and only one blanket, we pickets were not much
- troubled with sleep that night. However, at 5 o’clock in the morning
- of the 30th we rolled up our blankets and marched into camp, and at
- once set to work at tightening up girths, adjusting saddles and kits.
- I had just time to put some bread into my haversack, and half fill my
- horse’s nosebag with cartridges and also two or three priceless
- ‘smokes,’ when we had to mount. So away went all chances of breakfast
- that morning. Alas! some of us had no need for food and drink in the
- evening. Just as old Sol began to rise up over the kopjes we marched
- out of camp, up over the ridge, and down the other side towards the
- open veldt. Here we paused for a while to allow the other troops to
- join us. Taking advantage of this short halt, we got into our proper
- sub-sections, dismounted, and had a last look at our girths, and
- tightened up curbs, &c. Poor old mokes! How many of them, my own
- included, were fated never to see another day dawn! Colonel Lumsden
- now rode up to us and gave us a rough idea of what we were to do, and
- informed us that our B Troop was to have the place of honour, and that
- we were to take the lead. And, knowing us as he did, he had not the
- slightest doubt that we would not fail to distinguish ourselves, &c.
- To which our gallant ‘Oirish’ Captain Chamney began to reply in his
- usual Indian after-dinner style, that he felt proud of his troop, and
- fully conscious of the great honour that was bestowed upon us in being
- allowed to take the lead; and he sincerely hoped that we would do
- justice to the confidence bestowed on us. He would no doubt have
- continued in this style for some time had not our good old Major
- chipped in with his usual ‘down-in-his-boots’ aside: ‘Oh, that’s all
- right, Chamney; damn it, man, of course you will.’ And these were the
- last words I ever heard the good old man utter in this life.
-
-[Illustration: CAPTAIN H. CHAMNEY]
-
- Good old Showers, gruff as they make ’em, but a true white man’s heart
- inside for all that. Never afraid to jump on an officer for all you
- were worth if you thought he deserved it; and after those long hot
- Indian parades, how many times have we heard your hearty laugh at the
- head of the camp mess-table! For seven years our Colonel, and the man
- who made the Surma Valley Light Horse second to none in India.
-
- All the attacking forces being now mustered, we made a start and away
- we marched. For some part of the time our route lay alongside a pretty
- little lagoon, and then the road gradually lost itself in the great
- open veldt. How peaceful it all seemed that morning! The few cattle
- and sheep that were quietly grazing here and there on the scanty
- tussocks would casually lift up their heads and gaze at us, and,
- seeing that there were no strange dogs with us, would go on cropping
- the grass, though possibly a sheep or two would scuttle out of the way
- with a contemptuous wriggle of their tails. Time of war! one
- says—humbug! one could not believe it on that quiet morning. The fresh
- ozonised air, the soft, steady breeze, now pleasantly tempered by the
- bright morning sun; and there, by the doorway of the quiet little
- farmhouse, the farmer’s wife standing with her milk-pails all ready,
- while she laughingly makes passing remarks to her departing ‘guests.’
-
- The only signs of war, maybe, are those few fences with their wires
- cut down; and these you would suppose had been broken down by some
- restless calves or light-hearted foal. From our ranks could be seen
- and smelt the little clouds of tobacco-smoke which rose up in the
- clear air like so many stray wandering bits of cumulus clouds, while
- back in the rear could be heard the quaintly sad airs of ‘Bearer Ganga
- Dīn’ and ‘Who’s dat a-callin’?’ as some of our musically inclined
- troopers gave vent unconsciously to their feelings. What a lovely,
- jolly morning that was! All those dire hardships, cold, hunger, and
- wet, we had known only too well; but to-day—light, warmth, and the
- indescribable freshness of the open veldt, while under us were our
- plucky Indians, Arabs, and Walers, fresh as English daisies and keen
- as the air we breathed.
-
- Some miles ahead of us—though seemingly quite close, owing to the
- intensely clear atmosphere—lay a long range of low-lying hills all
- lighted up with various shades of colouring, the hues of which kept
- ever changing from moment to moment as the sun rose higher in the
- heavens. Still further on, and filling up the whole background of this
- typically African landscape, lay the razor-backs and table-topped
- peaks of the Basuto hills, from the tops of which soft filmy wisps of
- cloud drifted silently away into that great blue ‘nothingness.’ All
- peace! Peace on earth, it seemed to us that fair morn. Nor could we
- poor troopers realise that ere God’s life-giving sun should set that
- night great Mars would look down on many of us poor mortals writhing
- in the agonies of cruel death-dealing wounds and the tortures of the
- surgeon’s knife and probe, while some poor souls, like these vanishing
- vapoury clouds, would have left this little world for the infinite
- beyond. Nor could the mind of our well-loved Major, as he rode at the
- head of those men he had known for long, long years, have realised
- that in a few short hours his true British heart would have ceased to
- beat, and his life’s blood would be mingled with the dust of that
- great continent where so many good men and true had already given up
- their lives for an Empire’s cause. Thank God for the impenetrable veil
- that He casts over our future! One scene especially struck me by its
- beauty, and that was when a battery of Artillery toiled over a
- tussocky ridge right into the blazing disc of the sun. As gun after
- gun topped the ridge the whole team, horses and men, were shut out
- from our sight by the powerful blaze of light in a most curious way;
- while here and there a khaki-clad helmeted Artilleryman stood
- silhouetted against the sky-line, over which the khaki gun-carriages
- disappeared into a glaring sea of gold.
-
- As we were now approaching some suspicious-looking kopjes, we opened
- out into extended order as usual, and Lumsden’s Horse were told off to
- take, and _hold_, a certain line of kopjes some two miles off. So we
- promptly set to work, approaching them very ‘cannily,’ with scouts
- well out in advance.
-
- Arriving at the base of the kopjes without opposition, we dismounted
- and skirmished up to the tops, but found that the Boers had cleared
- out, though, judging by the several ‘sangars’ built of rocks, these
- must have been held in force. Our scouts in the meantime had advanced
- along the plain on the other side of the kopjes, and just as we
- arrived on top the enemy opened on them with a continuous rattle of
- rifle fire, and I saw several of the poor beggars limping back over
- the plain pulling their wounded horses after them, while all around
- them, to use whaler’s language, the sandy plain kept ‘spouting’ as the
- deadly bullets struck and ricocheted. From where we were it was
- utterly impossible to tell from what direction the bullets were
- coming, so we could do little in the way of keeping down the Boer
- fire. However, we did our best. But as the enemy soon ceased firing we
- reserved our ammunition for later use.
-
- Away to our left the Artillery were now having a great duel, while the
- pom-poms on both sides were making things generally cruel for the
- Mounted Infantry, and also for those who were holding their horses.
- Pom-pom-pom! pom-pom! and immediately whack, whack, whack! would echo
- the vile bursting shells. Then boo-m-m came the big hidden Creusot—and
- oh, the sound of its messenger, wo-o-o-o-ough! It would come soaring
- up with a dreadfully mournful sound, while the whole atmosphere seemed
- to vibrate with its spinning. Wugh! it would sound, as it burst far
- out of harm’s way, and then one could stand up in the ‘Who’s afraid?’
- style, to lie down again promptly as No. 2 came along. How did I feel?
- you ask. Well, to be strictly honest, I didn’t like it. I don’t
- believe any man really does, if it comes to that. Afterwards a wounded
- man described his feelings very well to me; he said, ‘Do you know, I
- just felt as if I were outside the headmaster’s room, in for a dashed
- good caning.’ And I think that hits off the sensation exactly.
-
-But now the picturesquely vague must give place to the explicit, and it
-would be impossible to summarise the position at this stage more clearly
-than in the terse words of Colonel Lumsden’s official despatch:
-
- On the evening of the 29th Colonel Ross received orders that the corps
- was to make a demonstration next morning at daylight on the right
- flank of the Boer lines for the purpose of drawing them from their
- position and enabling the 14th Brigade, under General Maxwell, which
- was to have come up on our right, to get behind and cut them off.
-
- The Mounted Infantry portion of General Tucker’s division, under
- Colonel Henry, joined hands with us at 5 A.M., half a mile from our
- camp. A portion of my corps was ordered to occupy Gun Kopje, a
- position believed to be held by the Boers, about four miles distant on
- our right front, the remainder extending and taking up positions on
- our left. I went forward with the right flank, Major Showers
- accompanying me. This portion consisted of the Adjutant, Captain
- Taylor, Captains Rutherfoord, Clifford, and Chamney, Lieutenants Sidey
- and Pugh, and four sections, the others having been detached by order
- of Colonel Ross to hold various points. Mr. Pugh was sent out in
- advance with the scouts, and it was when on this duty that Private
- Franks was shot. Mr. Pugh very pluckily assisted him in getting on his
- horse and endeavoured to take him out of the fire; but Franks was
- unable to stay on his horse, and, dropping to the ground, had to be
- left. Mr. Pugh and the remaining scouts were only just able to save
- themselves by galloping up and joining us on the kopje at the extreme
- right, to which we had just advanced, and which we held from 7 A.M.
- until ordered to retire at about 1 o’clock.
-
- Early in the morning I ordered Corporal Chartres with eight men to
- occupy a kopje about 800 yards to our right and prevent the Boers
- turning our flank. There they held their ground until ordered to fall
- back. It was a small party for this important position, but in the
- circumstances no more could be spared, I having only about sixty men
- with me, twenty of whom, under Lieutenant Sidey, were detached by
- Colonel Ross to protect the Vickers-Maxim (commonly styled ‘pom-pom’)
- in the centre of the position.
-
- The following was then the general disposition:
-
- There were four ridges diverging northerly towards the enemy. The
- extreme spur of the right ridge was held by myself with four sections
- Lumsden’s Horse as described; the second held by Lieutenant Crane and
- one section, he being directed there at the outset by Colonel Ross;
- the third and fourth by the rest of the brigade, the two pom-poms and
- our Maxim being at the head of the re-entrant between the second and
- third ridges, with Captain Noblett and three sections on its left.
-
- Shortly after our arrival the Boers took up a position on a kopje
- about 1,500 yards directly in front, and quickly opened rifle fire on
- our position. Fortunately the men had time to ensconce themselves
- behind rocks, and, consequently, though bullets fell fast about them,
- they were able to maintain a steady fire on the enemy without exposing
- themselves. It was here, I deeply regret to say, that Major Showers
- met his death. He was at the extreme right of the firing line and
- under a hot flanking fire from the Boers, who had moved a party into a
- donga some 300 or 400 yards to their left.
-
-[Illustration: CAPTAIN NEVILLE C. TAYLOR]
-
- I personally begged him not to expose himself, as also did Captains
- Chamney and Rutherfoord; but he would stand erect, using his field
- glasses and presenting a most conspicuous mark for the enemy’s fire,
- which resulted fatally to him shortly after noon, a Mauser bullet
- entering his right side half way down and coming out through his left
- arm above the elbow. In risking his own life he had drawn a heavy fire
- on the spot where he fell, and it was with much danger and difficulty
- that Captain Powell, with Captain Chamney and others, succeeded in
- removing him from the summit of the hill to a place of safety about
- thirty yards down. I should like to take this opportunity of adding a
- few words by way of tribute to the memory of Major Showers. When he
- heard of the corps being raised, he was in command of the Surma Valley
- Light Horse in Cachar, with the rank of Colonel, and was looked upon
- as one of the smartest commanders of Volunteer Cavalry in India. He
- wrote me and said, ‘If you will take me as your second in command, I
- will gladly forfeit my rank and come as Major.’ I may have made many
- fortunate selections in choosing my officers, but I never made a wiser
- one than in selecting Colonel Showers. A better or a braver man never
- breathed, and his loss to me so early in the campaign was irreparable.
-
- Shortly after the commencement of the Boer attack the whole of the
- left were forced to retire owing to their flank being turned, taking
- one pom-pom and our Maxim with them. Captain Noblett was consequently
- obliged, at about 11 A.M., to conform to this movement, having no
- support, and took his men out of the shell fire with great difficulty
- but had only a few casualties.
-
- Lieutenant Crane, receiving no orders to retire, and being detached
- from me and unable to communicate with me or I with him, deemed it his
- duty to retain his position as long as possible, which resulted in
- close fighting and the loss of nearly half his section.
-
-[Illustration: L.-SERGT. J.S. ELLIOTT]
-
-[Illustration: R.U. CASE (KILLED)]
-
-[Illustration: SERGT. F.S. McNAMARA]
-
-[Illustration: C.A. WALTON]
-
-[Illustration:
-
- A.F. FRANKS
- (KILLED AT HOUTNEK)
-]
-
-[Illustration: J.S. SAUNDERS]
-
-[Illustration: R.N. MACDONALD]
-
-[Illustration: L. GWATKIN WILLIAMS]
-
-[Illustration: CORPL. A. McGILLIVRAY]
-
- N.C.O.S AND TROOPERS
-
- One pom-pom and Lieutenant Sidey had been sent to the neck of the
- right ridge to support us, we having been instructed to hold our
- position until further orders. This pom-pom retired at about 12.30,
- and at 1 o’clock Lieutenant Sidey and I both received our orders to
- retire. This was carried out very deliberately, and the last of our
- men got out of a most trying position within twenty minutes of having
- received our orders, by moving away under cover of the ridge.
-
- As we had kept up a decreasing fire until the men got mounted, the
- Boers, fortunately for us, did not discover our retirement before we
- were out of range, otherwise we should have suffered heavily. While
- retiring, Private Burn-Murdoch’s horse was brought down by a stray
- bullet, causing him a heavy fall and a nasty wound in his head.
- Captain Chamney, who was near by at the time, with some assistance got
- Murdoch on to his own horse and pluckily rode with him off the field.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Photo: Hughes & Mullins_
- H.C. LUMSDEN (KILLED IN ACTION,
- HOUTNEK, APRIL 30, 1900)
-]
-
- Captain Taylor, with much gallantry and coolness, remained with the
- led horses, and saw the last of the men mounted and clear away before
- he himself left, bringing up the rear with Captain Clifford and some
- late stragglers, including one man who would stay for a last shot.
-
- The whole brigade rendezvoused at 2 P.M. behind a kopje about three
- miles in rear and waited till 3, when we returned to our various
- camps.
-
- For some reason the main attack on our right under General Maxwell had
- not been delivered, and the object of the day was not achieved. My
- corps alone had the regrettable number of eighteen casualties out of
- about 180 engaged. This was mainly accounted for by the position we
- held. The Maxim under Captain Holmes did good service, coming into
- action at 1,000 yards at a critical moment and checking the Boer
- advance for some time. The enemy’s ‘Long Tom,’ however, soon found the
- Maxim out, and, as the shells were bursting among the men with the gun
- horses, they were ordered to retire only just in time, all the team
- being more or less wounded.
-
- I cannot speak too highly of the gallant behaviour of my officers and
- men throughout the day. Individual instances of heroism were numerous,
- and I much fear that, especially in Mr. Crane’s section, many of the
- casualties were caused by men endeavouring to assist their wounded
- comrades. Mr. Crane himself was wounded in the groin, and I understand
- Private Daubney’s and Private Case’s deaths were due to their
- declining to leave their wounded officer. Judging from the number of
- empty cartridge cases found beside them, they must have kept up a fire
- on the advancing Boers to the last. Here Corporal Angus McGillivray,
- Privates Leslie Gwatkin Williams, Firth, and R.N. Macdonald were taken
- prisoners, along with Lieutenant Crane. Here fell Private H.C.
- Lumsden.
-
- The same evening about 4 o’clock Dr. Powell, with the ambulance
- tonga, and Private Godden went out under the Red Cross flag to
- search for the wounded, but in the gathering darkness were only able
- to reach the body of Major Showers, who died previous to the
- retirement from our position on the right where he fell. Captain
- Powell, in endeavouring to return to camp, lost his way and had to
- remain during the night on the veldt, reaching camp soon after
- daylight next morning. Shortly after his arrival he returned with
- another search party, but found that the Boers had already buried
- the bodies of Privates Case, Daubney, and Lumsden, after having read
- the burial service over them. A stone had been put over the head of
- Private Lumsden with his name scratched on it. The reason for this,
- as narrated by Transport-Sergeant Stephens, is interesting. When
- drivers were sent out with carts the following day, they met several
- English-speaking Boers, ‘who would not talk much about the fight,
- but said they were sorry our Colonel was killed. They had found some
- papers in the pockets of young Lumsden, whom they took to be the
- Colonel.’ The remains of Major Showers, being found still unburied,
- were brought back and interred with military honours at the foot of
- the kopje behind our camp. Private Franks, whose wounds had been
- dressed by Captain Powell, had to be left on the hill near the body
- of Major Showers, where he was found by the Boers shortly afterwards
- and received every attention, but died during the night and was
- buried by them in the morning. The Boers, subsequent to the fight,
- were most courteous in their attentions, and returned papers, rings,
- watches, money, &c., found on the bodies.
-
- I wish specially to mention a very plucky action done by Private C.A.
- Walton, who is wounded and a prisoner in Pretoria. He was one of the
- men in charge of the led horses in the No. 3 Section of A Company when
- Sergeant Walker took temporary command of the section in Lieutenant
- Neville’s absence on sick leave. On the order to retire Sergeant
- Walker had to run some distance to his horse, and came back much
- exhausted. The enemy being quite close on them, and Sergeant Walker’s
- horse having been lost, Private Walton insisted on giving up his own
- horse to the Sergeant, saying that he could run. While doing so he was
- shot twice, and had to be left on the ground, although Sergeant Walker
- did his utmost to take him along with him.
-
- After our return to camp I was much gratified to receive from Colonel
- Ross, the Corps Commander, and Colonel Henry, the Brigade Commander,
- congratulations on the behaviour of my officers and men throughout the
- day, and on the morning following General Tucker, the Divisional
- Commander, came over in person for a similar purpose; but at the same
- time read me a lecture on the inadvisability of allowing my men to
- attempt to bring off their wounded comrades when under fire. He
- pointed out that it only drew fire on the wounded men and endangered
- their own lives for no adequate result, as the Boers were a very
- humane foe, who treated the wounded carefully. The troopers, he said,
- must remember that their first duty as soldiers was to their Queen and
- country.
-
- With deep regret I append a list of the casualties:
-
- Killed: Major Eden C. Showers—buried at Spytfontein; Privates R.J.
- Clayton Daubeny, H.C. Lumsden, R.N. Case, Alfred F. Franks—buried by
- the Boers.
-
- Wounded: Lieutenant Crane; Paymaster David S. Fraser; Sergeant-Major
- Cyril M.C. Marsham, bullet wounds through shoulders and thigh;
- Lance-Sergeant J.S. Elliott, shell wound of right foot; Sergeant F.S.
- McNamara, bullet wound in thigh; Private J.H. Burn-Murdoch, fracture
- of frontal bone by fall from his horse, which was shot under him
- during retirement.
-
- Of these Sergeant-Major Marsham, Lance-Sergeant Elliott, and Private
- Burn-Murdoch are in hospital at Karree Siding, and Sergeant McNamara
- rejoined for duty at Kroonstad.
-
-Though General Tucker was constrained, by the wisest military
-considerations, to rebuke men who, while displaying magnificent
-qualities of courage and self-sacrifice in attempts to save their
-wounded comrades, might have endangered the lives of others, we may be
-sure that he made a mental reservation and wished in his heart that he
-might have regiments of such men to lead. If the records of his own
-gallant career have been truthfully kept, he won promotion in the
-Bhootan expedition of 1866 and in fights against the Zulus twelve years
-later, and paved the way to a Knight Commandership of the Bath, not so
-much by obeying the dictates of caution as by brilliant leadership and
-by conspicuous valour that was almost reckless in its disregard of
-personal danger. But he knew, with the intuition of a soldier’s quick
-sympathies, that the corps to whose Colonel his words were addressed
-wanted no incentive to boldness, but rather a lesson in self-restraint.
-He had seen a great deal of their gallantry in that action for himself,
-and his brigadiers had told him more. Lumsden’s Horse, at any rate, had
-no reason to be ashamed of the way in which they had taken their
-‘baptism of fire.’
-
-The devotion of Corporal Firth in sticking to his wounded officer,
-Lieutenant Crane, under a withering fire was a deed of valour that
-should be famous throughout the Empire.
-
-[Illustration: LIEUTENANT C.E. CRANE]
-
-All the men with Lieutenant Crane behaved very well. Two
-non-commissioned officers and eleven troopers went with him to hold the
-isolated kopje on the right flank. Of this gallant party of fourteen,
-three were killed, four were wounded and taken prisoners, four escaped
-with their clothes riddled with bullet-holes but otherwise unhurt; one,
-Corporal Firth, could have escaped, but preferred to remain with his
-wounded officer, to bind up his wounds if possible, to go with him into
-captivity perhaps, to share death with him if need be. Troopers Reginald
-Macdonald and Leslie Gwatkin Williams also performed deeds of splendid
-self-sacrifice. Of those who escaped, Sergeant-Major Marsham (wounded),
-Bugler McKenzie, Sergeant Walker, Lance-Sergeant J.S. Elliott (wounded),
-and Trooper Radford, whose parting shot while he sat in the saddle
-brought a Boer down, are deserving of the highest praise for the way in
-which they stuck to the led horses and rode off with them under heavy
-fire.
-
-These men were not tried veterans; they were taking their parts in the
-first battle of their first campaign. But several of them had been
-friends from their youth up, and all of them were Anglo-Indians—men
-whose exile from the land of their birth serves but to intensify their
-love for England and her greatness. Loyalty to friend and country! This
-is the magic touchstone of the soldier’s discipline and heroism.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Photo: J. Charlesworth_
- J.H. BURN-MURDOCH
-]
-
-Should any cynic dare to say that the men who did these deeds were
-thirsting for glory, or inspired by a hope of winning the Cross for
-Valour, or even conscious of doing more than a common soldier’s duty
-demanded, let him read the narrative of their actions, as told by
-themselves or their comrades, and be answered! In the whole literature
-of war I know nothing more realistic than Trooper Burn-Murdoch’s
-description of the incident in which he was a half-unconscious
-participator; when lying wounded he was taken from under fire by Captain
-Chamney, and finally carried out of action on horseback in that
-officer’s arms. The story is too characteristic of the battlefield to
-bear mutilation. For the sake of space, though with reluctance, some
-picturesque passages must be sacrificed; but, for the rest, as Trooper
-Burn-Murdoch told it originally in his letters to the ‘Englishman,’ he
-shall tell it again here:
-
- The kopje which we had to hold looked down on a sloping plain, and at
- a distance varying from 700 to 1,100 yards off, and running nearly
- parallel with our kopjes, was a deep dry river bed or donga. This
- donga ran right up towards the Boer position. In my humble opinion we
- should have done better to have placed some dismounted men in this
- donga, and so prevented the enemy using it as a zigzag trench or
- covered way towards our position. Instead of this, we literally stuck
- to the kopje. And in the early part of the fight I noticed, and drew
- my mates’ attention to the fact, that a lot of Boers were riding
- towards this river bed, but never seemed to cross it.
-
- As the day wore on our position on these kopjes became somewhat too
- warm to be pleasant. And, judging by the whistle of the bullets, we
- seemed to have the enemy on our left flank as well as in front. It was
- about this time that our gallant Major, who scorned to take cover, got
- two mortal bullet wounds through his lungs; our doctor very pluckily
- set to and cut off his tunic and plugged the bullet-holes, quite
- regardless of the heavy fire he was subjected to. But it was of no
- use; in a few moments the brave old soldier breathed his last. All he
- said was, ‘Ah, well, I’m done for ... it’s not so bad as I should have
- expected.’ But there was no time now to think of him or any other poor
- wounded comrade.
-
- On we went, blazing away for dear life at the well-hidden enemy. Flat
- on our empty stomachs, wriggling from one stone to another, never
- daring to raise one’s head above a few inches from the ground. Whish!
- whish! phew! phew! came those deadly nickels, then ping-r-r-r would
- sound the ricocheting shots as they struck the stones and rocks a few
- inches from our faces, and shot up into the clear blue sky behind us
- with a shriek of unquenched bloodthirstiness. Thicker and thicker they
- came—and now we saw that the enemy were straight in front of us,
- having, as I had expected, ridden up under the cover of the river bed.
- Orders now came for us to retreat slowly from the right. So as soon as
- my turn came I let blaze a few rapid parting shots, and then ‘sniped’
- back over the ridge to where Trooper Ducat was holding my
- sub-section’s horses. I can tell you that was an exciting little bit
- of a sprint, and the bullets striking all around me did not tend to
- retard my movements. However, I got back all right, and a few seconds
- later Trooper Stevenson turned up. As Trooper Thelwall had not joined
- us, I waited a few minutes with his horse. And rather an anxious wait
- that was. As he did not, however, arrive, I presumed that some Boer
- bullet had found him out. But I tied his horse to a stump in case he
- did come, and then, mounting, I galloped after the rest. It was
- uncommonly lucky that I did tie up his horse, as he afterwards, during
- a slight lull in the firing, managed to make a bolt over the kopje and
- down to his horse. One often hears it said that Mounted Infantry do
- not need to be much of riders so long as they can shoot straight. All
- I can say is, let a bad rider try to mount a fresh horse, with a large
- kit on the saddle and a heavy rifle in his left hand, and bullets and
- pom-pom shells whistling and cracking around, and he will agree with
- me in saying that every Mounted Infantryman ought to be a very fair
- rider before he can be of much use in a fight.
-
- Gathering up my reins, I kept up a good gallop towards our next kopje,
- and was just congratulating myself that I was too skinny a target for
- any Boer bullets when poor old Demon came down with a fearful crash,
- shot by a Mauser bullet. I suppose I must have been stunned by the
- fall, as I have no recollection of seeing him again. When I came to, I
- found that my neck was fearfully stiff and sore, likewise all the left
- side of my head. And pain—by Jove! pain was no word for it. I lay
- there cursing and crawling about for some time, and was momentarily
- expecting to have a ‘sighting shot’ into me, when, bang! and I
- remembered no more. I have since heard that after this two of our
- chaps came along and, dismounting, turned me over and left me as a
- ‘green ’un.’ I remember dimly wondering what time of day it was, as
- all things seemingly were so dim and dark that I could not see. I then
- thought of tying up my head with my field dressing; but whether I did
- so or not I could not swear, as I was more or less ‘silly.’ It must
- have been a pom-pom or some other kind of shell bursting near me that
- did the damage. Recovering a certain amount of sensibility, I was
- endeavouring to get under some cover when Captain Chamney rode up. He
- shouted out to me apparently from a long distance off, as I could just
- hear him, ‘Hello, Mud’ook, what the tivil are you doing here? Badly
- hurt are ye? Come on, then, get a hold of my stirrup an’ I’ll take ye
- along wi’ me; ye’r far and away too good a man to leave behind.’ I
- told him, of course, to go on, as I was all right and would get behind
- a rock and have a rest; but the good old ‘Oirishman’ told me to get up
- at once as he ordered. And a good job it was, too, he did _order_ me
- to do so, or I’d have been resting there now. Just then Trooper Ducat
- came galloping up, and the two of them got me between them and trotted
- me along some hundreds of yards—it seemed miles to me. At last I got
- nearly unconscious, merely rolling along in a sort of mechanical
- style. But, try as much as I could, what with loss of blood and
- giddiness I could go no further, and as I was a mere dead weight on my
- two companions they halted, and I next remember myself sitting behind
- Captain Chamney with my blood sopping down his neck and khaki tunic,
- my head resting on his shoulder, and my hands locked round his body.
- How I got there I don’t know. I suppose they lifted me up somehow.
- Anyhow, there I was, and the good old commandeered Free Stater carried
- us well. I don’t remember much of that ride. Somebody else rode up
- alongside of me—I think it was Trooper Stevenson—and he, being Scotch,
- and therefore ‘economical,’ had pluckily picked up my rifle. So, with
- Ducat on one side and Stevenson on the other, alternately digging me
- in the ribs, I managed to hold on until we got to cover; and here
- Ducat, who, luckily for me, was a doctor, bound me up and gave me a
- drink. Gad! I was thirsty. Shortly afterwards one of Danjeboy’s
- Nepaulese ambulance tongas, which we had brought over from India with
- us, galloped up, and I was put inside. I don’t think that worthy
- Ghoorka driver liked the sound of Mausers any better than I did, for
- he simply galloped the whole way. Over stones, over scrub, over ruts.
- I shall never forget that ride. However, I got to the camp all right,
- and willing hands carried me to my tent, where I lay till dark with
- only a greatcoat for a pillow and a good solid piece of natural veldt
- for a bed. Towards evening Ducat came in, and with great kindness went
- and made me some cornflour, which I was able to eat. This was the
- first food I had had, barring three or four mouthfuls of stale bread,
- since 5 o’clock the night before.
-
- Dr. Powell came back from the fight later. He had been tending the
- wounded and dying there. Tired and weary as he was, he at once set to
- and tied my head up, first shaving off some of my hair. I don’t
- remember much after this. I remember Sergeant Elliott (of Edinburgh)
- was brought into the tent with his foot shattered by a pom-pom, and we
- groaned out a duet throughout that night. In the fight Elliott was
- holding some horses when a pom-pom shell burst in their midst,
- shattering Elliott’s foot and finishing off several horses, including
- his own. Managing to get hold of another mount, he rode up and
- reported himself to Captain Noblett, by whom he was of course ordered
- to the rear. So, badly wounded as he was, Elliott rode those five
- miles back to camp unaided. Next day or the day after—I do not
- remember exactly, as I was unconscious for two or three days, off and
- on—the ambulance waggons drove up, and into them we were shoved.
- Colonel Lumsden, Captain Noblett, Captain Chamney, and Sergeant
- Hewitt, I think, all were there, seeing us off and helping us to ‘keep
- our peckers up.’ My one complaint was that Captain Chamney wanted to
- shave off my moustache when he was doing the V.C. trick on the veldt.
- I asked him why he wanted to. He was much surprised at the question,
- and told me in answer that ‘there were too many Boers doing the
- shaving for him to think of it himself.’ I must have imagined the
- whole thing, I suppose, when I was lying ‘silly.’
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Photo: Harrington_
- HERBERT N. BETTS, D.C.M.
-]
-
-Another incident which was referred to briefly by Colonel Lumsden, who
-for obvious reasons did not make much of it, is thus described in detail
-by Trooper Preston:
-
- Lumsden’s Horse was to do the work of advance guard and scouts. No. 2
- Section, B Company, was chosen for the scouting, and immediately sent
- out, and very soon the whole of the 8th Mounted Infantry was spread
- over the plain. One sub-section (Troopers Franks, Were, Powis, and
- myself) were scouting ahead of everyone else. For the first three or
- four miles the ground was fairly level, with a few small kopjes with
- trees on them. Then there was a ridge of kopjes with a steep valley
- behind, and then another ridge. The scouts got to the first ridge of
- kopjes before seeing anyone, then two shots were heard in the
- distance, and a man on a big roan horse was seen galloping away. As
- the scouts rode between two kopjes on the first ridge, about sixteen
- men were seen to come out from the top of the ridge; immediately the
- scouts halted, looked at them through their field-glasses, and saw
- they were dressed in khaki. Before the scouts started they had been
- told to look out for some of General French’s men on their right. One
- of the officers coming up then (Lieutenant H.O. Pugh) looked at them,
- and saw the same as the others—that they were dressed in khaki. The
- scouts then rode round the kopje, intending to meet them. By this time
- the sixteen men had got down into the valley, and were making up the
- steep hill on the other side to the top of the kopje. Trooper Franks
- and I then went down the valley, intending to see who they were, while
- the other two went on to the right. The men had by this time got on to
- the sky-line, some dismounting and others sitting still. We rode half
- way down the valley (which was about two hundred yards across), and
- then halted and looked through our glasses. The men on the top then
- shouted out something and began to fire at us, so we turned and
- galloped for our lives. Trooper Franks, after riding about three
- hundred yards, began reeling in his saddle and tumbled off. Lieutenant
- Pugh and a few men then galloped up to him and found he was shot
- through the back and stomach. The bullets meanwhile were raining about
- them. Franks begged us to leave him, saying that as soon as we were
- gone the Boers would stop firing; so Lieutenant Pugh gave the order to
- leave him and return to the others, who by this time were lining the
- ridge behind, Lumsden’s Horse having the highest kopje to hold. As
- soon as our Colonel heard Franks was wounded he started off on foot,
- with Troopers Betts, Percy Smith, and Chapman, to fetch him. The Boers
- immediately advanced down their side of the valley, and began firing
- at the Colonel and his party. However, they were prepared for this,
- and after a few shots the Boers retired, the Colonel bringing Franks
- in on his own horse and walking beside.[5] Then we got the word passed
- to retire from the right. Perfect order was maintained, the men
- retiring one by one, the others keeping up a continuous fire until
- their turn came. At last everyone had got away except Lieutenant Crane
- and three or four more, whom the order to retire never reached. The
- Colonel and Adjutant were among the last to go away. The behaviour of
- the men was just as if they had been accustomed to that kind of thing
- all their lives, smoking, and firing at the same time, others lying
- behind rocks and writing letters to their relations and sweethearts.
- The Boers did not follow us up, and we reached camp safely, but very
- sad for the losses we had sustained.
-
-Another version of these incidents, with such minor differences as help
-to give a clear conception of the whole scene, is furnished by the
-Special Correspondent of the ‘Indian Daily News,’ who, after describing
-the lucky escape of one scout, writes:
-
- Trooper A.F. Franks, of the same sub-section, the very best of fellows
- and liked by everyone, was not so lucky, poor fellow. He accompanied
- Lieutenant H.O. Pugh in advance, but, seeing nothing, Franks suggested
- that he should go forward to the top of the donga or nullah in which
- they were standing; but on reaching the top he was confronted by
- thirty or forty of the enemy about three hundred yards away. They
- beckoned to him and spoke to him in Dutch, presumably inquiring who he
- was; without waiting for a reply, however, they opened fire, and
- Franks then turned and retired. He had not gone far before he was
- struck, the bullet going through his back and coming out just below
- the heart. He managed to stick on his saddle till he reached
- Lieutenant Pugh, who caught his horse by the head and led him towards
- the kopje above mentioned as occupied by us. Franks was in such pain
- that he was unable to bear the jolting of the horse, and so he had to
- be laid down on the plain for the time being. Lieutenant Pugh and
- other men who had come up in the meantime then retired to the kopje to
- report the state of affairs to Colonel Lumsden. All this time, of
- course, the bullets were whistling about, and the wonder is that not
- more of us were shot. Two men were then sent in search of our doctor,
- and Colonel Lumsden, as soon as he heard what had happened,
- immediately ordered his horse and, accompanied by his orderly, Percy
- Smith, of A Company, and Private H.N. Betts, of B Company, on
- horseback—Private Chapman, of B Company, having previously gone down
- on foot on the same errand of mercy—rode forward to the spot. On
- reaching it our gallant Colonel insisted on dismounting and placing
- Franks on his horse, saying the animal was a quiet one, and,
- notwithstanding the urgent requests of the others that he would allow
- them to give up one of their horses to him, he insisted on walking the
- whole distance, quite regardless of the hail of bullets round him.
- Progress was naturally slow, as Franks complained of severe pain, but
- at last the kopje was reached, none of the party getting a scratch.
- They had a narrow escape; the Boers had evidently got the range to a
- nicety. They then started a brisk rifle fire on the kopje we were on,
- which we returned at every opportunity, but they kept themselves so
- well under cover that we had very poor chances of doing them any
- serious damage from our side. They gradually crept up closer and
- closer, coming down by twos and threes from a kopje about two thousand
- yards away, and taking up their position eventually behind a slope
- eight to nine hundred yards distant. A regular artillery duel, several
- of their shells bursting among the pom-poms and our own Maxim, but not
- doing much damage. I fancy our guns did a bit of killing, though the
- Boers afterwards acknowledged to four wounded only; our Maxim gave a
- very good account of itself. I understand our only casualties in this
- direction were two or three wounded horses. We were told afterwards
- that the day’s operations were only intended to be a reconnaissance in
- force to find out the enemy’s strength and position, after which large
- forces from the left and right would attempt to surround them. This
- being the case, at about 12 (we had been under fire for about four
- hours) a general retirement was ordered from the right. The Boers,
- seeing us retiring, were evidently emboldened to throw aside their
- usual cautious tactics, and advanced on us rapidly, very nearly
- rushing the kopje on which we were before we could get away. The
- writer’s horse, which had been tied to a tree, got away, and he would
- have been badly left, as in the hasty retreat we were obliged to make
- it was impossible to say who had gone on and who was left behind, but
- fortunately ‘Molly Riley,’ Mrs. Barrow’s well-known paper-chaser, was
- standing near a bush close by, and Private Were, who was just going
- off, stopped behind and helped to get hold of ‘Molly Riley.’ We then
- started to gallop off, but just then another man came running towards
- us much exhausted with scrambling down the kopje, and Were, saying he
- was quite fresh, pluckily got off and lent him his horse. Fortunately
- at that moment Captain Taylor, our Adjutant, galloped up with a spare
- horse, and, Were getting mounted, we all made away for our lives. We
- halted at a place some distance off, and it was only then we heard of
- our long tale of casualties. A Company suffered very heavily on the
- left flank, where part of them were lying in an exposed position.
- Besides this, there were several men missing, and it was not till we
- got into camp in the evening after roll-call was taken that the exact
- extent of our loss was known. Franks was left on the kopje with an
- orderly, as it was impossible to move him, and we heard next day that
- he was taken to the Boer hospital, and died there at 12 o’clock the
- same night. Among the wounded was Paymaster-Sergeant D.S. Fraser, well
- known in sporting circles in Calcutta. He had his horse shot under
- him, and was himself wounded in the thigh and captured by the Boers.
- Our ambulance went out next day and found that the Boers had buried
- all the dead, except Major Showers, whose body was brought back to
- camp and buried there. The service was a very impressive one, and was
- conducted by the Military Chaplain attached to the regiment camped
- close by. It was calculated to bring home to us all the stern
- realities of war.
-
-Yet in a trooper’s diary immediately after the most pathetic entry we
-find it recorded that when rations were to be distributed by a process
-of division and subdivision ‘B—— argued at great length that one-fourth
-of two-thirds could not be the same as two-thirds of one-fourth,’ and
-the discussion took a heated turn. Such are the trifles that seem
-important to men who have just come out of a battle in which perhaps
-they were more than once close to the jaws of death. ‘Linesman,’ in
-those brilliant impressions of the war in Natal—always truthful in fact,
-but not invariably just in deduction—has recorded a very similar
-incident at Vaal Krantz, when, from a fire that was deafening,
-bewildering in its intensity of concentration on the British front,
-
- some died, some were carried away on dripping stretchers before they
- could learn the full gamut. And the survivors? The few within the
- writer’s ken—quarrelled! During a lucid interval in the shelling, the
- regimental cooks had contrived to make and distribute tea to the men
- lying prone in their shelters. The distribution was not perhaps
- impartial. The menace of a 94-lb. shrapnel would make a liquor-measure
- uncertain with the eyes of a hundred Government inspectors glued upon
- it! So there arose a bickering. Tom down below must obviously have
- taken more than his share, else how came it that Mick above had to
- content himself with less? ‘Peace!’ yelled the monstrous shrapnel at
- the height of the argument; ‘Shut up!’ snapped the pom-pom shells;
- ‘Silence!’ boomed the far-off 40-pounder. Not a bit of it. No
- foreign-made projectile ever fired shall stop a Briton well under way
- with a grievance. That argument flourished amazingly under the shower,
- and only died away when the glaring sun overhead began to induce an
- unforgiving slumber.
-
-Ridiculous, of course, such a scene must seem to civilians who have been
-fed on the heroics of a melodramatic school, or on the still falser
-‘revelations’ of writers who, having never seen a battle, mix their own
-pusillanimous imaginings with so-called ‘psychological’ studies and
-ironically brand that mixture with the ‘red badge of courage’; but it is
-true to the nature of soldiers who are not always thinking great things
-while they do them, and who have often a laugh or an oath on their lips
-when their thoughts take a flight too serious for words. Burn-Murdoch
-has told us how, in the midst of a duel that was practically for life or
-death between some Boers and Lumsden’s Horse in this fight at Ospruit,
-men laughed outright at something that seemed to them ‘tearfully funny,
-coming as it did like the comedian’s joke in the middle of a tragedy.’ A
-soldier should make the best of valets because he is never a hero to
-himself. Yet he has a firm and never-to-be-shaken faith in the heroism
-of others. Lumsden’s Horse, many of them in imminent peril at the
-moment, watched their Colonel’s action in going out to bring the wounded
-Trooper Franks from a shot-withered slope to some place of comparative
-safety, and they afterwards declared it to be a valorous deed well
-worthy of the Victoria Cross. To that conclusion Sir Patrick Playfair
-also came when the story was told to him, and he said so. Thereupon
-Colonel Lumsden was much upset lest somebody might say that he, too, had
-been trying to win the coveted distinction. So he hastened to write a
-‘disclaimer’ in these words:
-
- What Sir Patrick really means, and heard about from some of my men,
- referred to the death of poor Franks, who was lying wounded on the
- veldt about 800 yards from the point we held on the extreme right of
- the fighting line. We could see him plainly through our glasses
- writhing evidently in great pain; and, as I asked for some volunteers
- to ride down and bring him in, I did not care to request them to do a
- thing I would not do myself, so rode down with my galloper, Trooper
- Percy Smith, now a captain in the Middlesex Regiment and a D.S.O., and
- Trooper Betts and Trooper Chapman, the latter of whom afterwards
- obtained a commission in the Johannesburg Police.
-
- On reaching the spot we found Franks lying in great danger and pain.
- Having a quiet pony, ‘Harry Stuart,’ I dismounted, and we placed the
- wounded man on my horse, and while he was held by two of his comrades
- we walked back to camp under a pretty heavy fire from some Boers who
- were galloping on our left rear and firing at us. It was a foolish
- thing on my part to have done, but, as I said, we were all new to the
- game together, and I did not care to ask my men to risk their lives in
- an action in which I would not chance my own. That is all. There was
- nothing in it.
-
-Yes, that is all! But let England, mother of nations, thank God for the
-sons who, doing such a deed, can say and think ‘there was nothing in
-it’!
-
-Cold reason may bid us approve General Charles Tucker’s words of wise
-caution, but all the time our hearts will be beating time to a noble
-refrain, the notes of which have thrilled the nerves of British soldiers
-in all ages, urging them to risk their own lives rather than forsake a
-stricken comrade, and to die like gentlemen before they would let the
-stain of dishonour rest on them or their regiment. People who talk
-glibly of the necessity for encouraging initiative among junior officers
-may hold that Lieutenant Crane should have conformed to the general
-retirement, instead of holding his isolated post with untimely
-resolution, waiting for the orders that could not reach him, when the
-Boers began to close in on his front and flanks. Apparently no blame
-attaches to anybody for neglecting to recall Lieutenant Crane and his
-party at a time when they might have extricated themselves without
-serious loss. Colonel Ross says that the orderly whom he sent with the
-message was either killed or wounded, and so the recall never reached
-Lieutenant Crane. That it was sent both Colonel Ross and his Staff
-officer, Captain Williams (who has since been killed), were quite
-positive. In justice to Lieutenant Crane, it must be remembered that a
-company officer can know very little of what is going on at other points
-of a fighting line beyond the immediate limits assigned to him, and the
-privilege of initiative might be strained to a dangerous extent if every
-section-leader should consider it discreet to retire directly he found
-himself pressed sorely or somebody else giving way on either flank. In
-Colonel Lumsden’s words—so eloquent because of their undemonstrative
-simplicity—Lieutenant Crane ‘deemed it his duty to hold his position as
-long as possible.’ How many thousands of times in the course of our
-‘rough island story’ has the Empire had cause to be thankful to the men
-who could thus interpret duty as a thing above all personal
-considerations, calling for self-sacrifice to the end! It was part of
-the white man’s burden which Lieutenant Crane and his comrades of No. 2
-Section had taken upon them long ago, when they settled as
-indigo-planters in the wilds of Behar, Mozufferpore, and Saran, where
-Europeans are few and natives many. In such districts the Sahib’s lot
-may be to face a riotous multitude of frenzied fanatics at any moment,
-and he must fight it out single-handed, dying if need be under cruel
-torture, but never showing fear. That was the training-school from which
-No. 2 Section of A Company came. They were indigo-planters to a man,
-self-reliant and imbued with a high sense of the Sahib’s responsibility
-to the race from which he springs. Knowing this, we cannot wonder that
-the leader deemed it his duty to fight for the ground he had been
-ordered to hold rather than give way an inch, no matter what odds were
-against him; or that, when he fell wounded, with Clayton Daubney, Henry
-Lumsden, and Upton Case dead beside him, others chose to share his fate
-instead of leaving him to the tender mercies of their enemies. To such
-men no thought of surrender could have come. Corporal Firth had a chance
-of getting away, but he went back to where his wounded officer and some
-old comrades from Mozufferpore were lying under heavy fire, and elected
-to stay with them as they held the Boers in check until nearly every
-cartridge was expended. Not before Daubney, Case, and Lumsden had been
-killed, Cyril Marsham, Stewart McNamara, Helme Firth, Gwatkin Williams,
-McGillivray, and Macdonald wounded did the Boers succeed in making any
-prisoners among the little band of indigo-planters, whom they had by
-that time practically surrounded within point-blank range. No white flag
-was hoisted and there were no ‘hands up,’ but rifles dropped from the
-nerveless grip of men who had fought till they were faint with loss of
-blood and there was no power in the numb fingers to press a trigger.
-Others laid down the weapons that were useless when their last cartridge
-had been fired; and then the Boers, closing in upon them, made prisoners
-of all who survived. If anybody blundered, the mistake was nobly atoned
-for. It is a story of which Lumsden’s Horse and the whole Empire may be
-proud.
-
-An early version of this incident, not quite accurate in some details,
-furnished a noble theme for the pen of Sir A. Conan Doyle, who, in his
-history of ‘The Great Boer War,’ writes, with a patriot’s enthusiasm and
-an enthusiast’s glorious disregard of fettering figures, as follows:
-
- Before entering upon a description of that great and decisive movement
- (the advance on Pretoria), one small action calls for comment. This
- was the cutting off of twenty[6] men of Lumsden’s Horse in a
- reconnaissance at Karree. The small post under Lieutenant Crane found
- themselves by some misunderstanding isolated in the midst of the
- enemy. Refusing to hoist the flag of shame, they fought their way out,
- losing half[7] their number, while of the other half it is said that
- there was not one who could not show bullet marks upon his clothes or
- person. The men of this corps, Volunteer Anglo-Indians, had abandoned
- the ease and even luxury of Eastern life for the hard fare and rough
- fighting of this most trying campaign. In coming they had set the
- whole Empire an object-lesson in spirit, and now on their first field
- they set the Army an example of military virtue. The proud traditions
- of Outram’s Volunteers have been upheld by the men of Lumsden’s Horse.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IX
- _AFTER OSPRUIT—SOME TRIBUTES TO MAJOR SHOWERS
- AND OTHER HEROES_
-
-[Illustration:
-
- MAJOR EDEN C. SHOWERS
- (KILLED AT HOUTNEK)]
-]
-
-
-Unsympathetic critics may discover a lack of due proportion in the space
-that has been devoted to this affair at Ospruit, seeing that it was but
-an episode in a long chain of operations, the whole of which are dealt
-with in a single paragraph of the Commander-in-Chief’s despatches. But
-the same argument might be urged against any enlargement in monograph on
-the official version of Brigadier-General Mahon’s brilliant march for
-relieving Mafeking, to which no writer has done full justice yet, though
-there is evidence that the Boers regarded it as the first ‘slim thing’
-achieved by a British commander, and as a stroke of daring leadership by
-which they were completely outwitted. Many similar examples, not so
-conspicuous perhaps, but all material in their bearing on the greater
-issues of a campaign, and therefore worthy of elaborate treatment in
-detail, might be quoted. The Editor can at any rate plead that this is a
-history of Lumsden’s Horse, and not an essay in perspective. For that
-reason he has chosen to reproduce impressions of the different
-incidents, not as they might have presented themselves to the mind of a
-divisional general or an unemotional spectator, but as they burnt
-themselves in upon the brains of men actually fighting for their lives,
-and to use as nearly as possible each writer’s own words. It may seem
-strange that through all these narratives, from the Colonel’s purposely
-restrained and undemonstrative summary to the details that are told with
-most convincing force, we can trace no signs of depression resulting
-from the fact that Lumsden’s Horse in their first fight were forced to
-retire instead of taking part in a victorious advance. This is a touch
-happily characteristic of British soldiers. Conscious of having done
-their duty manfully, they were content to let the issue be what it
-might, so long as they had not lost confidence in themselves or in their
-leaders. There was nothing of the beaten soldier about them; no
-demoralisation, no sullen discontent, no sham heroics covering a sense
-of discomfiture. Whether they had to come back from their sacrifices
-because the enemy was in superior force, or simply because the object of
-a reconnaissance ‘had been achieved,’ mattered little to them. As Tommy
-would have phrased it in his expressive way, ‘it was all in the day’s
-work.’ Victory is sweet, no doubt, and men from whose lips that cup has
-been dashed cannot but feel a little bitterness in their hearts, but it
-is only the bitterness of a wholesome tonic. For soldiers who have
-suffered so there is always consolation in the knowledge that their
-sacrifices were not borne in vain. And Lumsden’s Horse may take
-satisfaction from the thought that their first fight, with all its sad
-and glorious consequence, was not brought about by any useless
-demonstration without plan or purpose. Though none of them could know it
-at the time, they had been engaged with De la Rey’s force, by which
-General Ian Hamilton’s left flank was being seriously threatened along
-the Brandfort ridges, and their action, which seemed to them indecisive,
-had so far relieved the pressure that Sir Ian was able the next day to
-deliver his attack on Houtnek and drive the Boers from it in some
-confusion. The apparent failure of General Maxwell’s brigade to carry
-out the mission assigned to it in the flanking movement mentioned by
-Colonel Lumsden may be accounted for by the fact that some of the
-Brandfort commandos, finding themselves in danger of being cut off, had
-drawn back from the contemplated movement against Ian Hamilton and
-thrown themselves into the fight that was then raging about the spurs
-and kopjes of the range from which Ospruit springs. Thus they
-outnumbered many times the mounted troops under Colonel Henry, who,
-having achieved his object, wisely retired from the left, leaving the
-Boers in occupation of the ground they had won, but leaving them also
-held firmly in check there by Infantry brigades, whose presence
-prevented any further demonstration from Brandfort against Ian
-Hamilton’s left. When Lumsden’s Horse marched back to their camp that
-night, therefore, they might have congratulated themselves—though they
-didn’t—on having done remarkably good service by something more than a
-reconnaissance in force. The immediate result may be summed up in a few
-words. General Hamilton, reinforced by another Infantry brigade and by
-General Broadwood’s Cavalry, who rejoined him from Thaba ’Nchu way
-during the night, was enabled to advance early on May 1 and strike a
-strong blow by which, as Lord Roberts said in his despatch, ‘the enemy
-was signally defeated at Houtnek with comparatively small loss on our
-side, thanks to the admirable dispositions made by Major-General Ian
-Hamilton.’ To this comment Lord Roberts adds an expression of regret
-that the troops employed at Dewetsdorp and Wepener had been unable to
-cut off the enemy’s retreat and capture his guns; but during these
-operations the Boers, being evidently prepared for retreat whenever
-their safety might be threatened, moved with very little baggage, each
-fighting man carrying his blankets and food on a led horse. It followed,
-therefore, that they could escape without suffering any loss beyond that
-inflicted by our troops in dislodging them from their positions. This
-was practically the official explanation, to which one may add that
-Cavalry alone could not follow up effectively the retreat of Mounted
-Infantry every man of which knew the country and how to utilise its
-peculiarities for checking pursuit. By his masterly stroke at Houtnek,
-however, General Hamilton had achieved something more than the capture
-of a Boer stronghold. At the end of that action his troops were astride
-of the most formidable defensive position between Bloemfontein and Vaal
-River, and an unopposed advance two days later to Isabellafontein not
-only took the enemy’s entrenchments on that side of Brandfort completely
-in reverse, but also effectually prevented De Wet from co-operating with
-De la Rey or Botha, and thus opened a way for the general movement
-towards Pretoria. Thus the fight at Ospruit, though it ended in a
-retirement against which some of the more adventurous spirits chafed,
-was a demonstration that helped materially towards the development of
-more important schemes; and to Lumsden’s Horse belongs the honour of
-having given to this affair an imperishable distinction by sacrifices
-that may have been unnecessary but were certainly not inglorious. The
-men who risked their lives and liberty, as Firth, Macdonald, and
-Williams did, in gallant efforts to rescue their wounded officer from a
-position which he had attempted to hold too long, are as worthy to be
-remembered as those who met their deaths in the fighting line. To the
-fallen, monuments have already been raised. Above the grave of young
-Harry Lumsden, who was buried beside Daubney and Case on the
-battlefield, a cross was put up by the Boers themselves, who, finding
-letters in his pocket, mistook him for the Colonel commanding Lumsden’s
-Horse, and buried him with the respect that they considered due to a
-brave enemy and leader of men. In the old camp at Spytfontein, to which
-the body of Major Showers was borne the next day, another simple
-memorial, pathetically distinguished by its loneliness, was raised by
-the comrades who paid their sorrowing tribute to him there, but brought
-away memories of his soldierly qualities, which they have honoured since
-by a more sumptuous monument in Bengal. The old soldier would probably
-have wished for no higher honour than the esteem of comrades whom he had
-trained in times of peace, and among whom he fell in their first fight.
-How sincere that esteem was may be gathered from simple narratives sent
-home by officers and men of Lumsden’s Horse, whose letters give
-incidental glimpses of heroic actions that might otherwise have passed
-into oblivion.
-
-Lieutenant-Colonel W.R. Walker, officiating commandant, issued the
-following regimental order from the headquarters of the Surma Valley
-Light Horse, Silchar, dated July 10, 1900:
-
- As everybody connected with the corps will no doubt wish to hear
- details of the death in action of our late Commandant,
- Lieutenant-Colonel Eden C. Showers, I publish for information below
- particulars from a letter received by the Adjutant from Captain
- Chamney, of Lumsden’s Horse, written the day after the action in which
- Colonel Showers lost his life.
-
- Captain Chamney says: Our corps were given the honour of the advance,
- the S.V.L.H. the honour of the first of that, and with Lumsden and old
- Showers at our head we occupied the kopje that was said to be the key
- of the whole position, but were instantly subjected to a heavy
- musketry fire. We lost one man and horse scouting, and then got
- settled down among some sangars, but the old Major scorned all cover,
- watching, absolutely regardless of the bullets, the enemy’s advance up
- a spruit on our right flank. Everyone had asked him to get down, but
- he always said, ‘Oh, I’m all right,’ and walked from one end of the
- line to the other. When all the rest had begun to retire, and we got
- no word, the Boers worked up closer and closer. I had only just said
- to him (he was but three or four yards behind me), ‘For God’s sake,
- Major, get under cover,’ when I heard the sing of bullets over my head
- and ‘plint,’ and, looking round, I saw he was hit. I said, ‘Are you
- hit, Major?’ and he replied, ‘Oh, nothing much, only my arm; send back
- for Dr. Powell.’ I crawled back on my belly to him and got his belts
- and things opened, and found also a big hole, just above the heart,
- which was bleeding copiously. Then Dr. Powell and two assistants came
- up, and we bandaged him as well as we could for bullets flying around,
- and, still on our bellies, pulled and lifted the old chap out of the
- range of fire. He was suffering evidently a good deal from
- suffocation; blood in his lungs, I suppose. I stayed with him as long
- as he was conscious—not many minutes—and had then to return to the
- men. I found him as we retired a little later there under the tree
- where we had laid him, and where we had to leave him and another man
- to the Boers. The ‘Retire’ came before he died, and Dr. Powell, making
- up his mind to stay with him, fixed his handkerchief to a stick to get
- what protection he could from it. However, the old chap dropped off,
- and, covering him with a blanket and closing his eyes, the Doctor left
- him to his rest and bolted, but, looking back, he saw the white flag,
- and saying, ‘What would the old man say if he knew he was taken, even
- dead, with a white flag over him?’ returned and took it down, and so
- we left him. The Boers took nothing but his spurs and badges. Dr.
- Powell returned at night under a Red Cross and got permission to
- remove the body to-day and we bury the old man this afternoon. It is a
- terrible loss to the corps, and all so utterly sad.
-
-There is something almost Homeric in that incident of the white flag
-being taken from beside the dead warrior’s body under fire.
-
-The ‘Times of India’ of May 9, 1900, contains the following appreciation
-of the gallant Major Showers:
-
- Among those of Lumsden’s Horse killed in the fighting in the Orange
- Free State on the 30th ult. was Major Eden Showers. He was until
- recently the Commandant of the Surma Valley Light Horse, and by his
- example exercised a wonderful influence over all ranks. He was a son
- of General Showers, who did splendid work in the Mutiny days, and made
- his name famous by his courageous leading of the assault at Delhi on
- September 13, 1857. Major Showers was educated at Wellington College,
- and entered the Army through Sandhurst in 1865. He served in the
- Dublin Fusiliers, the two battalions of which are now in Natal, one
- having been in Ladysmith and the other with the relieving force under
- General Buller. After serving with the regiment for nearly seven years
- the deceased officer left it with the rank of Adjutant, and joined the
- 2nd Life Guards, with which he remained for three years. After ten
- years’ service he left the army to take up tea-planting. He worked for
- some years at Katalguri under Messrs. Macniell & Co., but at the close
- of the season 1881-82 joined Messrs. Octavius Steel & Co., and was
- Superintendent of their Cherra Gardens up to the time he resigned to
- join Lumsden’s Horse. He was elected by his brother planters to
- command the Surma Valley Light Horse in March 1895, in succession to
- Colonel Milne, C.I.E., and his nomination was ratified by the
- Government. The selection proved that the Government had put the right
- man in the right place. While in command he worked the Light Horse up
- to a high degree of efficiency, as was shown by the approval of
- General Sir George Luck, who at the inspection in December last gave
- them unstinted praise. Among other things, the General stated that he
- could honestly say that the regiment could hold its own with the best
- Yeomanry corps at home, which was saying a great deal. Shortly after
- his resignation of the command of the Surma Valley Light Horse,
- Colonel Showers joined Lumsden’s Horse as Second-in-Command, with the
- rank of Major, serving under his old friend and former subordinate,
- Colonel Lumsden. His death is a severe loss to the corps, and is
- deeply deplored by a very large circle of friends, who found in him a
- man of sterling merit, splendid character, and a credit to the
- military profession he was so keen in following.
-
-The following appears in the ‘Assam Gazette’:
-
- The Officiating Chief Commissioner expresses the general feeling of
- the Province in deploring the death in action of Major E.C. Showers,
- Second-in-Command of the Indian Mounted Infantry Corps (Lumsden’s
- Horse) now serving in South Africa. As Commandant of the Surma Valley
- Light Horse for nearly five years he brought that body to a high state
- of efficiency by his soldierly qualities, his untiring devotion to the
- interests of the corps, and by his personal popularity among its
- members. His untimely death is a serious loss to Assam, and will be
- mourned by the officers and men of the corps. He was loved by all who
- knew him.
-
-The Hon. H.J.S. Cotton, Chief Commissioner of Assam (now Sir Henry
-Cotton, K.C.S.I.), presiding at the Assam Dinner in London in June 1900,
-paid the following tribute to Major Showers:
-
- Another gentleman had been pathetically alluded to both by Colonel
- Kirwan and Colonel MacLaughlin, and the mention of his name recalled a
- recent public dinner at Cachar, given as a send-off to Colonel Showers
- and other Volunteers. The admiration which all the Volunteers of Assam
- had for Colonel Showers was, indeed, a thing to have witnessed. When
- he rose to propose Colonel Showers’s health the cheering was
- vociferous and so continuous that it was at least ten minutes before
- he could get any hearing. He had never been present at a scene of such
- extraordinary enthusiasm, and he believed it was thoroughly well
- deserved. Colonel Showers was an exceptional man; thoroughly
- straightforward and practical, and a born leader of men. What was said
- of Jim Bludso might with equal truth be said of Colonel Showers:
-
- ‘A keerless man in his talk was Jim,
- And an awkward hand in a row;
- But he never funked and he never lied:
- I reckon he never know’d how.’
-
- That was the type of man that Colonel Showers was—a simple-minded
- Englishman, true and staunch as steel, and courageous to the backbone.
- As Colonel Kirwan had told them, he died, as he would have wished to
- die, a soldier’s death. He was a soldier in his youth and became a
- soldier in his prime, and died for Queen and country. They were all
- proud of Lumsden’s Horse and of Colonel Showers, who died at the head
- of his men in the first battle in which they were engaged.
-
-From these extracts, and especially from the episode in which Dr. Powell
-played such a gallant part, we may know that the Surma Valley Light
-Horse were worthy of the Colonel who had volunteered to serve in a
-subordinate capacity that he might be with them in their first campaign
-and whose memory they still revere. That all Assam may bear in mind how
-he had endeared himself to those who served with him, the men of that
-corps have caused a handsome monument to be wrought in red Aberdeen
-granite for erection in the country where they first enlisted as
-Volunteers under his command. Its gabled base forms a Gothic cross
-surmounted by an octagonal spire, and in one panel under a cusped arch
-is the following inscription:
-
- TO THE MEMORY
-
- OF
-
- LIEUTENANT-COLONEL EDEN CURRIE SHOWERS,
-
- LATE COMMANDANT SURMA VALLEY LIGHT HORSE; KILLED AT
- HOUTNEK, SOUTH AFRICA, 30TH APRIL, 1900.
-
- Erected by the Members of his Corps.
-
-Before this monument was shipped from Glasgow to Calcutta in September
-1902 a sketch of it was sent by Mr. Peters, who had taken charge of all
-arrangements, to Lord Roberts. In acknowledgment the Commander-in-Chief
-wrote:
-
- I have received with much pleasure your letter of the 16th instant,
- enclosing a drawing of the obelisk that is being erected by the
- members of the Surma Valley Light Horse in memory of their late
- gallant commandant, Lieutenant-Colonel Showers, and I am much obliged
- to you for sending it to me. I am glad the memorial is being erected,
- as I feel sure it will go far towards preserving and promoting that
- _esprit de corps_ which is so important a factor in all units of the
- forces of the British Empire.
-
-It was _esprit de corps_, as Colonel Lumsden expressed it in the
-regimental motto, ‘Play the Game,’ that brought officers and troopers
-with distinction through their first fight, and the firmness with which
-it had taken hold of all ranks may be traced in tributes that show the
-finest spirit of comradeship.
-
-The following letter, received by Colonel A.W. Rendell, commanding the
-East Indian Railway Volunteer Rifles, from Captain B.W. Holmes, who went
-with the Maxim gun of the E.I.R.V. Rifles attached to Lumsden’s Horse,
-is full of the sentiment from which mutual confidence springs:
-
- Spytfontein, May 1.
-
- DEAR COLONEL RENDELL,—I am writing to give you an account of the first
- action the gun has been in, and to tell you how admirably the men
- behaved in what were really very trying circumstances. When we left
- Calcutta I had the gun arranged to go on pack saddles on horses; but
- when we arrived here we found this would not do, as our animals were
- not properly trained, and in jumping about they were always knocking
- pieces of skin off and otherwise damaging themselves. We therefore
- fitted up one of our transport carts as a carriage, and with two mules
- as wheelers and four horses in front we get along pretty well. The
- first day we went out to fight we saw nothing, although there was a
- little firing about two miles from us. On the way we came to a very
- nasty piece of ground, and we succeeded in turning the gun head over
- heels down the side of a kopje. By a miracle it was not injured in the
- least, and I felt sure it must be going to do some work. Yesterday we
- went out again, and had only gone about four miles when firing began
- all along the line. We were on the right, next to a pom-pom; the Boer
- guns very soon found out the latter, and it had to be moved out of
- action. In the meanwhile I had been having a go at the Boer gunners at
- about 3,000 yards. No sooner had the pom-pom gone than a shell missed
- my head by about a foot, fell twenty yards behind me and burst,
- wounding four of my horses slightly. This wasn’t quite good enough and
- I got out of action as soon as I could, but not before they had sent
- two more shells right among us, or too close to be pleasant; the last
- one killed two horses and blew a trooper’s foot to pieces.
-
- The Boers outnumbered us by about four to one, and shortly after this
- we received an order to retire with the rest, which we did. We had
- gone about half a mile, with rifle bullets sprinkling around us, when
- I was ordered to come into action behind a few stones that were lying
- on the plain. There wasn’t an atom of cover for my horses or the men
- holding them, although the gun was partly protected. I opened fire on
- the Boers at 1,000 yards, had fired about 250 rounds of rapid
- traversing fire when they began to retire. I fired about another 230,
- when the gun jammed, and at the same moment an officer came dashing up
- to tell me to retire immediately. We did so under a perfect hail of
- bullets, and although I had six horses wounded out of ten, not one of
- them was so badly injured as to be unable to go on, and not a single
- man of us was touched. After going about half a mile I gave my horse
- to Corbett to lead, and got into the cart and managed to get the gun
- into action again. We lost three belts and boxes in our hasty
- retirement, but that of course could not be helped. The men with me
- were Sergeant Bale, of Jubbulpur; Private Booth, of Howrah; Privates
- Dowd, Dickens, Corbett, and Burnand, of Jamalpur; and Private Bolst,
- of Asonsole; Private Burnand is my driver. There was one other man of
- Lumsden’s Horse with me, named Mercer, who was helping to hold horses.
- Sergeant Dale, Privates Booth, Corbett, and Bolst, and myself were on
- the gun. Colonel Ross, who was in charge of our brigade, expressed
- pleasure at the work done by the gun, and said that we knocked over
- several of the enemy, which was distinctly satisfactory. Our
- casualties were heavy. We lost our Second-in-Command (Major Showers)
- killed, Lieutenant Crane missing and wounded, and one private known to
- be killed, and probably one or two others of the wounded have since
- died, our killed, wounded, and missing being seventeen in all.
-
- How our team escaped injury is to me little short of a miracle. The
- men behaved splendidly, and if ever we get into as tight a place again
- I have perfect confidence in their standing by me and the gun. Our
- ambulance is out now looking for wounded, but the Boers have probably
- attended to them long ago—at any rate, I hope so. Our men have
- certainly had their baptism of fire, and I for one should not object
- if we never got it as hot again.
-
- You would hardly recognise the gun now, I fancy; it is a dirty khaki
- colour, with the paint knocked off it in, places and smothered with
- dirt and stuff outside. But the inside is, I think, quite as clean as
- when at Jamalpur; anyhow, it still knows how to work.
-
- Yours very sincerely,
-
- B.W. HOLMES
-
-From the personal experiences of a non-commissioned officer who was
-wounded and captured by the Boers we get side-lights that help more than
-anything else towards a clear understanding of the temper and actions of
-men on the battlefield. To some extent this story touches on ground that
-has already been covered by previous descriptions. Partly for that
-reason, but mainly because it is a complete picture of one incident the
-nobility of which would have been lost if woven into the continuous
-narrative, it has been kept distinct, so that the writer’s impressions
-may be reproduced here with all the minor touches and bits of local
-colour that made them vivid at the time of occurrence. He begins with
-the march out of camp at 3 o’clock that memorable morning:
-
- We fell in punctually and moved off to the rendezvous, the moon
- shining brightly and making wonderful black shadows among the
- surrounding kopjes-pronounced ‘koppies,’ by the way. The cold was
- intense, and numbed our fingers so that our reins could scarce be
- felt; The order to trot was received with satisfaction, for we were
- all shivering, men and horses alike. A few minutes later we joined
- company with a pom-pom battery of two guns, and a body of Mounted
- Infantry composed of Australians and details from various regiments.
- Our strength in all was, we have since heard, some 800, while the
- opposing Boers numbered three or four thousand, with several big guns.
- When our little band was complete, the order was given to trot, and we
- proceeded at a sharp pace for about a mile. Daylight was then breaking
- and a halt was called, the order being given to dismount and charge
- magazines—a sign of business received with much satisfaction.
- Thereafter we moved forward in extended order, with scouts in advance
- for three or four miles, when stray shots in front showed us that we
- were coming into touch with the enemy.
-
- Before us the country lay in ridges running parallel with each other,
- and at right angles to our line of advance. As we surmounted each
- rising we expected to view the enemy, but the order to dismount came
- without our being vouchsafed any visible sign of their presence.
- Before us lay some 800 yards of rising ground, and we swarmed up in a
- long open line, fully expecting a volley ere we reached the top.
- However, our hour of trial had not yet come, though the scattered
- shots heard to our front as we advanced had increased to a sharp
- fusillade on our left front. The order then came to extend away into a
- narrow valley running at right angles and crossing the ends of the
- succession of ridges we had covered. Thus, lying on the slope, we
- could see behind for a mile or so, and in the opposite direction, up
- the valley, right into the country which the enemy were known to
- occupy.
-
- Shortly afterwards the music began in earnest. A mile up the valley a
- Boer big gun appeared and opened fire on troops advancing on the hill
- from our left rear. Then out came one of our pom-poms and, galloping
- into position, replied from the opposite end of the valley at a range
- of some 3,000 yards. The duel between the two lasted for about ten
- minutes, the pom-pom firing briskly as is its wont, the more ponderous
- Boer gun replying every two minutes. Lying on the slope as we were, in
- full view of the valley and within a hundred yards of the line of fire
- of the opposing guns, we had a splendid, not to say realistic,
- illustration of artillery fire. The singing of the big shells as they
- tore through the air was magnificent to our unaccustomed ears. It was
- curious, too, to observe the sequence in which indications of
- discharge and report reached us. The first sign that the Boer big gun
- had been fired was the little cloud of smoke floating near the muzzle.
- Next we heard the singing of the shell passing up the valley. This was
- followed by the dust raised by the explosion of the shell in bursting,
- and not until these evidences of a shot having been fired did we hear
- the actual report, which was closely followed by that of the bursting
- shell itself.
-
- For some five minutes the duel proceeded, no evidence of the effect of
- the pom-pom fire being visible to our eyes, though it became evident
- that the Boers were finding the range, for each shell seemed to land
- nearer, until, as it seemed to us, one burst right in the middle of
- our gun. At that moment those of us on the slope heard rifle fire
- immediately behind. It proved to be our own regiment’s Maxim taking
- sighting shots at the Boer gun. This certainly made things livelier,
- but there was no comfort in realising that we lay right in the line of
- fire, and that replies from the enemy would probably land among us.
- However, the Boers took no notice of the Maxim, though it spat out
- bullets at a tremendous rate, but continued to devote their attention
- to the pom-pom. The greater weight of the Boer metal soon made matters
- too hot for Captain Rotton’s[8] little gun, and it shortly afterwards
- retired behind the hill, having lost several horses. Then our turn
- came, and the officious little Maxim, which had been kicking up a
- great shindy in our rear, drew the Boer fire. The first shot whizzed
- unpleasantly close to our heads and burst between us and the Maxim,
- which, undismayed, continued to pour out a hot fire. Number two was
- aimed slightly higher and travelled beyond the gun, killing two horses
- and wounding one man. The Maxim stuck it out pluckily for one more
- shell, but that fell so close that to have delayed any longer would
- have only been folly. On the retreat of our machine gun the Boer gun
- retired behind a kopje, and we were left in peace for a time, though
- the firing on our left had now greatly increased, and showed that a
- brisk fight was going on.
-
- About 10 o’clock orders were received for part of my section to extend
- to the right, and six of us, in command of Sergeant Walter Walker,
- went right down into the valley. In our new position we were sheltered
- by a low rocky ridge on the left, but the ground was open in every
- other direction. The ridge referred to cut us off entirely from what
- was going on on our left, and this accounts for the misfortunes which
- followed.
-
- Meanwhile the firing that had begun on our left earlier in the morning
- had increased tremendously. Bullets began to come our way very
- frequently, but as we were under the lee of a ridge they passed over
- our heads, evidently nearly spent, for the sharp ping of a newly-sped
- shot had changed with them into the melancholy wail of spirits that
- had lived and lived in vain. So great had the noise become that
- shouting to each other was ineffectual, not a word reaching even one’s
- next neighbour. So we lay and waited.
-
- Suddenly it struck us that the chain of fire extending in a line to
- our left seemed to be swinging towards our left rear, and a few
- minutes’ attention confirmed an idea that the position of the opposing
- forces must have altered considerably. As we listened the firing
- seemed to increase in fierceness and sounded still further to the
- rear. The position had become uncomfortable, for our horses were 800
- yards in our direct rear. To lose them would be fatal to our safety;
- the six of us, therefore, got up and began to retire slowly, wondering
- that no orders had reached us.
-
-[Illustration: BUGLER R.H. MACKENZIE]
-
- A shower of bullets swept past, singing in our ears with spiteful
- distinctness. Looking round I saw, barely fifty yards away, two-score
- Boers kneeling and firing away for all they were worth. A second look
- was unnecessary, and we ran like deer, the bullets whizzing by thick
- as hail. It was amazing that none of us was hit. Bullets seemed to me
- to be pouring between my legs and under my feet. A little rising gave
- us momentary protection, but the Boers came on again until within
- fifty yards, and poured a hot fire into us. Two hundred yards away we
- could see our horses and near them the rest of the section, which had
- got earlier notice of the repulse of our troops, galloping away. Each
- man got to his horse, but they shouted to me that mine had been killed
- by a shell. It was not a pleasant predicament, but before I had time
- to realise that the Boers must either shoot or capture me, Bugler
- Mackenzie galloped up and offered me a lift behind him. I was dead
- beat with running and quite unequal to violent effort. I put my foot
- in the stirrup he released, and tried to climb up. But my bandolier,
- haversack, and water-bottle all bunched in front and caught the
- blanket tied on at the pommel of the high military saddle. Back I
- flopped on to the ground. Another effort, and I nearly pulled
- Mackenzie, who was a light boy, out of the saddle. The firing all the
- time was very hot, and, fearing to bring disaster on all of us, I
- ordered Mackenzie off. But he would not budge until Saunders and
- Parkes between them helped me up behind the first-named. What a relief
- it was to feel the ground slipping past and to know we were getting
- out of such a desperate scrape! The Boer fire had slackened for a
- little, but the reason was that they had mounted and galloped up to
- within close range. Again they opened, and once more the ground all
- around was dusted up and the air alive with singing bullets. It was
- too much to hope for escape a second time, and sure enough, before we
- had gone a hundred yards, the gallant gee with his double load fell
- heavily to earth, a bullet having struck him. Being perched high up, I
- reached the ground first with a thud I hope never to experience again.
- Saunders then fell on top of me, and the horse crashed heavily across
- both of us, kicking me on the shoulder as he rolled over.
-
-[Illustration: E.B. PARKES]
-
- I must have been stunned for a moment, but soon recovered my senses
- and realised that I had broken nothing nor been hit by a bullet.
- Saunders lay very still within ten feet of me, and I feared he was
- dead. But cautious inquiry elicited a reply. He was all right, but
- complained of being unable to move one arm, and we assumed it was
- broken. All this time the firing continued, evidently directed at our
- retreating section. Judge of my astonishment, on looking up to see why
- it should suddenly have increased in our immediate neighbourhood, to
- observe Parkes riding back to us. He had pulled up as quickly as he
- could when he noticed our disaster. Seeing Saunders lying quiet, he
- offered to take me on his horse, but I shouted to him to clear off, as
- he was endangering his own life as well as drawing the fire on us. I
- could not have left Saunders after his having stopped to take me up,
- and for Parkes and myself to have helped him away in the midst of such
- a murderous fire would have been folly. Very reluctantly Parkes
- galloped off. His horse shortly afterwards was shot under him, but he
- managed to get away by running. As for myself, I was so shaken I could
- not have gone far on foot, besides which I was already exhausted by
- running. In any case, to have got up and attempted escape with the
- enemy in such force and at such close range would have been madness. I
- accordingly lay very still and called to Saunders to do likewise.
- Immediately afterwards a party of Boers some 300 strong swept past us
- on horseback, evidently in pursuit of our retiring troops, and then
- began a very trying part of our experience. The Boers were some
- hundreds of yards in front lying on the face of a slope, and we got
- the full benefit of a very hot fire directed against them. Three
- shells from our own guns burst all around, and the fire of a pom-pom
- sighted a little too high tore up the ground close on our left.
- Bullets fell all around us and between us; so embarrassing was the
- situation that I began to look about for cover. But turning round I
- saw a Boer some hundred yards away steadily looking at us from under
- the lee of a rock. Whenever he saw me turn he dropped on to his knee
- and levelled his rifle. Quickly I lay like one dead, and whispered
- hoarsely to Saunders not to move for his life. It was an anxious wait.
- No bullet came, and the Boer, seeing us remain still, stole cautiously
- up to where he could see our faces. Realising we were helpless, he
- dropped his rifle and came up, assuring us he would not harm us. He
- rolled Saunders round, took a valuable set of glasses from him, as
- well as belt, purse, knife, water-bottle, and everything worth having.
- He was about to commence operations on me, and I was wondering if it
- would be worth while to make a dash for his rifle, when he got up and
- cleared off. The cause was the approach of a Boer doctor, who came up
- and most kindly inquired if we were wounded. Finding nothing seriously
- the matter with us, he explained that he must move on to more
- dangerous cases, but promised to come back and attend to us later on.
- Then a large party of Boers suddenly surrounded us. They stripped me
- of my belt, to which was attached a fine knife and a good compass;
- also bandolier, ammunition, and water-bottle, the latter evidently a
- much appreciated prize. I begged to have my knife back, as it was a
- present from a dear friend. To my astonishment, it was handed back to
- me. Then one offered to buy it, but was quashed by the others, who
- said it was a shame to want from me what I valued so much. Then we
- were helped up and marched off towards the ambulance, Saunders
- suffering considerably from his arm, I feeling sound enough but very
- sick and giddy. Round the ambulance cart was a large crowd of Boers,
- evidently enjoying the shelter of the Red Cross. They looked curiously
- at us, and the bolder asked for our spurs and badges. We parted with
- these, but protested at a request to give up our leathern gaiters. A
- doctor bound up Saunders’s arm, and we were sent off in charge of
- three guards to the Boer laager which lay over the hill to the north.
- After a bit one of the Boers, observing me to move very groggily, put
- me on his horse. But Saunders, though his arm pained him a good deal,
- had to walk.
-
-In their first fight, and on many occasions afterwards, Lumsden’s Horse
-bore testimony to the sportsmanlike qualities and humanity of their
-enemies, especially towards men who were lying wounded and helpless on
-the field. Writing many months afterwards, Colonel Lumsden gave some
-affecting instances by way of illustration, and several of these were
-connected with the affair at Houtnek, though their interesting sequels
-were not known in some cases until near the close of the campaign. These
-may be given in Colonel Lumsden’s words. He writes:
-
- ‘One touch of Nature makes the whole world kin.’ Many kindly actions
- on the part of the Boers have gone unrecorded in the present campaign.
- I cannot, however, allow one or two which came under my special notice
- to pass without mention.
-
- On April 30, 1900, when we were engaged with that clever General De la
- Rey, my scouts, while reconnoitring under Lieutenant Pugh, far in
- advance of the main body, came suddenly upon a well-concealed Boer
- outpost, who opened fire on them, wounding poor Franks severely. Pugh
- stuck to him gallantly, making for where he considered our leading
- column would be. Franks, however, got so weak that Lieutenant Pugh and
- the other two scouts had to dismount him and leave him on the veldt.
- Later in the day, when the enemy’s fire slackened, some friends of
- Franks were able to go out and carry him in and place him in the hands
- of Dr. Powell, who did all that was possible for him in the
- circumstances. We were holding an untenable position, and when the
- order came to retire early in the afternoon, poor Franks had to be
- left until an ambulance might be got to carry him back to our
- headquarters camp at Spytfontein. Shortly after our retirement from
- the spot where he lay the Boers occupied the ground we had left, and,
- finding Franks, treated him with every kindness and attention. It was
- the last we saw of him. Some five days later, at the fight near
- Brandfort, a Boer ambulance containing several wounded Boers and with
- Doctor Everard in charge fell into our hands. On my riding up to
- interview the latter, he asked if we were not Lumsden’s Horse, and on
- my replying in the affirmative he said, ‘One of your men, named
- Franks, fell into our hands on April 30, and was under my care. I did
- all I could for him, but the poor fellow died.’ Then producing a small
- note-book from his pocket he said, ‘In this I have noted when and
- where he was buried. I also found on his person two sovereigns and two
- rings.’ These the doctor handed to me with a request that I would be
- good enough to forward them to the boy’s mother. I thanked him most
- gratefully for what he had done on behalf of my late comrade, and in
- due course was able to forward, through Trooper Preston, the relics
- handed to me to Mrs. Franks, of The Chase, Clapham Common, London.
-
- On the same day (April 30), Lieutenant Crane, with a small detachment
- of my corps, was sent by Colonel Ross, our commanding officer, to
- occupy a low-lying kopje on our left front. They were attacked by an
- overwhelming number of the enemy, and nearly the whole of the little
- lot were either killed, wounded, or taken prisoners, as they
- maintained their position to the last. Lieutenant Crane himself, being
- badly shot in the groin, was lying in an exposed position unseen by
- us, and under fire of our own Maxim gun, which was playing on the
- kopje now occupied by the Boers, and in imminent risk of being killed
- by our own fire. Suddenly one of the Boers came forward amidst a hail
- of bullets, lifted up Lieutenant Crane, and carried him to a place of
- safety. Many a V.C. has been gained by doing a similar action. This
- story was subsequently corroborated by Lieutenant Crane, who told me
- that the man who behaved so gallantly towards him was named Meyers.
-
- Strange to relate, in the following September when that ideal Cavalry
- leader, General French, made his brilliant dash on Barberton—a feature
- of the campaign on which I think too little has been said, and not
- sufficient credit given to the leadership and pluck of the gallant
- General—Lumsden’s Horse comprised his rearguard, under the command of
- General Mahon, of Mafeking fame. As we rode up the heights prior to
- following General French’s force into the Barberton Valley, we came
- across several Boer families living in tents and grazing their cattle
- on the veldt. I rode up to one of the tents and was chatting with a
- stalwart Boer and his family. He immediately spotted what corps we
- were and said, ‘Oh, we fought against you at Houtnek.’ I asked his
- name, and he said Meyers. I then shook hands with him gratefully and
- said, ‘You are the man who carried my subaltern, Crane, at the risk of
- your life into a place of safety on that day.’ He brought me a cup of
- coffee, and while I was chatting pleasantly with his wife and family
- he said, ‘Have you got a man with you of the name of McGillivray? I
- remember him well, a big Scotchman. We took him prisoner that day, and
- on our way to Pretoria I had the pleasure of dividing a couple of
- bottles of whisky between him and one or two of his comrades also in
- our hands.’ As this Boer was living quietly on the veldt, and not in
- the fighting line, I had the pleasure of getting a pass for himself
- and his family by way of showing some practical gratitude for his kind
- and plucky treatment of my comrades.
-
------
-
-Footnote 5:
-
- Franks was left afterwards on the kopje, where he had been placed by
- Colonel Lumsden, and the Boers took him to hospital, where he died at
- midnight.—ED.
-
-Footnote 6:
-
- Really fourteen.—ED.
-
-Footnote 7:
-
- More than two-thirds.—ED.
-
-Footnote 8:
-
- Now Brevet-Major.-ED.
-
------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER X
- _PRISONERS OF WAR_
-
-
-To be carried off captive after the first hot skirmish into which one
-has gone full of confidence and hope is a trying experience for any
-soldier, and especially for those who are conscious of having done
-manful deeds deserving a better fate. In these circumstances, however,
-it implies no humiliation, but only a feeling of rebellious resentment
-against the fortunes of war that have, at one fell stroke, swept away
-all hopes of further distinction, dashed every ambitious plan, and
-severed for a time at least all pleasant associations with comrades
-whose friendship is never so truly appreciated under other conditions as
-it is amid the rough campaigning experiences that try the temper and the
-mettle of all men. The full sense of everything that has been lost comes
-upon war-prisoners in the first hours of their captivity with the
-crushing force of a hopeless defeat, so that they cannot even find it in
-their hearts to be thankful for the lives that have been spared to them.
-If this is so in the case of men to whom loss of liberty means no
-reproach and who have the proud consciousness that they did not purchase
-safety by unfaithfulness to their trust, how much sharper must the sting
-be to those who by pusillanimous surrender have brought the dark shadow
-of dishonour on themselves and stained the proud blazonry of regimental
-distinctions! Happily, British soldiers have not often gone into
-captivity with that stigma resting on them; and, though critics at home
-were ungenerously prone to assume that the ‘flag of shame’ had been
-hoisted too readily in some fights against the Boers, they would have
-told a different story if it had been their lot to lie on the bare veldt
-within rifle-range of hidden enemies under whose deadly fire it is even
-more dangerous to go back than to go forward. The idea of wresting
-victory by a rush or wriggling up to it through zone after zone of
-hailing bullets across four or five hundred yards of open ground could
-only have commended itself to tacticians comfortably ensconced in
-arm-chairs far from the buzz and boom of war. Hemmed in by a girdle of
-fire that cannot possibly be broken by a charge across such distances,
-men must either lie down like sheep to be slaughtered, or walk to their
-deaths with eyes open, making useless sacrifices, or surrender; and none
-but a braggart who had never been under fire would dare to hurl the
-poisoned arrows of reproach at brave men upon whom the last alternative
-has been forced. Every soldier knows how unjust is that journalistic
-phrase ‘an easy surrender.’ Nobody could have written it if he had
-thought for a moment of the bitterness that is in the hearts of men who
-have to yield under the white flag; yet it is not necessarily an emblem
-of shame for all that. Lumsden’s Horse did not hoist it in their direst
-extremity, but they would be the last to jeer at men who have passed
-through such an ordeal. If ever captives had the right to hold up their
-heads in the presence of triumphant enemies, those men were the troopers
-of Lumsden’s Horse who had sacrificed themselves rather than abandon a
-wounded comrade. One of them, Corporal Firth, a prisoner in the hands of
-the Boers, wrote to his parents from Waterval on May 7, 1900:
-
- You will by this time have seen that I am now a prisoner of war from
- the published lists in the papers. I will just give you an outline of
- what happened on the 30th ult. An officer, two non-commissioned
- officers, and eleven men were told off to hold a hill as a guard
- against an attack on the right of a body advancing from our centre;
- this centre body had to retire, and we, receiving no orders, held on
- as long as possible until forced to retire, which we did, having five
- killed, our officer wounded, and four taken prisoners, leaving only
- four who escaped to tell the tale. I could have got away, only went
- back to the assistance of our officer, who was wounded about ten yards
- behind me. I bound him up under a heavy fire, and Providence must have
- watched over me that day, as bullets in hundreds were flying all round
- me. I am in good health and received very kind treatment from the
- hands of my captors, of which I will write more on another occasion,
- as I am not yet settled down in my new surroundings.
-
-How he and his fellow-prisoners fared after they had fallen into the
-power of their enemies is a story told with graphic picturesqueness in
-the following letters from Sergeant Fraser, who was surrounded by Boers
-when he lay bruised by a heavy fall in company with Trooper Saunders,
-who had gallantly risked his own life in an attempt to bring Fraser out
-from under fire:
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Photo: Johnston and Hoffmann._
- SERGEANT DAVID S. FRASER
-]
-
- We had imagined that our destination was comparatively close, but we
- covered mile after mile without any more satisfaction from our guards
- than that it was over the next kopje. The column wound in and out
- among many hills ere a halt was called. Though we had started about 11
- in the morning, it was not until 4 o’clock in the afternoon that our
- escort stopped at an ambulance tent, which was in charge of a
- hospitable Swiss doctor. We had had nothing to eat all day. In the
- hurry of getting ready so early in the morning neither of us had time
- to think of food, and our day’s rations were in our saddles, now in
- the hands of the Boers. So the good Swiss fed us plentifully with
- soup, meat, and coffee. He examined me and found only bruises.
- Saunders’s arm was much swollen, and the surgeon could not ascertain
- what the damage was. It afterwards turned out that the muscles were
- lacerated and one of the bones in the forearm cracked.
-
- In the doctor’s tent was a wounded officer, Lieutenant and Adjutant
- Lilley, of the Victorian Mounted Rifles. He, poor chap, had been shot
- through the head during the same engagement, and had been brought in a
- waggon from the field. He recognised us in so far as to repeat the
- name of our regiment, but seemed woefully wounded and repeatedly broke
- out in delirium. The doctor who had been so kind to us seemed
- assiduous in his attentions, and I am sure everything possible was
- done for the poor Australian. We heard afterwards that he had been
- left in hospital at Brandfort by the Boers, and found by our troops a
- few days afterwards, when they took possession of that place. He
- subsequently died from the wound, which was caused by a bullet passing
- through his brain. Marching for another mile we came to the Boer
- laager at dusk. Those in camp met us kindly, more particularly as the
- news given by our guards was that their own commando had apparently
- scored a victory. They gave us coffee at once, and a place to lie down
- and rest. And thus began our captivity.
-
- While Saunders and myself were recovering from our exertions,
- discussing the events of the day, and generally commiserating each
- other upon our misfortunes, we were much cheered to perceive the
- approach of two men attired in khaki and helmets. These proved to be
- Sergeant-Major Healy, of the Victorian Rifles, and Private Simmons, of
- the Duke of Cornwall’s Regiment’s Mounted Infantry. Both had fearful
- things to relate of the morning’s action. They had been through all
- the heavy fighting preceding the occupation of Bloemfontein, and
- agreed that never had they experienced such hot fire as on this
- particular morning. About 8 o’clock our guards supplied us with bread
- and coffee, and pieces of biltong, stuck on a wire, that had been
- thrust into a fire. They then accommodated us with a tent, a blanket
- apiece, and an empty sack or two—for we had no coats, and the cold was
- intense. In such comfort as we could make for ourselves with these
- limited resources we lay down, and soon slept the sleep of the weary.
- It seemed but a few minutes since we had turned in when we were
- awakened with rough kindliness, and turned out of our tent. The bulk
- of the commando had returned to camp after a successful but wearisome
- day, and the owners of the tent wanted their own. So out we got into
- the bitter cold. They placed us between two tents, and we arranged
- ourselves a second time as best we could. Despite the lack of warmth
- and comfort, we slept heavily, and the sun was high in the heavens
- next morning ere we awoke.
-
- Bread and coffee formed our breakfast, and this meagre meal was
- welcome enough. Our guards themselves had no more, so we could not
- complain. As the morning wore on, the sun became rather trying, and
- once again we were accommodated with a tent, wherein we discussed at
- length the events of yesterday. As this conversation turned inevitably
- to our own capture, needless to say we gradually began to despond. But
- we were shortly to have our hearts lightened by the discovery of
- fellow sufferers—how company in trouble eases one! In marched Firth,
- McGillivray, Macdonald, Petersen, and Williams, of our own corps,
- followed by Coghlan, of Sergeant-Major Healy’s regiment. Coghlan had a
- broken leg, done up in plaster of Paris, and lay on an ambulance
- pallet. Needless to say, we had much to tell each other, and Saunders
- and myself then heard how Franks, Case, Daubney, and H.C. Lumsden had
- been killed, and Lieutenant Crane wounded and a prisoner. It was not
- until afterwards we heard that Major Showers had been killed and
- several others wounded on the same day.
-
- The frugal fare of the morning was repeated in the afternoon, except
- in the case of the bread. Of it the Boers had none, but they furnished
- us with a plentiful supply of a kind of rusk. This appeared to be
- simply broken bread dried in an oven. It made a very good meal, but
- tried those of us whose teeth had been somewhat worn down by eating
- _moorghis_[9] in India.
-
- To march forth in the morning with a gun in your hand to fight your
- country’s battles; to endanger your life that you may return to your
- female relatives, decorated and a hero; to hear the vicious ping of
- bullets, the shrieking of shells, and know yourself alarmed but
- undismayed, are fine things. But to sit at night in the enemy’s laager
- with wings clipped, no gun, and a sinking stomach is so untoward a
- thing that a man who suffers it may well question the reason of his
- birth and entertain hopes that the world is about to end.
-
- Six of us sat in the dusky light of a tent in a Boer laager near
- Brandfort, and our own mothers could not have comforted us. It wasn’t
- as if we had had a bellyful of fighting, like others who had begun the
- campaign in Cape Colony, or as if after a tremendous struggle we had
- been overpowered. Without practically a chance to retaliate, we had
- been deluged with bullets that went by in such numbers you could hear
- them rattle against each other in their flight. Then instead of the
- bullets came the Boers, and we were prisoners—hands up, pockets empty,
- hopes vanished!—this in our first fight!
-
- When night had fallen, the sentries—there were two of them, with
- loaded rifles and revolvers—passed us in a big kettle in which had
- been boiled water and, they said, coffee.
-
- One of us sadly asked if they had put in sugar as well, and on
- receiving a reply in the affirmative, murmured, ‘What good hot water!’
- Then we munched away at rusks, of which light and tasteless provender
- they chucked us in a quantity in the bottom of a sack, and I wondered
- if the nourishment contained therein would compensate for the energy
- expended in chewing them. I know I registered a mental vow never to
- feed my horses on bran alone if ever I got back to India. A few of us
- had pipes, and there was no difficulty about Boer tobacco; but here,
- again, one was reminded of bran, for although the colour was not quite
- the same the taste was nearly identical with what I imagine bran would
- give if smoked. As it grew late the cold increased, and by 9 o’clock
- we were shivering. Those of us who had managed to retain their
- greatcoats were not so badly off, but others, who had nothing but thin
- khaki tunics, suffered considerably. On representing matters to the
- sentries, they procured for us a few blankets and empty sacks, and,
- huddled together, each man endeavoured to sleep to the chatter of his
- neighbour’s teeth.
-
- The laager next morning showed signs of great activity. A large patrol
- was about to start in the direction of the British lines, and the two
- hundred or so composing this body shook hands, every man of them, with
- half a dozen of their comrades, who, it afterwards turned out, were to
- form our escort to Pretoria. According to our preconceived ideas of
- how troops should move out of camp the behaviour of the Boers seemed
- absurd. No word of command appeared to be given, but in a moment the
- aspect of the camp that had been full of men lolling about, talking
- and skylarking, was changed. Horses were saddled, bridled, and mounted
- in a matter of seconds, the ceremony of hand-shaking gone through, and
- in less than five minutes from the first impulse which set them
- getting ready the patrol had disappeared over the skyline. Some were
- trotting, some cantering, and there was no attempt at formation; but
- none the less their method, or want of it, was effective, and one
- could not help being impressed with the individual independence of
- each man, combined, as it was, with complete unanimity of object in
- the whole body.
-
- Our turn came next, and we made our little preparations to start.
- These consisted mostly of buttoning up, and, indeed, there was a
- charming sense of irresponsibility in having no arrangements to make,
- no packing to do, no _hookums_[10] to give. For our conveyance was
- prepared a buck-waggon, with the appearance of which the illustrated
- papers have made all the world familiar. Twelve mules were stuck in
- front, the driver cracked his whip, and the caravan was ready. Down
- the centre of the waggon, on a mattress, and propped about with
- rolled-up blankets, was placed the wounded Victorian. The rest of us
- sat round, with our legs dangling over the side. A Kaffir held the
- reins from a raised seat in front, and two Boers sat alongside of him
- with loaded rifles on their knees. But they had their backs to the
- mules and the points of their guns towards poor us. At the tail end of
- the waggon sat two more Boers, also armed. A fifth Boer, unarmed,
- barring a whip as long as Chowringhi, marched alongside to curse the
- mules and pick holes in their hides when the cursing failed.
-
- As we stood ready the Boers near shook hands all round with us, hoped
- the war would soon be over and we be back in our ain countrees and
- themselves restored to the bosoms of their families. We moved off with
- a jolt that made the poor Victorian groan, and they shouted good-byes
- after us and congratulations that we were going to that wonderful
- place Pretoria. Soon a rising hid the laager, and around we could see
- nothing but veldt—not a tree, not a house, not a Boer. And now, we
- thought, is our chance. We only had to lay hold of our guards by the
- throats, wrest their rifles away, and so turn the tables completely—a
- poor return for their hearty kindness, but then we did not cherish the
- same feelings for Pretoria that they did. These ideas of escape were
- rippling round cheerfully but guardedly, when our hopes flopped to the
- ground, for over the skyline came cantering a couple of Boers, and we
- soon found their business was to trot behind. We might easily
- overpower the guards in the waggon; but what profit would there be in
- that if one mounted man galloped for assistance while the other kept
- watch on our movements? Without the mounted men we might have bagged
- our guards and got clear away, as no warning of our escape could then
- have reached the Boer lines for at least twenty-four hours. But it was
- not to be, and we resigned ourselves to the inevitable.
-
- When there’s nothing to see, almost as much to eat, and the Devil’s
- own pother to think about, travelling is wearisome. Add to these
- conditions a place to sit upon as hard as the heart of Pharaoh and the
- ever-present gun to keep you on it, and travelling becomes well-nigh
- unendurable.
-
- If it wasn’t for the antics of Brother Boer we should have succumbed
- to jaundice, occasioned by nausea of the situation, or some other fell
- disease. But the Boer brother, to beguile the tedium of the way,
- showed us a thing or two in bullying, in quarrelling, and in
- shooting—the last named, to our disappointment, not being a
- consequence of the first two. Hanging on to a projection of our waggon
- was an attendant to look after the mules, a Kaffir boy about fifteen
- years old. His face was unadorned with beard, whisker, or moustache.
- One of the Boers snatched the boy’s cap from him, held him tight by
- the scruff of the neck, and then chucked the cap into the road.
- Meanwhile the waggon proceeded, and soon the cap was a dim speck half
- a mile behind. Then the owner of the cap was loosed off, and away he
- sped back to his lost property. When he reached it we were a clear
- mile away. Thereupon the Boers waxed mighty cheerful, and the
- waggoner, loudly chuckling, whipped up his mules into a fast trot, the
- little nigger running like a good ’un far in the rear. The going was
- too bad for continuous trotting, so in two or three miles the boy had
- overhauled us, and, though very blown, he showed his teeth with
- pleasure at catching us, apparently bearing no malice for the trick
- that had been played on him. But his troubles were not over. As he
- laid hold of the waggon to jump on, a great Boer hand was sprawled in
- his face and he went down on the road like a thousand of bricks at the
- unexpected assault. Loud guffaws from the brethren greeted this
- performance. It was repeated again and again till the poor devil was
- hopelessly beaten, and unable to continue the game. Then, when allowed
- to hang on again, he had to put up with brutal horseplay. His ears
- were pulled, his face contorted into extraordinary shapes, and tufts
- of wool, bleeding, jerked out of his head. At this point we deemed it
- our business to interfere, and, appealing to the man who appeared to
- be in command of our guard, and who spoke English well, we asked if it
- was usual for the Boers to treat Kaffirs in this way. And if so, we
- told him, it was high time every Boer in South Africa was shut up in
- St. Helena. This touched him up, and he ordered the two bullies to
- drop it. Then ensued a pretty quarrel. Some of us felt sure there were
- Hindustani words used—and dreadful they sounded in Dutch mouths. We
- fondly hoped there would be shooting, or at least fisticuffs. But the
- Boer is like the Bengali—a leviathan in words and a mouse in deeds.
- Behind a stone his heart is like that which protects him, and in the
- open his heart becomes just like the atmosphere which affords him no
- protection.
-
- When cheerfulness was more or less restored somebody espied a herd of
- buck about a mile away. The keen sight of the Boers is astonishing,
- and the way they detected the movements of the buck at that distance
- was a revelation. Some of us could see nothing at all, but the keenest
- thought they could spot a little bit of colour which the Boers said
- was a herd of about twenty buck. In a minute three of them were
- blazing away with their Mausers, but the herd cleared without
- casualty. Throughout the rest of the way the Boers blazed away without
- intermission at anything and everything that suggested itself as a
- target. There certainly was no idea among them then that it would be
- well to husband ammunition. I see by the papers that their commandants
- are said to be exhorting the Boers now in the field to save their
- cartridges for officers, and not to waste any on the Tommies, but at
- the date of which I am writing they behaved as if their supply of
- ammunition was inexhaustible.
-
- About midday a halt was called, the niggers did something to the
- harness, which dropped on the ground, and the mules, freed, were
- quickly up to their knees in an adjacent dam, and soon after that
- busily engaged with the veldt grass. Only once a day were they
- supposed to get a feed of corn, and from all we could hear that day
- only came round about once a week. In the meantime the Boers had
- fished out an empty wine case, smashed it up, lighted a fire, and
- placed a great kettle on top. While that was boiling the carcass of a
- sheep was produced from a sack, and all and sundry hacked a piece off.
- When the kettle had boiled and the coffee was made, the fire was
- heaped up afresh with wood, and every man had his bit of meat on the
- end of a stick, held it in the flames, where it fizzled and cracked
- and spurted as merrily as any steak on a grill in London town. There
- was a dish of salt to dip into when you judged the cooking complete.
- Our rusk sack was still partially filled, and wasn’t the dam full of
- water within a few yards of us? ‘What more could the —— Englishman
- want?’ said Brother Boer, as he lapped up all the coffee! In the
- newspapers the Boer is made to speak of the _verdomde rooinek_, but my
- experience of the Boer is that he prefers Tommy’s pet adjective before
- all others.
-
- Our rustic repast over, the Kaffirs began to collect the mules. This
- they did not by running round them, but by sitting still and emitting
- sounds into the tenor of which God forbid that any civilised human
- being should inquire. Sufficient to say that they were weird enough to
- ‘kid’ the mules into leaving their feed and travelling half a mile to
- the waggon, there to be yoked again in slavery. Thereafter our journey
- was uneventful until we struck the railway, where we fondly hoped to
- find a train. But the advance of the British from Bloemfontein had
- begun, and the Boers, to prevent a sudden descent on the railway
- within their own lines, had taken the precaution of blowing up every
- bridge and culvert for many miles inside their own outposts. So we had
- to traverse six more weary miles, witnessing for diversion the
- destruction that dynamite can bring upon the handiwork of man. Great
- iron bridges broken and tossed aside, huge embankments shattered,
- railway stations annihilated. Cruel signs, but the inevitable
- consequences of war. At dark we reached Smaldeel, a little station
- sixty miles north of Bloemfontein, and at that time the southernmost
- depôt of the Boer forces on the railway. Three days later the British
- were in possession of Smaldeel and fired on the last Boer train
- steaming out of the station. But knowing that afterwards did not
- comfort us a bit when they locked us up that night.
-
- Smaldeel is not an attractive place. We were dumped down in the most
- unattractive part of it! Imagine a four-roomed house built of wood and
- corrugated iron, one window per room and each one of them nailed down,
- as it had been for a long time. Imagine in one of these rooms Boer
- lumber—old clothes, empties, forgotten bedding; remember the boarded
- window, call for a glass of brandy, and think with sympathy of us poor
- sinners condemned to such a place for a livelong night.
-
- What a ghastly night it was! They passed us in a small kettleful of
- coffee that ran to about half a mug per man. We were dreadfully
- thirsty, but the only water was a single water-bottleful between the
- crowd of us—they said there was no more available. For solids we had
- the remains of the rusks. On this slender nourishment we had to recoup
- our jaded bodies and revive our flagging spirits. Needless to say, in
- the morning we looked and felt but sorry representatives of Queen and
- country. At daylight we were cleared out of that room, the taste of
- which will remain with me until the day I die. The effect on us of the
- cold clean air outside was indescribable. We blew ourselves out with
- it like pouter pigeons, and nearly dropped down from shock to the
- system. We breathed the good air till we forgot to be hungry, thirsty,
- or even ashamed of our lamentable plight. The surging of it through
- our corrupted lungs was better than—but that would be departing from
- the plain unvarnished style with which the soldier man is allowed to
- embellish his narrative in lieu of literary grace.
-
- We were popped into a waiting train the carriages of which for
- narrowness and hardness were like coffins without the compensating
- immunity from pain and trouble so characteristic of the ordinary
- coffin. That we might fit in easily they gave us nothing to eat or
- drink, and when the train started we rattled about our compartment
- like dried peas in a drum. To see us off the station was crowded with
- all sorts and conditions of the human race. It was astonishing to
- realise that the throat of man was so constituted that it could be
- used to emit sounds which were nothing like anything we had ever heard
- before. I heard a hundred High Court chaprassies hold the concert in
- which their champion sang a solo in so raucous a voice that it caused
- the great crack which now ornaments the Calcutta High Court building.
- But it was nothing to Smaldeel station! Take a Boer who has lived on
- the high veldt of the Transvaal with his next-door neighbour four
- miles off, and bring him into a space where his conversation has to
- carry for feet instead of miles, and you are overwhelmed by his voice.
-
- Three hundred of that sort endeavoured to hold converse with us,
- wanting to know where we had come from, why we had come, and what we
- thought of our chances in the hereafter—no Boer thinks anybody who has
- taken up arms against the Lord’s anointed people has a million-to-one
- chance of salvation. We told them as much as we could, some of it with
- regard to the truth, but mostly without. They plainly said we were
- liars when we informed them we came from India. They knew all about
- Indian coolies, so weren’t to be taken in. They were of opinion that
- several of us who were clean-shaven were mere children, and deplored
- the sinfulness of a Government that could send such lambs to the
- slaughter. The clean-shaven ones cordially concurred, and ventured to
- hope the Boer Government would do the right thing and ship the little
- pets straight away to their mammas. That was another story, said
- they—one that Oom Paul would know how to deal equitably with.
- Pretoria! Pretoria! It was always Pretoria, as if that ghastly little
- village was the hub of the universe.
-
- I may be allowed here to point out that the Dutch pronunciation of the
- name of the late President of the Transvaal differs slightly from that
- commonly used in India. Of course, our Indian way is the soundest, but
- it may give this feeble narrative a touch of realism to have included
- the fact that in South Africa ‘Kruger’ is pronounced ‘Cree-yer,’ with
- the accent on the ‘Cree.’ ‘Paul’ is pronounced like ‘towel,’ with a
- ‘p’ instead of a ‘t.’ The Burgher General Botha, in his native land,
- is called ‘Beau-ta,’ both syllables of equal value and spoken rather
- quickly—like our Indian word ‘lotah,’ with which word, in fact,
- ‘Botha’ rhymes. Many other words appertaining to South Africa are
- pronounced not at all in the way that we have accepted as fit and
- proper. Swears, however, find Boer and Briton unanimous both in
- pronunciation and frequency of use.
-
- When we had left the babel of Smaldeel far behind we settled down to a
- critical examination of the country we were spinning through. We had
- to occupy ourselves with a subject of absorbing interest so as to
- divert our minds from dwelling on the vacuity of that part of our
- anatomies which it is not considered polite to mention out of a church
- or a nursery. But in the matter of country—we found it consoling to
- see nothing but rolling downs with never a kopje in sight, right or
- left, nearly all the way through the northern part of the Free State.
- Surely Bobs and his army would waltz along such easy going and
- speedily rescue us from the clutches of the wicked Boer! So far as
- Kroonstad there was nothing to stop the British. There a river forming
- a deep spruit meandered by, and would certainly give trouble were our
- troops to confine themselves to a frontal attack. But by this time the
- uses of flanking movements had been thoroughly grasped by our army,
- and it could only be a question of a day or two for our fellows to
- slip up on either side and squeeze the enemy out.
-
- Steaming into Kroonstad it was comforting to think what a favourable
- country the British army would have to operate in, but the feeling was
- as naught compared with that aroused in us when we heard we were to be
- fed at Kroonstad. Psychologists evolve wonderful things from the mind
- of the intellectual man. But let them starve him. Then see how his
- inner consciousness changes its base of operations. Thoughts emanating
- from the brain lack the vigour and inventiveness of those prompted by
- the working of the more humble organ. The war in South Africa proves
- this conclusively. Wherever our troops and Generals have been well fed
- the tendency has been to make a mull of things. But they have never
- been starved without doing grand work: _vide_ the defence of
- Ladysmith, the relief of Kimberley, the brilliant marches of Lord
- Roberts’s army, where for days on end whole divisions had nothing but
- a biscuit or two to crunch per man.
-
- We rushed into Kroonstad station with the familiar feeling of dashing
- importance that everybody knows about who travels by rail. We pulled
- up with the old jerk, only more so, that we so joyously used to
- anticipate when children. We sniffed the refreshment-room, caught a
- glimpse of the coloured papers in the bookstall, and everything seemed
- just the same as in old England—as if we were only waking up to
- pleasant reality after a horrid dream. But when we tried to get out
- the grimness of the truth was brought home to us: loaded rifles barred
- our way.
-
- However, the grub came, and our sorrows were forgotten in the pleasure
- of exercising our fast stiffening jaws. It was great sandwiches of
- bully beef, no butter, no trimmings, but mighty good, and bowls of
- steaming coffee. There was a fair whack for each man, and none of us
- thought of giving half to the poor or saving up any for a rainy day.
- Every man ate up all he got and never emitted a sound, other than that
- of mastication, until the grunt of interrogation which denoted
- finished, and was there any more? There wasn’t, and we got no more
- that day, barring what we bought and paid for at extortionate rates.
-
- At any game in the world the Briton can beat the Boer if the
- conditions are such that the Briton has any chance at all. This may
- seem a reckless statement in view of the fact that 16,000 Boers are
- still holding the field against ten times their number. But I make it
- with a knowledge of the circumstances, and am willing to demonstrate
- the truth of my statement to any unbeliever who has the pluck to call
- on me expressing his doubt. At any rate, by night time, when we
- crossed the Vaal River and had reached Vereeniging, the first station
- in the Transvaal, we had so ‘kidded’ our guards into a belief in our
- desire to reach Pretoria that they trusted us on to the platform, from
- which we gravitated into the refreshment-bar with a celerity that
- would have astonished Sir Isaac Newton. We found it crowded with
- people who didn’t seem to think we were particularly remarkable—at any
- rate, they did not offer us drinks: these we had to pay for at the
- rate of 2_s._ a peg—cheap enough, considering everything. Hard-boiled
- eggs 6_d._ each, sandwiches 1_s._, cigars none under 1_s._ The
- last-named we could not run to, so set about looking for pipes and
- ’bacca. Boer tobacco is sold in glazed paper bags, about the size of
- 14 lb. of sugar, for 1_s._ a time. You can use it either for smoking
- or as bedding for horses and cattle—they won’t eat it. Pipes like
- those you get at home for 4½_d._ were half a crown, so there is no
- need to dissert on the fiscal methods of the Boer: there’s no free
- trade about him. He represents McKinley at about two stone in the
- matter of Protection. I coveted a pipe for 3_s._ 6_d._ and told the
- barman I was very sorry I only had 2_s._ 6_d._, and wouldn’t he give
- it to a poor broken-hearted prisoner at a reduction? It was true about
- the 2_s._ 6_d._, for I was afraid to produce a sovereign lest some of
- them should take a fancy to it, as they had done to so many of our
- little valuables. The beast said he’d see me damned first, and I
- called him something in Hindustani which attracted more attention than
- I liked, when I felt a hand twitching my tunic and saw a little Jew
- man winking portentously. I put my hand down, and he slipped a coin
- into it—a shilling it was, to enable me buy the pipe. This is one of
- the few sporting things I have seen done in the Transvaal, and it was
- not a Boer who did it. I don’t think Boers understand sport. They
- never do anything until they have got six to four the best of their
- neighbour. Every Boer who plays billiards carries a bit of soap, and
- the few that are not afraid to play football are adepts at tripping.
- They have stopped playing cards entirely, for they invariably found
- after a few hands were dealt in a game that nothing but the rags of
- the pack remained to be played with, all the good cards having gone up
- the sleeves of the players.
-
- However, I bought the pipe, and refunded the kindly little Jew his
- bob. Leaving the bar, I passed a little bunch of Boers who had rather
- enjoyed my rebuff at the hands of the barman.
-
- I gravely congratulated the Boers on their brother behind the bar, and
- asked if they had many other Boers as good looking. Discretion may
- sometimes be a branch of valour, but there was very little valour
- about the discretion I exercised when I left that refreshment-bar.
-
- The rest of the night in the train was tedious and uncomfortable to a
- degree, and cold beyond words. At 3 or 4 in the morning we landed at
- Pretoria, and our guards, all South African Republic Police—the hated
- Z.A.R.P.—belonging to Pretoria, instead of leaving us in the train
- until daylight, hauled us out and marched us off. After a mile or so
- we came to a building. We entered by a gate, and found ourselves in a
- courtyard with high walls. We were there delivered over to another lot
- of ruffians, the first lot clearing off to their homes in high
- jubilation at the prospect of rejoining wives and families after many
- months in the field. They had not been unkind to us on the whole, and
- we found them simple enough, but imbued with considerable contempt of
- the Britisher and an unchangeable belief in the ultimate success of
- their own cause.
-
- Sitting on the cold stone pavement of the courtyard, chewing the cud
- of our misfortunes, we waited for the only friend we’d got—the sun.
- Meanwhile strange sounds came from the high walls surrounding us—heavy
- sighs, deep gruntings, weird moanings, harsh cries, and loud beatings.
- We wondered what manner of place we were in. Daylight revealed the
- truth. We were in the Pretoria Gaol, and all around us were the drunks
- and incapables, the vagrants and vagabonds, black and white, that had
- been scraped out of the gutter the night before. Mostly they were
- Kaffir women—huge, unwieldy, hideously ugly creatures, reminding one
- of those depicted by Hogarth in his scenes of low life in London
- nearly two centuries ago. When the sun rose the doors of the cells
- were opened and we saw strange sights. The gaoler prodded the sulky
- ones with a long stick and made them come out.
-
- Standing about in the fresh morning light, dirty, frowzled, altogether
- abominable to look at, they seemed a blot on creation, and the
- knowledge of their mere existence hung heavily on one’s mind. It was
- not a pleasant awakening to the splendours of the Boer capital.
-
- For about the tenth time we gave in our full names, and all we could
- think of in the way of description, down to red hair, for which the
- Boer has a peculiar regard. A Boer with red hair can be a Mormon a
- dozen times. Nearly all their clergymen have red hair. In among the
- drunks and incapables we found one cell containing representatives of
- the British Army, lately free fighting men, but now confined against
- their own wishes. One of these, to my astonishment—for his appearance
- did not suggest the soldier in the very least—addressed me by name,
- and I recognised in him a saddler sergeant who had built me a very
- excellent saddle some years before, when his regiment, the 18th
- Hussars, was in India. He and a pal had been taken prisoners at the
- very beginning of the war in Natal, and so had done six months in
- durance vile. They had been so bored with their experiences that they
- had escaped and endeavoured to get to Portuguese territory, but
- unluckily the ubiquitous Boer had been too many for them, and they
- were now being restored to their _status quo ante_, as political
- paragraphists describe it. Another was a Yeoman lad from county Notts,
- with a very much worn pair of boots to his feet, and it showed fine
- public spirit in him that he seemed to deplore this fact more than his
- being made prisoner.
-
- In the corner of the courtyard was a tap, and we all did a bit of
- washing. The absence of silver-topped scent-bottles, ebony
- hair-brushes, Pears’ soap, &c., was rather a drawback, but it did not
- prevent us creating at least a zone of cleanliness. We were then
- paraded, and in as martial array as was possible, without guns or
- swords and incommoded with blankets and empty sacks, we marched forth
- with a loud cheer. To be a prisoner of war was a fate that might
- overcome the best soldier that ever stepped, but to be herded with
- police mud-scrapings injured the dignity of every one of us.
-
- Half-an-hour’s walk past cottages, bakers’ shops, where smiling
- lassies stood at doorways, and all the signs of a little country town
- at home, we came to a great enclosed space at one corner of which was
- inscribed the legend ‘Polo Ground.’ We immediately began arguing about
- who was to play in the first chukker, and whether we’d have a
- ten-minute chukker, with a change of pony half-time, or chukkers of
- six minutes straight away. Two known cracks were agreed upon, and
- they, to save unseemly fighting, picked up sides. Then each side began
- backing itself for large sums (on the nod), while the unselected ones
- scoffed and offered 5 to 4 against either team. Needless to say, while
- diverting ourselves in this manner we were girt about by armed
- horsemen, who conducted themselves with much dignity and secret
- spurrings, especially when passing where comely lassies stood at the
- doors. In this respect I have observed the Boer does not differ from
- the Briton, nor has he any scruples about endeavouring to attract the
- admiration of another Boer’s girl as well as his own. Marching along
- one side of the enclosure, we came to a great entrance, and realised
- of a sudden that we had arrived at the racecourse, rendered classic by
- the experiences of our imprisoned troops within its gates. We entered
- and found all the offices so familiar to racegoers—grand stand,
- paddock, weighing-room, jockeys’ room, horse-boxes—but no equine
- wonders. It filled our hearts with sorrow to see such waste—not even a
- booky to trill forth the odds.
-
- But there was a desolation over the scene very different from the stir
- and bustle of a racecourse. Our troops had been penned up in a
- barbed-wire enclosure that included the paddock, stands, and a bit of
- the course itself. Most of the buildings had been utilised as
- hospitals, and where or how the poor devils who hadn’t enteric or
- dysentery or pleurisy or rheumatic fever existed, Heaven alone knows.
- The N.C.O.s had the privilege of sleeping on the steps of the grand
- stand, and I suppose the others had to be content with the ground.
- Very quickly the accommodation at the racecourse had become
- inadequate, and the camp at Waterval was established, leaving only a
- hospital and a staff of orderlies. The result was a most woebegone
- place, littered with empty tins, rags, paper, and refuse of all sorts.
- We elected to occupy a row of horse-boxes facing the paddock. I’m sure
- no owner of racehorses would have allowed any of his string to enter
- these boxes, but we were only too glad to find a place wherein to lay
- our heads. After a long delay they brought us rations of sorts—the
- potatoes, I remember well, being little round things about the size of
- marbles and everyone gaily sprouting. For the rest we had ½ lb. of
- meat and a loaf of bread apiece, plenty of cold water, and the
- consolation of being told we had a great deal to be thankful for.
- While our troops had been confined at the racecourse some of the
- residents of Pretoria had been exceedingly kind in supplying them with
- what, to them, were great luxuries to help out the meagre fare allowed
- by the Boer Government. A much-appreciated but sticky delicacy was a
- considerable supply of golden syrup. In one little hut occupied by a
- mess of sergeants, twelve men used to sleep every night, packed as
- close as herrings. The morning following the day on which they had
- received their share of the golden syrup they found themselves all
- stuck together, and had to rise up in one piece like a row of toy
- soldiers.
-
-Lieutenant Crane was taken off to the newly formed camp for prisoners on
-a barren hillside north of Pretoria, where nearly all officers had been
-confined within triple fences of barbed wire since their removal from
-the Model School. Non-commissioned officers and troopers of Lumsden’s
-Horse had to share the fate of other captive soldiers at Waterval on the
-high veldt outside the Magaliesberg, but luckily they were not among the
-number hurried away by retreating Boer commandos to distant Nooitgedacht
-when our troops entered Pretoria. At Waterval the daily rations were
-scanty enough, though luxurious by comparison with the meagre fare
-served out at a later date to prisoners in that place away eastwards
-with a name that bespeaks desolation. And by the kindness of the
-American Consul, Sergeant D.S. Fraser was able to obtain funds from
-India for himself and his fellow-sufferers. This enabled them to
-supplement the rough rations issued to them during their imprisonment at
-Waterval. To cover the advances made for this purpose Colonel Lumsden
-authorised a grant of 5_l._ each to the prisoners, being at the rate of
-1_l._ per man per week for the period of their captivity. Thus the value
-of such a fund as had been raised in Calcutta before the corps left was
-demonstrated in an unforeseen way. By means of it Colonel Lumsden had
-been able to start with a treasure-chest of 1,000_l._ and a sufficient
-credit in the Standard Bank of South Africa to meet all emergencies.
-
-[Illustration: WATERVAL PRISON, NEAR PRETORIA]
-
-Of the uneventful dulness of their life in the prisoners’ camp, where
-few visitors ever came, and none whose presence could be considered very
-cheerful, we may judge by the fact that hardly anything has been written
-about it. The poor fellows who had neither money nor friends to procure
-it for them must have fared ill indeed on nothing but Government rations
-issued according to the following scale, which cannot be impugned,
-seeing that the Editor found it written in choicest official Dutch among
-other documents at Pretoria bearing the seal of the Z.A.R. On this scale
-the officers were to receive 1 lb. of meat and an undefined ration of
-meal, rice, or peas, per head per day, with a weekly allowance of
-groceries amounting to 2 oz. of coffee, 2 oz. of tea, and one candle per
-head. In practice the meat ration dwindled down at times to as little as
-1½ lb. a week for each officer, and the meal, rice, or peas being _à
-discrétion_, not of the consumer but of the burgher in charge, were
-occasionally off the bill of fare altogether. The rank-and-file were
-each to receive 7 lb. of flour, 3 lb. of meal, 3 lb. of rice, 3 lb. of
-dried French beans, 21 oz. of sugar, 2 oz. of salt, 3½ oz. of raw coffee
-beans, and 2 lbs. of meat _per week_, and had to see that they got it,
-as the Boers, being rather short of luxuries themselves, claimed the
-right to make reductions frequently on the plea that there had been an
-excessive issue for some previous day. Actually at one time the
-prisoners at Nooitgedacht, to whom the same scale applied, did not
-receive more than an average of 3 lb. of flour and ½ lb. of meat per
-head per week, and the beans, which formed their only vegetable diet,
-were useless. The captives among whom a few of Lumsden’s Horse found
-their lot cast at Waterval were not so badly off as that, but still
-there was so much monotony, both in food and in the featureless routine
-of daily life, that they must have been very glad to hear the booming of
-British guns outside Pretoria and to know that the hour of their
-deliverance from bondage was at hand. A few days after the entry of our
-troops into the capital, Colonel Lumsden had the gratification of
-writing:
-
- Lieutenant Crane’s many friends in India will be pleased to hear that
- he is once more with us and in command of his section, looking stout
- and well, none the worse for his wound or his enforced stay in
- Pretoria.
-
- Sergeant Fraser, Corporal Angus McGillivray, Privates R.N. Macdonald,
- Peterson and Leslie Williams are also back with us, all looking fit
- and strong.
-
- Lance-Corporal Firth is at present employed in the Financial Adviser’s
- office in Pretoria, and has made himself so useful that I cannot
- persuade General Maxwell, the Military Governor, to dispense with his
- services.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XI
- _TOWARDS PRETORIA—LUMSDEN’S HORSE SCOUTING AHEAD
- OF THE ARMY FROM BLOEMFONTEIN TO THE VAAL RIVER_
-
-
-Lord Roberts was so well satisfied with the results achieved by General
-Ian Hamilton’s division and the other columns operating south of Thaba
-’Nchu on May 1 that he regarded all the strategical points in that
-direction as being securely held, and was therefore no longer anxious
-for the safety of the railway, on which future supplies for his army
-might be dependent after the exhaustion of those already collected at
-Bloemfontein. In these circumstances he determined on an immediate
-advance the day after Hamilton had cut the Boer chain in two at Houtnek.
-He accordingly sent General Pole-Carew’s division from Bloemfontein to
-Karree Siding, where their arrival was hailed by Lumsden’s Horse as
-significant of great things to follow, seeing that General Tucker’s
-brigade had been pushed forward to occupy the ground over which Mounted
-Infantry corps fought two days earlier. General Hutton’s brigade of
-mounted troops was ten miles west of the railway at Brakpan by Doorn
-Spruit, and General Ian Hamilton’s division had advanced from Houtnek to
-Isabellafontein, out-flanking the Brandfort range of kopjes. Thus, on
-the morning of May 3 De la Rey found his position seriously menaced, and
-after-events proved that he had no intention of making a stand there
-longer than was necessary for a rearguard action, by which he might
-delay the British advance and give his own main body time to withdraw
-all heavy artillery and stores. Threatened on the left by Ian Hamilton,
-and finding his right flank in danger of being turned by Hutton’s
-Mounted Infantry, De la Rey retired, and our troops entered Brandfort
-that afternoon. The Boers, however, had fallen back to a second
-position, being neither disorganised nor beaten, but only disinclined
-for close fighting, and until dusk they continued to show such a firm
-front that the mounted troops could do little against them. Colonel
-Lumsden sums up the situation briefly by the following entry in his
-official diary:
-
- On the morning of the 3rd we left Spytfontein at daybreak with Colonel
- Henry’s brigade, and joined General Maxwell’s brigade (14th) at the
- foot of Gun Kopje, the place where Major Showers was killed. The
- Mounted Infantry, covering a front of some three miles, swept the
- country towards Brandfort, Infantry and guns following. A little
- desultory fighting occurred, driving in the enemy’s advance parties on
- to their first position, which we found at about 11 A.M. The guns and
- Infantry then came up and cleared the position in about an hour.
- During the action we were exposed to a good deal of shell fire, which
- fortunately did no harm, owing to the ground being soft and the shells
- burying themselves before bursting, if they burst at all.
-
- At 12 the advance was made on their second and main position, about
- two miles off, and lying some five miles north-east of Brandfort. The
- enemy offered little resistance, confining themselves chiefly to
- long-range artillery fire. When the position was practically taken the
- Mounted Infantry were sent away to the right flank to make a wide
- turning movement with a view to cutting off the retreat of ‘Long Tom,’
- who, however, catching them on a wide open plain, forced them to
- dismount for the attack. The dismounted men advanced some two miles in
- his direction, but dusk setting in it became evident that it was
- impossible to reach that position with daylight, and we were ordered
- to rejoin our horses and return to camp. This we reached about 8 P.M.,
- having been in the saddle fifteen hours and covered quite forty miles.
- There had been no time during the day to feed the horses, which
- consequently felt the work very much. Our casualties were nil; but ten
- horses died from exhaustion.
-
-To troopers in the ranks, however, it seemed a much more serious affair,
-as well it might, for on them fell the burden of an advance that tried
-their powers of endurance if it did not put a very severe strain on
-their nerves. One of them, writing rather for his own gratification than
-with the idea of helping to make history, gives a graphic picture of the
-movement out of camp in the darkest hour before dawn to join other
-troops, and then trot on through the ‘pitch blackness’ over ground on
-which stones seemed to have cropped up suddenly where no stones had been
-before, so that horses stumbled at every stride. Then, as it grew
-lighter, they saw that a whole army was with them, extending along a
-front that stretched for miles. Lumsden’s Horse halted under a hill near
-Ospruit, and British guns opened fire from its crest. At this point the
-trooper’s hasty notes become ruggedly picturesque as he describes the
-sequence of events:
-
- The Boer artillery replied, and it became rather a hot corner. Shells
- burst all round us and over our heads. We were retired and lay down.
- Then moved to the right, gave over our horses to the even numbers, and
- moved forward on foot, extending to some ten paces apart. So we
- advanced, sometimes mounted, sometimes on foot—always extended. Then
- lay down, then advanced again, and lay down—all in long parallel
- lines, Lumsden’s Horse being on the extreme right, or nearly so. The
- Infantry marched in beautifully regular and even straight lines,
- apparently quite indifferent to the Boer guns that now opened on them
- and made good shooting too. The shell fell all amongst those Infantry,
- but when the dust cleared nobody seemed to be down, and the line went
- on unmoved. Then some shells came in our direction, but either fell
- short or whistled over our heads doing no harm; yet we were retired a
- bit. Then a pom-pom of ours came into action and silenced the Boer
- guns. This was all straight ahead. Meanwhile a gun opened across our
- front at some Boers, whom we could see plainly retreating on the
- right. They replied until the pom-poms behind us opened on them. Then
- they bolted and were chased by some Mounted Infantry who came up on
- our flank. Again we advanced on foot and got near the big kopje. Then
- Colonel Lumsden rode up, called for the horses, and ordered us to
- advance and join other corps of the 8th Mounted Infantry in a flank
- attack. Off we went at a trot, and then, extending to intervals of ten
- paces, advanced towards the kopje in front of us at a walk, but still
- mounted. Suddenly there was a bang, and a few seconds later a shell
- burst dead on for our centre, but some 200 yards short. After a brief
- pause a second shell burst 100 yards nearer, and then another, the
- fragments of which kicked up the dust all round us. This we discovered
- was what Cavalry called ‘being out to draw fire.’ Still we advanced.
- Bang went the gun again, and there was a cloud of dust followed by a
- tremendous report not twenty yards from Clifford, Cayley, and me. Iron
- whizzed over our heads, but nobody was hit. Our horses plunged and
- wheeled round, and, seeing everyone was off, we did not stop either.
- Halted and dismounted at a farmhouse lower down near a stream, where
- the company assembled. Then handed over our horses, and, advancing
- again, with lots of others on foot, trudged a weary two miles, when a
- Boer Maxim opened on us; but though the bullets swept ground between
- the front line and ourselves, they did no harm. When darkness began to
- fall the order came for us to retire, and, our horses being brought
- up, we rode back over dykes and sluits and boggy places in the pitch
- black. Nobody knew the way, but, seeing lights on our right, we made
- for them, and got into camp about 7 o’clock. Not a bad day’s work,
- having started at 3 A.M. with nothing whatever in the way of food to
- start on. Tied our nags up. Everybody too tired to boil a kettle, or
- even light a fire. Ate half a biscuit and some bully-beef and turned
- in. The left half-company having come back to camp comparatively
- early, got into a hen-roost and made great store of fowls, turkeys,
- and ducks. Heard that two foreign officers had been taken—one German
- and one Russian—who said it was useless going on, as the Boers would
- not stand and would not fight. So ended the Battle of Brandfort.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- BRINGING HALF RATIONS UP TO NORMAL
- (_From a sketch by J.S. Cowen_)
-]
-
-Colonel Lumsden takes up the narrative at this point in an official
-report to the executive committee, and without attempting to describe
-the general operations he gives a clear outline of events in which his
-corps took a prominent part, leaving details to be filled in by troopers
-according to their various views, and they give some realistic sketches,
-not only of the actions but also of the men under fire. In Colonel
-Lumsden’s epitome of a day when the troops were supposed to rest and
-gain fresh vigour for a forward movement, there is a meaning that could
-not have been better expressed than it is in this short sentence:
-
- On the 4th we halted, with no food for horses and only biscuit for the
- men.
-
- On the 5th, when the enemy were driven from a strong position on the
- banks of Vet River, we had a long dragging day, most of the march
- being done on foot to ease our tired horses, and with little hope of
- finding any enemy in front of us, though away on our flank the
- artillery on both sides were hotly engaged. At about 2 P.M. we
- suddenly got the order to change direction to the left and head for
- Vet railway station, which the enemy held in force. We crossed the Vet
- river, where Boer commandos had been making a stubborn stand, and soon
- found ourselves among our Infantry. Shortly afterwards our guns opened
- fire and our Infantry came into action, while the Mounted Infantry
- were sent round by our right—northwards—to intercept, if possible, the
- retreating enemy. It was a race for the same drift again among the
- Mounted Infantry, and we got there first. Crossing the river, we were
- told to push forward as fast as possible and seize a kopje two miles
- off which commanded a somewhat deep valley on the left, up which the
- enemy were retiring. As it was supposed to be a race between us and
- the enemy for the kopje, we had not the time to make a thorough
- reconnaissance before approaching, with the result that our scouts
- arrived at the kopje only some 600 to 700 yards before us, and the
- enemy had a charge at us at 800 yards. We immediately opened out and
- took cover behind the bund of a tank fifty yards in rear, and,
- dismounting, opened fire on the kopje and silenced it. We were unable
- to stay there, as the enemy from the valley were galloping up on our
- left under the cover of the kopje, so I gave the order to my sixty men
- to mount and retire on our supports, who were now coming up a
- quarter-mile in rear. We were only just in time, for, as we were
- mounting, the Boer pom-pom treated us to a ‘belt’ the shells of which
- came fair into the middle of us.
-
- The supports now opened fire with two pom-poms and 200 men, and the
- enemy retired, leaving us free to return to camp, which we reached at
- 7 P.M.—another long day of quite thirty miles. Our casualties were
- only one scout killed when reconnoitring this kopje. This was Private
- A.K. Meares, who was shot through the heart, and whom we buried the
- following morning.
-
-One of the scouts who was with young Meares when they reconnoitred the
-kopje describes that episode with convincing directness, and
-incidentally records a very gallant action on the part of Lieutenant
-Pugh, as if it were the most commonplace occurrence. Following is his
-version of the affair given in extracts from a private letter:
-
- By 2 in the afternoon we were fairly in touch with the enemy, and an
- artillery duel commenced. After some time our fire grew too hot for
- the Boers, and they retired with their guns. We had been sent forward
- to try to turn the Boer flank, and our section, No. 4 B, was ordered
- to seize a kopje which was supposed to be unoccupied. We, of the
- advanced party, cantered up to within 250 yards of the enemy’s sangar,
- and then they opened on us, but I must say they made very bad
- shooting; we had got within 200 yards of them before turning to
- retire, and yet only one man was hit. We were all in line, about
- twelve of us, in skirmishing order, when the Boers opened fire, and
- when the order to retire reached us we went back as fast as we could.
- Meares—the man who was killed—and I were going in the same direction,
- and as his horse was dead done, and had already fallen once during the
- day, I reined up so as to get near him in case of need. I was just a
- little ahead of him and kept glancing round to see how he was doing.
- In looking after him I quite forgot my own horse, and then I don’t
- know what happened. All I know is that half an hour afterwards I found
- myself breathless, holding one of our officer’s stirrup-leathers and
- running for dear life. My horse, it seems, got into a hole and came
- down an awful crash on top of me. The others thought both the horse
- and I had been shot. Almost immediately after this Meares went down,
- shot through the heart from the back. Both our horses righted
- themselves, and galloped back to the section. I lay stunned for half
- an hour, and then, as I have told you, I staggered up to No. 2
- section, who were covering our retreat. I believe I was making
- straight for the Boer line of fire, when one of our officers shouted
- out to me and gave me his stirrup-leather to hold as I came up to him.
- I was so completely done after a short run that he got off his horse
- and gave me a lift on it. Lieutenant Pugh was the man. It was dark by
- this time, and as we had driven the Boers off we retired to our camp.
- I picked up my section again, and found my horse, who was badly cut
- about the head. My face was in a lovely condition—one eye closed, and
- my cheek, forehead, and nose one big bruise, and my head was splitting
- with pain. It was a providential escape, and if I had not fallen I
- should surely have shared Meares’s fate.
-
-[Illustration: H.J. MOORHOUSE]
-
-[Illustration:
-
- A.K. MEARES
- (KILLED IN ACTION)
-]
-
-[Illustration: W.K. MEARES]
-
-[Illustration: H.W. PUCKRIDGE]
-
-[Illustration: R.G. DAGGE]
-
-[Illustration: R.P. WILLIAMS]
-
-[Illustration: R.C. NOLAN]
-
-[Illustration: T.G. PETERSEN]
-
-[Illustration: S. DUCAT]
-
- N.C.O.S AND TROOPERS
-
-In the simple phrases of another trooper who relates with more fulness
-the circumstances in which Trooper A.K. Meares met his death there are
-some pathetic touches:
-
- We had several severe engagements, in one of which I am sorry to say
- young Meares was shot dead while his company (B) were retiring from a
- very large force of Boers with a few guns. It was altogether a sad
- affair, as his brother Willie was riding next him. Being in extended
- order, however, they were fifty yards or so apart, and Willie knew
- nothing about his brother being hit till he got into camp and found
- who was missing. It was then some men said they had seen him fall off
- his nag, but could tell no more. Willie went with a party next morning
- and found his brother dead. The bullet-wound was right over his heart.
- He was buried there. What makes it all the more pathetic is that young
- Meares was the only man hit that day, no one else getting a scratch.
-
-Though the Boers made a brave show up to the last, disputing every
-position a hold of which gave them any advantage, the resistance offered
-by them to Lumsden’s Horse was only an expiring effort. Their right
-flank had by that time been turned by other corps of Mounted Infantry,
-among whom the Colonials vied with each other for distinction, and at
-nightfall, when Australians with a machine gun had come up to relieve
-Lumsden’s Horse, the enemy retired, leaving a Maxim gun and twenty-six
-prisoners in our hands. Again, however, they had carried off all their
-heavy artillery and equipage, although General Ian Hamilton had that
-afternoon got possession of Winburg and was threatening their rear. The
-events of following days are summarised briefly by Colonel Lumsden in
-his official report:
-
- Next morning, the 6th, saw us away at daybreak back for the
- yesterday’s battlefield and towards the rising sun. We could see
- clearly how clever had been the Boer plan of attack and how nearly
- they had caught some of us. We followed up their tracks for many
- miles, halted at noon for an hour, continued scouring the country—this
- time north—and eventually headed west, arriving at dusk at our new
- camp near Smaldeel, having advanced only three and a half miles after
- marching thirty.
-
- Away at dawn on the 7th, and, heading north, tramped many a mile on
- foot, striking the railway between Vet and Winburg a few miles from
- Vet, and continuing north some distance. We halted for two or three
- hours, and then retraced our steps to a camp near the railway,
- reaching it after dusk.
-
- On the 8th our regiment did flank guard for the Infantry during a
- march of twenty miles, saw innumerable buck, and commandeered twenty
- remounts on payment.
-
-With the incident thus delicately touched upon by Colonel Lumsden an
-irresponsible trooper deals more at large in a way that enables us to
-understand the troubles by which some commanding officers were beset
-when their men, unlike Lumsden’s Horse, did not think it necessary to go
-through the formality of paying for what they took. Writing from
-Smaldeel, the trooper says:
-
- Yesterday we went fairly straight, but about two or three miles too
- far, and had to come back; but we caught a young Boer leaving his farm
- with a rifle and ammunition, and we got another at the farm. The farm
- was looted of all its live-stock. The Colonel stopped it when he came
- up, but all the poultry was taken. Our men paid for everything. Kruger
- has told all these people that their farms will be burned and all the
- women taken prisoners. I think they were rather relieved when we left.
- One woman said her husband had come back three weeks ago and died of
- wounds, and they said the Free-Staters had lost terribly. They never
- hear officially, as they keep the deaths dark, but almost every farm
- has lost at least one man. In one we passed there were three widows.
- They are rather nice people and can nearly all speak English, and are
- rather nice-looking. We have fifty-one horses sick—about half with
- pink-eye and the other half sore backs and lame—but we make it up by
- degrees. Yesterday we collected eleven and the day before about the
- same, but in the night they got away. We also brought along 200 sheep
- and some cows; the sheep we have given over to the brigade, except
- about twenty for our own use. We carry with us to-morrow two days’
- rations and four on the carts in case the transport don’t come up.
- McMinn and Francis, of my section, got lost leading sick horses.
- McMinn has attached himself to another brigade, but nothing has been
- heard of Francis.
-
-The self-restraint exercised by soldiers who left untouched the stores
-and paid for all the live-stock they took at every farm where women and
-children had been left by the retreating Boers will be appreciated by
-all who know what it is to march and fight day after day on short
-rations. Though Lumsden’s Horse laid in that store of supplies, it did
-not last them many days, as we gather from a continuation of the
-Colonel’s diary:
-
- On the 9th the usual daybreak start, our men with two days’ biscuits
- and one day’s feed for horses, but the officers with only some
- chocolate, as we relied on our mess cart being up. We were with the
- main body this day, till we neared the crossing of the Zand River at
- the Virginia Siding railway bridge, which had been blown up the day
- before, and at this point our companies were detached on each side of
- the drift to prevent a surprise. We heard General Hamilton having an
- artillery duel with the foe some miles off on our right, while on the
- left we saw the Mounted Infantry dislodging the enemy’s advance
- parties, the war balloon with Lord Roberts and Staff being near the
- drift itself. We received orders to concentrate and move away to the
- left, and on the far side of the river to join our corps—the 8th
- Mounted Infantry—on doing which we were immediately sent into action
- dismounted, firing at 1,500 yards, while the enemy’s pom-pom shells
- flew whistling over our heads as they aimed at our guns behind us. Our
- corps here got its first definite order, and that was, ‘Keep touch
- with the enemy at any cost.’ As this came from Lord Roberts direct, we
- proceeded to obey it to the letter, with the result that we were under
- shell and rifle fire for the remainder of the day. Having got well
- ahead of the rest of our brigade, in following up ‘Long Tom,’ which
- halted and fired on us at intervals, we kept running into the enemy’s
- supporting Infantry, whom we only managed to discomfit thoroughly when
- we got at them with our Maxim on the open hillside. Our losses were
- only two horses wounded. We were severely shelled several times, but
- we escaped casualties through being widely extended and also through
- the faulty bursting of the enemy’s shells. On one occasion ten shells
- burst among us within five minutes. About 3 P.M., in company with
- Colonel Ross, I went to endeavour to get some support, and brought up
- one company of Loch’s Horse, one company Tasmanians, and one company
- South Australian Rifles, afterwards meeting General Hutton with a
- battery Field Artillery, which promptly went into action on our left
- flank and shelled the Boers, who were then retiring. Unfortunately,
- our force was much too weak to attempt to follow them in the open. Had
- it not been so it was the opinion of General Hutton and Colonel Ross
- that we might have captured the whole of them—some 1,500, with a
- couple of guns. Dusk had then drawn on, and, having lost touch with
- our brigade, we marched under General Hutton’s orders to a camping
- ground seven miles off in the direction of Kroonstad, arriving about 9
- P.M., without food for men or horses, and there was no firewood within
- miles.
-
- The troopers had each little else but dry biscuit, the officers faring
- hardly any better.
-
-Another correspondent writes of this affair:
-
- We had a very pretty fight at the Zand River, and were within an ace
- of taking two of the enemy’s big guns. To begin at the beginning. We
- had marched the previous day from our camp near Smaldeel to within
- about five miles of the Zand River. On our arrival there we heard that
- the Australians and Oxfords had been having a skirmish with some Boers
- at the bridge, and had seized a train of stores, but were forced to
- retire. Starting at daybreak in the second line of Mounted Infantry,
- we got across the drift all right, and drove the Boer outposts back.
- We sat on the further side of the river for about an hour, watching
- them bring up two big guns on to a kopje about three miles off, and
- wondering when we should be shelled. Presently we were ordered off on
- a flank movement, and after trotting some miles came in touch with the
- enemy. We dismounted, and moved up a valley with good cover, the
- pom-poms following. They drove back the Boer riflemen and presently
- silenced a gun, which had been amusing itself by shelling our led
- horses, but luckily without effect. We mounted again and started for a
- two-mile gallop to get up with their gun, but it had disappeared.
- Making a flank movement round the shoulder of the position they had
- occupied, and pushing on some distance, we found them again, or rather
- they found us first. Their gun got our range beautifully, but every
- shell seemed to fall and burst between the horses. Of course we were
- widely extended. Retiring, we dismounted and then advanced on foot,
- but their rifle fire and shell fire was too hot; so again we tried to
- out-flank their position. A Company and half of B Company advanced,
- and we climbed a small kopje with a deserted Kaffir kraal on top;
- Loch’s Horse, some of the Australians, and the West Riding Mounted
- Infantry went round and took up a position further along the ridge. We
- sat there for nearly two hours under a terrific shell fire, till it
- dawned on us to move below the brow. For the first half-hour they
- landed shell after shell (40-pounders) right into the middle of us;
- luckily, very few burst properly. If they had fired shrapnel, which
- bursts in the air, or lyddite, we should all have been blown off the
- top. They then let our horses have a few shots, and killed two and
- wounded three. In the meantime urgent messages were being sent for our
- artillery, or at least the pom-poms that generally come with us, but
- unfortunately they could get nothing but a walk out of their horses,
- and the Boers quietly trekked away. We ought to have had them with the
- greatest of ease, as we were well round them on two sides and a
- brigade was moving somewhere on the third. If the Artillery had got up
- in time we could easily have moved round the fourth side. We tried to
- keep in touch with the Boers when they retired, but it soon got dark
- and we had to stop.
-
-No stirring episodes or dramatic incidents marked the army’s farther
-advance towards a stronghold which the Free State Boers had declared
-that they would defend to the last. Colonel Lumsden deals with this part
-of the operations briefly in the following notes:
-
- Dawn on the 10th saw us in the saddle again on the move for Kroonstad.
- The leading sections were constantly in touch with the enemy, and
- sometimes under heavy shell fire, from which Corporal Kirwan received
- a scalp wound not very serious. After a long and weary march we halted
- at nightfall near a farm, where we were lucky enough to get some
- Indian corn for the horses and a few sheep for the men.
-
- We made an early start on the 11th for the expected big fight at
- Kroonstad, it having been reported on the previous evening that the
- enemy were strongly posted five miles on our side of the town.
-
- We advanced for ten miles with the utmost military precaution, only to
- find that the enemy had vacated the position, leaving Kroonstad
- undefended. Lord Roberts marched in at 3 P.M., followed by the Guards
- and the rest of the Infantry, the mounted troops flanking both sides
- of the town. We occupied heights on the left, and halted there for the
- night, changing ground next morning to our present camping ground, a
- mile distant, where, with the rest of the army, we are waiting for
- supplies for horses and men, before a forward movement towards
- Pretoria can be made.
-
- The halt has been a welcome one, as our horses are fairly done, and I
- doubt if I could mount 150 men to-morrow, and a few more weeks’ work
- like that of the last would reduce the numbers to 100. We are leaving
- a dozen horses to-day as unfit to march, and shot six yesterday. Cast
- horses wander about all over the veldt and lie dead in the river or
- any other quiet place, and fatigue parties are ceaselessly at work
- burying the bodies.
-
- You can form no idea of the condition of our horses, and, but for the
- fact that we have been able to commandeer and get remounts _en route_,
- we should have half our corps dismounted. We have lost quite
- seventy-five horses already. I have stated officially that we require
- immediately seventy-five remounts more, and these we expect to get
- this afternoon. Mrs. Barrow’s ‘Molly Riley’ looks like a
- bathing-machine horse, and I fear is on her last march.
-
- The men are all very well and in good spirits, are most efficient
- cooks, and if allowed would rank high as looters; but orders against
- this are very strict, and our men pay liberally for anything in the
- shape of foodstuffs wherever procurable.
-
- The office department has been rather upset by the loss of Sergeant
- Fraser, of the Bank of Bengal, who was Paymaster and Secretary, but I
- have replaced him by Graves, of the same bank, who is working up
- arrears as quickly as possible. He is a very willing and intelligent
- young fellow, and will soon have things straight again when he gets a
- few days’ halt, but it is impossible to do much on the line of march.
-
-The troops were not all so punctilious as Lumsden’s Horse in the matter
-of prompt payment for things commandeered, and a good story was told of
-one brigade at Kroonstad, whose commander, in despair of being able to
-check irregularities, issued an order that loot was ‘not to be carried
-openly on the saddle.’ Our soldiers, however, had not then been reduced
-by hardships and scant fare to the necessity of providing for themselves
-at all costs. Some pitiful cases of unauthorised commandeering were
-reported in connection with later operations, when columns moving
-rapidly through several districts had to draw supplies from Boer farms
-and give receipts for them in lieu of cash payments. Detached parties
-driven to straits for want of food did not hesitate to adopt the means
-they had seen employed by responsible officers, but took care to leave
-no trace by which they could be identified. An officer who had to
-investigate these cases told me of one receipt given to a Boer widow. It
-ran thus: ‘Being without rations and hungry, we have taken all this poor
-woman had of live-stock and food. She asks for a receipt. I give it. God
-help her!—ALLY SLOPER.’ To the credit of British military
-administration, it must be said that this document, though irregular,
-was accepted as genuine, and duly honoured by payment in full.
-
-Lumsden’s Horse had their share of the privations that made
-commandeering a necessity, and even looting pardonable; and it is not to
-be wondered at if some among them regarded campaigning in anything but
-the roseate light that imagination had shed upon it before they left
-India. Yet, even at this time, their conduct in circumstances that tried
-the character of men individually and collectively won approval from
-such a soldier as Colonel Ward, C.B. (now Sir Edward Ward, K.C.B.,
-Permanent Under-Secretary of State for War). Singling them out on the
-line of march, he asked what regiment they were, and seemed astonished
-to learn that they were Volunteers. In a letter to the Editor he says:
-‘I was much struck with Lumsden’s Horse. They were very keen and
-excellent soldiers.’ After an exceptionally hard day one of them wrote:
-
- We were in the saddle at 5 A.M., and did not bivouac till 8 P.M., and
- were under shell fire the greater portion of the day. We had two men
- and several horses wounded; and two or three horses killed. It seemed
- to me that our task always was to find where the enemy’s guns were
- posted, as we invariably drew their fire on us. It was a fearfully
- long day, and after fighting for ten hours we had to march for five,
- and when we bivouacked we had nothing but a few dry biscuits and a
- little jam to eat, but we were making coffee till midnight. We were up
- again at 6 A.M., and did an easy march to Kroonstad, where we
- commandeered two fowls, and, having been served out with fresh mutton,
- we did ourselves very well indeed. Some potatoes had been left in the
- farmhouse garden, and these fried in dripping made a feast for
- epicures. Next day we marched again, and, after skirmishing about the
- hills above Kroonstad, camped outside the town. It had been evacuated
- by Boer commandos the day before, and surrendered without a shot being
- fired.
-
- Lord Roberts received quite an ovation as he marched in, but we only
- heard the cheers, as our corps was not in the town, but above it. We
- have now marched right across the Orange State from Bethulie to
- Kroonstad, and are wondering how much farther we shall go. There are
- all sorts of rumours about camp—some say Lumsden’s Horse are to
- garrison Kroonstad, others that we go on east to Harrismith, and
- others, again, that we accompany Lord Roberts to Pretoria. There have
- been days when but two men were left in the lines; all the rest have
- been on fatigue or duty of some sort. Our horses, it is true, have
- been overworked and underfed, but you will be able to form some idea
- of the effects of ‘pink-eye’ and other African diseases when I tell
- you that of the thirty men in our section alone who were well mounted
- when we started from India there are about five of us riding our own
- horses now, all the others have remounts; and our section is not the
- worst in this respect. My horse is doing me splendidly; except for a
- sore back for a few days, he has never been sick or sorry.
-
- We have learnt to cook now, and can serve up chops, steaks, stews, and
- curries as well as any cook—when we can get the meat. We have been
- lucky lately in bivouacking near farmhouses, as we can commandeer
- chickens and sheep, paying for them when we are caught! We have, for
- the last few days, been getting to our camps after sundown, and by the
- time the fires are lighted and the meat ready to cook it is quite 9
- o’clock. It takes an hour or so to cook, and the eating lasts longer,
- as the meat stands a deal of masticating. We seldom get to bed before
- 12, and are always ready by 5 o’clock, so you can imagine how
- invigorating the climate of this place is. It is bitterly cold at
- night and hot in the day, yet very few of our men are down with fever.
- It is a fine climate, but a fearful country. For miles and miles you
- see nothing but immense, undulating, treeless, waterless tracts of
- poor pasture-land. Here and there you find small ponds of dirty water,
- but whether it is rain-water dammed up or whether these are springs I
- have not yet been able to ascertain. The farmers here make their
- living by breeding cattle, and not by cultivation at all. We have
- marched from one end of the Orange State to the other, and I don’t
- suppose all the cultivation I have seen would cover ten acres. A year
- of drought or disease, I should think, would tell very heavily on
- farmers here.
-
- Queen’s Town is the only town in Africa that I can really say I have
- seen; we either camped outside the other towns or merely passed
- through without having time to see them. We rode through Bloemfontein,
- and from what I could see of it it seems to be a large town built on
- the slopes of two or three converging hills, and fairly dirty.
-
- Several of the towns we have passed consisted of half-a-dozen zinc
- houses, two at least of which are bound to be churches; of the
- remaining four, one will be a store and the rest dwelling-houses. But
- each dwelling-house is a township in itself. Even the ‘mild Hindu’
- marvels at the number of people who live in one house, no matter how
- small it may be. There was a farmhouse near our camp at Bloemfontein,
- where we used to go sometimes to get a cup of coffee. This house had
- two rooms, each one about twenty-five feet square. It contained the
- following permanent residents—they said, they had visitors sometimes
- too—one old woman and three young ones and three young men and six
- children of sorts and sizes. One of the rooms was used as a kitchen
- and larder, so there was only one for general use. Needless to say,
- these people were Boers!
-
-One trooper of A Company, writing to friends in Calcutta, has nothing
-but expressions of admiration for the behaviour of British Bluejackets,
-to whom he pays appreciative tribute in the following extract:
-
- At Zand River, on the 10th, I was with the naval guns in action. It
- was simply grand to see the sailors work them. They were drawn up a
- drift in the Zand River by teams of thirty bullocks per gun, and
- opened fire from the top of the left bank on the enemy’s position at
- 7,200 yards range, and in five shots had blown up one Boer gun and
- knocked the whole shoot down about their ears. When the first gun was
- fired I happened to be quite near, although at one side of it, and the
- force of the explosion made me stagger as if a man were in a strong
- north-wester trying to make headway.
-
-Even the novelty of such things, however, soon began to wear off, and
-under the depressing influences of life in a rest camp outside Kroonstad
-the trooper took a more gloomy view of things military, writing:
-
- This place is like most of the so-called towns in South Africa, a mere
- cluster of tin huts with hardly a stone building in the lot. We, as
- usual, are not within a mile and a half of the town, and only one man
- per section of twenty-eight is allowed into it at a time. When you do
- get there, there is nothing much to buy or see, and prices are
- extremely high. Thank goodness, the climate at this time of year is
- just grand; at night it is very cold, and in the day warm, but never
- too warm unless one happens to be very hard at work. We seldom have
- any time to ourselves; even now, though I am writing letters, I am on
- duty with forty other men grazing the horses, about a couple of miles
- from camp. We are in a bad way for nags now, and very few of the
- Calcutta horses are left. It’s fun going out to commandeer things from
- the Boer farms, and it would make a person roar to see the different
- things different people choose to take. We are generally in a bad way
- for firewood, as this is practically a treeless country; so we break
- up chairs, beds, floors, doors, posts, rafters, and every blessed
- piece of wood to be got. Here as I sit on the side of a kopje I have a
- loaded rifle and cartridge bandolier on, and we are warned to stand to
- arms at any moment, as there are some wandering Boers about on the
- war-path who have cut the wires and played Old Nick with the railway
- and Bridges. It’s wonderful what good health men keep, considering the
- hardships they go through; we have not got a tent among the lot of us,
- barring those small servants’ tents used by the officers. Many among
- us have not even a change of clothes, on account of a _golmal_[11]
- made in regard to our kit bags, which got left behind at a camp near
- Bloemfontein. Goodness knows if we shall ever see those bags again. At
- present I have only the clothes on my back and one extra pair of socks
- to my name. Many of us have started growing long beards, and I have a
- beauty, but it wants a little trimming. I had a bath about four days
- ago, the first for weeks, and please goodness I will have a swim
- before leaving this place, as there is a river here which, though
- rather full of dead mules and horses, is better than nothing at all.
- Yesterday three horses got stuck in the river and were drowned, and
- this morning when watering horses I saw three mules and another nag
- which belonged to our Maxim gun team _panklagged_, and I fear that
- they also have been lost. There is most awful ‘pank’ in some of the
- rivers and ponds, and on more than one occasion we have all but lost
- men when crossing or watering. I have had about enough of it, and so
- has everyone else. It does make a man feel creepy when he has shells
- bursting about all round, and Boer shells do burst, for all that is
- said otherwise. They make a noise in the air like a huge flock of
- ducks when they take a dive downwards in their flight; and the rifle
- bullets going past sound like a breeze playing in the branches of a
- tree. I have now been in three engagements, and I’m perfectly
- satisfied! I don’t mind it where there is some cover, and you can see
- your enemy; but when the bullets come from Lord knows where, it’s real
- tough bread and butter to chew. The day we lost so heavily the Boers
- were rifle firing at over 2,000 yards, and as they use smokeless
- powder it was impossible to see them.
-
-In those closing sentences there is a realistic touch that tells of the
-weariness and heart-sickness from which soldiers invariably suffer in
-days of rest following a succession of hard marches and heavy fighting.
-When there is stern work to be done, or a foe to be faced, these men may
-succumb to sheer exhaustion without a word of complaint. It is only
-after a day or two of comparative inaction, when supposed, by a pleasant
-fiction, to be resting in camp, that they will confess to being tired of
-the whole thing, or, as Tommy expresses it, ‘fair fed up.’ A total
-change comes with the order for a fresh advance, and everybody welcomes
-it except, perhaps, the regimental commanding officer, who knows that
-his horses would be all the better if given more time to regain
-condition, and his men more happy if there were a chance of re-clothing
-them. But what do rags and tatters matter when days have to be spent in
-marching through clouds of red dust and night blots out all distinction
-between weather-stained khaki and the soil on which it is laid? Colonel
-Lumsden must have felt the care for such things heavy on him, but he
-gave no sign of it in the notes by which he summarised the renewal of
-operations and of hard work that was in inverse ratio to the number of
-words employed in describing it:
-
- We halted at Kroonstad till the 22nd, and then moved out some four and
- a half miles to a fresh camp clear of the town ready to join Colonel
- Henry’s brigade, and to start marching early next morning. Nothing of
- interest occurred at Kroonstad, except that we were able to leave
- behind a number of worn-out horses. These were replaced by fifty-six
- Argentines, which arrived the day before we left in a sorry condition,
- suffering from the effects of forced marches made without food, except
- what they could pick up on the veldt.
-
- The next three days were spent in long weary marches, reconnoitring
- the country in front of the main advance, for we had been transferred
- at Kroonstad from General Hamilton’s column to the troops selected to
- march with Lord Roberts. Just after the men had settled down in camp
- at sunset on the 24th, bugles sounded a single G, and, on hearing this
- signal, all troops joined in singing ‘God Save the Queen.’
-
- We were expecting to be in action every day, but nothing was seen of
- the enemy till the 26th, when we came upon him at about 9 A.M. in the
- railway station near Viljoen’s Drift, half a mile from the Vaal River.
- There some time was spent in reconnoitring to find out the enemy’s
- strength, and when a few shells had been put into the station, turning
- out only a hundred Boers, we were too late to stop the train which had
- apparently been loading up there. It steamed unhurt over the Vaal
- bridge, which was immediately blown up.
-
- A general advance of the 8th Corps was made dismounted, and the enemy
- driven back, so that at noon the whole brigade was over the Vaal, much
- to the delight of the manager of the mines, who had been in a state of
- great anxiety. He treated all officers to breakfast, and told us that
- the Boers had not expected our force for two days, and that the party
- just ejected by us had arrived that very morning with the intention of
- blowing up his mines. He estimated that one million sterling had been
- saved by our unexpected arrival.
-
- Our only casualty during the day was Sergeant H.A. Campbell, slightly
- wounded.
-
- At 5 P.M. we moved off to our new camp, guarding the Vaal bridge, with
- the promise of a sorely-needed halt next day.
-
-From this brief chronicle nobody would suppose that the honour of
-reconnoitring and drawing Boers out from their hiding-places among the
-sheds and shanties of corrugated iron at Viljoen’s Drift Station had
-fallen to Lumsden’s Horse. Lieutenant Pugh, however, supplies the
-missing links in a private letter:
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Photo: Bassano_
- SERGEANT PERCY JONES, D.C.M.
-]
-
- It was my section’s turn to do the scouting, and they did very well,
- getting information that there was a train and fifty men in the
- station this side of the Vaal. Two other regiments of Mounted Infantry
- each sent out an officer’s patrol of about fifty men, and each came
- back full split. One of their officers told my scouts that if they did
- not wish to be shot they had better clear, but Peddie thought this was
- not business; he, being in charge of the advanced scouts, went on till
- they were fired on and then halted. We had to wait for orders to
- advance for about half an hour, and saw the train steam out of the
- station and over the bridge and presently blow up one span. With a
- dash we could have caught the men and train, and probably saved the
- bridge, as we had two Maxims, and we could easily have driven the
- Boers off. We then crossed the river and drove their rearguard out of
- Vereeniging. They took the opportunity of burning a large store of
- mealies at the station. Our guns got into them well as they bolted
- across the plain. We had a very nice fight, and everyone is much
- pleased, even the Chief of the Staff.
-
-Through all this advance, in which Lumsden’s Horse, with other corps of
-the 8th Mounted Infantry, reconnoitred ahead of the army, troopers who
-had been trained to field sports proved invaluable, and sometimes at
-least a match for the wily Boer. Nobody distinguished himself more by
-skill at this work than Corporal Percy Jones, whom Colonel Lumsden
-regarded as one of his best scouts, a man of great self-reliance,
-unfailing in resources, and with a very keen eye for a country, so that
-he never allowed the section of which he was leader to be entrapped or
-surprised. For repeated acts of daring enterprise he was promoted to the
-rank of sergeant and given the ‘Distinguished Conduct’ Medal. Others
-who, being selected for some specially difficult or dangerous duty, had
-on occasion distinguished themselves as scouts, or who, by actions of
-individual gallantry, won mention in despatches, with subsequent
-honours, were Trooper Preston (D.C.M.), Trooper H.N. Betts (D.C.M.),
-Trooper W.B. Dexter (D.C.M.), and Corporal G. Peddie. Trooper H.R.
-Parks, Sergeant Dale, Sergeant Llewhellin, and Corporal C.E. Turner also
-performed meritorious actions, for which they were mentioned in
-despatches.[12]
-
-Though little has been said of the privations endured by our soldiers
-during their forced marches from Kroonstad to reach the Vaal River
-before its steep sandy banks could be made formidable by entrenchments,
-as the Modder was, some troops suffered severely from want of sufficient
-food, and nearly all were on short rations. It is certain, however, that
-not many could have been so near the ravenous stage of starvation as a
-private in one colonial corps, of whose act a trooper of Lumsden’s Horse
-writes:
-
- The day we crossed the Vaal River a very interesting thing happened;
- we were very hungry, and when we got to Vereeniging a dog was seen
- running away with half a loaf of bread in his mouth. Immediately a
- private darted out of the ranks and rode the dog down, took the bread
- out of his mouth, and ate it.
-
-At last Lumsden’s Horse were on Transvaal territory. Another vaunted
-stronghold, which the Boers had declared they would defend to the last
-extremity, was in our hands, without even the semblance of a struggle
-for it. Generals French and Hutton had crossed the Vaal at important
-strategic points west of Vereeniging. All the most important drifts were
-thus held by us, and the ways open for British columns to enter the
-Transvaal without opposition. On the following day Lord Roberts, with
-his headquarters, moved across Viljoen’s Drift and issued a proclamation
-declaring that the Orange Free State had ceased to exist, and had become
-from that moment an integral part of the British Empire, to be known
-henceforth as Orange River Colony.
-
-[Illustration: J.S. CAMPBELL]
-
-[Illustration: C.E. TURNER]
-
-[Illustration: E.S. CHAPMAN]
-
-[Illustration: G. INNES WATSON]
-
-[Illustration: C.E. STUART]
-
-[Illustration: C. CARY-BARNARD]
-
-[Illustration: E.S. CLIFFORD]
-
-[Illustration: CORPORAL KIRWAN]
-
-[Illustration: H. GOUGH]
-
- N.C.O. AND TROOPERS
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XII
- _JOHANNESBURG AND PRETORIA IN OUR HANDS_
-
-
-In all operations up to this point Lumsden’s Horse, with Loch’s Horse
-and companies of the West Riding and Oxfordshire Light Infantry, forming
-the 8th Mounted Infantry Regiment, under Colonel Ross, had, with other
-corps of Colonel Henry’s brigade, been so actively engaged scouting
-ahead of the main column with which Lord Roberts moved, that they had
-neither time nor opportunity to know what was being done by other
-divisions of the army. It is necessary, therefore, to explain briefly
-here the general dispositions for an advance on Pretoria at the moment
-when Lord Roberts crossed Vaal River into Transvaal territory. Since
-they marched out of Kroonstad the troops, whose advance was most
-direct—following the line of railway with slight divergences—had covered
-just a hundred miles in four days. Mounted troops, being employed to
-reconnoitre on each flank and keep up communications along their front,
-almost doubled that distance. In face of such a rapid advance the Boer
-commandos which had dispersed after their evacuation of Kroonstad found
-a difficulty in concentrating for the defence of any strategic points.
-They were evidently puzzled by the sudden mobility of British forces,
-and, what with Methuen marching for the west, French’s Cavalry making a
-dash for the drifts at Parys and Reitzburg, as if Potchefstroom were
-their objective, the main column pushing along beside the railway for
-Viljoen’s Drift, and Ian Hamilton marching as if for Engelbrecht’s Drift
-on the Heilbron-Heidelberg road, the Boer commandants could not agree as
-to which point would most likely be threatened first or at which they
-might make a stand with the greatest chance of success. Hasty
-preparations were made by them with a view to checking General Ian
-Hamilton, whom they credited with a design on Heidelberg and the Eastern
-railways. Possibly that, combined with a great movement in force upon
-the junctions outside Johannesburg, might have been the shortest way to
-end the war, because, as we know now, the Boer Generals attached very
-little importance to the defence of their big towns, while they realised
-fully all the strategical advantages of free communication between
-Pretoria and the eastern districts; and President Kruger especially was
-anxious to keep open a line by which prominent members of his
-Administration might be able to get away with a sufficient store of
-bullion for private and political uses at the last moment. The defenders
-of Engelbrecht’s Drift, however, waited in vain watching the trap they
-had laid for General Ian Hamilton. His line of march had been suddenly
-changed by orders from Lord Roberts, and, instead of crossing the Vaal
-where he was expected, east of Vereeniging, he had made a rapid march
-westward to strike the river between General French’s Cavalry and the
-main body, leaving our right flank to be guarded by General Gordon with
-the 3rd Cavalry Brigade. With regard to all this and the ceremony at
-Viljoen’s Drift, when Lord Roberts proclaimed the annexation of Orange
-Free State to the British Crown, Lumsden’s Horse knew nothing at the
-time. Content with their own share of the good work that had been
-accomplished, they were consoling themselves by the prospect of at least
-one day’s well-earned rest for men and horses. But that good fortune was
-not to be theirs after all. Colonel Lumsden, continuing his official
-record, explains how these pleasant hopes were dashed:
-
- The 27th dawned, the horses were turned out to graze, leave was given
- for men to go into town, and general cleaning up began, when suddenly
- at 10.30 A.M. we had an order to move at once to help the 3rd Cavalry
- Brigade under General Gordon, who was reported to be in a tight corner
- to the north-east. Horses were caught, saddles put on, and we were
- away by 11, with no rations for man or horse. The rest of the brigade
- joined in four miles further on. All proceeded with every precaution
- through a difficult bit of trappy country, arriving about 4.30 P.M. at
- the drift where General Gordon was supposed to be stuck up. There no
- signs of him could be seen, so we made tracks back to a point four
- miles north of Vereeniging, where we were to have joined our column,
- when it camped there that night. We struggled on until, our horses
- giving out, the whole brigade bivouacked at 8 P.M., having put behind
- us some seven miles of our return journey, and having done quite
- twenty-five miles. Lieutenant Neville, with a guide, was sent in to
- headquarters for instructions, and returned at 3 A.M. with the order
- that our brigade was to come on at once and resume its position in
- front of the headquarters, leading the army. By 4 A.M. we were away
- again in the bitter frosty cold, leading our starved horses, the sun
- rising as we waded a nasty drift over the Klip. We reached our place
- in the advance guard at 7, in the nick of time, just as all had begun
- to move off, and were at once pushed on three miles at a trot ahead of
- everything, fighting being expected at the notorious Klip River
- position. No Boers, however, were seen. The country was ablaze with
- the burning veldt, which the Boers had set fire to systematically as
- they went, and the Klip River was gained without a shot. There were
- sounds of heavy fighting, however, in the hills on our left, where
- French and Hamilton were forcing back the enemy on Johannesburg.
-
-[Illustration: LIEUTENANT G.A. NEVILLE.]
-
-With an editorial desire to link the separate operations into one chain,
-I may here describe from personal experience what happened away on that
-left flank where French and Hamilton were hotly engaged with the
-outposts of a Boer force, whose object in holding the high kopjes
-between Gatsrand and Klipriviersberg was obviously to force upon us a
-wider flanking movement, by which the western columns would be further
-separated from the main body and thus unable to co-operate with it
-effectively. It is improbable that Louis Botha had any hope of being
-able to defeat the British forces in detail by delivering a
-counter-stroke on each column in turn. It is far more likely that his
-idea even at that period was to lengthen out the British line of
-communications as far as possible, thus weakening it by attenuation and
-making it more vulnerable to attacks by small raiding parties.
-Co-operating with him was Christian De Wet, to whom such a plan would
-have been sure to commend itself as offering a chance for numbers of
-Free-Staters to slip through the girdle that was gradually closing about
-them, re-cross the Vaal, and harass their enemies on ground where local
-knowledge would give them every advantage.
-
-On this supposition the resistance offered to General French some
-twenty-five miles north-west of Vereeniging had peculiar interest for
-me, because I watched the operations there with some foreknowledge of
-the probable Boer tactics gained in a curious way. Four days earlier I
-had breakfasted at a farm next to Christian De Wet’s, not far from
-Rodewal station. The farmer invited myself and a companion into his
-house, above which a white flag was flying, and when told that this was
-our Queen’s birthday he produced a bottle of whisky with which to drink
-to Her Majesty’s health, which we did readily enough, although he
-declined to join us. There was no unfriendliness or want of hospitality
-in that, and, indeed, we should have mistrusted the man if he had put on
-a pretence of loyalty because he had been induced to hoist the white
-flag as an emblem of neutrality. There were no troops at that moment
-nearer than Lumsden’s Horse, who could be seen on the sky-line about
-four miles westward, moving towards Vredefort Road Station.
-
-From that direction presently came a young Boer well mounted but
-unarmed. His wary movements at first seemed to indicate that he had no
-desire to be seen by our troops, but our host explained that the road
-took many turns and twists which might puzzle a stranger. The horseman
-was evidently not well pleased to find Englishmen at the farm, but this
-we, being somewhat vain, attributed to jealousy, seeing that the youth
-and our host’s comely daughter were exchanging glances in which there
-might have been a world of other meaning, though we suspected it not. We
-knew instinctively that they were not quite strangers, but there were no
-signs of friendly recognition in our presence. After a brief
-conversation, carried on between the young man and the farmer aside,
-though neither of us could have understood the taal they talked, our
-host came forward and explained that his neighbour was simply riding
-from one farm to another, where the family had all surrendered and
-obtained their permits to live in peace. There was nothing to be done
-then except shake hands and part, but the next day my Basuto servant,
-who, having lived in Johannesburg, had a wholesome dread of Boer
-sjamboks, gave me a full interpretation of what he had overheard the
-young man say in that neighbourly talk with our burgher friend. The
-burden of it was that this guileless youth, Ferreira by name, had been
-sent by Christian De Wet to let everybody know why the Free State
-commandos were retiring with Botha’s Transvaalers instead of defending
-their own homesteads. It was only to lure the English on to destruction,
-and Christian De Wet promised that he would slip back again in a day or
-two to Rodewal and play Old Harry with the invaders.
-
-Up to the time of joining General French’s force in the afternoon of May
-28 I had regarded this as a vain boast. A closer study of Boer tactics,
-however, was enough to show what they were playing for, and I watched
-with some apprehension our Cavalry moving westward in vain attempts to
-outflank the mobile Boers, who were galloping from kopje to kopje on one
-side of a vast dam fringed by treacherous mires which French’s squadrons
-could not cross. Ian Hamilton meanwhile conformed to this movement
-without getting touch of the enemy or drawing near to their stronghold,
-which was obviously on the frowning crest of Klipriviersberg (shortened
-by the Boers colloquially to Riviersberg).
-
-Being alone, and far from my supplies, I slept supperless that night in
-a deserted Boer store, for the sake of such shelter as a wall and roof
-might give from a keen icy wind that swept in gusts through the broken
-windows. I had neither overcoat nor blanket, and saw nothing to lie on
-but a filthy floor or the bare laths of a rickety iron bedstead. I chose
-the latter. Having been in the saddle from 5 in the morning until 10 at
-night, with the exception of necessary halts for my horse to graze, I
-was soon oblivious to the discomfort of that rude couch, and, for all I
-knew, my pillow might have been softest down instead of hard
-saddle-flaps. But long before daybreak the cravings of a hunger that had
-only been tantalised by coffee and biscuit twenty-four hours earlier
-awoke me to a consciousness that my limbs were aching with cold and sore
-from the chafing of those sharp-edged laths. Striking a light, I looked
-at the little thermometer attached to my wallet, and found that it
-registered ten degrees of frost. More sleep was not to be thought of, so
-I groped through the darkness to a stall only less draughty than the
-store I had slept in, found my horse shivering there, rubbed him down
-with a wisp of straw, by way of restoring his circulation and my own,
-and waited for the dawn. Then I found my way across vleis and spruits to
-where General Ian Hamilton’s force was moving off through dense mists
-from Cyferfontein to attack the Boer position on Riviersberg. When the
-rising sun dispelled those mists the Gordons and City Imperial
-Volunteers were spread out in thin lines stretching fan-like across a
-segment of the veldt, and so they went on hour after hour without
-finding any sign of Boers. The pangs of hunger being all-potent, I rode
-off in search of a farm, hoping also to come across another British
-column within a few miles. After an hour or more I was gladdened by the
-sight of Haartebeestefontein Farm standing in the midst of green
-mealie-patches and belted about by eucalyptus trees—the very picture of
-peace. At that moment four Boers drove out from the farm-yard in a
-well-horsed Cape cart, but made no sign at sight of me except by driving
-the faster. They needn’t have been in such a hurry to get away from an
-unarmed and famished Englishman, who had not one comrade within miles.
-But luckily they didn’t know.
-
-Though French’s Cavalry had been at the farm a day before me and
-ransacked the Veldt-Cornet’s deserted house, in search of any documents
-that might have been left there, ducks were swimming in a pond close by
-and fowls cackling about the sheds from which some Kaffirs presently
-appeared. To my request, for bread or eggs or milk they had but one
-answer, ‘Ikona.’ The sight of a loaded revolver might have produced some
-effect, but, having none, I dismounted and made a systematic search. If
-food in any shape was there it must have been very cleverly hidden.
-Finding not so much as a bundle of oat-hay for my horse to nibble at, I
-rode on across ridge and hollow another five miles or so, and then came
-upon a little dorp or hamlet, from which all the inhabitants except a
-Dutch schoolmaster and his wife had disappeared. They declared that not
-a scrap of food had been left behind. But the good vrau gave me a cup of
-excellent coffee, and with thanks for the best of hospitality, which
-gives all it can, I jogged along another league or two, following the
-straight road towards Johannesburg and expecting every minute to fall in
-with the rearguard of a column going that way. All the while I had not
-seen a single soldier or the trace of an iron-shod hoof that was not at
-least a day old. The unmistakable marks of ‘ammunition’ boots were not
-there, and neither horse nor man had left footprints on tracks where the
-morning’s thaw had softened them. At last from a rugged ridge I saw
-smoke curling up from houses among the trees that marked the course of a
-river some two miles ahead. Not caring much by that time whether Britons
-or Boers might be in those houses, I rode straight for the nearest of
-them, which turned out to be a farm in the barn of which I saw much
-forage.
-
-Evidently none of our mounted troops had been there, but it was too late
-to think of turning back. That, in all probability, would have brought a
-Mauser bullet whistling about my ears. ‘Bluff’ was the only game to play
-in such circumstances, so I called to a Kaffir servant, told him to
-fetch forage for my horse, and then swaggered towards the house as if I
-had been a Staff officer with a whole regiment at my back. On the stoep
-a bearded Boer met me. He had been lying prone on ground where rhenoster
-bushes grew. Their burrs were still sticking to his serge jacket, the
-left elbow of which was stained by the red earth on which it had rested,
-and his right thumb was black with a coating of burnt melinite. I saw it
-all as he raised one hand in a sort of half-military salute, and
-extended the other to welcome me, and in that moment I knew he had just
-come down from Riviersberg heights for lunch in the intervals of
-fighting. So, still playing an assumed part, I asked what weapons he
-had, and he brought me a well-worn Martini-Henry; but that was not what
-I wanted. After some show of misunderstanding the Boer brought his wife,
-who talked English fluently enough, and when I had explained to her the
-awful consequences of concealing arms or ammunition from a British
-officer, holding plenary powers of punishment, there was no necessity
-for saying any more. Without even waiting for my words to be
-interpreted, her husband went out and came back with a Mauser rifle, the
-fouling of which was still moist round its breech-chamber, and a
-bandolier half full of cartridges. These I took charge of, not knowing
-what I should do with them if a Boer commando happened to come that way.
-As to British troops—well, at any rate, I had no hesitation in assuring
-the Boer that his household would be safe from them. I did not think it
-necessary to add that none would be likely to come anywhere near him. In
-return for my leniency (save the mark!) he suggested something that had
-been in my mind all the while, and thereupon his good wife brought a
-deliciously white loaf and milk that was fragrant in its freshness. She
-was sorry that they ‘had nothing better to offer.’ Nothing better!
-Heavens, how sweet it tasted! Yet I was restrained from eating or
-drinking much by the thought that any show of my famished state would
-give me away. It was difficult to parry all questions concerning the
-number of troops I had with me, so I said that my men must have found a
-lot of arms to collect or they would have been there sooner. Upon that
-the Boer volunteered information as to the number of rifles which could
-possibly be in farms or cottages round about. All this information I
-noted down ostentatiously, wondering as I did so how on earth I should
-get out of the hole into which circumstances were thrusting me deeper
-and deeper.
-
-At that moment, as luck would have it, two West Australians of the 4th
-Regiment M.I. turned up, and, leaving them to collect the arms of which
-such careful note had been made, and to eat the remnants of my
-unfinished meal I mounted to ride off in quest of their main body,
-taking care, however, to command proper protection for the house in
-which I had been so hospitably entertained. ‘Well played,’ said one,
-with much outward show of respect, as he produced a bottle of brandy
-from the ample pocket of his ‘coat British warm,’ and offered me a nip.
-I saw that he, at any rate, understood the game. At Eikenhof Drift I
-found the main body which turned out to be no more than a patrol. Its
-appearance drew fire from the Boers, who were apparently holding that
-road into Johannesburg strongly. They began to show in groups of twenty
-and thirty on kopjes where no sign of them had been seen before, and
-were evidently meditating a movement by which the drift might have been
-outflanked. To prevent this Major Pilkington, who was in command,
-detached some men from his scanty force to hold two smaller fords, and
-in a short time there were several casualties from rifle fire at short
-range. Just then we could hear the roar of guns where General Ian
-Hamilton was attacking miles away on the left. Hard pressed, yet
-determined to hold on where he was, Major Pilkington had not a galloper
-whom he could send with a message to his divisional General, Pole-Carew.
-I volunteered to carry it, and started for a ride of twenty miles across
-unknown country, making sure that I should hit off some column within
-that distance. But all the troops under the immediate command of Lord
-Roberts had been following the line of railway—where their front was
-cleared by the 8th Mounted Infantry, with which were Lumsden’s Horse and
-other regiments of Colonel Henry’s brigade—in a turning movement, the
-extent of which will be appreciated after perusal of the preceding
-narrative. I had ridden a distance that would have measured nearly
-thirty miles from point to point without seeing more than a small patrol
-of British troops. That night, or early the next morning, when Major
-Pilkington had withdrawn his small force, a thousand Free State Boers
-crossed Eikenhof Drift and got in rear of the British columns to rejoin
-De Wet. Meanwhile, with French or Hamilton on the west, and in advance
-of the main body on the east, deeds were being done that sealed the fate
-of Johannesburg and Pretoria. Lumsden’s Horse took a full share of
-honours that day, though their Colonel does not descant upon these at
-great length in his official report, but contents himself with the
-following record:
-
- On the 29th we marched at 5.30, expecting to arrive after ten miles at
- Natal Spruit, where fighting was certain. Our maps and information
- were, however, wrong, for we found ourselves most unexpectedly in
- sight of the place with the smoke of the train leaving the station.
-
- We were sent to endeavour to cut it off as it wound about the kopjes,
- and had a very exciting gallop of three miles, blowing up the railway
- behind the train. Again we pushed on to try and cut her off at the
- next big bend, but again were too late, and ran into the fire of a
- party covering the retreat of the train.
-
- We then took up a position commanding the railroad, while under
- Colonel Ross’s orders a party of five men was sent to block the line
- at any cost. This very dangerous task was given to Lieutenant Pugh and
- the undermentioned men, who carried it out with great determination
- and coolness: Privates Turner, Were, Dagge, and Parks.
-
-An officer of high rank, whose opportunities of knowing what happened
-give especial value to his testimony, says:
-
- On May 29 the 8th Mounted Infantry were ordered to move from Klip
- Drift to cut the Natal Railway line, the Springs line (the main line
- north of Elandsfontein), and the telegraph wires at important points.
- When near the junction of Natal and Free State lines we saw a
- train-load of burghers from Natal passing northwards to where, beyond
- the junction, the railway runs from a broad valley into one of several
- converging kopjes through a deep cutting in the steep and rugged
- hillside. With the object of heading off that train as it slackened
- speed on a stiff gradient, Lumsden’s Horse made a great gallop up the
- valley towards a point where it narrows to a neck, from which the
- hills rise abruptly on each side. Their course for two or three miles
- was over rough ground parallel to the railway and nearly midway
- between it and a branch of Natal Spruit. They were unable, however, to
- arrive in time, and the Boers, detraining, occupied a kopje just above
- the railway cutting, the gorge and banks of which they could command
- from the ridge above and from a ganger’s hut, which they also held in
- force. Thus they had the railway between them and Lumsden’s Horse, and
- seemed in a good position for sweeping all approaches to it by an
- effective rifle fire. Lumsden’s Horse dismounted in the hollow and
- advanced against that kopje.
-
- It was, however, necessary to destroy the line, and the Engineer
- officer who accompanied the force for the purpose of blowing up the
- line was not handy. Lieutenant Pugh, with four men, then volunteered
- to get into the cutting at its deepest point and either block or break
- it. As the Boers were holding the ganger’s hut close to this point, it
- was a warm corner! However, Pugh and his party reached the line. The
- four men covered his further advance from the edge of the embankment
- whilst he descended into the cutting. Having nothing wherewith to
- break the line, he effectually blocked it with a number of huge
- boulders—quite sufficient to stop any train passing through. This
- occupied some time, and his covering party were pretty busy with the
- Boers at the hut, who were at first inclined to run in on him. But as
- one or two of them paid dearly for their temerity, their efforts
- ceased, so that Pugh and his party were enabled to retreat from their
- little picnic without loss. Pugh is now a D.S.O.
-
- It was a long and hard day that 29th of May; the 8th Mounted Infantry
- were under fire from 7 A.M. till 9 P.M. Lumsden’s Horse were among the
- _few_ troops in at the finish on the hill north of Elandsfontein,
- where the parting duel was fought with the Boers as they retreated.
- All the lines were cut. The consequent bag was fourteen engines and
- over 400 waggons—not a bad day’s work. Even Lord Kitchener is reported
- to have ‘smiled’ when he heard the news.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Photo: Harrington & Co._
- LIEUTENANT H.O. PUGH, D.S.O.
-]
-
-This incident is described with further detail in a private letter by
-Lieutenant Pugh, who, modestly minimising his own share in a very
-hazardous enterprise, writes:
-
- Yesterday our orders were to take Elandsfontein, cut the wires and
- blow up the railway, and to do the same at Germiston. The first
- excitement began at Elsburg, where we saw a train going out of the
- station. Seeing it was on the move, we sent some men to try to cut it
- off, but it went back up an angle like the Darjiling train. There was
- another angle, and we galloped about three miles to that part, but the
- train was too fast and went round a kopje, where its occupants
- evidently got out and opened fire on us. If we had known the line we
- would have got that train easily by going to the left instead of to
- the right. While we were dismounted and firing an order came for six
- men to rush for the line and try to block it. The Colonel passed on
- for the six men at the end to go. It happened to be partly my section
- and partly No. 4. One man could not find his horse, so I went off with
- four men and galloped right up to the railway and under the
- embankment. It was held by a fairly strong picket, who luckily did not
- fire till we were under cover. I put two men on to fire at that
- picket, of which three were hit—the range was only about fifty
- yards—and the other two on to about 100 on our left front 200 or 300
- yards off. We were also fired at from a kopje on our right. The picket
- presently cleared, and I made a rush for the line: it was in a cutting
- and out of the fire. I rolled some boulders on the lines, and on
- getting back found a pretty hot fire had opened on us from behind: it
- turned out to be one of our own Maxims. We mounted and galloped back
- without a scratch.
-
- Colonel Ross’s orders then were to push on and support the 4th Mounted
- Infantry, who held a kopje on our right. Here we lay for two hours,
- our position overlooking the Boksburg railway station, supported by
- two Colt guns from Ross’s Battery, which kept up a steady fire in
- answer to the enemy’s shells and bullets until their retirement. We
- then continued the turning movement to the right and took possession
- of the station, halting there for a few minutes to re-form, while the
- Royal Engineer Company attached to us for the purpose blew up the line
- at this point. One of our sailors, Private Dexter, swarming up the
- telegraph post, cut all communication with Springs. At the time we and
- a company of Compton’s Horse were the only troops up, and, being
- reinforced by two companies of the 4th Mounted Infantry, which were
- placed under my orders, we were told to proceed with all speed due
- west to blow up the Pretoria line, which we should find four miles on.
- We succeeded in doing this, but too late to cut off one train, which
- just evaded us, our horses being too done to go faster than a modest
- trot. We again halted a few minutes, facing a long kopje in front of
- us.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- WALTER DEXTER, D.C.M., B Company,
- cutting the telegraph wires at Elandsfontein
- (_From a sketch by J.S. Cowen_)
-]
-
-Colonel Lumsden adds:
-
- While the Royal Engineer Company were busy blowing up the railway at
- this point, Captain Rutherfoord on the left, with our scouts, with his
- usual keenness soon came in touch with those of the enemy, and a brisk
- fire ensued on both sides, Captain Rutherfoord holding his position
- until I was able to reinforce him on his right flank. Colonel Ross
- soon hurried up further reinforcements on his left, which enabled us
- to hold the kopje and forced the enemy to fall back on the convoy they
- were covering. As night was approaching, pursuit with our tired horses
- was utterly hopeless, and we were ordered to move to our left and
- encamp at Germiston, which lay in the hollow behind us. This, being
- the junction of railway lines that branch off in several directions,
- was the key of the Boer position. Our day’s movements had, however,
- been very successful, and Colonel Henry issued a brigade order next
- morning saying he had been congratulated by the Commander-in-Chief on
- the day’s work; while Colonel Ross was also congratulated on the
- prominent part taken by his corps, which resulted in the capture of
- fourteen engines and a large quantity of rolling-stock. This was very
- pleasant news to us, but the work was telling its tale on the horses,
- who were dead beat and fast tumbling to pieces from overwork and want
- of food. Our casualty was fortunately only one during the day—namely,
- Private J.D. Bewsher, who was shot through the knee while we were
- engaging the enemy opposite Boksburg.
-
- Owing to the pace we had travelled and the hilly nature of the
- country, our Maxim gun under Captain Holmes, with its escort, had not
- come into camp when we retired to bed. The men, as on many previous
- occasions, had to turn in without food, and their horses were in the
- same plight.
-
-In another action, on the 30th, north of Germiston, Trooper Elwes, son
-of the Archdeacon of Madras, was wounded by a bullet through the ankle
-and Trooper Radford had his horse shot in two places.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Photo: D. Brownsworth_
- P.C. PRESTON, D.C.M.
-]
-
-Describing Trooper Preston’s adventurous ride with despatches and his
-readiness of resource in a difficult situation, another correspondent
-writes:
-
- Eight men of Lumsden’s Horse in charge of Sergeant Macnamara were sent
- out in a big patrol under Captain Harris, 1st West Riding M.I., with
- orders to take the Johannesburg Waterworks. Captain Harris paraded his
- sixty men, and chose two of Lumsden’s Horse as his orderlies. We then
- rode down the kopjes to the plain below, Compton’s Horse firing over
- our heads at the Boers all the time. As we went down we met Trooper
- Elwes, No. 2 Section, B Company, being brought in wounded through the
- ankle when on patrol with Lieutenant Pugh. About a mile away there was
- a farmhouse under the kopje which was held by the Boers; some
- Australians with us rushed the place, and captured three Boers and a
- waggon of ammunition. After marching about an hour, firing every now
- and then and being fired at, we got to the Waterworks on a hill
- towering above Johannesburg. The fort is on another hill half a mile
- away. It seemed as if trenches had been dug for us round the
- Waterworks, high banks of gravel perfectly protecting us. Trooper
- Preston, of Lumsden’s Horse, was sent back to Germiston with a
- despatch saying the Waterworks were occupied; he was to make the
- shortest possible cut, and gallop all the way. This orderly had a very
- exciting adventure. His shortest road lay through the outskirts of
- Johannesburg. When riding through these streets he saw several Boers
- peeping out of their houses, and at one place they actually tried to
- stop him. He galloped through them, however; they then shouted out to
- know if the English were in Johannesburg yet, and he answered that
- they were, knowing that if he said no he would as likely as not be
- shot at. They then asked where he was going to, and he said Pretoria.
- Thus it was that a man of Lumsden’s Horse was the first, or one of the
- first, to enter Johannesburg. A little further the orderly met two
- Kaffirs who could talk English, and who told him that among the rocks
- on a small kopje on the left of the road was an armed Boer waiting to
- shoot him. The orderly was puzzled what to do, as he could see no Boer
- behind the rocks; however, he dismounted and advanced on foot towards
- the kopje, leading his horse behind him. Having got within speaking
- distance of the rocks and still seeing no Boer, he put his rifle to
- his shoulder and pointed it at the biggest rock, shouting out, ‘Hands
- up, or I fire!’ Immediately two arms were seen above the rock, the
- order ‘Hold up your rifle’ was obeyed at once, and the orderly found
- he had captured the Boer. About a mile further on he met some
- Australians, and having to gallop with the despatch he handed the
- prisoner over to them, taking with him the rifle and ammunition. Alas!
- at the door of the Colonel’s tent whom should he meet but Lord
- Kitchener himself, who, seeing the orderly had two rifles,
- commandeered one. Meanwhile the Boers kept up a continuous fire at the
- Waterworks. However, several Englishmen and young ladies had climbed
- up the hill at the back and brought food and drink for the first of
- their countrymen whom they had seen—several of them, while Tommy ate
- and drank, firing away with the soldiers’ rifles at the fort. In the
- evening Preston brought the message to retire to camp, which was done
- in a very orderly fashion, the patrol arriving back soon after dark
- with the total casualties of three men wounded, having spent the most
- or one of the most exciting and agreeable days in the whole campaign.
-
-Colonel Lumsden describes other incidents in the following passage:
-
- A party of West Riding Regiment’s Mounted Infantry scouting on our
- left did not get off so easily, for seeing some men in khaki and
- helmets to their front they mistook them for friends, and, getting
- within speaking distance, were much surprised to find their morning’s
- greetings met with a summons to surrender. Their immediate attempt at
- flight resulted in two casualties—one wounded and taken prisoner, the
- other, although wounded, getting back to camp. Firing then became
- general on our right, where the 3rd Cavalry Brigade was on outpost
- duty, and we were hastily summoned to saddle up and reinforce them. We
- arrived in time to witness an artillery duel, the Boers retiring
- slowly under the fire of the Cavalry pom-poms. The morning’s work,
- however, resulted badly for them, they having had sixteen casualties,
- which were attended to by our medical officer, Captain Powell, who was
- luckily on the spot.
-
- We then returned to camp, and shortly afterwards Captain Holmes came
- in with his Maxim gun, reporting that he had lost two of his scouting
- party, Privates Cary-Barnard and G.I. Watson, whom he had sent out in
- advance while journeying to rejoin us in the early morning. A few
- hours afterwards the missing men came into camp, stating that having
- been informed that our men were in front they had ridden confidingly
- into a body of about fifty men dressed like our own troops in khaki,
- thinking they were friends, but were suddenly disillusioned by being
- ordered to surrender. Under the conditions attempting to escape on
- their worn-out horses was out of the question, and they had no option
- but to deliver up their arms. They were cross-questioned as to our
- strength and the likely duration of the war. Private Watson, in reply
- to the latter question, told the General that he considered fighting
- would be over in a few days, a reply that seemed to cause much
- amusement. They were then offered the choice of remaining as prisoners
- or giving their word of honour that they would fight no more during
- this war. They chose the latter, thinking the end was very near.
-
- Next morning, June 1, our orders were to march on Johannesburg, six
- miles distant, which we reached unopposed in time to see the Union
- Jack hoisted over the Fort, which had been divested of all its guns
- except a few rendered useless. We then marched some five miles north
- of the city, and camped for two days. On the morning of the 3rd we
- marched twelve miles towards Pretoria, meeting no resistance, but
- again losing touch with our Maxim, which, being unable to follow us
- across country, had to stick to the road, and which we were destined
- not to see for several days.
-
-So Lumsden’s Horse had gratified one desire on which their hearts were
-set for many months. Their brigade had led the fighting line practically
-into Johannesburg, and when the Union Jack was hoisted over its public
-buildings they cared nothing for the ceremonial parades, but were only
-anxious to take the lead again in a march on Pretoria. With soldier-like
-brevity Colonel Lumsden’s chronicle sums up the operations of an
-eventful day:
-
- On June 4 we advanced to Six Mile Spruit, again being the foremost
- corps of the leading brigade, all anticipating a heavy fight in front
- of us, as the spruit was said to be our enemy’s last position and
- likely therefore to be desperately contested. These prognostications
- were not, however, realised. Careful reconnaissance showed that there
- were no Boers at the spruit. We then proceeded leisurely up the chain
- of hills beyond it, concluding they were not held, but with every
- precaution against the unexpected. It was not until midday that we
- came in touch with the enemy, who opened on the 4th Mounted Infantry
- on our right with shell fire. We were then pushed forward to take a
- commanding kopje, and got a smart peppering from a few snipers hidden
- in the rocks on our left flank, but had no casualties, though the
- bullets were falling thickly among us as we crossed the open.
-
- It now became evident that the enemy’s main position was on our left,
- and I was ordered to occupy a ridge about one mile distant in that
- direction, opposite a steep kopje about 1,000 yards off held by the
- Boers. Here they were beautifully entrenched and kept up a steady fire
- on our line, which we returned with interest, until aid arrived in the
- shape of three fifteen-pounders on the right, two pom-poms on our
- left, and three Colt guns in the centre. These searched the ridge for
- some hours without dislodging the Boers, whose trenches must have been
- admirably constructed, as a move on our part from one rock to another
- was sufficient to draw a hail of bullets, while we were unable to spot
- a single Boer.
-
- Here Private Charles E. Stuart was wounded by a bullet through the
- ankle, but was unable to be removed from the firing line until the
- fire slackened late in the afternoon, when a kind friend carried him
- down on his back to the ambulance tonga at the foot of the hill.
-
- At about 4 P.M. the enemy’s fire began to dwindle, and eventually
- ceased altogether, and just as we meditated leaving our ridge to cross
- over to theirs our Infantry became visible, advancing from westward
- along the ridge which the enemy had occupied, while to our right
- front, some two miles off, more British Infantry appeared on the sky
- line, showing that the Boer position had been quitted. At this period
- our Brigadier’s orders came for us to retire from the kopje and make
- our bivouac for the night somewhere on the plain below.
-
- June 5 was the day on which we reached the goal we had been struggling
- for. Pretoria at last, not fighting our way in, as anticipated by
- everybody, but forming a peaceful procession, with our baggage behind
- us, news having arrived that the Governor had surrendered the town
- late the previous night.
-
- We were not allowed to halt, but just passed through the city and out
- to Irene, a station ten miles south of Pretoria and on the
- Johannesburg line, which we at present occupy, the whole corps
- protecting the rail from Pretoria to Johannesburg.
-
------
-
-Footnote 9:
-
- Hindustani for ‘fowls.’—ED.
-
-Footnote 10:
-
- Hindustani for ‘orders.’—ED.
-
-Footnote 11:
-
- Hindustani for ‘blunder.’—ED.
-
-Footnote 12:
-
- See Appendix IV.—ED.
-
------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIII
- _ON LINES OF COMMUNICATION AT IRENE, KALFONTEIN,
- ZURFONTEIN, AND SPRINGS—THE PRETORIA PAPER-CHASE_
-
-
-That march through Pretoria, marked by none of the pomp and pageantry
-which imagination conjures up as essential features of a great triumph,
-must have seemed a lame and impotent conclusion to the stirring drama of
-real life in which Lumsden’s Horse had played their manful part, cheered
-always by the prospect of a glorious reward for all their struggles,
-hardships, and sacrifices in the final downfall of Boer power when the
-Transvaal capital should be in our hands. They were not the only people
-who entertained such sanguine hopes and felt proportionally disappointed
-at the inadequate realisation. For nearly every soldier at that time in
-South Africa, from Lord Roberts downwards, Pretoria had been the goal,
-and its conquest the climax beyond which no operations of serious
-importance could possibly be called for. Few people, if any, realised
-then how little value Boers attach to great towns as strategical bases.
-With the capture of Johannesburg and Pretoria we had theoretically all
-their arsenals and main lines of communication in our hands, and
-according to all hard-and-fast rules of warfare the campaign should have
-ended then. That impression was certainly strong on the
-Commander-in-Chief’s mind shortly before dusk of June 4, when Colonel De
-Lisle, whose Mounted Infantry had followed the enemy to within 2,000
-yards of Pretoria, sent an officer under a flag of truce to demand the
-surrender of the town. The end might possibly have come then, if,
-instead of waiting five hours for a reply to that summons and seven
-hours longer for the unconditional surrender which Lord Roberts insisted
-upon when Commandant-General Botha’s tardy message reached him, we had
-risked everything in a night attack on the town. But at dawn the next
-morning Botha sent a simple message to say that he was not prepared to
-defend Pretoria further, and therefore he entrusted the women, children,
-and property to his enemy’s protection. In other words, we were quite at
-liberty to march into a town from which every fighting commando, all
-treasure, and nearly every munition of war had by that time been safely
-removed. One big gun was still in the station on a train that waited to
-take British prisoners away, but they had risen in mutiny at the last
-moment and refused to go, wherefore the train went without them, its
-movements being hastened by the sight of British troops coming over the
-hills. To Colonel Henry’s Mounted Infantry, of which Lumsden’s Horse
-formed a part, was given the honour of being first to enter Pretoria by
-the Rustenburg Road, as the Guards Brigade of General Pole-Carew’s
-division marched in on another side, without firing a shot. So the goal
-was reached; but we found it to all intents and purposes a hollow
-triumph. There had been no surrender of the Boer army or of anything
-that could weaken its power for further resistance. The cage was in our
-hands, but the hawk had gone with wings unpinioned. Every soldier
-probably felt, as Lumsden’s Horse did, that any show of triumph would
-have been out of place in the circumstances. They took no part even in
-the ceremonial parade when Lord Roberts made his formal entry and the
-Union Jack was hoisted on the Raadzaal that afternoon, but had at least
-the satisfaction of knowing that their services of the previous day were
-appreciated by the Commander-in-Chief, who, in his despatches, wrote:
-
- I marched with Henry’s Mounted Infantry, four companies Imperial
- Yeomanry, Pole-Carew’s division, Maxwell’s brigade, and the naval and
- siege guns, to Six-mile Spruit, both banks of which were occupied by
- the enemy. The Boers were quickly dislodged from the south bank by the
- Mounted Infantry and Imperial Yeomanry, and pursued for nearly a mile,
- when our troops came under artillery fire. The enemy then moved along
- a series of ridges parallel to our main line of advance, with the
- object of turning our left flank; but in this they were checked by the
- Mounted Infantry and Imperial Yeomanry, supported by Maxwell’s
- brigade.
-
-[Illustration: J. SKELTON]
-
-[Illustration: R.P. HAINES]
-
-[Illustration: H.W. THELWALL]
-
-[Illustration: C.K. MARTIN]
-
-[Illustration: H.S. CHESHIRE]
-
-[Illustration: H.B. OLDHAM]
-
-[Illustration: M.H. LOGAN]
-
-[Illustration: J.V. JAMESON]
-
-[Illustration: H. HOWES]
-
- INVALIDED HOME AFTER THE SURRENDER OF PRETORIA.
-
-Seeing that Louis Botha, with all the main body of Boers, had retired
-eastward, Lord Roberts realised the importance of making his line of
-communications secure in that direction, and he therefore paid a high
-compliment to the troops under Colonel Ross in selecting them for that
-duty. A few days after taking up the positions assigned to him, Colonel
-Lumsden wrote from Irene a letter in which he expressed his opinion of
-the work that had been done by all ranks in the corps under his command:
-
- We have been told off to hold the line of communications from Pretoria
- to Johannesburg, A Company and Headquarters taking the first ten
- miles, B Company the second, and the remainder of the 8th Corps in
- detachments all down the line. We are here for an indefinite time,
- awaiting events.
-
- Our Maxim gun under Captain Holmes has rejoined us here, having been
- with General French’s columns.
-
- This is a much needed rest for all, and especially for our horses, as
- they are utterly unfit to do more than a couple of days’ hard
- marching, and I can only put ninety mounted men, including officers,
- into the field.
-
- This, considering the corps landed with a full complement of 250
- horses and has since received nearly 150 remounts, will give you an
- idea of what we have gone through, and the wear and tear our horses
- have had through hard marching and short feeding.
-
- Taking it as a whole, officers and men have kept excellent health, the
- only prevalent disease being dysentery. The days are bright and sunny,
- without being hot; at times it is even cold. The nights, however, are
- always bitterly cold, and it is quite a usual occurrence, on awaking,
- to find the grass covered with frost and the water in the hand-basin
- frozen over. This will give you some idea of the pleasure of sleeping
- out with only the sky for a roof.
-
- Our total casualties have amounted to twenty-five—just ten per cent.
- of the force we landed with, and a very large proportion of our
- ordinary fighting strength, considering that the most we have ever put
- in the field was 186, and we are now reduced to under a hundred
- mounted men.
-
- We have heard of the release of our prisoners, and expect them to join
- us in a few days. Our only casualties in this shape were the seven
- taken on April 30 at Ospruit.
-
- I cannot say too much in praise of the conduct of my officers and men
- from first to last, under many hardships and in very trying
- circumstances, and I feel sure they have gained a name for themselves
- which their many friends both in England and in India have just cause
- to be proud of.
-
- I am confident that my meed of praise will be fully endorsed by those
- under whom I and my corps have had the honour to serve.
-
- It is considered that the war is virtually over, and, at any rate, I
- fancy all Volunteer corps will be disbanded within a short time.
-
- I have kept our accounts as nearly as possible up to date, but we are
- unaware if any pay already claimed has yet been placed to our credit
- in Cape Town, and in the meantime troopers are receiving advances
- through this office out of the funds brought by me from India.
- Fortunately, I have been able to cash cheques in the towns we have
- passed through, and I hope I may succeed in doing so at Pretoria
- to-morrow, as our cash in the box is reduced to four sovereigns.
-
- We have received no mails, either from England or India, for the past
- six weeks, and we are all anxiously awaiting news.
-
-The Special Correspondent of the ‘Englishman,’ whose close association
-with the corps in all circumstances can be traced through every letter,
-does not take his banishment to lines of communication with the Stoical
-philosophy that characterises Colonel Lumsden. After the freshness of it
-has gone he writes:
-
- Irene—that’s where Lumsden’s Horse have been putting in time since
- Lord Roberts supplanted Paul Kruger in the jurisdiction of the town
- and in the hearts of the people of Pretoria. Irene is not so called
- because of any resemblance it bears to the Irene of the classics. For
- of all the forsaken places which it has pleased Providence to dot down
- on this earth of ours Irene is the most forsaken. Perhaps the Boers,
- in their cunning, calculated that by giving it a name like music its
- reproach in the land might be less. The predominating feature of the
- scenery in Irene is the railway. That, with rare persistence for a
- Transvaal railway, runs right through the place in a straight line.
- The late Government of this country knew a lot about railways. A crow
- might have done the distance between, say, Bloemfontein and Pretoria
- in 250 miles, but it takes the railway 500 miles. And each mile cost
- as many hundred pounds to build. The Government fell in with the
- contractor’s miscalculation. The railway is full of curves, elegant
- but unnecessary, and the Government—_garib admi, sahib! Huzoor,
- bucksheesh!_
-
- Near the station stood a culvert so big that it deserved to be called
- a bridge. There the Boers had placed a charge of dynamite. The
- dynamite went off pop, and the bridge, the embankment, a section of
- the river, and a large slice of the scenery became as naught. Then as
- Lord Roberts swept north he dropped a Sapper or two—no orders, no need
- of any. But in three days trains as long as Chowringhee skipped over
- where the bridge had been, and only the two Sappers trembled for the
- safety of their bag o’ tricks. No Tommy ever doubts the inventions of
- a Sapper. And, despite the absent-mindedness attributed to him, Tommy
- is a man ever suspicious of the doings of his neighbour. But everybody
- knows about Sappers and their wonderful works.
-
- Hence it was that Lumsden’s Horse went to Irene. The powers that had
- newly begun to be in Pretoria said we were to do steady Horatio,
- without any theatrical business, to that bridge, while the Sappers
- slung things about and made it _pucca_. After three weeks of guarding
- this babe of the Royal Engineers the truth dawned upon Lumsden’s Horse
- that they were on lines of communication. ’Twas no place for them,
- thought they, but the authorities had their own designs, and Lumsden’s
- Horse were spread out to such places as Zurfontein, Kalfontein,
- Oliphantfontein, Springs, &c., where the railway had been foolish
- enough to risk itself in the air and endanger its existence thereby,
- for the Boers are death and dynamite on everything in the shape of a
- bridge. However, while Lumsden’s Horse took care of those places no
- Boers ventured to disturb the peace, though they played the devil with
- them when we had gone.
-
-Troopers who had not been spoilt by luxurious idleness as prisoners of
-war in Pretoria took a less cynical view of their situation at Irene
-until the monotony of it began to depress them. Notwithstanding their
-disappointment at having to leave Pretoria behind them before they had a
-chance of discovering how illusive was its outward show of plenty, they
-soon became reconciled to the fate that deprived them of a share in the
-garrison duties which would have seemed but a dull substitute for the
-festivities and celebrations that imagination had conjured up as a
-natural sequence of a triumphal entry into the Boer capital. On
-discovering that the surrender of Pretoria had not brought peace
-appreciably nearer, the correspondent of the ‘Indian Daily News’ wrote
-quite cheerfully:
-
- We saw very little of the town, as, after waiting near the racecourse
- for about two hours, we were, much to our disgust, marched off to a
- station called Irene, about ten miles down the line, where we were to
- be put on lines of communication. Our hopes of a bit of a spin in the
- town after the toilsome march up were therefore blasted, and growling
- was more or less general, naturally enough. I think our tempers were
- not improved by the fact that the road out was a mass of dust, which
- kept going down our throats and into our eyes till one could hardly
- speak or see. Once in camp and settled down, things wore a very
- different appearance, however. Irene is a nicely wooded place, with a
- beautiful stream of water running just handy—in fact, a perfect
- camping ground; just close by is situated the model farm of the
- Transvaal. The grounds are very extensive, and fruit and vegetables of
- all sorts are grown. There is also a large fenced-in enclosure, where
- deer, hartebeeste, and other animals run wild. We stayed at Irene two
- days, and then the 8th Mounted Infantry, accompanied by three sections
- of B Company, went on to Kalfontein, a station about ten miles further
- south, leaving A Company and No. 3 Section B Company to garrison
- Irene. Arriving at Kalfontein late in the evening, we camped about a
- couple of miles from the railway station till next day, when our
- company moved into the station compound. We parted with the 8th
- Mounted Infantry here, they being sent to various stations down the
- line, and sorry we were to lose our old friends. Kaalfontein railway
- station is surrounded by nice trees, under which we kept our horses
- and made ourselves at home. Knowing that this would be our station for
- some time, we laid in a stock of pots and pans collected from the
- empty farmhouses, of which there were several in the vicinity, and did
- our cooking in _pucca_ style. Ducks, geese, and turkeys, to say
- nothing of cocks and hens, besides our rations of mutton and beef,
- kept us going merrily, and groceries, &c., were obtainable from a few
- storekeepers, who paid us visits once a week. It was not surprising,
- therefore, that after a month of this sort of thing, with
- comparatively light work, after the rough time we had been having on
- the march up, the appearance of the men all round improved
- considerably, chubby rosy cheeks and well-filled-out bodies taking the
- place of hollow sunken-in features and more or less meagre frames. The
- weather, though bitterly cold in the nights and early mornings, and
- very warm as a rule during the days, was thoroughly enjoyable, and
- accounted in a great measure, no doubt, for the improved state of most
- of the men’s health. Our work consists in patrolling the line south of
- Irene, and also the country round on every side, and we also supply
- men daily for observation posts in various directions.
-
- The life we lead is, for the most part, a peaceful one, though in
- examining farms and scouring the country round, which we do in parties
- of six, under an officer as a rule, there is always the chance of
- being potted by the wily Boer. This has happened on three occasions
- during our stay, our men being fired upon at close range, and having
- to flee for their lives. None of us was touched, but the bullets came
- pretty close most times. These small patrols, by the way, are, I
- think, the most unsatisfactory part of one’s work, looked at from a
- personal point of view. One stands every chance of being shot, and
- knows that immediately one is fired at it is a case of turning and
- riding for dear life, without a chance of retaliation, or at any rate
- immediate retaliation, as the Boers always outnumber us and hold the
- positions on these occasions.
-
- Most of the farms round about Kalfontein are unoccupied, the farmers
- and their families evidently having left in haste, only carrying away
- a few necessaries with them; but some of their houses have been left
- in charge of the Boer Memsahibs, the Sahibs having gone on a
- man-shooting expedition with the nearest commando, or, perhaps, being
- Commandants themselves. A case in point is that of Commandant Erasmus,
- who has a large farm about seven miles from here, where he has left
- his wife and five or six comely daughters. Needless to say, this is a
- favourite patrol, though the girls are shy and retiring, and the old
- lady waxes very wroth when approached with a view to doing a deal in
- sheep, saying she has only enough to keep herself and family going,
- doubtless including papa when he pays them his periodical visit by
- stealth during the night.
-
-Another trooper takes up the narrative with a sigh of regret for the
-things that cannot be got at Boer farms for love or money:
-
- We are all languishing for an iced whisky peg and a decent meal, and
- often wonder whether we shall enjoy either again. Our work has been no
- picnic, and, though we are all as enthusiastic over it as ever, I must
- admit our experiences have been many and hard. We have dwindled down
- in numbers, too, through casualties and sickness, and our clothing is
- showing signs of wear and tear. The spick-and-span stage has long
- since vanished, and a wash once a week is a luxury. Some had grown
- quite respectable—disrespectable I might say—beards, but the Colonel
- has a rooted antipathy to hirsute growth on the chin. We have also had
- some changes. Trooper Percy Smith has obtained a commission in the
- Berkshires, but _pro tem._ is doing duty with the 8th Mounted
- Infantry; Trooper Huddleston (a cousin of Lady Roberts and brother to
- the E.I.R. Traffic Manager) has been appointed Assistant-Commissioner
- of Police in Kroonstad, while Lieutenant Pugh fills a similar office
- at Heilbron.
-
- We have been cut off from our mails for more than a month, and are
- very anxious to see the letters that have accumulated somewhere for
- us. Our doings, I expect, have been telegraphed to India as they
- occurred, for there is a plethora of newspaper correspondents
- following in the wake of the army and with Headquarters—Lionel James
- represents the ‘Times,’ and has been to see his Indian friends.
-
- The Kaffir we have come in contact with here is a bad lot, and he has
- harassed the Boer farmers terribly during the war, being a perfect
- Pindaree in his depredations. He loots anything and everything he can
- lay hands on, and shifts his allegiance from Boer to British directly
- our troops enter his province. In this respect the excuse he makes is
- that since the outbreak of the war the Boers have not troubled to pay
- their native servants any wages, while keeping them at work as usual.
-
- All the Volunteers (Colonial and Imperial) receive 5_s._ and as much
- as 7_s._ 6_d._ per day, while Kaffirs earn on an average 4_l._ 10_s._
- per mensem in our employ. It comes a bit rough on us to find our
- remuneration fixed at 1_s._ 2_d._ _plus_ 3_d._ for rations per diem.
- Considering that we mainly exist on private purchases of stores, the
- want of ready money is a great hardship. Some of our troopers have
- spent from 10_l._ to 20_l._ a month on groceries and smokes since our
- arrival in Africa. Ten shillings for a packet of cigarettes has often
- been willingly given, while nobody would think two shillings for a
- loaf of bread exorbitant. The reason for these prices is always that
- the Boers have commandeered all they could lay hands on in their
- retreat. Since our departure from Bloemfontein we have not seen our
- tents. Our nightly shelter has been the frosty canopy of heaven, and
- our couch the African veldt (pronounced ‘felt’).
-
-A letter to the ‘Indian Daily News’ gives some interesting personal
-details:
-
- At Irene and Kaalfontein several of our men who had been prisoners at
- Pretoria and Waterval, and others who had been left behind at various
- places sick, rejoined, and we were very glad to have them back among
- us again. Some of our number have had their services requisitioned by
- Government, among them being Lieutenant H.O. Pugh, who has been
- appointed Assistant Commissioner at Heilbron; Sergeant P.P. Warburton,
- Secretary to the Irish Hospital at Pretoria; Sergeant W.C. Conduit to
- the Engineering Department of the railway near Johannesburg; Private
- J.E. Cubitt, Assistant Traffic Manager on the railway at Johannesburg;
- Private F.M. Clifford, Mounted Orderly to General Ian Hamilton;
- Private Huddleston, Assistant Commissioner at Kroonstad; and Private
- Firth, to the Financial Department at Pretoria. Sergeant D.S. Fraser
- was also appointed to the Financial Department at Pretoria, and worked
- there for about a month, but has now rejoined the regiment and resumed
- his duties as Paymaster; and Sergeant Thesiger and Privates
- Moir-Byres, Lytle, Thelwall, and Thornton worked in the Remount
- Department at Johannesburg until the Depôt there was closed.
-
-Among those who had been prisoners from April 30 until our entry into
-Pretoria, and about whose fate some doubt existed for a time, was
-Trooper Clarence Walton. His gallantry in sacrificing himself while
-attempting to save a wounded comrade was mentioned by Colonel Lumsden as
-an act of conspicuous devotion on a day when the corps gained high
-credit and a reluctant rebuke for many brave deeds. Like others who fell
-into the hands of enemies that day, he experienced nothing but kindness
-from his captors. To this he bears willing testimony in the following
-letter:
-
- Starting from the time of our first action of April 30, when I had the
- misfortune to be slightly wounded and taken prisoner, it might be
- interesting to add my experience of the treatment I received to that
- of the other prisoners. After our fighting line retired from my
- direction a Boer came down to me and asked if I was wounded. I told
- him I was hit in the foot, and he offered to take my boot and gaiter
- off for me, which I accepted. He then got a small pony and helped me
- on, and took me to a farm about half a mile distant, where an English
- doctor (on the Boer side) attended to my case immediately, and then
- gave me a jolly good meal, better than I had had for some time. The
- following night I was taken to Brandfort Hospital, where I received
- every kindness possible, the nurses being exceedingly attentive, and
- the Boers themselves, far from showing any ill-feeling, came and
- talked and gave me tobacco. One lady cycled to her home with the
- object of getting some books for me to read; but unfortunately she
- arrived back just too late, as we were being placed in the waggon to
- go to Smaldeel and entrain there for Pretoria. Lieutenant Crane, who
- was also a prisoner, travelled most of the way in the same waggons and
- train as myself. He was kind enough to allow me to share the little
- tobacco he had got, for which I was exceedingly grateful. After
- reaching Pretoria I was handed over to our own people at the hospital
- on the racecourse, where, although I did not have quite such a
- comfortable time as I had had with the Boer ambulances, I had nothing
- to complain of, as the British residents at Pretoria did everything
- they could for us, and we have to thank them for all the little
- luxuries they gave us. The food we received from the Boers was
- sufficient to keep one alive, and that is about all.
-
- After Pretoria was taken I found myself a prisoner of the R.A.M.C.,
- which I found to be very irksome, although at Pretoria the Major in
- charge allowed us our liberty to a great extent. When I got to
- Bloemfontein I was fortunate enough to meet Dr. Roe, late doctor in
- Assam, who treated Saunders and myself with great kindness, and did
- everything he could to make us comfortable.
-
-Life at Irene was not all unpleasant. Several lively incidents
-brightened existence there, and some reflex of them comes to us through
-the cheery words of Captain Neville Taylor, whose arduous duties as
-Adjutant did not prevent him from garnering a fund of merry anecdotes.
-Here is one:
-
- After Pretoria had been taken A Company and Headquarters remained at
- Irene, and B Company went to Kalfontein, ten miles south on the line.
- The duties at both places were similar, in that they had to patrol the
- line and the neighbourhood. One of the Irene regular patrols was to
- Pretoria and back daily.
-
- On one of the usual patrols into that town Captain Rutherfoord passed
- a German ambulance proceeding south, who explained that they had been
- allowed to do so, but carried no pass. Arriving at Pretoria, he
- reported the fact to the authorities, and also that he had stopped the
- ambulance until he could get orders concerning it. On inquiry, having
- ascertained that nothing was known about it, he obtained a letter to
- the Commandant at Irene, who was told to ascertain that the ambulance
- people were carrying no papers for the use of the enemy, and, if
- satisfied, to allow them to proceed. The Commandant, being a man of
- high ideals, did not see his way to thoroughly searching the
- ambulance, which contained four German nurses, in addition to the four
- doctors, and he therefore allowed them to pass on having taken the
- senior doctor’s word of honour that they had with them nothing of any
- use to the enemy in the way of papers. The ambulance then went on its
- way, but stopped the night at Kalfontein, ten miles beyond Irene. In
- the evening a wire came to us for an officer’s patrol to bring all
- those people back to Pretoria. Captain Rutherfoord was accordingly
- sent to Kalfontein for the purpose, and returned in the evening with
- the party.
-
- Colonel Lumsden and all of us felt so sorry for the prisoners that we
- decided to ask them to dinner, which invitation being accepted, in due
- course we all sat down together in our little mess-house.
-
- During our stay at Irene, as it was bitterly cold, we had run up a
- small hut: walls of piled-up stones, a tin roof, and a most cunningly
- contrived fireplace which did not smoke. We decorated the place with
- flowers, had a tip-top dinner, and drank _crème de menthe_ as our only
- beverage. The dinner went off in the wonderful way dinners do. None of
- us could talk German, and none of them English, and yet we conversed
- freely and had the greatest fun. The show concluded with songs, and
- the last remembrance I have of it was that the Colonel and the
- prettiest ‘sister’ were taking down one another’s addresses and
- betting gloves about something in the quietest corner. Rutherfoord had
- been hiding as much as possible, as he felt himself to blame for being
- the cause of all their trouble, but we gave him away at the end, and
- though they all pretended to be very angry with him, we unanimously
- allowed that he had beaten all but the Colonel in winning the favours
- of the fair sex.
-
- At about 2 A.M. we escorted them back to their caravan and said
- good-night, first of all pointing out that a sentry was posted over
- them, with orders to shoot at sight if anyone left the waggons during
- the night. They started for Pretoria at daybreak, but most of the
- officers were there to see them off, while one met them a few miles up
- the road. The Colonel was late for breakfast that morning. We heard
- afterwards that on arrival at Pretoria they were searched, and the
- result was that the doctors went to gaol, and the dear ladies were
- sent under supervision out of the country. We all, however, are quite
- certain that they were innocent victims of Boer duplicity.
-
-Another story is very characteristic of Tommy’s smartness:
-
- At one of the camps—I think Elandsfontein—a party of us got leave to
- go into the town for dinner. We had come in late, and either had not
- been given or had forgotten the countersign. Near the town we came
- upon a sentry, who challenged in the usual way, and who let us through
- after making certain that we were officers of Lumsden’s Horse. After
- going a few yards we heard him say to his pal that it was all right,
- as we were only ‘some of those d——d Volunteers,’ this being meant in
- all politeness and only Tommy’s _patois_. One officer of ours,
- however, half-jokingly threatened to report him if he talked like that
- again. After a good dinner we were returning to camp and came upon the
- same sentry. ‘Halt! Who goes there?’ ‘Friend.’ ‘Advance one and give
- the countersign.’ One officer, advancing, said, ‘D——d Volunteer.’
- Tommy shouldered with a slap and roared out, ‘Pass, D——d Volunteer,
- and all’s well!’ He had the best of us, and we laughed as much as the
- guard.
-
-About this time the Boers in Pretoria were also making merry over an
-incident associated with countersigns in which one who played a sentry’s
-part had the laugh on his side at the expense of British officers. It
-happened at a crisis when Botha was known to have secret emissaries in
-the capital warning him of every preparation for a fresh movement, and
-it illustrates perfectly the aptitude of Boers as spies, and the
-easy-going inefficiency of our own precaution against traitors. A young
-Boer, speaking English fluently, came from Botha’s force just after Lord
-Roberts was supposed to have dispersed it in the neighbourhood of
-Diamond Hill. He reached our outposts not far from the limits patrolled
-by Lumsden’s Horse, and, being armed with one of the passes that have
-been lavishly distributed and frequently abused, he had no difficulty in
-getting through the British lines. Once inside them, he was free to move
-about anywhere and ascertain that nearly all available troops, except
-one division, had been withdrawn from Pretoria for concentration
-elsewhere. He even loitered about to hear the talk at a club frequented
-by officers and by ‘friendly’ civilians, whose privileges of membership
-nobody assumed the right to question. There and in hotel halls or
-billiard-rooms, where officers, regardless of attentive listeners,
-incautiously spoke of their own probable movements, this young Boer
-picked up much entertaining gossip and useful information. But he also
-learned, to his dismay, that nobody could move about the town or leave
-it after nightfall without the countersign. His idea was to get out
-again under cover of darkness, with all the news that he could gather
-for General Botha, but he heard that provisional police would by that
-time be patrolling all the streets, alert and zealous in the performance
-of their new duties, and also that every outlet by which a horseman
-could pass would have double sentries posted after sunset. A wary Boer
-never tries rash experiments if he can avoid them, and this young man,
-having no unpatriotic wish to run his head into a noose, adopted other
-measures.
-
-Going to a friend’s house, in which some British uniforms were kept as
-trophies until the police discovered and appropriated them, he dressed
-in khaki, donned a greatcoat, and armed himself with a Mauser carbine.
-All this may seem impossible in a town under martial law, but arms and
-ammunition were found in private houses long after the date of this
-incident, and nobody ever heard of exemplary punishment being meted out
-to offenders, who generally got off scot free on a plea of ignorance. At
-any rate, the young Boer, thus equipped to counterfeit a provisional
-policeman, sallied forth at night, when a high collar, turned well up
-for protection against the icy north wind, and a hat slouched over the
-eyes, would not have attracted any attention. Making use of mental notes
-previously taken, he placed himself near the corner of a street so much
-frequented by officers on their way to or from the club that special
-police seldom troubled to look after it. There he had not long to wait
-for a chance of challenging, and in response the countersign was given
-as a matter of course without the least suspicion. Safe in the
-possession of this password, the ingenious young Boer mounted his horse,
-and, claiming to be the bearer of despatches, rode past our outlying
-pickets and off into the darkness on his way to the nearest Boer
-commando. Some officers of Lumsden’s Horse were in the Pretoria Club
-that night, but it was not they who gave away the countersign.
-Occasional visits to Pretoria in the vain hope of finding that some
-articles of luxury or much-needed outfit could be bought there became
-great events in the lives of both officers and men during their
-banishment to lines of communication. Somehow a goodly number of them,
-for whom sport was an irresistible attraction, managed to assemble on
-ground a mile outside the racecourse when three score of competitors
-started for the first military steeplechase ever ridden near Pretoria.
-After this event Colonel Lumsden wrote with pardonable pride:
-
- Beharis will be pleased to hear that Captain Rutherfoord, of ours, won
- the first paper-chase in Pretoria. There were sixty starters over a
- stiff country, with the result that grief was plentiful.
-
-But that view of the result, though entertained by nearly every
-spectator who was near enough to watch an exciting finish, did not
-commend itself to the official whose decision none could question. How
-it all came about may be told by an eye-witness, who was also a
-competitor until, finding himself hopelessly out of the race, he took to
-‘skirting,’ and finally joined a crowd of onlookers at the winning-post.
-
-The German Staff officer who said that English soldiers went into a
-fight as if it were sport and took their sport seriously as training for
-battle, must have been thinking of some scene like that in which British
-officers and Volunteers of all ranks figured on Pretoria Racecourse that
-last Saturday in June 1900. There we were in the midst of war with an
-active enemy not many miles off, yet nobody seemed to concern himself
-much about what the Boers might be doing at that moment. All were intent
-upon the important business in hand. A paper-chase had to be run, and
-every man meant to do his best, whether mounted on a Basuto pony that
-had never jumped any obstacle more formidable than a boggy spruit
-before, or on a raking Waler or clever English hunter. Lord Roberts had
-given permission for a paper-chase and theoretically the sport took that
-form. There were no prizes for winners, no clerk of the scales, no
-weighing-in, no penalties for infringement of Hunt Club rules. All who
-cared to start might enjoy that privilege. But practically the thing
-resolved itself into a steeple-chase under regulations that forbade
-riding from point to point at discretion; a course being marked by flags
-round which every starter was compelled to go or lose his chance of
-distinction. Paper-hunting would have been child’s play in a country
-like this unless it had led us over rough kopjes and away across the
-veldt, where there might have been a chance of Boer patrols chipping in.
-So to add some touch of excitement, and the spice of danger, without
-which no British sport is worthy of that name, artificial fences were
-made more difficult to negotiate than torrent-filled spruits or boggy
-water-courses. Two stone walls enclosing a mealie patch came handy, and
-suggested themselves as most appropriate for a start where spectators
-might see some fun at the outset if veldt ponies tried to tumble over,
-as they generally do, without jumping. A run without hound-music as an
-accompaniment did not commend itself to the immortal Jorrocks, whose
-eulogy of ‘’unting, the image of war without its guilt and only 25 per
-cent. of its danger,’ would have been considerably modified in
-application to such sport as ours of that day, if that genial M.F.H.
-could have seen the horses some men chose to risk their necks on. They
-were of all sizes, shapes, and breeds. As for the fences, an Irish
-hunter would have larked over every one in his stride; but it is quite
-another thing with horses that have never been trained to leap.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Photo: Bourne & Shepherd_
- CAPTAIN RUTHERFOORD, D.S.O.
-]
-
-Pretoria did not give itself away all at once to the temptations of a
-novel spectacle; but there were ladies in carriages among the little
-crowd of sightseers, and some stolid burghers looked on with approval,
-while others took part in the chase, for Boers have a bond of sympathy
-with us in love of horse-racing and field sports. The Commander-in-Chief
-came, sitting his shapely chestnut with a firmer and more workmanlike
-ease than half the horsemen present could boast of, and looking as if he
-could still show them all the way over a stiff hunting country. His
-appearance at the starting-point was a signal for marshalling the forces
-into line.
-
-Then a Staff officer gave the word to go, and away went the motley
-field, more than half a hundred strong, spurring, hustling, charging
-like a Cavalry squadron for all they were worth. A light-weight, who
-served with distinction in Her Majesty’s Navy years ago, was quickest
-off, and led them over the two stone walls, closely followed by Captain
-Cox, of the New South Wales Lancers. Then came the second flight, riding
-for the walls knee to knee. Thanks to bold hearts and resolute riding,
-they all got over. A fall in that dense formation with another rank
-rushing close behind would have brought more than one rider to
-unutterable grief. But the ranks began to thin where a spruit had to be
-crossed, with steep banks into and out of the drift. There the
-‘Skipper’s’ pony, with speed unchecked, gained a good lead, but he came
-down at the next made-up fence and gave his rider a nasty fall. The
-active light-weight, however, nipped into the saddle and went on cheery
-as ever. Then in clouds of dust, through which the fences could scarcely
-be seen, leggy horses and diminutive ponies rushed onward, jostling for
-a lead as before. Captain McNeil, of Montmorency’s Scouts, came down and
-broke his collar-bone, and Gibbs, of the Somerset Yeomanry, falling with
-his horse on top of him, had two ribs broken. But still ‘the chase went
-sweeping heedless by’ over a wide dug-out, with a hurdle to screen it
-and a trappy ditch where the road had to be crossed. Then they spread
-out to gallop over stony ground for the spruit, into which many
-floundered. The pace was beginning to tell on horses out of condition as
-they struggled up hill to go for a formidable bank of sandbags topped
-with loose earth that had been dug out of the ditch in front. Down-hill
-again to a hollow, where the little stream meandering between boggy
-ground had to be crossed three times. There several jaded steeds came to
-a standstill, having shot their bolts, and only a select few went up the
-next hill to the trappiest fence of all, where water flowed between deep
-banks. There the ‘Skipper’ got his third fall, but he mounted again and
-followed the leaders as they rounded the flag and rode for home. Captain
-Cox had also been left behind, and the running was taken up by Captain
-Rutherfoord, of Lumsden’s Horse, with Major Kenna, V.C., of the 21st
-Lancers, in close attendance. Flanks were heaving and pipes wheezing
-before the next boulder-strewn ridge had been crossed. ‘A run is nothing
-without music,’ said a subaltern as he roused his panting steed for
-another effort. He nearly blundered, as many others did, over the next
-little fence, and they were being left hopelessly behind. Kenna and
-Rutherfoord charged the last stone wall side by side, and rose together
-at it. Rutherfoord landed first, and had the race in hand, but,
-mistaking the post, eased his horse too soon. So Kenna, V.C., got a neck
-ahead in the straight run home, and thus won his right to claim the
-brush or whatever may be a substitute for it in paper-chasing. That was
-the official verdict, but Lumsden’s Horse still hold that their champion
-was first past the post.
-
-One day a pleasant incident enlivened Colonel Lumsden’s ordinarily
-uneventful round of inspections. He had been visiting posts south of
-Irene, and was hurrying back to headquarters on an affair of urgent
-importance, when a train stopped at one of the sidings. Before he had
-time to realise that it was a special, or to make any inquiries, the
-train began to move again. So he jumped on to the nearest platform, and
-presently found himself in a corridor, cleaner and more carefully looked
-after than any he had seen on a Transvaal railway up to that time. Not
-knowing what to make of it, and half-expecting to meet an angry Chief of
-the Staff face to face, he refrained from exploring further. Presently a
-lady passed and said, ‘Won’t you come in?’ Colonel Lumsden was smoking
-at the time, and declined for that reason. ‘But mother wishes you to
-come,’ was the reply. So the gallant Colonel yielded with ready grace,
-and found himself in the presence of Lady Roberts, who, with her
-daughters, was on the way to Pretoria. They were just then nearing
-Irene, and Colonel Lumsden drew attention to the camp of his Indian
-Volunteers, in whom he thought Lady Roberts would naturally be much
-interested. To his surprise he saw a huge bonfire burning, and in
-silhouette against it were the words, ‘Welcome to Lady Roberts!’
-Sergeant-Major Stephens had hit upon this happy idea, and put it into
-execution just at the right moment. One of the daughters, seeing it,
-said, ‘Oh, mother, there is a warm welcome for you, at any rate!’ Lady
-Roberts frequently referred to this impromptu welcome in conversation
-with Colonel Lumsden afterwards, and spoke appreciatively of the
-pleasure it had given her.
-
-For nearly two months—from the fall of Pretoria on June 5 to July
-29—Lumsden’s Horse were scattered up and down the railway lines between
-Pretoria and Johannesburg.
-
-Colonel Lumsden gives the following official account of this period in a
-letter to the executive committee of his corps:
-
- My headquarters are still at Irene, while my corps is stationed in
- detachments along the railway from here to Springs. I am daily
- expecting an order to concentrate either here or at the latter point,
- having received official information that we are to be relieved by
- Mounted Infantry from the Regulars.
-
- Beyond living in a constant state of alarm, standing to arms at all
- hours of the night, and our patrols shooting and being shot at, there
- is little or nothing of interest to record.
-
- Scouting parties have had several narrow escapes, but nothing of a
- serious nature occurred until yesterday (July 13), when I heard by
- wire from Captain Beresford at Springs that Private Claude F. Walton,
- of the Mysore detachment, had been wounded rather severely while out
- on patrol with Captain Clifford, but without, I understand,
- endangering his life. The shot was fired from a farmhouse, which has
- since, I am glad to say, been burnt to the ground. Two days
- previously, when I was on a visit to Springs, Captain Chamney and his
- patrol had rather a narrow squeak, but got safely away under a pelting
- fire.
-
- The Boer outposts are within four to five miles of our position at
- Springs, where Colonel Ross and part of his corps are stationed, but
- they are too weak to take the initiative.
-
- The weather is still bitterly cold at night, but the men have now had
- time to rig up temporary shelters of sorts, while the detachments at
- Zurfontein and Springs have been fortunate in obtaining iron-roofed
- shelters to live in.
-
- I much regret to have to inform you of the death of Private M.B.
- Follett, of the Mysore detachment, from enteric fever in hospital at
- Johannesburg on the 7th inst., and that the undernamed have been left
- at various hospitals on the march up sick, or sent down from here.
-
- Some may return to headquarters, but I anticipate that most of them
- will proceed to England or to India, invalided or convalescent.
-
- Young Follett’s brother was fortunately with him at the last, and it
- is gratifying to note that the rites usually accorded to an officer
- were observed at his interment.
-
- The men in the attached list have mostly received their regimental pay
- up to date, and I have done my best to see that any balance due to
- them in this respect will be paid before they leave Cape Town.
-
- I have also given in such cases five pounds to each man for
- necessaries on the voyage. This responsibility I have taken on myself,
- having ample funds in hand, and I feel sure the committee will approve
- my action, more especially as many men are utterly unable to get into
- communication with their friends and are entirely without money.
-
- I understand Government intends to grant this amount to each soldier
- as a war gratuity at the close of the campaign; the sums thus given
- will therefore be recoverable.
-
- _List of Men in Hospital_
- Private D.O. Allardice │ ” J.H.A. Burn-Murdoch
-
- ” E. Adlam │ ” R.G.H. Muskett
-
- Lance-Corporal Hugh Blair │ ” C. McMinn
-
- Private E.N. Bankes │ ” A. Martin
-
- ” H.C. Bennett │Sergeant-Major E.H.
- │Mansfield
-
- ” C.J.D. Bewsher │Private R.C. Nolan
-
- ” W.R. Birch │ ” H.B. Oldham
-
- Lance-Corporal Butler (A.D.)│ ” H.W. Puckridge
-
- Private W.B. Brown │ ” E.B. Parkes
-
- ” Baldwin │ ” P.W. Pryce
-
- ” J.S. Campbell │ ” N.J.V. Reid
-
- ” Cheshire │ ” J.W.A. Skelton
-
- ” H. Cooper │ ” J.S. Saunders
-
- Sergeant E. Dawson │ ” S. Sladden
-
- Lance-Sergeant J.S. Elliott │ ” B.C.A.A. Steuart
-
- Private A.H. Francis │ ” H.W. Thelwall
-
- ” E.H. Gough │ ” W. Turnbull
-
- ” G.A. Gowenlock │ ” T. Thompson
-
- ” R.P. Haines │ ” A.N. Woods
-
- ” C.C. Harvey │ ” C.A. Walton
-
- ” W.H. Holme │ ” F.W. Wright
-
- ” J.V. Jameson │ ” C.F. Walton
-
- ” R. Tait Innes │ ” L.H. Zorab
-
- ” Jackman │ ” W.S. Lemon
-
- ” G.E. │ ” C.E. Stuart
-
- ” D.J. Keating │ ” A.C. Walker
-
- ” H.M. Logan │
-
- Regimental Sergeant-Major Marsham’s friends in Behar will regret to
- hear that bad luck has again overtaken him. On the way up to rejoin
- after recovering from his wounds, he was so unfortunate as to be in
- company with the Derbyshire Militia when they met with their disaster,
- and is believed to have been taken prisoner with them. So far I have
- no official communication as to this, but, not having heard from or of
- him, conclude it is only too true.
-
- Private Percy Smith and Lance-Corporal Hugh Blair have received
- commissions in the Regular forces and are no longer with the corps,
- although the former is for a time attached to the Oxford M.I.—part of
- our own regiment under Colonel Ross. Blair is among the sick men
- mentioned and at present in Cape Town.
-
- Lord Roberts has also been good enough to grant commissions to Private
- Douglas Jones—in the Army Service Corps—Privates J.A. Fraser, Collins,
- T.B. Nicholson, J.S. Biscoe, and Corporal Bates. Several of the latter
- are for the West India Regiments. All these remain with me for the
- present.
-
- Lieutenant Pugh and Private Huddleston have been appointed Assistant
- Commissioners at Heilbron and Kroonstad respectively.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Photo: P. Klier_
- CAPTAIN W. STEVENSON, VET. SURG.
-]
-
- The names of several other applicants are still before His Excellency,
- and I hope to advise you soon of their having received commissions
- also. At the same time I do not expect any of these will leave the
- corps until its disbandment. Young Maurice Clifford has been taken on
- by General Ian Hamilton as orderly, and is also likely to receive a
- commission, as well as Leslie Williams, son of the late popular
- Gwatkin Williams.
-
- Captain Rutherfoord, Lieutenant Crane, and Sergeant Macnamara have
- been offered commissions in the Transvaal Mounted Police, and will
- probably remain in this country, as I believe will a good many others.
-
- Captain Stevenson is likely to obtain an important veterinary
- appointment out here, and Dr. (Captain) Powell is also in the running
- for a high medical post should he prefer this to returning to India.
-
- All the above, added to the continued requisitions for men of my corps
- for various offices, point to the esteem in which they are held by the
- authorities apart from their fighting qualities. In fact, were it not
- for strong remonstrances on my part to official requests, I should be
- in a fair way to lose a big percentage of my men before the work for
- which they came out has been completed.
-
- In my previous letter I mentioned the sad plight to which our horses
- had been reduced, and that at the time of writing I doubted my ability
- to place ninety mounted men in the field fit for a two-days’ march.
- You will now be pleased to hear that in this respect things have
- improved, and that I can now mount 180 officers and men on fairly
- serviceable animals, few, however, remaining of our original Indian
- chargers. In this connection I may also mention that out of sixty
- Argentine remounts received at Kroonstad, only one is alive.
-
- Now comes the important question of finance.
-
- I have been spending various sums on comforts for the men, the largest
- item being 50_l._ for a much-needed supply of tobacco.
-
- The men are very badly in want of clothes, especially breeches,
- tunics, and boots. I have indented on the Government Stores at
- Bloemfontein for a complete outfit, and hope to receive it shortly.
- This, of course, will be issued to us gratis. Nothing in the shape of
- clothing can be got for money.
-
- I am enclosing a statement showing roughly the financial position of
- the corps. From this you will see that, provided the war is not
- prolonged beyond our present anticipations, there will be an ample
- balance left to admit of the payments estimated for in Calcutta.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Photo: Johnston & Hoffmann_
- SERGEANT ERNEST DAWSON
-]
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIV
-_ALARMS AND EXCURSIONS—BOER SCOUTING—A RECONNAISSANCE TO CROCODILE RIVER—FAREWELL TO COLONEL ROSS_
-
-
-Lumsden’s Horse found their duties on lines of communication not all
-uneventful, and had on occasions some adventures more exciting than the
-incidents of a patrol to Pretoria or Elandsfontein or Johannesburg,
-though that had to be conducted with proper precautions against possible
-surprises from Boer raiders who were always on the prowl within a few
-miles of our outpost lines, but rarely to be seen. Emboldened by the
-inaction of British troops in Pretoria and by some successes which
-Christian De Wet had achieved down Rodewal way, where he captured and
-burnt a train containing mail-bags with precious letters for Lumsden’s
-Horse, the enemy began to press on every weak point they could find.
-They evinced especially a desire to get possession of the mines near
-Springs, being not only bent on wanton destruction, but also impelled
-thereto by the fact that Supply officers there had been gathering stores
-of forage from the country round about. Apart from its position in the
-centre of a district richly mineralised, Springs was of considerable
-strategic importance as a stronghold for the protection of the railway
-junction at Elandsfontein, to which its commanding kopjes, if strongly
-held, were a formidable flanking defence. Nothing but the belief that
-Botha’s forces had been so scattered and demoralised by defeat at
-Diamond Hill as to be incapable of great offensive movements could have
-induced the military authorities to neglect an adequate defence of
-Springs. The Boers seemed to realise its importance more than we did,
-and if they had brought artillery to bear upon it the safety of
-Johannesburg might have been seriously threatened. Fortunately, however,
-either Botha’s irresolution or divided counsels among his colleagues led
-to the abandonment of such enterprises after one or two attempts which
-were frustrated by General Hutton and Colonel Henry, whose Mounted
-Infantry reconnaissances at this juncture were characterised by great
-skill. Nevertheless, some strong Boer commandos were persistent in their
-attempts to get a footing at Springs, so that Lumsden’s Horse had to
-reinforce other corps of the 8th Mounted Infantry and take their full
-share of outpost work, in which they were frequently harassed by the
-enemy. Some interesting details of this phase are furnished by troopers
-whose letters were published in the Indian newspapers. One correspondent
-writes to the ‘Indian Daily News,’ dating from Springs, July 14:
-
- You will see from the above that we have been moved again, and I fancy
- we shall be kept on the go now for some time to come, as both we and
- our horses have had a long rest and are quite fit again.
-
- It was rather a bore getting shifted out of our comfortable quarters
- at Kalfontein, but now that the wrench is over I fancy most of us are
- glad to be on the march once more, as life there was beginning to get
- just a trifle monotonous and humdrum.
-
- About a week previous to our leaving Kalfontein No. 3 Section B
- Company, who had been left at Irene with A Company, were sent to
- garrison Zurfontein, a few miles down the line, and we joined them
- there, the whole of us then marching to this place, which is the
- terminus of a branch of the main line running eastward, and is
- situated about twenty-five miles from Johannesburg. I should have
- mentioned that we left a few of our men at Kalfontein to help to
- garrison the place until further orders. We stayed at Elandsfontein
- and Boksburg on the way here, and the men who had been through such
- exciting scenes so recently in these places naturally took a great
- interest in them and ‘fought their battles o’er again.’
-
- We have had rather an exciting time of it on two occasions since being
- quartered here. On the 11th inst. we sent out a patrol of six men
- under Captain Chamney, and just as they got to the top of a bit of
- rising ground they found themselves within a few hundred yards of an
- approaching body of the enemy, who no sooner saw our men than they let
- ’em have it with their Mausers. There was nothing for it but to turn
- and get away as quickly as possible, and this the patrol did, managing
- once again to elude the bullets. The Boers followed, but soon gave up
- the game, as it was only a few miles from the town, and they evidently
- did not consider it good enough to venture too close. On getting out
- of range and up to the next rise our patrol halted and sent a man back
- to report matters to Colonel Ross, and, after staying out about an
- hour to see if there were any more signs of the enemy, they returned
- to camp. A larger patrol was sent out during the day, but saw no signs
- of Boers, these gentry evidently having returned to the adjacent
- hills. A small farmhouse, from behind which our men were shot at, was
- burnt down; but this did not have much effect, as another of our
- patrols was fired on two days afterwards near the same place, and this
- time we were not so fortunate, as Private Walton, of No. 3 Section B
- Company, was shot through the right thigh and got another bullet
- through his hat, just shaving his skull. He managed to ride into camp
- with the others, but will have a long spell in hospital, I fancy. His
- wound was dressed as soon as he got into camp, and next day he was
- sent on to Johannesburg.
-
- This is one of the coldest places we have struck so far, and early
- morning patrols and night pickets are consequently more unpopular than
- ever. There is one great consolation, however, and that is we can get
- good and cheap draught beer here; this is a luxury we have not
- indulged in for ages, so, needless to say, the thirsty ones are having
- a great time.
-
-The special correspondent of the ‘Englishman’ treats one of the
-incidents above referred to in a lighter vein:
-
- In the middle of July our detachment at Springs, where there had been
- a good deal of desultory fighting, had some fun for their money. They
- went out patrolling one day, a dozen or so strong. A farmhouse loomed
- in the distance, and as the magnetic pole draws the needle so did this
- innocent, nestling farm draw the patrol. If you live on biscuits for a
- month you develop a craving for bread. Same with everybody, from
- General down to mule-drivers. It would be side on the part of
- Lumsden’s Horse to hold aloof from any popular taste, and as one
- leary-nosed tea planter said he smelt dough, the patrol rode for that
- farmhouse, animated by the noble sentiment that the devil might take
- the hindmost. But this time the devil nearly copped the leader, for
- the Boers opened at short range from stone walls near the farmhouse. A
- patrol’s duty being to locate the enemy, and not to die valorously or
- otherwise, our men turned tail, thought of their misdeeds, and
- streaked for home. Unluckily C.F. Walton, of B Company, bestrode an
- Argentine which feared neither Boer nor bullet. The brute wouldn’t
- budge under the fire, and Walton received a hail of lead all to
- himself. One bullet struck his hat, cutting the bottom of the
- crack—our squashed Cashmere ones—clean away, shedding his hair in a
- way that no brushing will alter, for it shaved a line clean along his
- scalp. Just as he got his horse on the move he was struck again, in
- the thigh, but managed to gallop away without further mishap.
- Examination proved that the bullet had gone right through the upper
- part of his leg, inflicting a severe but not dangerous wound. Walton
- is now in hospital and doing well.
-
-Fuller details and a more consecutive narrative of other events are
-given by a correspondent of the ‘Madras Daily Mail,’ who writes:
-
- Our duties are not only to guard the station and railway line and
- patrol the country, but also to furnish observation posts, whose duty
- it is to report the movements of any bodies of men they may see; the
- patrols also demanding the production of passes from anyone—native or
- white man—whom they may meet. The Boers are not far off, and life is
- not without its excitement; for on two occasions our patrols have been
- fired on, once getting a particularly hot reception and being chased
- for a considerable distance. One man in particular had a narrow escape
- when the enemy—who were lying in wait for the patrol—suddenly charged
- down over the top of a neighbouring ridge. He was in the middle of a
- small copse ahead of his companions and did not see the Boers, who
- galloped round on each flank of the wood, and, dismounting just this
- side of it, commenced firing at the rest of the patrol. Hearing the
- rifles so close, he attempted to return, and found, on getting to the
- edge of the wood, that he was cut off by a line of men along a wire
- fence, who fortunately were so busy firing that they did not see him.
- He eventually made a dash for it from the upper end of the wood,
- coming out behind the Boers and making a long detour. Of course,
- directly he got clear of the wood he was seen and became a target for
- all their rifles, but he got safely away.
-
- During a prolonged stay in a place like this we manage to make
- ourselves very comfortable. In the vicinity of Kaalfontein the
- farmhouses were for the most part deserted and had been left just as
- they stood. From these farmhouses we are always allowed to help
- ourselves to useful and non-valuable articles, such as cooking
- utensils and eatables; so what with chickens, ducks, &c., while the
- live-stock held out, and most excellent mutton issued as rations, not
- to mention an occasional porker (bought from the Kaffirs) or haunch of
- venison (shot by one of the officers), our larder was well stocked,
- while extras in the way of groceries could be obtained from an
- enterprising Jew storekeeper, who would drive round with his stores.
- Then, too, bivouacs and shelters of all sorts can be rigged up, and
- very welcome they were at the time, as during June and the beginning
- of July the cold was intense.
-
- At Springs, the terminus of a branch line from Elandsfontein Junction
- through Boksburg, together with four companies of the 8th Mounted
- Infantry and the Canadians, we remained six days. Here the Boers were
- rather closer than they had been at Kaalfontein, and it was the rule
- rather than the exception for the patrols to be fired on. One morning
- our patrol was shot at from a farmhouse flying a white flag, the
- advance scouts being only 150 yards distant; one of them, Trooper
- Walton (Mysore and Coorg Rifles), received a bullet through his thigh
- and another right through the crown of his hat, actually cutting the
- hair along the top of his head, but he managed to get away without
- further injury. On receiving the news Colonel Ross immediately sent
- out a strong patrol with a pom-pom and burnt the house to the ground,
- but saw nothing of the enemy, who are always careful not to interfere
- with a strong patrol, their plan being to allow a small party to
- approach their ambush and then suddenly open fire, hoping to empty a
- few saddles. Fortunately, however, it is not easy to hit a man on
- horseback at an unknown range or else the Boers are uncommonly bad
- shots, for our patrols have now been fired upon on seven or eight
- different occasions at comparatively close range and only one man has
- been hit. One afternoon a party of Boers, about thirty in number, were
- seen by the look-out man coming down to a Kaffir kraal, about three
- miles out. Lumsden’s Horse were ordered to saddle up immediately and
- give chase. The Boers, however, did not wait. They had evidently come
- down to get mealies from the Kaffirs, as we found some bags they had
- dropped in their haste.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- A TYPICAL BOER
- (_From a sketch by J.S. Cowen_)
-]
-
-In these operations Lumsden’s Horse learned a great deal about the
-tricks and methods of Boer scouts, and soon began to realise that these
-could best be met by bringing all a shikarri’s varied experiences into
-play. In reality the wily Boers do not send out patrols, according to
-our interpretation of that word. When any considerable number of them
-are seen together, it may be taken for granted that their scouts have
-previously done all the work expected of them, or that they are off
-somewhere in another direction, acting as a screen for some more
-important movement. When watching a hostile force, with a view to
-aggressive tactics or defensive measures, the Boers hardly ever show
-themselves. If caught by chance on the move, they either halt where they
-are and lie down or steal away one by one to the nearest cover, knowing
-perfectly well that any large body moving can be seen a long distance
-off, while separate figures become almost invisible dots on the vast
-plain and attract no attention from people whose eyesight is less keen
-than a Kaffir’s. Once concealed from view, they are careful not to show
-themselves again on the sky-line, or on a sunlit slope, where their
-shadows would betray them. From hunting wild game they have learned to
-pursue the tactics of an antelope or a haartebeeste in eluding a
-vigilant enemy. As a herd of deer, browsing peacefully in some hollow,
-leaves a trusty sentinel on the nearest hill to keep watch, so Boers
-tell off one of their number for a similar duty, and he, like the
-sentinel buck, remains motionless beside a tree or stone, invisible
-himself, but allowing no movement on the plain to escape his watchful
-eye. The man on whom this task falls is generally a veteran trained by
-long experience to a knowledge of the veldt and the habits of every
-being, man or beast, frequenting it. By the actions of horses or cattle
-on the pastures, not less than by the hurried movement of more timid
-wild animals or birds, he knows whether they have been disturbed by
-anything unusual. Then he stoops down to listen, and his ears are so
-sensitive by long practice that he can distinguish the rumble of wheels
-or tread of marching men miles off, though the sound comes to him no
-louder than the whisper of wind among dry grass. And a bird on the wing,
-or animal scuttling through the undergrowth, will warn him at once of
-approaching foes.
-
-[Illustration: CAPTAIN CLIFFORD]
-
-If the Boers want to lay an ambush they do not set about it in a clumsy
-fashion, but with due foresight, calculating all the chances. Far in
-advance of the trap thus prepared they will probably have posted some
-men among the rocks of a kopje, or preferably in a dry donga between
-high banks that effectually conceal any movement. These advanced scouts
-never show themselves or fire a shot when the prey for which their
-comrades are waiting approaches. They simply allow it to pass, and then
-perhaps will be heard a whistle like that of some wild bird, the lowing
-of cattle that cannot be seen, or other sound familiar enough but
-conveying no particular meaning at the moment. Yet in all probability it
-is a preconcerted signal from the foremost scouts to others within
-hearing, who pass on the message, so that every movement of the coming
-patrol or column is known to the Boers waiting in ambush for it. Thus
-many mishaps have occurred in a way that nobody could account for, and
-by practising similar methods Lumsden’s Horse at length became a match
-for their enemy at the same game. Other lessons than those learned at
-Springs were, however, needed to perfect them in the craft on which the
-safety of an army may sometimes depend. One such experience fell to
-their share in a reconnaissance towards Crocodile River, which Colonel
-Lumsden describes in a letter to the executive committee of Lumsden’s
-Horse:
-
- A few days after the despatch of my previous letter, Colonel Ross,
- with a detachment of my own corps and the greater part of the 8th
- Mounted Infantry, collected at Irene under instructions to proceed to
- Pretoria. While we were still in camp there orders came from
- headquarters to patrol the country to the west and north-west as far
- as the Crocodile River. On receiving the above orders, Colonel Ross,
- accompanied by myself, Captain Taylor, and a small patrol of the
- Oxfords under Lieut. Percy Smith, went out to reconnoitre the country.
- Captain Clifford, of ours, had already proceeded early in the day
- (July 20) with a patrol of fifteen men in the same direction.
- Overtaking this party about noon, Colonel Ross ordered Captain
- Clifford to push on and ascertain that the ground was clear of the
- enemy as far as the river. Colonel Ross’s party then returned to
- Irene. Late in the evening Captain Clifford’s patrol came back and
- reported that his party had been ambuscaded before reaching the river,
- and had had to make the best of their way out of a tight place on
- jaded horses at the best speed they could, leaving two of their
- number, Privates Bearne and Cayley, in the hands of the enemy. Captain
- Clifford estimated the enemy’s strength at 300, and reported that as
- far as he could ascertain they were laagered in a strong natural
- position near Six Mile Spruit, commanding a perfect view of its
- valley. Not being quite satisfied with the information, Colonel Ross
- ordered him to proceed again next day with a patrol of thirty. Captain
- Sidey accompanied him. The task was a difficult and dangerous one,
- for, although the first twelve miles were clear of the enemy and
- comparatively open, the last eight miles of the journey led down the
- valley of Six Mile Spruit, with high hills to the right and lower ones
- to the left, the enemy’s laager being situated about half-way down on
- the right. The Boers had thus the option of stopping the patrol on the
- way down, or cutting it off on the return journey. The reconnoitring
- party could reach the Crocodile River in comparative safety by
- advancing along the higher ground to the left of the valley and
- holding the commanding posts as far as numbers permitted. But as this
- course failed to draw out the Boers, it was useless as a method of
- discovering their strength and whereabouts. Captain Clifford therefore
- effected a compromise, reached the river as above described, and when
- about half-way through the valley on the return journey turned off in
- the direction of the Boer laager, leaving Sergeant Mitchell and four
- men in observation on high ground to cover his advance. As soon as he
- and his party were well down to the Spruit, the Boers rushed out in
- large numbers, forcing them to retreat in haste towards the covering
- party, who were unable to fire, as they could not distinguish friend
- from foe. The whole patrol, being outnumbered by ten to one, with
- their line of retreat threatened, had no choice but to escape as best
- they could in an easterly direction. Three men were taken prisoners
- through their horses being exhausted. Sergeant Mitchell’s party,
- finding itself cut off, escaped in a southerly direction, and reached
- Johannesburg in safety next day. The patrol that night came back nine
- short. It turned out that three had been taken prisoners, and the
- remaining six arrived in camp from various directions the following
- day. The three prisoners returned three days later, having been
- treated with great kindness by the Boers, who only took their horses,
- rifles, and accoutrements, and were evidently much amused by the way
- in which our patrols were sent out every day to face almost certain
- capture or death in accordance with orders. They considered this
- patrol as very useful to supply them with the necessaries of warfare,
- and treated the whole thing as a huge joke. During the retreat on the
- first of these two patrols Private Graham did very good work. When
- Cayley’s horse had fallen and then run away, Graham made him hold his
- stirrup to expedite his flight on foot, and offered to take turn and
- turn about riding and running with him. It became evident that they
- could not both get away, so Graham, taking Cayley’s rifle and catching
- his horse afterwards, brought both animals and rifles out of action,
- saving them from the hands of the enemy and earning the commendation
- of the Colonel on his arrival in camp. On the 22nd Colonel Ross’s
- Irene command was ordered to start at two hours’ notice for Pretoria
- viâ Swartzkop. He complied, camping at Swartzkop for the night, and
- reaching the camp by the Pretoria Racecourse next day.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Photo: Elliott & Fry_
- J.A. GRAHAM, D.C.M.
-]
-
-Captain Clifford, in an official report of the incident to Colonel
-Lumsden, does full justice to Trooper Graham’s conduct in the following
-words:
-
- When about two miles from Crocodile River, while I was questioning a
- farmer, the enemy suddenly opened fire on us from a ridge in front,
- between 300 and 400 yards distant. I was with the scouts when this
- happened. We galloped back to the rest of the patrol, which only
- consisted of a total of nine troopers, and before we could take up any
- position the fire began to come from three sides, so I gave the order
- to retire as fast as possible to avoid being surrounded. In the
- retreat, under a heavy fire, Trooper Cayley, one of the scouts, was
- thrown from his horse, whereupon Trooper Graham, with great gallantry,
- stayed behind and gave Cayley a ride on his own horse, running by his
- side, and then mounting and Cayley running. The rest of the patrol
- being scattered, and the ground much broken, these two were not missed
- for some time. After some distance had been traversed, the Boers were
- getting so close, and the fire so hot, that it would have been
- impossible for both to escape. Trooper Cayley thereupon flung himself
- into a small ditch and Trooper Graham made off, not, however, without
- bringing Cayley’s rifle. On the way to rejoin the patrol, and still
- under fire, he came across a riderless horse of another of the party,
- and brought it safely back with Cayley’s rifle. The patrol then,
- observing him coming, turned to his support, and the Boers
- discontinued the pursuit.
-
-For his gallant behaviour on this occasion Trooper Graham was
-recommended by Colonel Lumsden for the Victoria Cross; but instead of
-that coveted decoration he subsequently received the Distinguished
-Conduct Medal.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Photo: C.G. Brown_
- BERNARD CAYLEY.
-]
-
-The talented correspondent of the ‘Englishman’ writes as follows of the
-same affair:
-
- One morning a patrol set forth to spy the land, an officer and eleven
- men. They rode west for fifteen miles and entered the hills aforesaid,
- their object being to reach the junction of Six Mile Spruit with the
- Crocodile River. The way being purely cross-country it was a difficult
- matter to locate their destination, and seeing a farmhouse at the top
- of a valley the patrol made for it with the object of being directed.
- The valley traversed was some thousand yards wide from ridge to ridge.
- At the far end was the farmhouse, and beyond a low hill. Down the
- middle of the valley ran a spruit between high banks, forming a donga
- deep and wide enough to cover mounted men. The path running up the
- valley crossed the donga 600 yards from the farmhouse. Our fellows
- trotted up to the farmhouse, some tackling the lady of the house, and
- the others the Boer himself, who was spotted on the road a little way
- off. The good lady was a bit nervous, and rather hastily volunteered
- the information that the Boers had all gone away. Though never
- dreaming of their presence so near, this aroused the suspicions of the
- man to whom the remark was made, and he went up to the farmer, and
- roughly demanded where the Boers were. The question rather startled
- him, and from his manner it became evident that Boers were about,
- though he swore they had left the night before.
-
- Thereupon the patrol, in open order, advanced across the rising to the
- right, with Bearne, Graham, and Cayley in front. A wire fence
- obstructed the way, and it was a moot point whether to go round by a
- gate to the left or to use the wire-cutters. This fence was eighty
- yards from the top of the ridge, to which it ran parallel. The cutting
- of the fence saved the lives of the men mentioned. Hardly were they
- through the opening than a heavy fire was opened on them at a range of
- fifty yards. The rest of the party being a hundred yards behind, not
- yet up to the fence, Cayley, Bearne, and Graham whipped round, and
- made for the cutting, which was luckily immediately behind them. If
- they had gone round by the gate to the left they would have had to
- stand fire getting to the gate, and then run the gauntlet all the way
- back. As it was they got safely through the cutting and legged it
- after the rest, the party making straight down the valley for the
- donga already described. As the distance between the Boers and the
- donga was only 800 yards, it can be imagined how hot the fire was.
- Extraordinary to relate, not a man was touched during the brief but
- dangerous interval which elapsed between leaving the wire fence and
- reaching the donga. Arrived there a new foe sprang upon the unlucky
- patrol.
-
-[Illustration: L.C. BEARNE]
-
- From the left of the hill behind the farmhouse, and at the point where
- the left ridge forming the valley joined this hill, another lot of
- Boers opened a heavy enfilade fire at a thousand yards’ range. Their
- sanctuary was a sanctuary no longer, and again the patrol fled, this
- time straight for the opening in the hills by which they had entered.
- Meantime the second lot of Boers kept up a brisk fusillade, many of
- them mounting horses and galloping along the ridge parallel with the
- flying patrol. As our men had travelled some twenty miles, their
- horses were pretty beaten, so that the Boers, in light order, had no
- difficulty in catching up and taking pot shots at short range. Shortly
- after leaving the donga, Cayley’s horse fell heavily, and got away
- from his fallen rider. Thereupon Graham pulled up, gave Cayley his
- stirrup, and the latter ran until exhausted. Graham then very
- gallantly insisted upon Cayley riding while Graham ran. When beaten,
- Graham mounted again and Cayley ran. At this point the Boers had got
- close up and were pouring in a hot fire, and, the situation
- endangering both men, Cayley, who was much exhausted, let go,
- insisting on Graham leaving him, hoping himself to escape the Boers by
- hiding among the rocks. Near the same place Bearne’s horse stopped,
- dead beat. Bearne got off and ran until done, when he, too, took cover
- from the Boers, who were close at his heels peppering for all they
- were worth.
-
- By this time the remainder of the patrol, headed by Captain Clifford,
- who was in charge, had got well away, and they eventually returned to
- camp late at night, having had to walk most of the way back, as their
- horses were too done to carry them. But Cayley and Bearne never had a
- chance, for the Boers had never lost sight of them. They were quickly
- routed out of their cover, and having dropped their arms when running,
- defenceless, they had to surrender to overwhelming numbers. The Boers
- explained to them what had happened on their side, and it would seem
- to be only by a bit of luck that the whole patrol was not captured.
- Right behind the low hill at the back of the farmhouse was a laager,
- where a number of Boers were encamped. Five, _they_ said, though there
- must have been quadruple the number, Boers had gone over to the
- farmhouse already mentioned half an hour before the patrol appeared.
- Failing to find forage there, they had proceeded up the hill with the
- intention of crossing into the next valley to visit another farmhouse.
- When on the sky line they spotted our patrol advancing. The Boers
- immediately lay low to watch what happened. Realising that the patrol
- was riding into the lion’s mouth, they meant to keep doggo until the
- party was close up, and consequently far away from the only point of
- escape—viz., the road by which it had come. When close up they would
- open fire, warning at the same time their own camp over the hill
- scarce a mile away. Luckily for us, their camp proved slow to hear,
- else the main body of Boers would have rushed for the donga and
- regularly trapped the crowd. As it was our men had reached the donga
- before the laager had awakened to the situation.
-
- Cayley and Bearne were kindly treated but marched about unmercifully,
- eventually reaching the main Boer laager at Commando Nek, where a
- short time previously the Lincolns and Scots Greys had come to such
- terrible grief. There the unhappy pair were released to struggle
- twenty miles into Pretoria as best they might.
-
- Shortly after the adventurous descent on the Crocodile River
- fastnesses, which I have already described, a second and larger
- patrol, with Captain Clifford again in command, set forth to avenge
- the disasters of the first. As I have a particular regard for my
- personal safety, and believing the neighbourhood accursed, I found it
- convenient to be otherwise occupied at the moment when patrol No. 2
- started. And subsequent events proved me wiser than my generation. Not
- being present at what happened, I cannot, of course, tell exactly how
- it came about. Nor could I piece the twenty different accounts given
- me into a satisfactory whole, for the very good reason that no two of
- the stories afterwards told me would fit in. However, it would appear
- that it happened somewhat thus.
-
- The party started out at daybreak, and reached the scene of the
- previous disaster in good time in the morning. Needless to say, the
- Boers were on the look-out this time, and so soon as the patrol hove
- in sight made their dispositions. With a wariness born of experience
- there was no venturing into the valley. The party spread over the
- ridge along which the Boers had followed them on the first occasion,
- and advanced in skirmishing order with scouts in front smelling out
- every nook and cranny. And so they came, as they say in racing
- parlance, right along the ridge until close up to the farmhouse. All
- the time the Boers in force were happily contemplating these
- operations from the opposite ridge, which they had selected as being
- the one not likely to be scouted. As the ridge ran into the hill
- behind the farmhouse it became necessary, if any act of retribution
- was to be performed on the farmer, to diverge from that line of
- advance and make for the farmhouse. This was done, and of course
- brought the patrol into closer order. At the farmhouse one of its
- occupants handed a note to Captain Clifford. It was from the farmer,
- and ran, ‘Am going down the road to kill a pig for a neighbour. Will
- be back in a few minutes.’ And then the band began to play. From the
- hill in front and the ridge on the right the Mausers spoke out their
- unwelcome messages in a continuous stream, till it seemed as if the
- blue sky above must crack for the noise. Round whipped the patrol and
- in went the spurs, Captain Clifford leading his men down the valley
- that seemed as if it must spell death for the whole party. There were
- 200 Boers in all firing at an average range of 800 yards for a
- distance of two miles. Several horses were shot, several fell, some
- stopped from exhaustion; but there was no way of getting out except
- along the road which ran parallel to the ridge occupied by the enemy.
- The rocky going on the other ridge precluded a retreat over its
- inhospitable sides, besides which it was commanded on both slopes from
- the hill behind the farmhouse.
-
- That night at Irene the return of the patrol was anxiously awaited. It
- seemed a strange thing, to many marvellous, that no man had a mark on
- him, and this shows again what extraordinarily bad shooting the Boers
- are capable of at moving bodies, and particularly when they are not
- certain if another and concealed movement is not being conducted on
- their rear. Of the party sent on the expedition one by one continued
- to arrive back, some late the same night, some during the next day,
- some even the day after, until at last the lot were accounted for.
- Three of the unlucky patrol had trekked for Johannesburg, and advised
- us by telegraph of their safety. Another struck the railway at
- Kaalfontein. And so they straggled in, weary, hungry, and dirty.
- Several were taken prisoners, but treated kindly enough, one attention
- in particular being much appreciated. That was a stomach warmer of
- peach brandy before they were set free for their march back to Irene.
- Rather an insulting message given the released ones was to the effect
- that the Boers would have coffee ready next time we came.
-
-After these events Colonel Lumsden’s request for more active employment
-than his corps could find on lines of communication was granted, and the
-sequel is described by a correspondent of the ‘Madras Mail’:
-
- We left Springs on July 16th, expecting to join General Hutton, who,
- we heard, had had a severe engagement with heavy casualties, and was
- in want of more mounted troops. However, after a night at Kaalfontein
- we moved on to Irene, which place is the headquarters of the 8th
- Mounted Infantry, now on communications between Johannesburg and
- Pretoria. We remained at Irene a week, during which time we had some
- half-dozen men taken prisoners owing to their horses giving out when
- being pursued by the Boers, who were always lying in wait for our
- patrols. We were exceedingly fortunate in having nobody hit on these
- occasions. The prisoners were in every case released, their rifles and
- horses, of course, being taken from them. Apparently the Boers now
- find prisoners an encumbrance.
-
- On the 22nd we moved to Pretoria, camping three miles outside the
- town. Pretoria is prettily situated in a hollow surrounded by hills.
- These hills to the south-west, and about ten miles out, sheltered a
- number of Boers, and on the 27th we set out on a reconnaissance to
- find out something about them. The force, under Brigadier-General
- Hickman, consisted of the 2nd, 6th, 7th, and 8th Mounted Infantry
- Regiments, a battery of Field Artillery, and a battalion of Infantry
- (the Cornwalls). We saw nothing of the enemy until evening, when the
- advance guard came into touch and exchanged shots with the enemy’s
- scouts, who retired. The next morning we had scarcely started when we
- heard the now familiar double thud of the Mauser, and found that the
- Oxford Company of the 8th Mounted Infantry were engaged. It was a very
- different country from what we had been used to, and it did not suit
- us nearly so well. We were in a valley with steep hills on either
- side, the slopes of which were covered with loose stones and rocks of
- every size and shape, which made the going almost impossible for
- horses and very trying for the men. The pom-poms came into action
- close on our left and shelled a steep kopje opposite for some time;
- meanwhile, a brisk rifle fire was being kept up by the Mounted
- Infantry on our left. At the end of about an hour the General had
- apparently found out all he wanted to know, for the order to retire
- came, the 8th Mounted Infantry to act as rearguard. Lumsden’s were
- deputed to guard the left flank, which we did, retiring by alternate
- companies along the top of the range of kopjes, while the Infantry and
- guns moved along the valley. The enemy followed in a half-hearted way,
- but were easily kept in check by the pom-poms, which dropped shells
- into them whenever they showed themselves in any numbers. Beyond
- firing at a few of their scouts, we (_i.e._, Lumsden’s) saw nothing of
- them. The casualties had been slight, the Oxford Company 8th Mounted
- Infantry having one man killed and one wounded. An officer’s charger
- hit was all the damage done to Lumsden’s Horse.
-
- On the 27th General Ian Hamilton’s division, consisting of General
- Bruce Hamilton’s, General Mahon’s, and General Hickman’s brigades,
- marched into Pretoria. Lord Roberts and his Staff, with General Ian
- Hamilton on his right and Lord Kitchener on his left, took up his
- position in the market square while the troops marched past, cheering
- him as they went. The same day we heard the good news that 5,000 of
- the enemy had surrendered to General Hunter.
-
-More active service, however, meant for Lumsden’s Horse a transfer to
-some other column, and the time had thus come when they were to bid
-farewell to Colonel Ross, under whom they had served for four months,
-and from their comrades of the 8th Mounted Infantry, with whom they had
-marched and fought in many actions. Colonel Lumsden expressed the
-feeling of all ranks in his parting words to Colonel Ross, which were
-full of appreciation for the many kindnesses shown by that gallant
-commander towards Lumsden’s Horse. What Colonel Ross thought of the
-corps and its officers may be gathered from the regimental order
-acknowledging their services, and from a letter in which Colonel Ross
-writes as follows:
-
- Lumsden’s Horse joined the 8th Corps M.I. about the middle of April
- 1900, and served with the corps till the end of July, when they were
- transferred to General Mahon’s command. This was probably the most
- completely equipped ‘unit’ that joined the forces in South Africa
- during the war—a well-organised regimental transport, of Indian
- pattern, a complete regimental hospital and veterinary establishment,
- and every ‘necessary’ of life for man and beast for a campaign in
- almost any country.
-
- The _personnel_ of the corps was in keeping with everything else.
- Colonel Lumsden, though not an experienced campaigner when he first
- arrived on active service, was a capable organiser, and had the
- natural gift of commanding the respect and cheerful obedience of all
- who served under him, and he soon qualified as a competent leader
- under fire. He was ably supported by a well-selected body of officers
- and non-commissioned officers; and there was an evident determination
- among all ranks that the representatives of the Indian Auxiliary
- Forces should justify their selection by the Indian public. The
- ‘rank-and-file’ was composed of gentlemen who had been used to the
- comparative luxury of an Indian planter’s life, and who were untrained
- in cooking for themselves and attending to their horses. But they soon
- adapted themselves to the situation, and cheerfully took their share
- of all the work of Regular soldiers, and with such success that an
- experienced officer like General Hutton expressed his admiration of
- the manner in which they did it.
-
- The ‘fighting’ capacity of Lumsden’s Horse cannot be entirely
- estimated from the gaps in their ranks. They were, as a result of
- their training in civil life, more ‘self-reliant’ than the
- rank-and-file of our Regular Army, and the looser formations they were
- consequently able to adopt account in a great measure for their
- comparatively small losses. The opinion formed of the corps by the
- Commander-in-Chief can be gathered from the great number of
- distinctions, promotions, and commissions in the Regular Army which
- were conferred on those who remained. The time-honoured maxim, ‘Blood
- will tell,’ was never better exemplified than in this corps, and,
- should it be my lot ever again to command troops in the field, I ask
- for no better fortune than to have a similar body to Lumsden’s Horse.
-
- W. Ross,
-
- Late Lieutenant-Colonel Commanding 8th Corps M.I.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XV
-_A MARCH UNDER MAHON OF MAFEKING TO RUSTENBURG AND WARMBATHS—IN PURSUIT OF DE WET_
-
-
-To have served under two leaders of high reputation for ability in
-handling Irregular troops was a stroke of good fortune that did not fall
-to the lot of many Volunteer Corps in South Africa. Lumsden’s Horse had
-every reason to be thankful that the lot was theirs, and they
-appreciated it fully. In exchanging from the 8th Mounted Infantry
-Regiment to another column, of which Colonel Bryan Mahon was Brigadier,
-they did not forget the commander under whom they had served so long;
-but affection for him was happily consistent with out-and-out admiration
-for the officer to whose force they were transferred after leaving
-Irene. Both were thorough soldiers, having strong sympathies with
-Volunteers and a complete understanding of the peculiarities that
-distinguish them from Regulars. In other words, both were born leaders
-of men. Colonel Mahon, or General as he then was by local rank, had
-proved himself to be a commander of great dash and resourcefulness in
-his conduct of operations by which he won not only the affectionate
-confidence of his own troops, but also the respect of enemies who still
-speak with admiration of the young Cavalry officer who beat them at
-their own game by rapid flank movements on the way to Mafeking, and
-effected the relief of that beleaguered garrison in spite of all De la
-Rey could do to prevent him. In ten days he marched a distance of 230
-miles through country destitute of supplies, where no other forces had
-disputed possession with the Boers since war began. He outwitted the
-cleverest of De la Rey’s lieutenants at Kraaipan by a night march which
-won his adversary’s admiration, and he took a great convoy of Cape carts
-and heavier transport full of provisions into Mafeking without having
-lost a single waggon. Describing that surprise at Kraaipan, when, after
-waiting in expectation of an attack by which Mahon should fall into the
-trap laid for him, the Boers suddenly realised that the British column
-had disappeared, one of their scouts said, ‘We did not get much rest, as
-somebody had to be on the look-out all night. Your laager was quite near
-to us, but we did not see or hear anything move. In the morning,
-however, the whole had vanished, and when it was too late to stop them
-we heard they were trekking away north-west towards a desert where
-nobody but Boers or natives would expect to find water. Your General
-must have had somebody with him who knew that country well or he would
-never have ventured there.’ The ‘somebody’ in this case may have been
-Colonel Frank Rhodes, the bearer of a name which is one to conjure with
-still among the native tribes of Bechuanaland. He was Mahon’s
-Intelligence officer, and information gleaned by him made the night
-march possible; but it was the young Brigadier who planned and carried
-it into execution at a time when his enemies thought they had him surely
-trapped. When a complete history of the campaign comes to be written,
-that march of Mahon’s for the relief of Mafeking will rank high among
-the most daring and successful operations. All this story was known
-weeks before the General himself arrived at Pretoria with the Imperial
-Light Horse, who had won fresh honours in that enterprise under a leader
-whose praises they never tired of singing. No expectation of being
-brigaded with such a famous corps under such a brigadier had occurred to
-Lumsden’s Horse when they left Irene. Indeed, they seem to have regarded
-themselves as an integral unit of the 8th Mounted Infantry up to the day
-when Colonel Ross, receiving orders for a movement southwards, went off
-with other corps of his command, leaving Lumsden’s Horse behind.
-Meanwhile, however, they had been placed for a time at the disposal of
-Colonel Hickman, under whom they took part in the brief operations
-already described towards Crocodile River, which were merely a
-reconnaissance for the more important enterprise to follow.
-
-It will be remembered that Lord Roberts, about this time, had both hands
-fully occupied in keeping Botha at arm’s length in the east and
-stretching out his left with considerable force westward to ward off
-attacks by De la Rey and others who were causing General Baden-Powell
-much anxiety for the safety of Rustenburg, which he held with a very
-small number of troops. It would never have done to let the newly
-emancipated hero of Mafeking be subjected to another siege. Therefore,
-when he reported that a strong force was again threatening Rustenburg
-Lord Roberts determined to withdraw that garrison to Commando Nek, while
-the small force holding Lichtenburg was to retire upon Zeerust.
-Accordingly, General Ian Hamilton received orders to march to Rustenburg
-and bring Baden-Powell’s force back with him. At the same time Sir
-Frederick Carrington was directed to advance from Mafeking with his
-mounted troops to the assistance of Colonel Hore, who, with 140 Bushmen,
-80 men of the Rhodesian Regiment, and 80 Rhodesian Volunteers, was at
-Eland’s River with a convoy of supplies for the Rustenburg garrison, and
-held up there by an intercepting body of Boers. This brief summary of
-the general situation is necessary to a clear understanding of the
-exigencies that necessitated General Ian Hamilton’s movement eastward
-along the Magaliesberg, and the reconnaissance immediately preceding it,
-in all of which important operations Lumsden’s Horse were actively
-engaged from start to finish. The force marched in three columns,
-Colonel Hickman’s being on the left, General Ian Hamilton’s in the
-centre, and Brigadier-General Mahon’s on the right, each being separated
-from the other by a rough range of hills which in places became quite
-mountainous.
-
-All this range, sweeping round the hollow in which Pretoria lies, and
-then stretching away westward by irregular curves past Rustenburg to
-Eland’s River, is known as the Magaliesberg, and famed for the fertility
-of valleys that broaden out at its feet from many rugged kloofs. In
-peace-time it is the great tobacco-producing district of the Transvaal—a
-veritable garden, where orange groves, flourishing in wild luxuriance,
-sweeten the air with their fragrance, and brighten the landscape with
-the richness of their golden fruit. In war-time its commanding crests
-and narrow defiles formed a series of strongholds for the commandos that
-rallied round General De la Rey and by their daring raids gained a
-reputation as the best fighters of all Boers then in the field. Every
-Kaffir path by which scouts could move unseen was familiar to them. They
-knew every point from which wide views could be obtained in all
-directions, and every nook in which men might hide secure from
-observation, ready for a sudden attack if occasion should serve, yet
-having more than one way open for escape from any danger that might
-threaten them. General Baden-Powell with the relieved garrison from
-Mafeking had marched through a mountainous country and crossed the
-Magaliesberg to Rustenburg, meeting no opposition. The Boer forces
-belonging to that district had then more serious affairs to occupy them
-elsewhere. But after the fight at Diamond Hill, when General Botha
-retired to the Eastern Transvaal, De la Rey came back to his old haunts
-on the Magaliesberg, surprised a British post near Zilikat’s Nek, and
-began a series of operations by which he threatened to cut off all
-supplies from Rustenburg.
-
-Colonel Lumsden continues his diary:
-
- Two days after our return to Pretoria from the reconnaissance under
- Colonel Hickman the 8th Mounted Infantry received orders to entrain at
- 4 A.M. for Wolve Hoek, the station next south of Vereeniging; but at
- the station the order as far as we were concerned was countermanded,
- and we were told to return and report to General Mahon. His
- instructions were that we should remain in our present camp and fall
- in as rearguard when his column marched off for Rustenburg on August
- 1. The morning of that day, therefore, found us in rear of the baggage
- of his column, which was moving to Rustenburg, north of the
- Magaliesberg Range, to the relief of Baden-Powell, while General
- Hamilton proceeded up the valley south of the Magaliesberg. Mahon’s
- brigade was unique in its composition, consisting almost entirely of
- Volunteer Mounted Infantry—viz., Imperial Light Horse, Lumsden’s
- Horse, New Zealand Mounted Infantry, Queensland Mounted Infantry, a
- regiment of Yeomanry, two squadrons 18th Hussars (the squadrons that
- were captured after the battle of Talana), and the M Battery R.H.A.—in
- all about 1,500 strong.
-
- Firing began two miles out of Pretoria, and pom-poms and guns played
- merrily all day, clearing the range which divided the two columns. We
- camped twelve miles out. The plan for next day subsequently transpired
- to have been that General Hamilton should make a frontal attack and
- drive the enemy off the high ground, where they had taken up a
- position, near Zilikat’s Nek, while our brigade, making a wide
- movement, to the right, was to cut off the retiring foe from the
- Schwartz and Roode Kopjes, to which they were expected to retreat.
- Apparently something went wrong with the arrangements, for Hamilton,
- attacking before we got into position, lost some twenty men and the
- Boers escaped.
-
-The point at which General Hamilton made his attack was from the south
-side of the Magaliesberg range near Uitval Nek, which the enemy held
-strongly. As General Mahon’s brigade was moving along the north side of
-those precipitous ridges through a country thick with scrub, no
-communication could be kept up between the two forces, and Hamilton,
-whose march was unimpeded by natural difficulties, had not allowed
-sufficient time for his colleague to cover the treacherous ground
-through which many tributaries of the Crocodile River run their devious
-courses. On getting touch with the enemy, whose position he had located,
-Ian Hamilton went for them at once, a portion of Cunningham’s brigade
-making as if for a frontal attack, while two companies of the Berkshire
-Regiment, led by Major Elmhirst Rhodes, gallantly escaladed the steep
-cliff overlooking the pass from its eastern side. Hamilton’s losses in
-this fight amounted to forty killed and wounded before the Boers could
-be dislodged; but as soon as they found that their position was under
-fire from above, where the Berkshires had gained a footing, the enemy
-fled, abandoning their waggons and horses. Unfortunately, delayed by the
-obstacles already mentioned, Mahon’s mounted troops did not come up in
-time to take any part, otherwise but few of the enemy could have
-escaped. A correspondent of the ‘Times of India,’ taking up the story a
-day after this fight, when General Mahon’s force had got through the
-denser bush country into a more smiling region only to find that the
-enemy had disappeared, writes:
-
- The valley we were passing through was well watered and cultivated,
- and in some places fairly thickly wooded; much pleasanter country for
- travelling through than the bare monotonous veldt of which we had seen
- so much in the Free State. We passed many snug farmhouses, also
- several flourishing orange groves. At one place there were acres of
- orange trees simply laden with fruit, and as they were going to waste
- we were allowed to help ourselves. The oranges were very fine and
- beautifully ripe; one man from each sub-section was allowed to go and
- gather them, and in a few minutes came back literally bulging with
- them—haversacks, nosebags, pockets, &c., overflowing, the little
- tangerines being especially appreciated. Some of the Australians were
- so enchanted by this valley that they doubted whether there could be
- another such in all the world. That night we were all aroused to
- assist in putting out a veldt fire, which had approached uncomfortably
- close to the camp; owing to a high wind and the fact that the grass
- was particularly long and dry, it was much fiercer than is usually the
- case. However, we set to work with blankets and beat it out where it
- was too threatening, and then burnt a ring round the camp, effectually
- stopping its progress. A Boer spy was caught in camp that night. He
- had a pass on him showing that he had taken the oath of neutrality,
- and he had expansive bullets in his bandolier. He was shot next
- morning.
-
- Progress was naturally very slow, owing to the difficult nature of the
- country and the fact that the hills had to be very carefully scouted.
- We were rearguard that day and saw no fighting ourselves, but the
- scouts in front evidently soon put up the Boers, as we heard rifle
- shots being exchanged constantly, and every now and then our guns
- shelled the retreating enemy.
-
- I may mention here that the Imperial Light Horse formed part of the
- Mounted Infantry in General Mahon’s brigade. This was the first time
- we had come across this famous corps, which had done such splendid
- work during the war, and a very fine body of men we thought them.
- Possessing a knowledge of the language and in many cases of the
- country, they are most useful as scouts, and General Mahon fully
- recognised that fact during the whole march, as he gave them plenty of
- work to do. Besides this, they were old friends of his, having been
- under his command with the Mafeking Relief Column, and they have been
- with him ever since. Ian Hamilton, we heard afterwards, had met with a
- pretty stubborn resistance from the Boers in his valley, where, as had
- been anticipated, their main body was opposed to him, and he had
- several casualties. We only advanced about twelve miles that day. Next
- day the driving process recommenced, Lumsden’s Horse during the
- greater part of the time occupying a very high kopje, from which we
- were ordered to keep a bright look-out and to hold it if attacked. It
- was a devil of a climb (the horses were kept below), but the view from
- the top almost compensated us for our trouble. This part of the
- country was certainly the best we had been through so far; beautifully
- wooded in many places, and dotted all over with farms and orange
- groves. The oranges were simply delicious, especially the tangerine
- variety, and we took full advantage of the opportunity afforded us of
- having our fill of them, each man eating as many as he could on the
- spot, and carrying away a nosebagful with him.
-
- Evidently the Generals had orders to adopt strong measures in cases of
- farms harbouring Boers, or from which any sniping might be done, or in
- which ammunition might be stored, as it was a daily occurrence for two
- or three of them to be fired and rased to the ground. Looking into the
- next valley from our high perch we saw a huge camp below which we at
- first took to be a Boer laager, but we found out afterwards it was Ian
- Hamilton’s force, which had advanced quicker than we had, and had
- encamped for the day.
-
- We had got to Commando Nek that night, and heard that the Boers from
- the centre valley had already slipped through. This was unfortunate,
- but could not be helped, as we could not push on farther than we did
- without risking the sacrifice of many valuable lives. I think we were
- informed that the enemy numbered about 600, and that their main body
- had got away some time before, leaving behind a few snipers to keep us
- in check. This is their usual method of proceeding, and a very sound
- one it is.
-
- One has to see the country oneself to realise what an easy thing it is
- for a few men well placed to keep a large body back. We send out our
- scouts, and immediately they are fired on. We shell the places from
- which they have been shot at. After this has gone on for some little
- time we advance again, and so on. Progress is very slow, and meantime
- the bird has flown. As I say, one has to be out in the country to
- understand properly what difficulties the attacking party has to
- contend against. With the numberless examples before them of our men
- blundering into traps and being slaughtered and having to surrender
- through going at things baldheaded, as they say, our Generals have
- learned caution. Then, on the other hand, the slow progress enables
- the enemy to get away. ‘What can do?’ ‘Horns of dilemma!’ as our Babu
- friends would say.
-
- Then, again, the Boers know the country thoroughly, and when hard
- pressed the Commandant simply tells his men to scatter and appoints
- some meeting place further on. His convoy scatters likewise, and all,
- travelling by three or four different routes, arrive at the rendezvous
- in due course. We, on the other hand, have to follow the beaten path,
- and are always being hung up for hours by our convoys getting stuck in
- drifts, &c. It is not to be wondered at that the Boers, possessing
- these advantages, so often elude us.
-
- General Ian Hamilton’s column came through the Nek next day, and,
- joining hands with General Mahon, proceeded towards Rustenburg, in
- which direction the Boers had fled, and where Baden-Powell was said to
- be surrounded and unable to get away. Horses and men fared very well
- just then, the former getting plenty of oat-hay commandeered from the
- hostile farms we passed, and green barley and oat-grass in the fields
- at the midday halts; and the latter securing fowls, geese,
- sucking-pigs, &c., which were very plentiful in Kaffir kraals and
- farmhouses. During the two days it took us to reach Rustenburg we
- expected to get in touch with the enemy at any moment, but they did
- not come up to the scratch, and we entered the town unopposed on
- August 5.
-
- It appears that, hearing of Ian Hamilton’s approach, the Boers
- abandoned the kopjes surrounding Rustenburg and relieved the pressure
- on Baden-Powell, who, having heard in the meantime that General
- Carrington, working with a small force in the country between
- Rustenburg and Mafeking, was in danger of losing his convoy, had moved
- out to his assistance.
-
-The actual position was that Colonel Hore, marching with a convoy of
-supplies from Zeerust to Rustenburg, and, finding his way barred by a
-greater force than he could hope to cope with, and his retreat also cut
-off, had entrenched himself at Eland’s River. There he waited for the
-relieving force under General Carrington, which never came nearer than
-within sound of the Boer guns, and unfortunately the Rustenburg column
-also stopped short in its attempt to relieve Colonel Hore, who had to
-fight it out for a week or so longer against enormous odds that might
-have overwhelmed his force but for the magnificent determination
-displayed by Australian Bushmen and Rhodesian Volunteers. The failure of
-that attempt at relief is briefly described by Colonel Lumsden, whose
-diary also summarises subsequent operations in pursuit of De Wet in the
-following passages:
-
- Next day we expected a well-earned rest, but Mahon’s brigade was lent
- to strengthen General Baden-Powell’s force, which was to move at
- daybreak next morning to assist Colonel Hore, who was known to be in
- difficulties in the direction of or beyond Eland’s River (one of the
- many streams bearing that name in the colony). This entailed a sharp
- ride of fifteen miles, which brought us to Eland’s River and within
- hearing of the cannonading, but no further. On the bank of the river
- was a small group of officers, prominent among them being General
- Baden-Powell, and by his side were Colonel Plumer and Major
- Baden-Powell. We found the great man seated on a rock, surrounded by
- his Staff, and sketching hard with both hands! Most of us had not seen
- him before, so it can be imagined how glad we were to have the
- opportunity of getting a good look at England’s popular hero at the
- moment. We were also delighted at the idea of being under his command,
- if only for a short time. We had a better view of him on the way back,
- and he appeared to be very fit and none the worse for his Mafeking
- experiences.
-
- While waiting here to rest and water the horses we heard big guns
- firing in the direction in which Carrington’s force was situated, and
- expected momentarily to be ordered to advance; but after some time we
- were told that Baden-Powell had tapped the telegraph wire and learned
- from Carrington that he had repulsed the Boers and had got his convoy
- away safely, and that he did not require our assistance. I am afraid,
- however, that the wrong source must have been tapped, and that a false
- message, intended to deceive, must then have come, not from
- Carrington, but from the wily Boers. After two hours’ rest we returned
- to Rustenburg for the night, having apparently accomplished nothing in
- particular, except a march of thirty miles all told. Rustenburg was
- then evacuated, and the whole of General Hamilton’s division
- concentrated near Commando Nek, resting there one day. We then went to
- join the De Wet hunt with Mahon’s brigade in front, and in spite of
- only a little skirmishing advanced somewhat slowly. On the 15th we
- came into touch with the eight Generals who were pursuing De Wet on an
- organised plan from the south towards Oliphant’s Nek. We were supposed
- to have been in time to cut off De Wet and prevent him going north to
- Oliphant’s Nek, but were unfortunately too late, and all we could do
- was to join the others and follow him up. The next evening we were in
- touch with the rearguard and in sight of the Nek.
-
- The following morning we escorted the big guns to within range of the
- Nek, took our position on the hills on the right, and watched the
- Infantry make the attack. It was a very pretty sight from our
- position, but the resistance was slight, so, going through the Nek, we
- reached Rustenburg for the third time and spent the night there, our
- laager being well supplied by way of a change with turkeys and fowls
- poached from local preserves. Away again next morning Pretoria-wards,
- reaching Sterkstroom at 4 P.M. the next day. Hardly had we
- off-saddled, with visions of a raid on a field of sweet potatoes in
- view, before we received orders to again saddle up and march at 5 P.M.
- after De Wet, who was reported just in front of us. From 5 till 11 our
- weary horses struggled on through the darkness. We bivouacked for the
- night within three miles of Commando Nek, hoping, as we had often
- hoped before, to get De Wet next morning. Long ere day broke we were
- up and away again, only to find that De Wet’s force had gone north
- along the river towards Roode Kopjes, which we reached at daybreak
- with still no signs of the enemy. On the right bank of the river and a
- mile off were some low rocky kopjes covered with scrub, on the left a
- series of high but broken hills. We, as advance guard, took up our
- position on the latter as the Boer convoy was trekking away in full
- view across the open from the shelter of the former, and just out of
- range of the twelve pom-poms. The temptation was great to push on in
- pursuit, but our General was luckily wiser and preferred to
- reconnoitre across the river before implicating the guns and main body
- in what turned out to be a most difficult drift. We from our position
- looked on while the New Zealanders on the right crossed the drift and,
- spreading out, advanced to the broken ground. We had just made up our
- mind that all was clear, and that the General had been culpably slow,
- when a frightful fusillade burst out on the unfortunate reconnoitrers
- from a range of fifty yards. There was nothing for it but to race back
- as hard as they could, leaving six casualties behind, two of which
- resulted fatally. The _coup_ having failed, and horse and man being
- incapable of more, we all returned to the previous night’s camp. At 6
- A.M. on the 20th we reoccupied the same kopjes, forced the passage of
- the river, and with little further resistance got into the open
- country five miles beyond. We then marched through bushveldt to
- Zoutpans, Warmbaths, and Waterval, back to Pretoria, with very little
- to record in the ten days so occupied, the only interesting feature
- being the peculiar country known as bushveldt, best described as a sea
- of stunted thorn trees (familiarly known as toothpick trees), with an
- undergrowth of coarse grass, no roads, but tracks of heavy sand which
- delayed the Transport very much. Scouting was practically impossible,
- as it was very difficult to get horses through the formidable thorny
- scrub, while vision was limited to thirty yards.
-
-The operations are described in fuller detail by correspondents of
-Indian papers, whose interesting records of events in which they took
-part need to be dovetailed together for the sake of a connected
-narrative. It is necessary, however, to say here by way of introduction
-that after accomplishing its mission in the relief of Rustenburg and the
-withdrawal of that garrison General Ian Hamilton’s column became
-involved by force of circumstances in a series of intricate operations
-with other columns moving from east, west, and south with the object of
-catching the wily De Wet between them. One correspondent thus describes
-the march out of Rustenburg:
-
- It having been decided to abandon the town, the night was spent in
- destroying a lot of Boer ammunition and rifles of every description
- which had been stored in the gaol. There was a constant succession of
- reports as the cartridges exploded, and it sounded exactly as if a
- smart general engagement was taking place. The next day, the 7th,
- Rustenburg was completely evacuated, and the four brigades marched
- back on their way towards the Crocodile River. Those of the
- inhabitants who had claimed British protection also moved out with our
- convoy, in addition to whom were forty Boer prisoners, including Piet
- Kruger, Oom Paul’s son, under escort. As our progress was considerably
- retarded by the large convoy it was despatched at night on the 8th to
- a situation of safety. Each brigade was then operating separately,
- though supporting each other, with Mahon’s as a flying column. The
- next morning the Australians had a brush with some sixty Boer snipers,
- but the main body made a dash for Uitval Nek, only to find that the
- enemy had again anticipated our arrival and had bolted. Getting
- through Commando Nek on August 9, we rejoined Ian Hamilton, who was
- encamped on the other side. This was the largest camp we had been in
- so far. There must have been quite 15,000 men there, including troops
- from many parts of the world. All General Baden-Powell’s as well as
- General Mahon’s column were Irregulars, so that with General Ian
- Hamilton’s Regulars we were perhaps as representative a gathering as
- has ever camped together. Englishmen, Highlanders, Welshmen, and
- Irishmen, Australians (of all sorts), Canadians, New Zealanders,
- Tasmanians, Imperial Yeomanry, ‘Lumsden’s’ from India, and Colonials
- from all parts of South Africa, the Imperial Light Horse, the
- Rhodesian Regiment, some of Montmorency’s Scouts, &c., were present.
-
- The New Zealanders gave a sing-song that night, the visitors sitting
- or standing round a huge log fire and the performers occupying the
- centre. It was an excellent show, several very good men taking the
- boards, or rather the veldt. The _finale_ was a march round by some of
- the Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders with pipes and drums playing.
- Our entertainers, I must not forget to mention, supplied the crowd
- liberally with rum, a much-appreciated drink among Tommies and
- Volunteers alike. Mixed with sugar and water and taken hot it is hard
- to beat, and has kept off many a fever, I am sure, in wet weather. I
- may mention that rum was only rationed out very occasionally, except
- in extremely bad weather, when we generally got it daily. Rum nights,
- needless to say, were hailed with delight, and shouts of ‘Roll up for
- your rum’ would be heard all round the camp.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- NIGHT IN CAMP
- (_From a sketch by J.S. Cowen_)
-]
-
-Here the sequence of events may be appropriately interrupted for the
-sake of some amusing incidents and anecdotes told by another
-correspondent, who, in connection with this great gathering of troops in
-our camp near Commando Nek, writes:
-
- After considerable practice the amateur cooks could make a savoury
- repast out of very little. If there was a garden about we grubbed up
- some vegetables, with which even the trek-ox served out in Government
- rations made an excellent stew. It was our fortune this night,
- however, to be better provided for by a lucky chance. While engaged in
- drawing the meagre rations and arguing with the Quartermaster-Sergeant
- over details of ounces and pennyweights, that had come to be regarded
- by us as very important matters, we suddenly espied a great scurry
- going on about a mile away, crowds of men rushing after what we at
- last made out to be a small deer. In and out it went among patrol
- tents, horses, saddles, carts, and guns. Frantic efforts were made in
- vain to catch it; men left whatever they were doing to join in the
- chase, rolling over in their endeavours to be first. Everybody threw
- something, and many dangerous missiles came hurtling through the air.
- But the deer ran on and suddenly turned our way. We also missed it by
- yards, and the shouting crowd swept by, losing sight of their quarry
- presently, and not knowing whither it had gone. A man of ours happened
- to be lying rolled up in his blanket asleep. The din roused him, and
- just as he was beginning to move the buck rose for a leap over his
- body. He caught it in the outspread blanket and kept it there. So the
- game came to our mess after all by sheer luck. On the strength of it
- we invited our very good friends and next-door neighbours, the Bushmen
- (Queensland Mounted Infantry) to dine with us that night, and soon
- after sunset they came round to our fire. Very good fellows they were,
- and a very genial dinner we had. Our guests brought their own stew,
- which was excellent, and their coffee too, with which to eke out our
- supplies. One of our men produced some good cheroots afterwards, and
- we sat on into the night, smoking, sipping coffee, and telling
- stories, the hills all around being lighted up with lines of veldt
- fires and the sky illuminated by a glorious full moon. Some of the
- Bushmen’s stories against themselves were most amusing. They had as
- good a name as anybody for horse-stealing and cattle-lifting. One of
- them told us gravely that when he was walking one day through another
- regiment’s lines a sergeant spotted him and gave the order ‘Stand to
- your horses.’ He said he was so overcome by the ‘compliment,’ that he
- could hardly acknowledge it. On another occasion, at a midday halt,
- when the ‘cow-gun’ teams were brought back from watering, the
- distracted officer in charge found one of the fattest and best oxen
- was missing. He only just discovered it in time to save its life and
- deprive the Bushmen of a feast. They told us many tricks for changing
- a horse’s marks, brands, colour, and general appearance, so that no
- man might know his own horse thus transformed, and I looked anxiously
- towards my own chestnut quite expecting to find that he had either
- been taken away to the camp of our neighbours or ‘faked’ practically
- before my own eyes. Others joined our circle as the moon rose higher.
- The whole camp seemed in excellent spirits. Sounds of revelry, wafted
- on the still night air, reached us from many a camp-fire; snatches of
- song, broken anon by outbursts of cheering; elsewhere uprose the
- strains of the Highland pipes. Rumour is busy that we are to join in
- the chase after De Wet, who is breaking away north. We wonder as we
- roll into our blankets when will be our next day of rest.
-
-And the rumours were true for once. Not many hours elapsed before
-Mahon’s brigade, with the remainder of Hamilton’s force, was on the move
-southward and westward through Commando Nek into Rustenburg again, and
-then away north-east, still pursuing into the bushveldt the elusive
-force which they took to be De Wet’s. As a matter of fact, De Wet had
-already left this force. He, personally, did not quit the Magaliesberg
-range, but, doubling back with a small band of trusty followers the day
-after his passage of Oliphant’s Nek, he slipped through a neighbouring
-poort, and so got at once in rear of his pursuers. They were thenceforth
-on the heels of a fresh force, which De la Rey had detached to serve as
-a will-o’-the-wisp. All these facts the Editor has learned from the lips
-of General De la Rey himself recently. The next rest did not come for
-several weary days, owing to circumstances that are described by other
-correspondents in the following letters:
-
- After a day’s rest (General Baden-Powell being left behind with a
- small force to guard Commando Nek) the division advanced again in a
- south-westerly direction to try to cut off De Wet, who was being
- driven north by Kitchener, Methuen, Smith-Dorrien, Hart, and
- Broadwood. We encountered a small body of fifty Boers, but a few
- shells sent among these soon dislodged them from the kopje on which
- they had taken up a position, and we did not see them again.
-
- We got to a place called Hekpoort the next day, and here it was
- decided to convert Mahon’s brigade into a flying column, which meant
- that we were to travel without any Transport, each man being served
- out with three days’ rations, which he carried with him. This column
- was to work independently of the rest of the division and be ready to
- start in pursuit of De Wet at a moment’s notice, should we get news of
- him.
-
- Leaving Ian Hamilton to follow on slowly by another route, Mahon’s
- brigade marched at daybreak on the 12th, we acting as advance scouts.
- The country hereabouts is very hilly, and affords excellent cover for
- the wily sniper, so scouting was not all ‘beer and skittles.’ Visions
- of grouse moors at home were naturally strong upon some of us that
- day, and one’s thoughts ran irresistibly to parallels between the
- driving of grouse and our attempts to round up De Wet. One was
- constantly on the qui vive, expecting to be shot at any moment, as the
- enemy were known to be about. Nothing happened, however, and the next
- few days were spent in loafing along, doing about ten miles or so, in
- momentary expectation of getting in touch with De Wet. But this
- gentleman’s movements were as erratic as usual, and it was evidently
- impossible to get any reliable information as to his exact
- whereabouts. It was known that he was being driven towards Oliphant’s
- Nek by Lord Methuen and the others mentioned above, and it would
- appear that the proper course to have pursued was to have held this
- pass, which was the only possible avenue of escape left to De Wet, and
- wait for him there, instead of wandering about more or less aimlessly,
- as we were doing. This could very easily have been done, one imagines,
- with a small portion of the large force at General Hamilton’s
- disposal, and why it was not tried is an unsolved mystery to a great
- many of us up to the present. As far as an outsider can see, a very
- serious blunder was committed here, and we apparently lost a chance of
- bringing the war to a speedy conclusion. Had De Wet been caught, Botha
- would probably have surrendered, and the other commandants would have
- followed suit.
-
- As it was, however, we moved along slowly, the monotony being broken
- now and again by an exchange of shots between our scouts and scattered
- parties of Boers on the adjacent hills. About midday on August 13
- Lumsden’s Horse were detached from the main body and sent off to the
- flank to reconnoitre, and on our way met a party of the Imperial Light
- Horse who had been sent out to burn a farm situated in a hollow among
- some hills from which the Boers had been sniping. The officer in
- charge of the Imperial Light Horse party requested Captain Noblett,
- under whose command we were, to keep us on the top of the hill to
- prevent surprise while he and his men went and destroyed the farm.
- This was done, but for some reason or another the Imperial Light Horse
- officer changed his mind and did not burn the farm. While on the hill
- we were told by some Kaffirs that the enemy (about eighty in number)
- had left a few moments before; seeing our scouts coming over the hill,
- they had fled precipitately. We went down to the farm after the
- Imperial Light Horse party had gone on, and had hardly left it to
- return to the main body again when we saw a small party of Boers on
- the hill on our right, and these were doubtless the men referred to by
- the Kaffirs we had spoken to. Instead of going by the road we took a
- short cut across the veldt, as it was rather late and we wanted to get
- back to the main body before nightfall. It turned out afterwards that
- it was as well we did so, as on the way we heard firing on our right,
- and on approaching to see what it was all about saw that the road led
- through a deep hollow among some low hills in which the Boers had
- taken up their position. Had we taken the road we should have walked
- right into the trap which they had evidently laid for us, and should
- have got slaughtered. The firing we heard was an exchange of
- compliments between these Boers and some dozen Australians who had
- also been sent out on reconnaissance duty, and who had posted
- themselves on a hill opposite. Finding that they did not want any
- assistance, we pushed on and joined the brigade again at about 5
- o’clock, camping shortly afterwards. It is interesting to note that
- the spot we camped at was the one that heard the first shots fired
- during the Jameson Raid. The Boer _sangars_ still exist, and were
- occupied that night by Lumsden’s ‘outlying picket.’ Having no
- Transport, we had to depend on whatever we had in our saddle-bags, and
- were consequently on rather short commons; and the horses, too, fared
- badly, poor beasts, having to subsist mostly on what grass they could
- pick up on the veldt and on such oat-hay and mealies as we could get
- out of the farmhouses we passed. The latter were very few and far
- between in that part of the country. Next day we continued our march
- in the same direction, and both flanking parties engaged the enemy’s
- snipers on several occasions. The Imperial Light Horse reported having
- killed one Boer and wounded four others. On the 15th we acted as
- advance guard, and had not proceeded far when we found ourselves wound
- up with five brigades—viz., Lord Kitchener’s, Lord Methuen’s, General
- Hart’s, Smith-Dorrien’s, and a column under Colonel Pilcher—that had
- all been co-operating with us, bent on surrounding De Wet. But the
- Boer leader of a lost cause proved as slippery as ever, and had again
- escaped _viâ_ Oliphant’s Nek towards Rustenburg. The valley we had
- passed through was mainly occupied by English and German farmers, who
- complained bitterly at the constant visits of English and Boer troops,
- as sympathy of any kind with either cause got them into hot water with
- the other side, and the Boers are past masters as looters. The good
- people of Rustenburg were in a like predicament, hence its evacuation.
- We heard at a store here that De Wet had passed through the previous
- day with our men in close pursuit. Later we were informed that he had
- got through Oliphant’s Nek, which he had found unoccupied, and that
- now the place was strongly held by the Boers.
-
- In the evening I understand the various Generals got into
- consultation, and it was decided that General Ian Hamilton should
- advance with his division to attack the Nek and continue the chase
- after De Wet, while Lord Kitchener and the others were, I believe, to
- proceed to the west of Rustenburg, where the Boers under De la Rey
- were again giving trouble.[13]
-
- We joined General Ian Hamilton that evening, and next day the whole
- force marched in the direction of Oliphant’s Nek and got within a few
- miles of it by about 4 that afternoon. As it was so late, and the
- place was said to be so strongly held, General Ian Hamilton decided on
- deferring his attack till next day. Before we camped for the night the
- advance scouts got into touch with the enemy, and we heard several
- exchanges of shots going on in front. Shortly afterwards we were moved
- up in support, and stayed till dark, after which we went back to camp,
- which had been pitched about two miles off, leaving a strong mounted
- picket behind. Lumsden’s Horse alone supplied forty men. Writing about
- picket duty reminds me that it was particularly trying during this
- march. Since leaving Pretoria we had been supplying forty or fifty men
- nearly every night—_i.e._, about 50 per cent. of our number. This duty
- we hated more than any other. One did not mind hard work all day if
- one’s nights in camp were undisturbed; but to come in at dark and
- hardly have time to off-saddle before being ordered to fall in for
- outlying picket was simply ghastly. On some occasions we went out
- without any food or drink, and if, as often happens, the post was a
- long way off and difficult to find in the dark, one’s fellow messmen
- were unable to take anything out. Whenever possible, however,
- bully-beef or Army rations and biscuits were served out to the picket
- before it marched off, and when this was done things were not so bad.
-
- The Boer camp fires were seen quite distinctly on the hills close to
- where our pickets were, and from the number of these we judged that
- the report that the Nek was strongly held was not an exaggerated one.
- It is naturally a grand place to defend, and could be made almost
- impregnable, I should think, with its high commanding kopjes on either
- side. Besides which, it was said to have been strongly fortified by
- Colonel Kekewich some time before. We naturally thought, therefore,
- that we should have a hard nut to crack next day. Just before dawn,
- however, a spy who had been sent into the Boer camp returned with the
- news that they had been on the move all night getting away their
- baggage, &c., and that they would not offer any very great resistance
- to our passage—probably just enough to allow their convoy ample time
- to get away. This man, by the way, while returning from the Boer camp
- ran into our outlying picket, and, not being prompt in replying to the
- sentry’s challenge ‘Who comes there?’ he very nearly got shot.
-
- The report that most of the Boers had stolen away turned out to be
- correct, as after a few hours’ shelling to clear the way for our
- Infantry the latter advanced practically unopposed, the casualties on
- either side being very few, and we got through the Nek about 11 A.M.
- We saw some very pretty artillery practice, two 5-inch guns coming
- into action at a range of three or four miles quite close to where we
- stood.
-
- As De Wet was said to have gone off in the direction of Rustenburg we
- pressed forward, got outside that town in the afternoon, and camped
- there for the night once more.
-
- Evidently fresh news of the ‘wily’ one was received, as next day
- (August 18) we started back the way we had come and halted in the
- afternoon, as if for a long rest, at Sterkstroom, some miles west of
- Commando Nek. We had hardly been in camp an hour when the order came
- for Mahon’s brigade to saddle up and march at once, the object being
- to intercept De Wet, who was reported to have taken up a position near
- the Crocodile River. We did a long weary march, the weariness being
- accentuated by the fact that we were not allowed to smoke or speak
- above a whisper. We halted about 10.30 and camped at a place called
- Bokfontein, about five miles west of the Crocodile. I presume it was
- not thought advisable to advance any closer for fear of blundering
- into the enemy unawares, and thus giving them the chance of getting
- away under cover of darkness. With all these precautions and
- preparations we naturally thought we were really there or thereabouts
- this time. Once again, however, we were baffled of our prey, which we
- heard next evening had got away in a north-easterly direction.
-
- We arrived at Commando Nek at 6 A.M. on the 19th, and it was then
- decided that Mahon’s brigade should reconnoitre the kopjes north of
- and directly opposite to the Nek, and this we proceeded to do. General
- Ian Hamilton had not come up then. On approaching the position we
- found that there were two ranges of kopjes lying east and west (each
- range being divided again into several little groups of hills), and
- through these there was a passage leading to the open country beyond.
-
- A squadron of the Imperial Light Horse was sent out to scout, and they
- presently put up some Boers, but a few shells sent among these soon
- drove them back again. Lumsden’s Horse were then ordered to gallop
- forward and occupy the first group of kopjes on the western ranges. We
- had hardly got into position when we saw a large convoy of Boer
- waggons making its way, as fast as the oxen could be goaded to travel,
- from the kopje on the east to the plains beyond, and towards another
- range of kopjes further north. We immediately sent back word to
- General Mahon, and he at once ordered the guns to be brought up, and a
- few shells were sent after the convoy. Unfortunately, however, we only
- had a battery of 12-pounders with us, and by the time they got into
- position the convoy had a long start and our shells fell short.
- General Mahon reluctantly decided that it would be unsafe to follow
- the convoy with the small force at his disposal, as the Boers had no
- doubt left a sufficient number of men behind on the eastern and
- western ranges of kopjes to cover its retreat. These kopjes completely
- commanded the plains beyond, and had we gone on we should have been
- absolutely at their mercy and should have been very roughly handled
- indeed.
-
- Besides which, I fancy General Mahon’s orders were merely to
- reconnoitre the position and not to run his neck into any kind of
- noose. Abandoning all idea of pursuit, therefore, General Mahon then
- proceeded to examine the eastern range of kopjes from which the convoy
- had started, and where he suspected there might be a Boer laager. To
- effect this purpose he sent out the New Zealanders as scouts. They
- were allowed to approach within fifty yards without molestation, when
- all of a sudden the klik-klok of Mausers was heard all along the
- ridge, and an officer and three men were seen to fall. The former died
- next day, poor fellow. After this the scouts returned. From our
- position on the kopjes on the left we saw the whole thing distinctly.
- A party of New Zealanders, before this happened, were examining a
- farmhouse, and while they were inside one of their horses got away.
- The farmhouse was quite close to the hill from which the Boers were
- firing, and when the retirement took place the unfortunate man who had
- lost his horse would have been left had not one of his comrades very
- pluckily ridden forward and caught the animal, which was grazing close
- by, and thus enabled its owner to get away. The plucky scout, however,
- stayed to take up, behind his saddle, another man, whose horse had
- been killed, and they also managed to get clear off, notwithstanding
- that they were being shot at all the while. Captain Taylor, our
- Adjutant, who was looking through his telescope at the time, said it
- was the neatest and coolest thing he had ever seen. It was now getting
- on in the afternoon, and, the purpose for which, as I presume, we were
- sent out being complete, the order to retire was given, Lumsden’s
- Horse being instructed to act as rearguard, and occupy the kopjes
- where they were posted, till the guns and the rest of the troops had
- got away. This we did, and we heard afterwards from the men in charge
- of the ambulance which was left behind to bring in the wounded that we
- had hardly left the kopjes we had been on all day when the Boers
- occupied them. We got back to our camp at Commando Nek late in the
- afternoon, and stayed there for the night. This was the most
- irritating action we have yet been in, for the Boer convoy was at our
- mercy, but we were not numerically strong enough to attack it. It thus
- slipped away under our very noses. Baden-Powell was at Commando Nek
- and Ian Hamilton a day’s march in rear.
-
- It was arranged that next day General Mahon’s brigade should make an
- attack on the position reconnoitred that morning, supported by Ian
- Hamilton, who was to join us again with the rest of his division.
- Lumsden’s Horse were to take up the same position as they had done the
- day before. The brigade marched out at 6.30 A.M. and were soon on the
- scene of the previous action. As instructed, we posted ourselves on
- the kopjes occupied by us the day before, and in the meantime scouts
- were sent out to discover whether or not the Boers were still about.
- The crack of Mausers soon decided this question, and the kopjes in
- front and on both flanks were then shelled for several hours. We were
- then ordered to leave our rocky perches and advance in skirmishing
- order to the attack. We soon arrived on the kopjes previously held by
- the Boers, but found no trace of these gentry, who had evidently
- played their usual game of leaving a few snipers behind to hinder our
- advance while their main body got away in safety. This effected, the
- snipers themselves vanished into space. There were no casualties on
- our side that morning, and I do not fancy our shells did much damage,
- as I did not hear of any dead or wounded Boers being found. It was
- about here that De Wet was supposed to have broken up his commando,
- leaving some 1,500 dismounted men to take refuge in the bushveldt,
- while he went off south with only 200 men. Meantime General Ian
- Hamilton came up with his troops, and the whole of us then advanced
- north, the direction taken by the fleeing Boers into the bushveldt,
- expecting a fight at any time, which did not come off. The going was
- extremely difficult, the soil being impalpable sand with thorny bushes
- growing so close together that at twenty yards objects could not be
- discerned. Water was only encountered at one spot, a farm in a valley.
- The occupants of the farm were a Boer woman and two little children;
- she weepingly informed us that the Boers had commandeered her husband
- the day before, and, as he had objected, they had taken him away in
- handcuffs. We made Zoutpans by sundown, completely jaded and worn out.
- At Zoutpans are the salt-mines, now at a standstill, as the company
- owning them have gone into liquidation, and the only house is that in
- which the manager, an Englishman, lives. A pool highly impregnated
- with salt was the only water near at hand, and on this men and horses
- had to do. The salt itself from these mines is only fit for cattle, as
- soda predominates in it. We had marched more or less in a circle. Next
- day we heard that De Wet had doubled back with 200 picked men to the
- Free State, leaving the rest of his force to join Grobler, who was
- then operating north of Pretoria. We were told that General Paget was
- coming up with a small force along the line of rail, and Baden-Powell,
- who had left Commando Nek, would advance parallel with and ten miles
- west of Paget, and that Ian Hamilton’s Division, then about twelve
- miles further west, was to co-operate with these two columns and keep
- Grobler from breaking back if possible.
-
- We were now in what is called the bushveldt—_i.e._, country covered
- with low scrubby bushes. These bushes form excellent screens for the
- enemy, and scouting, therefore, is ticklish work. ‘You dunno where you
- are,’ as they say. Water was a scarce article, too—in fact, it was
- about the driest country we had been in so far. Passing a place called
- Stinkwater, we reached Swartzkop late in the evening, and camped there
- for the night near a large settlement of the Barotse tribe. The
- Germans have a mission in these parts; their church is only a large
- mud hut, but the missionary in charge has a following of no fewer than
- 2,000. We were told that night that General Ian Hamilton was going
- with his Staff to Haaman’s Kraal, a railway station about fifteen
- miles east, coming back the same evening, and that Lumsden’s Horse
- were to act as his escort. This promised a nice break in the monotony
- of the everlasting march, march, march we had been having lately, so
- those of us who had fit horses were much elated, the unfortunate ones,
- who had not, being correspondingly downcast. As arranged, we started
- for Haaman’s Kraal at daybreak next day, and our advance scouts had
- got quite six miles out when we were ordered to turn back and return
- to camp. Trooper Philip Stanley writes of an incident that occurred at
- a farm near the German mission, and which may help to explain how some
- of the wonderful yarns we so often heard about De Wet’s capture
- commenced.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Photo: Bourne & Shepherd_
- PHILIP STANLEY
-]
-
- We were catching the fowls in the houses round the church, and one
- particular black-and-white cock evaded all our endeavours. So somebody
- called him De Wet, and presently yelled out, as the poor cock was hurt
- by a stick or stone, ‘_De Wet’s captured at last_.’ Curiously enough,
- just at that moment a mounted man, a Hussar I think, was riding close
- past us on the road and heard the shout ‘De Wet’s captured at last,’
- and I think must have spread the report, as when we got into camp,
- four miles on, about an hour and a half afterwards, we were at once
- told De Wet was captured at last, and I think they might that evening
- have added, ‘and eaten.’ Fresh instructions had evidently come from
- headquarters, and General Ian Hamilton was not going to Haaman’s Kraal
- after all. When we got back to our place we found the division moving
- off in a northerly direction, and so, after a few minutes’ halt to
- water our horses, we had to follow on as quickly as possible to regain
- our place in the column—_i.e._, on the flank of the guns. It was a
- very hot and dirty march, and towards the afternoon our position was
- changed to rearguard, which meant that we had to wait behind till all
- the stragglers and the whole of the Transport got into camp. In
- consequence we did not get in till 8.30 that night, and even then our
- troubles were not ended, as several of us were immediately ordered out
- on outlying picket. The different corps take it in turn to do
- rearguard as a rule, and, needless to say, it is not a popular duty at
- all. Generally the rearguard gets off supplying outlying pickets, but
- when short-handed, or when there are more posts than usual, they too
- have to bear their share of the burden.
-
- The next day’s march (August 24) brought us to Warmbaths. As its name
- indicates, there are natural springs here. Some of the enterprising
- ones of the earth, taking advantage of this, have erected long rows of
- bathing houses supplied with every convenience, hot and cold water
- taps, &c., &c., and before the war broke out I understand they were
- making a good thing out of it. It was a great resort for invalids, I
- was told, and, being on the line of rail from Pretoria, it was quite
- the thing to spend a few days out there and take the waters. When we
- came in we found the baths entirely deserted, no one being left in
- charge of them.
-
- There were any number of troops in the place when we arrived, Paget’s
- and Baden-Powell’s lot having come in the day before. They had had
- several brushes with the enemy under Grobler, and had driven them on
- to the hills beyond the town. As can easily be imagined, there was a
- regular rush on the baths, each room being in most cases engaged six
- deep. Many of us, in consequence, had to defer tubbing till next day,
- which we spent resting in camp. I was one of these. Oh! I shall never
- forget the luxury of that bath. I think I spent a whole hour lying
- full length in a tub of hot water, with just my chin above the
- surface. When one only gets the opportunity of bathing on rare
- occasions it is perhaps not surprising that one should wax
- enthusiastic over one such as this was. That we hadn’t been used to
- luxuries was fully demonstrated by the number of men who were
- suffering with colds the next day. We started again with Ian Hamilton
- on the evening of the 26th, leaving Generals Paget and Baden-Powell
- behind to settle with Grobler and his merry band, whom, as I have
- written above, they had already harried considerably. Our march was in
- the direction of Pretoria, and everybody in the column then heard for
- the first time that we were merely going there to refit and get
- remounts, after which we should be sent out in the direction of
- Middelburg. Alas! for our hopes that this was to have been our last
- trek.
-
- Twenty-five miles of bushveldt had to be traversed to reach the next
- camp, at Pienaar’s River—an eccentric stream, the meandering of which
- caused us considerable inconvenience in crossing and re-crossing it a
- dozen times during the march. We reached Pienaar’s River station that
- night and camped there. Starting again next day, we got to Haaman’s
- Kraal about midday, and halted there for two or three hours. We heard
- here that our mails (we hadn’t had any since leaving Pretoria at the
- beginning of the month, so expected a good pile) had been sent on from
- Pretoria to meet us, and they were a mile or two ahead. About a dozen
- of us were accordingly sent to get them. There were eight or ten bags
- for us, and we immediately ‘buckled to’ the pleasant task of sorting.
- It took us a good two hours’ hard work, and this will give some idea
- of the number of letters and parcels received.
-
- Continuing our march, we reached Waterval station late in the
- afternoon and halted for the night. This, it will be remembered, was
- where the Boers kept our men whom they had taken prisoners, after they
- removed them from the racecourse at Pretoria. They were confined in
- long tin sheds placed in the middle of a large barbed wire enclosure,
- and this was lighted up by electric light all night, thus reducing the
- chances of escape to a minimum.
-
- We marched at 4.30 next morning and at 10 o’clock arrived in Pretoria,
- where we camped on the racecourse. Shortly afterwards we were joined
- by Captain Clifford and the men (about twenty) who had been left
- behind at Irene owing to their having no horses, and also by several
- others who had been in hospital and were now convalescent. Among the
- latter was Regimental Sergeant-Major ‘Lump’ Marsham, who was looking
- remarkably well after all he had gone through. He had had some
- remarkable experiences; shot in two places (through the chest and
- right thigh), besides having a bullet through his haversack in our
- first fight at Houtnek, then being taken prisoner at Rhenoster River
- station, where he was on his way up to rejoin the regiment after
- leaving hospital, then having the pleasure of being present at the
- surrender of Prinsloo and three or four thousand of his men, and
- forming one of the guard which escorted them afterwards. We were all
- greatly pleased to have him back among us again.
-
- We had had a trying time of it, and Veterinary-Captain Stevenson cast
- our horses wholesale, nearly two-thirds being cast in all. The men
- seem made of sterner stuff, and campaigning has only tended to make
- the majority fitter than ever, and only a very few are ill—a matter of
- the survival of the fittest. We have been working in co-operation with
- Baden-Powell’s brigade a good deal, and our desire to hear about him
- and to see him has been surfeited. The only hardship experienced on
- the march was want of good tobacco. Though the Magaliesberg tobacco is
- considered the best of Transvaal tobacco, and we could have obtained
- plenty of it, yet few among us have acquired a taste for it. It is
- positively vile, and an Indian cigar when smoked in a pipe is probably
- the nearest approach to it. Some more changes have taken place among
- us. Trooper Arathoon (Oudh Light Horse) has been granted a commission
- in the 3rd Dragoon Guards, Corporal Montagu-Bates one in the East
- Surrey Regiment, Trooper Partridge one in the Northumberland
- Fusiliers, and Trooper Douglas-Jones one in the Army Service Corps.
- Corporal Chartres has for some months been doing duty as
- Surgeon-Captain at one of our many hospitals. Trooper Follett died of
- enteric at Johannesburg, while quite twenty or twenty-five men have
- been invalided home. There is little doubt that a famine in the
- Transvaal will result from this war; foodstuffs are at a premium,
- while the expected crops have been all destroyed. In the large towns
- like Pretoria, Johannesburg, &c., bread is only baked from flour
- supplied by Government, and even then the prevailing price is a
- shilling for a pound loaf. Every-day necessities, such as tea, coffee,
- and sugar, are now hard to procure, while beet has risen to two
- shillings a pound; mealies (Indian-corn) for horses cannot be bought
- under threepence the pound. The beginning of a famine would thus be
- the precursor of the end of the war. Glancing at a map, one would be
- inclined to think places indicated in capitals and small capitals to
- be important towns; as a matter of fact each is but a cluster of
- houses, a store or two, the inevitable church, and an hotel. This is
- typical of places like Rustenburg, Heilbron, Middelburg, Carolina, &c.
- Kroonstad, Brandfort and Pretoria are but larger clusters, more
- hotels, and more churches. The latter certainly possess some really
- excellent public buildings; the private villas are charming, and
- suggest the _otium cum dignitate_, while the State artillery barracks
- are reputed to be the finest in the world. Johannesburg is the one
- town of the Transvaal, and can hold its own against the world. But it
- must not be forgotten that the Uitlander alone has made it what it is.
- As a sink of iniquity it has the unenviable distinction of ranking
- second only to San Francisco. Gambling saloons abut on to the streets,
- and at some gambling is restricted to gold alone. One can imagine what
- Johannesburg must have been under a corrupt Government, such as the
- one we have just displaced—the Rand, a succession of gold-mines, being
- practically suburban. Johannesburg sports a public-house at every
- fifty yards, and it is the refuse of the Rand that forms the nucleus
- of the band of outlaws and desperadoes known as the Irish Brigade
- _alias_ Blake’s Ruffians. The very antithesis of this contingent are
- known as the Imperial Light Horse, who have been so highly
- complimented by Sir George White as constituting the finest fighting
- men in the world.
-
-Very characteristic of the dashing and humorous leader under whom
-Lumsden’s Horse served in this march is the following story told by
-Captain Beresford:
-
- I remember one very wet cold day when we were attached to Mahon’s
- column. While on the march a sergeant and two men were told off to go
- and forage for some provisions. Coming across a Boer farm, they helped
- themselves to a turkey or two and some poultry. Now, it happened that
- General Ian Hamilton the day previous had paid for what his men took,
- so the Boer was loud in his protestation, but all the satisfaction he
- could get from our men was, ‘The General will pay.’ General Mahon
- passing shortly after, the man presented his bill, which amounted to
- fifteen shillings. On seeing it the General made inquiries as to which
- corps the foraging party belonged to, and being told, sent for an
- officer of the corps and requested _him_ to pay the bill; but as the
- officer had not fifteen shillings about him, the General very kindly
- lent him the money till he could obtain it from his brother-officers
- and men, who found out then that the General would not be universal
- provider.
-
------
-
-Footnote 13:
-
- Lord Kitchener’s force went to relieve Colonel Hore at Eland’s
- River.—ED.
-
------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVI
- _EASTWARD TO BELFAST AND BARBERTON UNDER GENERALS FRENCH AND MAHON_
-
-
-After such a march, in which horses had become so emaciated by want of
-sufficient food to sustain them, and so leg-weary from incessant work
-under heavy burdens, that more than two-thirds of them were temporarily
-unfit for service, the corps naturally expected to get a long rest at
-Pretoria. Nearly every man needed it too, and welcomed the prospect of a
-little town life in touch with civilisation, where some luxuries might
-be enjoyed and experiences exchanged with comrades from other columns.
-Ragged and out at heels from being having marched long distances through
-tangled growth of rhenoster bushes and ‘wait-a-bit’ thorns to relieve
-their exhausted steeds, these troopers naturally looked forward to the
-chance of clothing themselves in comfort if the stores of Pretoria
-should be equal to that demand, or at any rate of waiting until articles
-of much-needed kit could be got up from the bases where these things had
-been left. Such expectations were natural enough in the case of men who
-began to think there would be no more need of their services, since Lord
-Roberts had expressed an opinion that regular warfare was nearly at an
-end. Circumstances seemed then to justify that view. Though De Wet was
-still at large, he did not count for much while his followers were
-scattered in all directions with little chance of coming together again.
-Botha’s forces, offering but a feeble resistance at any point, had been
-pushed further and further eastward by Generals French and Pole-Carew,
-operating in their front, and the army of Natal on their flank. Buller
-had fought his brilliant action at Bergendal, where Lord Roberts
-considered the success decisive, saying: ‘It was carried out in view of
-the main Boer position, and the effect of it was such that the enemy
-gave way at all points, flying in confusion to the north and east. Next
-morning Buller was able to occupy Machadodorp without opposition.’
-Dundonald’s brigade of Irregular Cavalry had pushed on in pursuit of the
-Boers through mountainous country, where they made no stand against him.
-Buller, continuing his march, occupied Waterval Boven, where the
-prisoners released from Nooitgedacht joined him. President Kruger and
-other members of the late Transvaal Government were at Nelspruit
-preparing for flight across the Portuguese frontier; and General French
-was at Carolina, waiting only for reinforcements to make his swoop on
-Barberton by way of the last stronghold that remained in the enemy’s
-hands south of the Delagoa Bay Railway. It looked, indeed, as if Boer
-resistance on any organised scale must be near its final stage, and the
-thoughts of Lumsden’s Horse naturally turned towards home rather than to
-opportunities for gaining fresh distinction. Their hopes of immediate
-peace with honour were, however, doomed to disappointment. Before they
-had been in Pretoria many hours orders for a fresh move had reached
-them, and, instead of having leisure for relaxation or even a taste of
-civilisation’s comforts, they had to spend the next day in drawing from
-stores the outfit of which they were sorely in need and making other
-preparations for their march. Their Brigadier-General (Mahon) was to go
-in command of reinforcements for General French, and the troops placed
-at his disposal were M Battery Royal Horse Artillery, the 3rd Corps of
-Mounted Infantry, Queensland Mounted Infantry, New Zealand Mounted
-Rifles, 79th Company Imperial Yeomanry, the Imperial Light Horse, and
-Lumsden’s Horse. The order came to them in a form which left no doubt in
-any mind that there was still a man’s work to be done, and that they
-were about to take part in another important phase of the great Boer
-war. Therefore they put aside all vain regrets for the things that were
-just then out of reach. Disappointment gave place quickly to
-gratification at the thought that they were to see service under such a
-dashing leader as General French, who had never up to that time met the
-Boers without bringing them to action, and whose reputation rose higher
-after every enterprise undertaken by him, though he was not always
-allowed to take full advantage of a success by following up his beaten
-enemies. The Boers, who attributed every British success in the Free
-State and Transvaal to luck or to overwhelming numbers, had given to
-French the title of the ‘lucky General.’ They said it was by luck alone
-that he beat Commandant Koch at Elandslaagte before their reinforcements
-could come up. Luck, according to them, served him again in the hour of
-his secret withdrawal from Colesberg just before De la Rey’s plans for
-annihilation were complete, and yet again when he made his dash at
-interposing forces north of Modder River, and, striking at the very
-point where they were weakest, got through just in the nick of time,
-took their positions in reverse, and thus cleared a way for the relief
-of Kimberley. If all this can be called luck, then it is something to be
-a lucky general and goes a long way in justification of the faith that
-Napoleon placed in men who had that reputation. At any rate, no Boer
-commandos were very eager to get in the way of ‘lucky French,’ and
-whenever he was known to be operating on their flank they always thought
-it time to summon thither one of their own Generals most trusted for his
-ability to conduct a retreat. That luck fell more than once to De la
-Rey’s lot. In a recent conversation that redoubtable leader, the best
-fighting man of all on the Boer side, told the Editor of this History
-that it was he who opposed French at Driefontein after Cronjé’s
-surrender. He also had to fight all the rearguard actions up to the time
-of our crossing the Vaal, when he went off in hot haste for the purpose
-of intercepting Mahon’s column before it could reach Mafeking. Having
-been out-manœuvred there, he was called back to aid Botha outside
-Johannesburg, and entrusted again with the task of delaying French’s
-flanking movement by the defence of Klipriviersberg until the Boer guns
-and convoys could make good their retreat. Obviously they did not think
-it safe to trust anything to chance when our ‘lucky General’ was
-pressing them, but sent their wiliest tactician and most stubborn
-fighter to hold him in play while they cleared off. If any of them
-really believed in their capacity to beat French on equal terms—the
-advantage of ground being with them to counterbalance British
-superiority in numbers—an admirable opportunity offered in the
-mountainous ranges of the Devil’s Kantoor, where, Boer leaders had
-frequently declared, they would crush any force attempting to reach
-Barberton that way. If properly held, the positions there would have
-been almost impregnable. Few people to this day know the difficulties
-that French had before him when he concentrated his force at Carolina.
-The Boers knew all about these things. Every zig-zag track like a
-winding stair up the precipitous mountain-side was familiar to them.
-They knew also the object with which he was waiting to gather strength
-at Carolina, and they brought forces against him that were little
-inferior numerically to his own. Yet when at last he struck straight for
-almost inaccessible mountain passes, instead of making a wide detour to
-get round them, they were so paralysed by the ‘lucky General’s’ audacity
-that they let him have his way, which led by the nearest track to
-Barberton. This slight digression, however, anticipates events which may
-now be dealt with more fully in the narratives by Colonel Lumsden, his
-officers and troopers, whose experiences and observations are woven
-together in the following description of events in something like proper
-sequence:
-
- We were by this time reduced to forty fit horses.
-
- Our stay in Pretoria, as we had heard it would be, was only a short
- one. The day after arriving in camp we were served out with new kit,
- of which we were sadly in need, most of the men being in a very ragged
- condition indeed. General Mahon was to proceed to Carolina and join
- General French’s division there, leaving General Ian Hamilton’s
- division, to which we were no longer attached. It rained heavily the
- night before we started, and as we marched at daybreak there was no
- time to dry our blankets, which were simply sopping wet.
-
- Our total muster on parade was—A Company 17, B Company 24; in all, 41
- rank-and-file. The balance of nearly 100 men, under Captain Beresford,
- were to follow on receipt of remounts, and overtake us if possible.
- This hope was soon knocked on the head, for while headquarters started
- with General Mahon for Barberton, the remainder were sent to
- Machadodorp, which they reached without much adventure a fortnight
- later. Notwithstanding their repeated attempts to join us, their
- wishes were not acceded to, the country being considered too dangerous
- for a small party to move alone. On the 31st we reached Bronkhurst
- Spruit, memorable in the Transvaal as the spot where British troops,
- under Colonel Anstruther, were badly cut up in the last war, while
- marching, all unconscious that war had been declared against the
- Transvaal. On September 1 we passed Balmoral and camped at
- Elandsfontein. On the 2nd, near the Transvaal and Delagoa Bay
- coal-mines, a French gentleman was good enough to communicate the
- latest Boer lie. It was that China was sending a million of troops to
- invade England. The country about here is very treacherous, with many
- swamps which unwary troopers may not see until they are floundering in
- mire, where their horses sink to the girths. Our camp that night was
- at Reitspruit, six miles from Middelburg.
-
- The next day we passed Middelburg, which proved a grievous
- disappointment, for there was absolutely nothing in the way of
- provisions procurable, and camped at Reitpan. The weather was very
- hot, the sun striking down with great force during the middle of the
- day. General Mahon had adopted the plan of off-saddling and halting
- for two or three hours during the heat of the day, instead of marching
- steadily from 6 A.M. to 6 P.M. with short halts of ten minutes every
- now and then. This gave man and beast a thorough rest, and the
- opportunity was always taken of making tea and coffee, and partaking
- of this with the inevitable jam and biscuits. The horses, too, had a
- good feed of oats, which were served out in the morning and carried in
- our nosebags. Captain Noblett got a nasty touch of the sun two or
- three days before arriving at Middelburg, and the doctors decided that
- he ought to go into hospital there, being quite unfit to continue on
- the march. We were very sorry to lose him, as he was one of our most
- popular officers. Speaking for No. 2 Section B Company, anyhow, I know
- they swore by him to a man. We heard afterwards that he had gone to
- Durban for a change, and it is to be hoped he will soon be back again
- with us. The fourth day’s march brought us in contact with General
- Hutton’s line of communications, and we were apprised of the
- annexation of the Transvaal. With this good news we buoyed ourselves
- up, and brought a dreary march to a close at Wonderfontein. The Boers
- are whimsical at names, but have surpassed themselves with
- Wonderfontein, for the wonder of it is where to find the fountain?
- Speculation was rife, as the pools of water we saw were so putrid that
- the horses, though they had done thirteen miles from the last
- halting-place, would not drink till accident disclosed a tiny spring
- in a bed of sand, just deep enough to fill a coffee cup at a time.
- Here was the wonder, and, _eureka_! we had struck it. The 5th was an
- eventful day, for when we had marched eastward three miles a heliogram
- from a contingent of 90 Canadians on the line of communications
- solicited help, as they were hard pressed by 300 Boers near Pan
- station, where they had been fighting since daybreak. Files about and
- canter was the order, and we went back some six miles to their aid,
- but the enemy had beaten a retreat after capturing a small post, where
- they crept up through a dense fog and surprised the helpless picket.
- We returned to Wonderfontein, and General Mahon, in consideration of
- the call made on us, very generously ordered an issue of a quarter of
- a pound of bully-beef and a biscuit. ’Twas lunch _à la South Africa_,
- and much appreciated. Thus refreshed we continued on our march for
- some five or six miles, and camped for the night. Such a night we have
- never had. The wind blew a perfect hurricane, and it was bitterly
- cold. On the 6th the brigade reached Carolina, and we were in
- expectation of seeing a town where we could renew our diminished stock
- of provisions, but, alas! Carolina in Africa is very different from
- the Carolina of the song—
-
- South Carolina is a sultry clime,
- Where the niggers work in the summer time,
- Massa in the shade would lay,
- While we poor niggers work all day.
-
- With us it was not summer time, but Massa had to lie on the bleak
- veldt and pretty hungry too. We found General French in camp near by
- us, with two brigades. A foreign commando of Austrians and Italians
- was said to be in the neighbourhood, and we hoped to become better
- acquainted with it later on.
-
- Carolina is a small uninteresting sort of place, more a village than
- anything else, the houses being small and built of corrugated iron. It
- is about the windiest place I have ever been in. We were there nearly
- a week, and it blew a hurricane almost all the time. One day it rained
- as well, and this made it horribly cold—the chilly blast cutting into
- one like a knife. Even the hardy Cape ponies, who had never before in
- their lives known what it was to be blanketed, had to be covered up
- that day.
-
- Another of the charms of this delightful place is that it is most
- dangerous to send horses out grazing on the surrounding veldt, as
- there is a low poisonous bush which grows pretty plentifully on it, to
- eat which is almost certain death. We found this out by bitter
- experience, losing four or five horses before we left.
-
- The first march from Carolina took us over a ridge by Nelspruit, where
- we witnessed a very pretty engagement. The enemy had taken up a
- position on top of a hill crossed by three deep ravines at right
- angles to our line of advance. This was stormed by the Suffolk
- Infantry while we acted as escort to the guns, which shelled the enemy
- severely as they left the shelter of the last ridge. When turned out
- of their last stronghold they retired by ones and twos under severe
- shrapnel fire at 1,500 yards’ range, which gave us an object-lesson in
- Mounted Infantry tactics. At Carolina, with General French and his
- Cavalry, we halted two days, and resumed our advance on Sunday the
- 9th. We had heard that the Boers were in the vicinity, and it was not
- long before we met them. For about six miles we marched across the
- absolutely flat veldt, and then with extraordinary suddenness the
- scene changed, and we found ourselves among steep and rugged hills.
- Here was ideal country for the Boers to fight in, and they speedily
- let us know of their presence. They had taken up a strong position
- among rocks and piled-up boulders on the further side of a hollow some
- 3,000 yards across. ‘Lumsden’s,’ together with a part of a squadron of
- the 18th Hussars who, like ourselves, had been unable to get remounts
- in Pretoria, so that their numbers were reduced about 60 per cent.,
- were escorting the guns. M Battery R.H.A. swung ‘action front’ and had
- opened fire in next to no time, the whole battery and also two
- 15-pounders being placed in line along the ridge and all pounding away
- at the rocky kopje, or rather series of kopjes, from which the Boers
- were firing at our Infantry (the Suffolk Regiment), who now opened
- out, and, advancing to within good rifle range, took what cover they
- could find and engaged the enemy. It was a grand sight watching the
- play of the guns, and cheer after cheer rang through the lines as each
- shot fell in rapid succession right in among the Boers, scattering
- them like startled sheep. The guns did splendid work; the range was
- accurate, and the shells perfect. But a grander sight still was to
- watch Tommy advancing: he does it in a most casual way, with his rifle
- slung at ease over his shoulder. You see individuals in khaki
- stumbling over rocks and boulders, then a thin line of khaki in the
- distance, then nothing, for Tommy is resting; the thin khaki line
- again becomes visible as he proceeds in the coolest manner in the
- world, till the order to fire is given. Nothing is then visible, but
- the sounds of volley after volley and independent firing tell you the
- Infantry are in the thick of a fight. As the Mounted Infantry advance
- through the gaps in their lines, Tommy cheerily calls out, ‘Let ’em
- have it ’ot, mate.’ Having placed our horses in a nullah out of the
- way of stray bullets—one or two of which came whistling overhead—we
- had nothing to do but watch the progress of the fight, and a capital
- view we had, especially of our artillery in action; the enemy had no
- guns in position here, so our guns could devote themselves to shelling
- the rocks among which the Boers were lying; the boulders afforded them
- excellent cover, and they stuck to it exceedingly well. The weak point
- in their position lay in the fact that the cover of which they had
- taken advantage was half-way down the near side of the slope, so in
- the event of their being forced to retire they would have to ride (or
- run) up three or four hundred yards of bare hillside before they
- topped the ridge. For about five hours the fight continued. By this
- time our Infantry had got comparatively close, and the Boers decided
- not to wait for them. Suddenly they were seen issuing from the dip
- where their horses had been hidden in twos and threes and batches of
- various sizes, and scattering up the hillside. With the naked eye one
- could see little black dots streaming away in all directions; it
- looked for all the world like a disturbed ants’ nest. The guns now
- redoubled their exertions, loading and firing all they knew, the
- shells dropping in every direction among the retreating Boers. In
- retiring they had to go down to the bottom of the dip, where they had
- left their horses, and up the slope on the other side—a distance of
- about 300 yards, I should say. When once they got to the top of this
- slope they were more or less safe, as they could take cover among the
- rocks there and get away to the hilly country beyond. But while going
- up the slope they were quite exposed to the fire from our batteries.
- General Mahon was there in person, giving instructions to the officer
- in charge of the guns, which were kept playing on the spot as fast as
- the gunners could load and fire. Watching through glasses we could see
- three or four bowled over; they must have had an uncomfortable ride
- until they topped the ridge, though probably not many were hit, as we
- know from our own experience how ineffective even a well-directed
- shell fire often is. However, on crossing over we found where one dead
- Boer had been hastily buried, also a dead horse and other signs that
- our shell fire had not been without results. A long-range 15-pounder
- of the Boers now came into action, and for about an hour before
- sundown shelled our convoy at extreme range without doing any damage.
- Throughout the day the Cavalry had been engaged on our right and had
- suffered some casualties. Our brigade had had half-a-dozen or so; one
- of the Imperial Yeomanry was killed and two were wounded, and three of
- the Imperial Light Horse were wounded.
-
- In the afternoon we advanced and occupied the position previously held
- by the Boers, who had retreated some distance. They had a long-range
- 15-pounder with them, and they treated us to a few shells; but these
- went high over our heads, and burst a long way behind without doing
- any damage. Shortly after this, as it was getting dark, we camped for
- the night. As we were preparing to camp the Boers shelled our convoy
- with a Long Tom they still possess, but their shells fell wide and
- were harmless. We camped for the night at Buffalo Spruit. The
- casualties were nine wounded Scots Greys, one wounded Imperial Horse;
- Boers about fifteen killed, wounded unknown. The 10th was an
- uneventful day, but on the 11th Lumsden’s Horse supplied an outlying
- picket consisting of our entire strength. Through some error the
- picket manned the wrong kopje, and as they could not be found next
- morning were reported as captured. We turned up, however, late in the
- day at the camp on the Komati River, and followed rapidly in the track
- of the advancing troops. We were now on half-rations, with De Kaap
- Mountains looming before us, the roadway being in places as steep as
- one in eight, and the enemy strongly posted along the summit. On the
- 12th the advance was made at 5.30 A.M., and by 9 A.M. M Battery was
- again pounding away.
-
-[Illustration: T. HARE SCOTT]
-
-[Illustration: H.G. PHILLIPS]
-
-[Illustration: R.P. ESTABROOKE]
-
-[Illustration: J. BRAINE]
-
-[Illustration: R. PRINGLE]
-
-[Illustration: W. BURNAND]
-
- TRANSPORT DRIVERS
-
- The road to Barberton slopes gradually up from the plains round
- Carolina for about 3,000 feet, if I remember right, when it takes a
- sudden upward turn for about a couple of miles before reaching the top
- of De Kaap Mountains, over which it winds, and then descends again
- about 2,000 to 3,000 feet, the town being situated in a hollow
- surrounded by hills on all sides. The last bit of a couple of miles or
- so is what is called the Devil’s Kantoor. The gradient is about one in
- four, as far as I could judge, and this will give some idea of the job
- our Generals had to tackle if the Boers elected to hold this place, as
- it was reported they were going to do. It was simply an ideal place to
- defend, and they were said to have a Long Tom in position—so things
- generally looked uncomfortable, to say the least of it. Scouting that
- day looked like being an even poorer game than usual. Anything but a
- demoralised force would have made a strong stand in such a position.
- The main advance was against its front, while the Cavalry executed a
- turning movement to the right, with such effect that the position was
- gained almost without a shot. The climb was terrific. So bad was it
- that 12-pounders only just managed to get up with double teams, and
- all the baggage had to be left at the foot of the hill. The troops,
- however, pushed on to the top, only to witness a heart-rending sight.
- On the range opposite, at about 8,000 yards, was a high laager half a
- mile square, a dense mass of cattle and waggons, out of which the
- latter were seen streaming away towards Swaziland. Between us and them
- lay a deep valley, while the road curving round to the left was
- commanded by three guns, rendering serious attack in that direction
- inadvisable. The Imperial Light Horse made a gallant attempt to get
- round, but were not strong enough. We all looked to see the 6-inch gun
- come up and play havoc with the laager, but the naval officer in
- command declared his oxen unable to bring the gun up the precipitous
- ascent, leaving us the mortification of seeing the enemy escape under
- our very eyes. It was some gratification, however, to eventually
- capture twenty-five of their ‘buck waggons,’ many thousand sheep, and
- some oxen.
-
- By the time we had dragged up our guns and got them into position the
- fugitives were out of range, as a few shells sent in their direction
- proved; but the captured waggons contained stores of various kinds,
- sugar, flour, &c., and this made a welcome addition to our
- commissariat, which was running very short of supplies. It took four
- days to get the whole of the Transport up the Devil’s Kantoor. During
- this time the bulk of the division halted, as they could not move
- without supplies.
-
- To form some estimate of the difficulties of transport up these
- mountains, I would mention that the Boers were confident that we could
- never get our convoy and guns up, for among them the steepest part is
- described as a place where, if a leading team of oxen come to a stop
- they are hurled back on to the waggon. To clear these mountains in
- four days reflects the greatest credit on that much-abused department,
- the Transport. Sergeant Power, of Lumsden’s Horse, excelled on the
- occasion, for, fearing he could not possibly get the troopers’
- blanket-carts up that night, he unloaded the carts and used the mules
- with pack saddles, thus enabling Lumsden’s Horse to sleep with
- blankets when the rest of the brigade were blanketless, poor fellows!
- In such circumstances it needs no telling that we went to sleep
- supperless, as our rations were at the foot of the mountain and the
- troops on its summit. Directly the road was clear General French with
- two Cavalry brigades advanced rapidly, and, leaving the Boers, who
- were retreating southwards, alone, he pushed on to Barberton, some
- fifteen miles distant. Guided by one of the Imperial Light Horsemen,
- he avoided the road down into the plain in which Barberton is situated
- (which road—so it is said—the enemy were quite prepared to defend),
- and using a bridle-path across the hills, supposed to be impracticable
- for horses, he descended suddenly on the town and captured it without
- opposition. The enemy were completely surprised and fled, leaving
- fifty-seven engines with rolling-stock standing in the station, a
- large quantity of stores, and 10,000_l._ in specie. The day following
- General French’s occupation of the town a Boer convoy consisting of
- fifty waggons walked in under the impression that it was still in
- their hands! General Mahon’s brigade, with the Infantry, were left to
- guard Homolomo while the convoy came up. The gradient was something
- like one in four, so you can imagine what a business it was getting
- the heavy waggons up. Twelve and fourteen horses were required to get
- the lighter guns up, while the naval gun had eighty oxen harnessed to
- it, and many a poor beast fell out and died under the strain. On the
- third day we continued our march; all day we were descending,
- gradually leaving the hills behind, until we eventually came out into
- an enormous plain, the Kaap Valley. Here we halted and waited for the
- Transport, who had had another trying day. We had descended 3,000 feet
- during the day, and the difference in temperature was most noticeable.
- In this part of the country the hot weather is just beginning; the
- nights are quite mild and the sun at midday is scorching. On Sunday
- the 16th we marched to within a couple of miles of the town and
- camped. It is a straggling little place built close under and partly
- on the lower slopes of a spur of the Kaapsche Berg. This is a well
- watered part of the country, and fruit growing appears to be a paying
- industry, Pretoria and Johannesburg being markets where—in normal
- times—any quantity of fruit is easily disposed of. On the fruit farms
- here we noticed several old Indian friends—viz., plantains,
- pineapples, and papiya. When we got into Barberton we found that
- General French had gone on towards Komati Poort, on the Portuguese
- border, in which direction the Boers had fled, and we heard shortly
- afterwards that about 3,000 of them had taken refuge in Lourenço
- Marques, having given up their arms and destroyed a number of their
- big guns before crossing the border.
-
-[Illustration: L. DAVIS]
-
-[Illustration: LEO H. BRADFORD]
-
-[Illustration: C.W. LOVEGROVE]
-
-[Illustration: S.W. CULLEN]
-
-[Illustration: F.C. MANVILLE]
-
-[Illustration: F.C. THOMPSON]
-
- TRANSPORT DRIVERS
-
- Barberton is quite an Indian town in many respects. Not only is the
- Madrassi native common, but mango, banana, loquat, fig, and other
- Indian fruit trees abound. East Africa seems to my mind to be the
- Indian coolie’s Eldorado, for not only does he wax fat and opulent,
- but he abandons his Indian garb and struts about in that of Western
- civilisation. He does not get on well with the Kaffir, but has pushed
- himself forward, and now occupies a higher position among white men
- than he would presume to in India.
-
- In all other respects, however, Barberton is a very English town, and
- owes its origin to the De Kaap Goldfields. It was here that the Boers
- housed the women and children who were sent to them from Johannesburg
- and Pretoria, and in consequence every house in the town is packed
- full of these refugees. It was also at Barberton that the Dorset
- Yeomanry and the remaining British prisoners were confined after their
- removal from Nooitgedacht; at present the improvised place of
- confinement is being used as a prison for the Boers themselves. The
- latest official bulletin announces the complete demoralisation of the
- Boer army, which is termed a rabble, and speculation is rife as to the
- probable date of our disbandment. Last night (22nd) it was announced
- in orders that anyone desirous of joining the Pretoria Police at
- 10_s._ a day could do so at once; the chances of a commission at the
- end of three months were held out, but only four names were given in.
- The majority intend going to England. A very few have decided to
- remain in Africa, while some twenty or thirty, chiefly coffee planters
- from Southern India, are returning to India. The summer is on us, and
- the days are very hot—102° in the shade. We have no tents, but the
- ingenious ones erect a bivouac of blankets supported on posts and
- rifles as a shelter from the sun. Yesterday a cricket match was played
- between French’s and Mahon’s brigades, resulting in an easy win for
- the latter. Sergeant Pratt represented Lumsden’s Horse in Mahon’s
- team.
-
-Another correspondent writes:
-
- Besides the usual camp duties, we had to supply outlying pickets and
- patrols turn about with the other Volunteers and Regular regiments.
- Twenty or thirty of us used to be sent out to a post five or six miles
- out in the morning. From these posts we sent out patrols, forage
- parties, &c., during the day, and outlying pickets at night. One of
- these posts was situated right on the top of one of the hills beyond
- the town. It was a tremendous climb, and took most of us at least an
- hour to get to it. Lugging blankets, coats, and rations up there was
- no joke, and I am glad to say we only had to do it once during our
- stay.
-
- There was a beautiful wood, with a nice mountain stream running
- through it, about a mile and a half from camp, where we used to send
- our horses down to graze and water, and we always took the opportunity
- of having a delightful bathe or of washing clothes, at which we were
- by this time becoming experts. A daily bath was a luxury we had not
- been accustomed to before for months, so we appreciated it
- accordingly. After our bath we lounged under the shade of the trees
- till it was time to take the horses back to camp again. Grazing guard
- in these circumstances was rather a favourite duty, as up in camp it
- was fearfully hot, our only protection from the sun being small
- blanket shelter tents, which were not really much good. These tents
- were made out of two blankets, or a blanket and a waterproof sheet.
- The blankets and waterproof sheets served out to the Army have
- eyelet-holes on both sides and at the ends, so one can put up a tent
- very easily and quickly, all the materials required being a few pegs
- (easily cut from an old biscuit-box or from any other wood which may
- be obtainable), a little string, and a couple of rifles, these last
- forming the supports at either end.
-
- Owing to the great heat, we move the position of our camps once a
- week. What with dead horses and cattle the air is absolutely putrid,
- and ’tis a precaution most imperative. On the march the foul smells
- encountered are terrible, owing to the number of dead horses and
- cattle lying on the highway. From Pretoria to Balmoral we passed as
- many as two or three hundred carcases in different stages of
- decomposition. The very water is often polluted, and considerable
- inconvenience is the consequence. In a previous letter I incidentally
- mentioned veldt fires, but at the Crocodile River camp it was our luck
- to be in the thick of one, and that at midnight. We had made the camp
- at sundown, and as darkness set in we were enraptured with the
- pyrotechnic display of the surrounding kopjes on fire. It was a
- magnificent sight, though awful. By 10 P.M. the camp was hushed in
- slumber except for stable pickets, when the wind shifted and blew the
- flames towards the camp. Gradually the veldt near us took fire, till
- at midnight we were completely surrounded. The roar was appalling,
- while myriads of insects filled the air. The situation was one needing
- immediate action, as every moment was precious. ‘Stand to your horses
- and saddle up,’ were the orders anxiously given. All was confusion—men
- hurriedly folding up blankets, &c., Kaffir boys running about
- conducting oxen to inspan, bodies of men running towards the fast
- approaching flames carrying blankets to beat them down. In the midst
- of all a patrol of the 18th Hussars were seen completely cut off from
- the camp and surrounded with flaming veldt. A rush was made, and
- hundreds of blankets soon cleared a space, and the patrol emerged, the
- horses showing every sign of terror. It was an anxious time, but in
- half an hour all was safe, and the flames had been successfully
- diverted from their course of destruction. Such a fire in the back
- veldt it would have been impossible to cope with. On the western veldt
- these fires destroy complete herds of cattle annually, and are much
- dreaded.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- THE LAUNDRY
- (_From a sketch by J.S. Cowen_)
-]
-
- One day at Barberton four of us were on observation post when four
- Boers came along the road; they were immediately challenged and told
- to show their passes, which they did; they then sat down to rest
- alongside us. One of them, named Meyers, could talk English perfectly,
- and when he found we were of Lumsden’s Horse he said he had escorted
- one of our fellows from Ospruit to Pretoria a prisoner, and shared two
- bottles of whisky. He then told us the Boers knew exactly, when we
- were at Spytfontein, how many men went on picket every night, and how
- many we were all told. He also said on April 30 the brigade adjutant
- rode up within twenty yards of him. He shouted to Williams to
- surrender, and he shouted back, ‘I am damned if I do,’ and galloped
- off; Meyers fired all his magazine at the English officer, but missed
- him. Lieutenant Williams has since been killed at Bothaville.
-
- Barberton was simply crammed with stores of all sorts, the Boers
- having used it as a supply depôt for some time past. It was a great
- treat being able to get luxuries in the shape of extra sugar, tea,
- coffee, sweets, &c., again after such an age, and at reasonable rates
- too. Pretoria was entirely denuded of these things, and I remember
- hunting without success round the whole town for sugar the day before
- we left on our last march. Matches were not to be had there at any
- price, whereas here we could buy them at sixpence a dozen boxes. I
- think we appreciated these more than anything else. We had felt the
- want of them tremendously during the past two or three months. English
- tobacco, unfortunately, was unobtainable, so we had to content
- ourselves with the Boer variety—a very poor substitute, I think most
- of us agreed, though I dare say when one got accustomed to it one
- would prefer it. Personally I never want to see or smell the beastly
- stuff again.
-
- Barberton itself is a small gold-mining town situated at the bottom of
- De Kaap Mountains, and more or less surrounded by hills. On the hills
- forming its background are the various mines which were opened out
- when gold was first discovered here. Then came the rush of the Rand
- mines, and Barberton was left standing. The roads leading to these
- mines wind up and round the hillsides, and must have taken months and
- months of hard work to complete, I should think. The houses are built
- of wood and roofed with corrugated iron for the most part, and are
- very small. One wonders how people manage to exist in them in the
- summer months, when the temperature is almost if not quite as high as
- it is in India, and damp to boot.
-
- It was getting very hot before we left early in October, and the old
- familiar limp feeling which began to pervade all ranks brought back
- memories of hot weather in India. Barberton is essentially a British
- town, and until lately, when the Boers used it as a city of refuge for
- their wives and families, the inhabitants were practically all British
- by blood if not by birth. The community must have been a fairly rough
- one in the old days, and one can imagine many wild orgies taking place
- among the miners, more or less cut off, as they were, from
- civilisation. Fruits of all sorts grow here, Indian as well as
- English—plantains, gooseberries, oranges, lemons, strawberries—and
- vegetables too. Beautiful oat-hay for our horses was obtainable in the
- fields for the first week or so that we were in Barberton.
-
- You will be sorry to hear of the death from enteric fever at
- Johannesburg Hospital of Private M. Follett, the elder of the two
- brothers—planters—who joined with the Mysore contingent. Since then, I
- regret to say, we have had another death from disease—that of Private
- J.H. Maclaine (Surma Valley Light Horse), who died of acute pneumonia
- in Pretoria Hospital. Transport Driver Martyn some months ago was run
- over and badly injured. We are sorry to hear that he has since died of
- the injuries he then received. One way and another a good many have
- left the regiment. A certain number of those left behind, sick and
- wounded, have been unable to rejoin the regiment and have been
- invalided home, among them Privates Cooper and Butler, from Madras,
- both of whom were taken ill at Kroonstad, the former suffering from
- pneumonia and the latter from pleurisy; also Private Bewsher, from
- Mysore, who was wounded in the knee at Elandsfontein station two days
- before the surrender of Johannesburg.
-
- Our ten days at Barberton gave a welcome rest after many weary
- marches. The time was enlivened with dances and hunting with
- buckhounds for the officers and cricket for whoever could be spared.
- It was here that Colonel Lumsden had his unfortunate accident. He was
- riding back in the dark from afternoon tea at a neighbouring camp,
- and, being deceived by the light of a picket fire, rode straight into
- a nullah. The picket, luckily for him, heard the noise of the fall,
- and by the light of a candle went in search, finding horse and man
- prostrate. The horse was dead and Colonel Lumsden insensible. The good
- fellows, however, did their best, and, taking him up to the fire,
- discovered by his badges that he belonged to Lumsden’s Horse. One of
- them came into our camp to report, bringing us the information about
- 11 P.M. The doctor and ambulance immediately proceeded to the scene of
- the accident, and, patching him up temporarily, took him away to the
- Boer hospital in Barberton. By the light of day it appeared wonderful
- that anyone could have escaped death from such an accident. The nullah
- may almost be described as a fissure in the ground some 15 feet wide
- and 29½(measured) deep. The only thing that saved our Colonel’s life
- was that the horse evidently alighted on his feet, taking the brunt of
- the fall himself and paying the penalty with his life; this was shown
- by the fact that the saddle was not injured in any way.
-
-Colonel Lumsden writes of this incident in a letter from Barberton
-Hospital dated October 1, 1900:
-
- Well, eight days ago I visited town, and was riding back to my camp at
- dusk when my charger, a splendid paced and mannered Cape horse, simply
- cantered right into a donga 30 feet deep, breaking his neck in the
- fall, while I lay by his side bruised and insensible.
-
- Luckily for me, some pickets were close by and heard the smash.
- Recognising me by my badge, they went to my camp and brought our
- doctor and adjutant to the spot. They took me to our camp for
- treatment, and in a few hours’ time our doctor, with the assistance of
- troopers who volunteered to carry the stretcher, conveyed me into the
- Barberton Club, the temporary Boer hospital, ours being both full up.
- The Boer doctor and nurses have been kindness itself to me, and have
- done everything in their power to make me comfortable. How I escaped
- with my life my usual good luck only knows. I was bashed, cut, and
- bruised, but not a limb or a bone broken. Four days ago I nearly
- snuffed out from a flow of blood from my nose and mouth, but
- fortunately it was stopped in time, and I really believe did me good,
- as I had too much blood in my system. Now, more than enough about
- myself. I am on the right track, and hope to be with my men in a few
- days more. I follow on with the hospital train the day after
- to-morrow, and pick them up at Machadodorp, for which place they leave
- to-day. There we pick up Captain Beresford with 100 of my men. They
- stayed at Pretoria a day beyond us to get remounts, came on with my
- friend General Cunningham’s Infantry Division, and were never able to
- rejoin us, we being in advance with General Mahon’s Mounted Brigade.
-
-Months afterwards, Colonel Lumsden, by the following tribute, showed
-that he had not forgotten those who had tended him with so much care:
-
- To incidents which I have already related of kindly treatment at the
- hands of Boer doctors and nurses I may add another of which I was on
- this occasion the recipient. I awoke the morning after my serious
- accident feeling very stiff and sore, and found myself lying in the
- general ward amid wounded Tommies and Boers. I must have been
- insensible for nearly twelve hours. Next day Dr. Powell, our
- regimental doctor, wished to remove me to one of our own hospitals,
- but Dr. Bidenhamp, the Boer doctor, offered to give me a small room to
- myself if I remained, which I gratefully accepted, and could not have
- wished for better care or attention than I received at his hands and
- those of his assistant, Mr. E.E. Haumann. I have also to thank very
- gratefully Sister Alma Meyer, of Grosvenor House, Stellenbosch, for
- the kindly treatment she accorded me, as well as two Dutch sisters
- from Holland who were assisting her in the hospital and acting nobly
- to Briton and Boer alike; and I take this opportunity of acknowledging
- with sincere thanks their careful treatment and kindness to me during
- the ten days I was their patient.
-
- Ruling passions are strong even when one is at death’s door, and I
- cannot help recalling a sporting bet I had with my kind friend Sister
- Alma. It took the usual shape of a bet with a woman—gloves—and I laid
- her a dozen pairs to nothing that the war would be over by Christmas,
- which not only I but many high in authority fully believed it would.
- We were passing Durban on our way back to India during the second week
- in December, and, taking the then situation, I looked upon my bet as
- lost and bailed up. One of my subalterns, who was landing there to
- return to the seat of war, kindly carried out my commission, and
- forwarded the gloves to the winner, from whom I received a prompt
- acknowledgment, with the usual remark that women are always right, and
- I believe they are! At least, I never attempt to contradict them, and
- yet I am a bachelor.
-
-Colonel Lumsden being in hospital, and debarred, therefore, to his
-regret, from leading the corps in a march for which it had already been
-detailed, Major Chamney took temporary command, and a few days later
-received orders to hand over horses and proceed by train to rejoin the
-other detachment under Captain Beresford at Machadodorp. This uneventful
-stage of the campaign is thus described by the correspondent of an
-Indian paper serving with Lumsden’s Horse:
-
- Prior to this the Imperial Light Horse had left Mahon’s brigade, and
- we heard that they too expected to be disbanded shortly. General Mahon
- made them a speech before they left, praising them highly for the good
- work they had done while with him, and saying how sorry he was to part
- with them.
-
- On October 1 we handed over nearly all our horses to the New
- Zealanders, keeping only such of them—four or five, if I remember
- right—as had been brought from India and come right through the whole
- show. Four others also were kept for the doctor’s cart, the horses he
- had before being played out. But the experiment did not turn out a
- success, as the first time they were put into harness they bolted and
- there was a general smash-up. The leaders broke away and vanished into
- space, and were never seen by us again; and the wheelers got mixed up
- in the traces and upset the cart, damaging it hopelessly in their
- struggles to get free. The doctor was thenceforth cartless, I think,
- and the implements of his trade had to be carried in one of the
- Transport carts.
-
- After giving over our horses we were marched into town, and camped
- close to the station for the night. The Transport, with the heavy
- luggage and led horses, were to leave next day by road for
- Machadodorp, for which place we too were bound. The rest of the
- regiment, under Captain Beresford, had been stationed there for some
- time. Next morning we proceeded to the station and loaded our saddle,
- baggage, and a few of our small Transport carts into open trucks, into
- which we ourselves afterwards scrambled, the train moving off
- immediately. There was not overmuch room, but we were not particular,
- and this did not very greatly bother us. After proceeding about
- sixteen miles we had to get out and walk to Avoca, a railway station
- about three miles further on, as, owing to the Boers having smashed up
- a bridge here, the train was unable to get across. Waggons were
- awaiting us, into which we loaded the baggage, &c., also making use of
- the Transport carts we had brought with us.
-
- On arriving at Avoca we heard that an accident had occurred further up
- the line, and we should not therefore be able to go on till next day.
- We camped in the open, and spent a wretched night, as it rained
- incessantly, and by daybreak everything was sopping wet. Hearing next
- morning that we would not be leaving for some hours, several of us
- foraged round and found an empty hut, in which we took shelter, as the
- rain still continued, and made ourselves very fairly comfortable.
- There was any amount of firewood about, so we were able to semi-dry
- our blankets, &c. When the train came in at midday it was found that
- there was not room for more than about fifteen of us, besides the
- saddles, baggage, and Transport carts.
-
- At Kaapmuiden we got on to the main line from Komati Poort to
- Pretoria. This junction presented a really woeful sight. The Boers had
- evacuated the place in great haste, throwing away stores, &c., galore,
- principally large quantities of flour, which had been rendered useless
- by sprinkling it with kerosine, making it smell horribly and totally
- unfitting it for consumption. Whole trains had been burned as they
- stood on the lines, and an idea of the terrible conflagration may be
- gathered from the fact that the rails under the wheels were buckled
- down by the terrific heat.
-
-Captain Taylor, in one of his amusing reminiscences, pays a tribute to
-the work done by Infantry soldiers:
-
- Tommy certainly is the most wonderful all-round man, and quite
- prepared to do anything he’s asked. A whole company of Infantry being
- converted into mounted troops by such an order as ‘A company of ——
- Regiment will be Mounted Infantry’ was at one time quite usual, but
- they were fair troops in a month. One saw him making bridges and
- diversions for the same with the old jokes and quaint oaths; or doing
- butcher, baker, slaughterer, tailor, bootmaker, farrier, and all the
- thousand-and-one things he is taught. But he fairly surprised me at
- Barberton.
-
- There we had suddenly arrived with a division of Cavalry ‘in the air.’
- Within a week we had sent our Cavalry as far as Kaapmuiden—the point
- where the Barberton branch line meets the main one from Pretoria to
- Komati Poort. Our Infantry had repaired the numerous bridges and
- culverts, and we were entrained and taken back to Machadodorp by
- train. Every station-master was a junior British officer, the
- pointsman Tommy, engine-driver Tommy, who also worked the telegraphs,
- was stoker, bridgemaker, platelayer, wheelgreaser, &c. There were a
- few accidents, but not many, and a smash was only a joke. No wonder we
- are hard to beat.
-
-The trooper correspondent did not look at things quite in that light,
-but perhaps he was travelling less luxuriously, and the humorous side of
-the situation did not strike him so forcibly:
-
- It was raining all the time, so things generally were not at all
- cheerful, and the prospect of travelling for several hours in open
- trucks under these conditions did not help to raise our spirits.
- However, it was not so bad after all, as we stretched a huge tarpaulin
- propped up with sticks, rifles, and boxes, over the truck we were in,
- which was piled up to the top with the baggage, and managed to keep
- the rain out in this way. The rest of us were to follow on by the next
- train. We even managed to get up a game of whist, and this, with the
- perusal of such literature as we had with us and occasional snoozes
- helped to pass the time. We stayed that night at Crocodile Poort
- station, it not being considered safe to travel after dark. It stopped
- raining at 10 P.M., so, getting out of the truck, we built a huge fire
- and dried our blankets and boiled the inevitable coffee. We slept in
- the open, as it was quite fine then; but the dew was so heavy during
- the night that everything got sopping wet again by the morning. We
- started again at 9, but made very slow progress, as we had long waits
- at various stations on the way.
-
- From there to Machadodorp is a most interesting and beautiful country.
- The line runs between two precipitous ranges quite Swiss in their
- magnificence, with a river running between the hills. Then to Waterval
- Onder, where the ordinary rails gave place to a cogwheel line up a
- steep climb.
-
- We left again at 8 A.M. the following day, and passed through very
- fair scenery between that place and the next station, Waterval Boven.
- High overhanging kopjes on one side, along the bases of which the line
- ran, with a deep sort of cañon between, the Crocodile River flowing
- along its bottom, and a large square turret-like rock looking
- commandingly from the other. In one place the train ran quite close to
- the ‘cliff,’ as in the Darjiling Himalayan Railway in India, and
- almost under a huge mass of overhanging rocks. There are deep fissures
- in these rocks in many places, and they look as if they might get
- loosened and overwhelm us at any moment. We were told that in the
- rains sentries are posted at this place night and day to give timely
- warning should there be any signs of the rocks shifting. The incline,
- too, is very steep here, and only a few trucks at a time can be taken
- up. In our case eleven trucks were sent up at first, two engines being
- put on, one in front and the other behind. To prevent slipping, the
- hindermost engine had the usual cog-wheel arrangement working on a
- centre rail. Shortly after leaving Waterval Onder you get into a
- tunnel about a hundred yards long, I think. It is absolutely
- unventilated, so it can be imagined that the smoke from the engines,
- which, seated as we were in open trucks, simply poured down our
- throats and up our noses, very nearly suffocated us.
-
- We stayed at Waterval Boven till 5 P.M., and then went on to
- Machadodorp, where we found the rest of the regiment, which was
- encamped there, under Captain Beresford. They had marched to this
- place from Belfast, where Lord Roberts inspected them. Here we were
- greatly undeceived. Instead of going on down country for home, as we
- expected, we received orders to equip, and furthermore to leave the
- old brigade we were so fond of under General Mahon, and join General
- French’s column in General Dickson’s brigade.
-
- The men of Lumsden’s Horse arrived in the midst of a very heavy
- hailstorm. Like all true soldiers, they were ready to make a jest of
- discomfort, and seeing the company commander, whose name happened to
- be Jim, as he crawled under the shelter of his _tente d’abri_, they
- struck up the then popular music-hall chorus:
-
- O lucky Jim,
- How I envy him!
-
-Colonel Lumsden was at this time speculating on the chances that his
-corps might soon be ordered home, and in a letter to Sir Patrick
-Playfair, written while still in hospital, he says:
-
- Ever since we entered Pretoria on June 5 and marched through it to
- Irene it has been even betting that the war might end any day or keep
- on with this kind of guerilla fighting till Christmas. It looks very
- like the latter now. I have discussed the matter frequently, while
- lying in my bed here, with Colonel Wools-Sampson, commanding the
- Imperial Light Horse, and Colonel Craddock, commanding the Australian
- contingent, both in Mahon’s brigade with myself. They fully hold my
- opinion that, although this unexpected delay comes harder on the
- Volunteer personally than was anticipated when he joined, yet it was
- all in the bargain. I also assure the men that Government looks upon
- the Colonial Volunteer movement as much too big a factor in this
- crisis to be ignored or undervalued, and that not one day beyond what
- is actually necessary shall we be kept in harness in this country.
- There is no doubt that the complete pacification or subjugation of
- this huge Colony is a much bigger question than we soundly tackled at
- the start, or were prepared to face. De Wet and Botha are harder nuts
- to crack than we imagined. I am extremely proud of and pleased with
- the doings of the corps, and I feel sure it has been worthy of its
- Honorary Colonel and its many friends and supporters in the land we
- hail from. How kind Lord Roberts has been to us and to me personally I
- can hardly state here.
-
- Our good fortune in the way of obtaining commissions in the Regular
- forces speaks volumes on this point, besides other civil appointments
- already granted, to say nothing, I hope, of others in store when we
- disband. As regards the Transvaal Police, which a number of my men
- were keen to join when it started in June, I distinctly said, ‘_No_,
- until we are disbanded. If Government would say “Disband,” then I’ll
- do my best for you with commissions, &c.; but until then, _No_.’ The
- terms were 10_s._ per diem, horse allowance, and rations. Of course
- these were tempting to men playing a hard game on 1_s._ 2_d._ per day,
- but Government soon stopped enrolment, the New Zealand Government
- having declined to let their Volunteers join. I hear it is being
- opened again to a small extent, mostly for mechanics, but these are
- not the class I’ve got. What they mean really to do is to make the
- Transvaal and Orange River Police the soldiers of the immediate
- future, and take all the suitable Volunteers they can to back it up. A
- right good plan too, and I fancy they are only waiting for the
- opportune moment to do so.
-
- As regards funds, I feel sure we shall end up well. I never lose a
- chance of buying little extras for the men in the way of Boer tobacco
- and tinned milk.
-
- Any quantity of the stores for officers went astray, and heaps were
- given away to the men, &c. I can truly assure you the officers will
- not make much out of the hunt!
-
- I don’t know what my movements will be—Calcutta or London, depending
- on that of the corps. At one period our orders were the latter, to be
- in the Colonial Volunteer Inspection by the Queen, but I fear it is
- too late in the day for that to come off, and that it will now be
- Calcutta direct for all that remain of us. Well, as you know, it is
- hard to beat in the cold season, and always enjoyable to me, so I
- don’t mind.
-
-So ended the experiences of Lumsden’s Horse under Brigadier-General
-Mahon’s command. They had been with him two months in circumstances that
-try the mettle of men, whether officers or privates, and their devotion
-to him had increased day by day. In camp or in action he was always the
-same, never worrying himself or harassing his men. On the contrary, he
-more than once gave up his own rough shelter in a deserted house or hut
-so that his troops might have firewood for cooking their scant rations
-of tough mutton or horseflesh. Their confidence in him was unbounded
-because they said he never got them into a tight place without knowing
-how to get them out again; and they would have followed him anywhere.
-That was the feeling of all ranks in the brigade for their General. His
-confidence in them was equally firm. In a letter which the Editor has
-permission to quote, that distinguished leader writes: ‘Lumsden’s Horse
-served with me for some months, and a better lot of men and officers
-could not be found.’
-
-[Illustration:
-
- A HALT ON THE MARCH TO BARBERTON:
- GENERAL MAHON AND COLONEL WOOLS-SAMPSON
- (_A Snapshot by the Editor_)
-]
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVII
- _MARCHING AND FIGHTING—FROM MACHADODORP TO HEIDELBERG
- AND PRETORIA UNDER GENERALS FRENCH AND
- DICKSON_
-
-
-Before presenting as a connected whole the separate descriptions dealing
-with a movement which had for its object the disintegration of Boer
-forces that still held the high veldt and thus threatened both railway
-lines east of Johannesburg, it will be well to summarise briefly the
-experience of troopers under Captain Beresford’s command while separated
-from the headquarters of their corps. It will be remembered that when
-General Mahon set out from Pretoria to join General French in his dash
-on Barberton more than two-thirds of Lumsden’s Horse were left behind
-waiting for remounts, with instructions to follow as fast as possible,
-or as soon as General Cunningham, under whose orders they were placed
-for a time, might permit. What happened then is especially interesting
-as evidence of the class of horse that was being issued to mounted
-troops at that stage for operations against an exceedingly mobile enemy.
-The Boers were then practically nomads, having no fixed bases from which
-supplies were drawn, and therefore no lines of communication to be cut.
-Pursuit of them was therefore very much like hunting a fox that has been
-driven out of his own familiar country. If he runs the pack ‘out of
-scent,’ there is nothing to serve as a guide for the casts that may be
-made in hope of hitting off the line again, for nobody can say what the
-probable ‘point’ is; and unless he can be brought to hand by a pursuit
-that never tires and never goes wrong, we may be sure that there is no
-chance of running him to ground. Most of the Boer leaders at that time
-had their wives and families with them. Mrs. De la Rey had been living
-in an ox-waggon, without fixed abode, since the beginning of war, and
-accompanying her husband on every trek from Magersfontein to Colesberg,
-and thence in succession to Driefontein, Brandfort, Kroonstad, the Vaal
-River, then on to meet Mahon’s column south of Mafeking, back in haste
-for the defence of Johannesburg and Pretoria, from there to Diamond Hill
-(or Rietfontein as the Boers call it), then back northward through the
-bushveldt, and so to the Magaliesberg Range again. Against an enemy thus
-independent of railways or beaten tracks none but well-mounted troops
-with horses in the best of condition could hope to achieve much. For
-corps in the same plight as Lumsden’s Horse, however, nothing better
-could be found than under-bred Argentines or weedy Hungarians, gross
-from the combined effects of idleness and injudicious feeding, and soft
-from want of exercise, badly broken, and therefore ill-mannered. One
-trooper, whose comments are based on actual experience, as he was among
-the men to whom horses were issued for trial, only on the morning of the
-day when they marched from Pretoria, writes of the ‘strange exhibitions’
-with this lot of remounts which, to put it mildly, had not been ridden
-much before. ‘They were just off the ship, fat and very soft, and full
-of beans. One fellow was bucked off, another dragged, and several very
-uncomfortable. The horses had no mouths; they wouldn’t answer to bit,
-rein, or spur, and it was impossible to get one away from the rest.’
-When the corps returned from its long trek nearly everybody was in rags,
-and very unlike the ‘typical trooper’ of ten months earlier, whose smart
-turn-out had been a source of pride to the corps. Clothing, however, ran
-short, and many men had difficulty in replacing their tattered garments
-by new of any kind.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Photo: Johnston & Hoffmann_
- H.P. BROWN, A TYPICAL TROOPER
-]
-
-However, this detachment, under Captain Beresford, having cleared up its
-camp, marched out a day after the corps headquarters had gone and
-bivouacked that night ten or twelve miles east of Pretoria, near the
-pass known as Donker Hoek. Colonel Lumsden, having remained behind to
-see them off, went on a stage or two by train, hoping that they would
-overtake the leading company before it joined General French. The two
-detachments were, in fact, though they did not know it, within cannon
-sound of each other on September 5, when Mahon had turned back from
-Belfast to help the Canadians at Pan station; but, after that, every
-march took them further apart, the Colonel pushing on with what remained
-to him of A Company as part of Mahon’s brigade, while Captain
-Beresford’s hundred could make but slow progress on their leg-weary,
-spiritless horses. The latter troops, on arrival at Belfast, were
-inspected by Lord Roberts, who rode through their lines but made no
-speech to them. General Hutton, who was with the Headquarters Staff,
-cast longing eyes on Lumsden’s Horse, looked them over, and told Captain
-Clifford that he meant to take them on with him. Against such wholesale
-appropriation, however, Captain Beresford protested, saying that the men
-wanted to join their own corps and the horses were not fit yet. After
-appeal to Lord Roberts, Captain Beresford got his way. While at Belfast
-the detachment had unpleasant experience of winter temperature at an
-altitude of more than 6,500 feet above sea level. They tried to supply
-artificial fuel to the system by additional rations, but were not very
-successful, as the resources of Belfast at that time were low indeed,
-and certain restrictions had to be placed on traffic with the Dutch
-inhabitants, one of whom sold bread from the eating of which twelve or
-fourteen men of an Infantry regiment had been poisoned. So sentries were
-posted to warn all soldiers against buying provisions. To keep out the
-icy wind some men built themselves little huts of corrugated iron, in
-the construction of which we learn that Kingchurch and Cobb and the
-brothers Allardice distinguished themselves among one section of B
-Company. Captain Beresford came to have a look at them, and in notes of
-that time is the appreciative entry: ‘He is a very pleasant man and
-always polite to every one of us. He said our tin house was much better
-than the officers’ tents. He told us also that Lord Roberts had
-expressed himself very much pleased with the appearance of the men and
-horses.’ At Belfast also Lumsden’s Horse were visited by their former
-comrade Chartres—once a corporal in the corps, ‘who looked very smart as
-an Army doctor.’ Their last day at Belfast was devoted to the mild
-excitement of watching races, in one of which Captain Clifford came in
-about sixth on ‘The Mate,’ and a note is made of the fact that the Duke
-of Westminster, who won the long-distance steeplechase, ‘rode like a
-workman.’ On the whole, this brief stay at Belfast was more pleasant
-than first impressions of it promised, except for nightly excursions
-after loose Argentines, one of which drew his picket peg so persistently
-and got away on the open veldt so often that Robertson dubbed him
-Ulysses because he was such a wanderer! The next day (November 11)
-Captain Beresford’s detachment struck its camp on that breezy high veldt
-and marched across the battlefield of Bergendal on its way to Dalmanutha
-and Machadodorp as advance guard of General Cunningham’s brigade. No
-sooner had it got into camp once more than B Company was selected to
-furnish an escort the next morning for Lord Kitchener. The
-non-commissioned officer who was to be in command had no other uniform
-than the weather-stained and saddle-worn suit that had done service
-throughout most of the campaign. Luckily, however, one of the Hussars
-offered to sell sundry things. He was a Reservist, and knew his way
-about a military camp. From him a complete outfit was obtained, and the
-purchaser then discovered, much to his amusement, that he had been
-dealing with one who was a pushing commercial traveller in private life.
-So the non-commissioned officer was able to turn out a credit to the
-escort. But some mistake had been made about the rendezvous, which,
-however, the escort found at last by the lucky accident of meeting Major
-J.K. Watson, Lord Kitchener’s A.D.C. By that time the General had gone
-on. ‘So had to follow at a tremendous pace, galloped up every steep hill
-and down the other side over terrible ground, a mass of stones and such
-clouds of dust that you could not see the ground or whither you were
-going. Then caught up Lord Kitchener, who was riding with General
-Hamilton towards a big camp on the top of a hill, where they told us
-General Smith-Dorrien was in command. Very soon started back again. This
-time Lord Kitchener by himself, and a nice pace he led us, up hill and
-down, in clouds of dust. Got back before 1, having started at 10 and
-covered twelve miles altogether.’ During a month at Machadodorp, outpost
-duty and patrols towards Lydenburg or Helvetia, where Boers were often
-seen but never showed fight except by sniping at long range, formed the
-ordinary routine. This, however, was varied by football matches, for
-which Lumsden’s Horse furnished a strong team with Hickley in goal,
-Kirwan and Winder as backs, Courtenay, Brown, and G. Lawrie halves,
-Robertson, Luard, Holme, Tancred, and Lloyd-Jones forwards.
-Unfortunately, Robertson injured his knee in one of these matches and
-had to go into hospital. It was at Machadodorp that Sergeant Stephens,
-of the Indian Commissariat, who was attached to the Transport Staff of
-Lumsden’s Horse, distinguished himself by several solitary expeditions
-into the unexplored country round about. From one of these he came back
-with a pom-pom carriage which he had found at a farm and several ‘poor
-orphans,’ as he described pigs whose owners had deserted them. Once,
-however, he got caught himself, as narrated in Captain Taylor’s private
-collection of reminiscences:
-
-[Illustration: SERGEANT STEPHENS]
-
- We had an Indian Transport sergeant lent to us, and a very good useful
- man he was; but he always had a desire to kill a Boer with his own
- hand and to be able to swear to it. One day when he was out getting
- supplies he saw an armed Boer riding over an adjacent ridge, so he
- left his carts and cantered away to cut him off. On nearing the ridge
- he slipped off his horse and proceeded on foot. Topping the ridge, he
- saw the Boer coming towards him and had him dead practically. Suddenly
- something touched him. Looking up, he saw three rifle muzzles, and he
- was a prisoner with a party of Boers. They took his rifle and horse
- and told him to come along with them. He walked between them for a
- bit, and, being a very amusing Irishman, proceeded to explain that in
- his opinion it wasn’t entertaining him like a guest to make him tramp
- while they rode. They treated the subject at first as a joke, but he
- was so persistent that they at last grew angry, and threatened to
- shoot him if he didn’t be quiet. On this point also he was found to be
- so argumentative that at last in despair they told him to make himself
- scarce, which he did with alacrity, arriving in camp by evening none
- the worse for his adventure, and quite pleased, as he had only
- suffered to the extent of a walk, a Government rifle, and a
- comparatively useless pony.
-
-[Illustration: CORPORAL G. LAWRIE]
-
-[Illustration: F.G. BATEMAN]
-
-[Illustration: L. KINGCHURCH]
-
-[Illustration: IAN SINCLAIR]
-
-[Illustration: SERGT. A.H. LUARD]
-
-[Illustration: PERCY COBB]
-
-[Illustration: HARVEY DAVIES]
-
-[Illustration: A.E. CONSTERDINE]
-
-[Illustration: D. ROBERTSON]
-
- N.C.O.S AND TROOPERS
-
-While Lord Roberts remained at Machadodorp, B Company was often called
-upon to furnish an escort of the smartest men, and for this duty Cobb,
-Kingchurch, David and Hugh Allardice, Ian Sinclair, Robertson, and
-Biscoe, or at least two or three of them, were generally selected. But
-the time for more active service had come again, and with the return of
-A Company from Barberton to Machadodorp Captain Beresford’s command
-ceased to have an independent existence.
-
-It was on October 6 that Major Chamney’s force marched into camp without
-horses, and on the following day Colonel Lumsden passed through
-Machadodorp in the Princess Christian’s hospital train bound for
-Pretoria. Having received a sufficient number of remounts from among
-horses that had been left behind by the Imperial Light Horse and 18th
-Hussars, the corps was ready to take its place in General Dickson’s
-brigade for the sweeping movement by which it was hoped that General
-French would clear the country between De Kaap Mountains and Pretoria.
-Nobody at the time thought that it would be rather more like a rearguard
-action, continued from day to day, than a triumphal progress. We know
-that from morning to night the Boers followed every movement of French’s
-columns, potting at them almost incessantly. No matter at what hour the
-British troops began their march or halted in bivouac, or how often they
-changed direction, the enemy was always with them, and always close
-enough to see, though not often seen. A more harassing march has
-probably never been endured by any force of similar strength in that
-country. All these things we know, but men kept for the privacy of their
-own diaries a record of the physical sufferings that came to them
-through hunger and thirst where food, if not scarce, could seldom be
-cooked because of the thunderstorms night after night and the absence of
-firewood. Notwithstanding all these discomforts, we find a cheery strain
-running through the unprinted records of Lumsden’s Horse, and quite a
-joyful note when by chance the means of making a fire falls in their
-way. Then somebody is sure to be provided with meat to cook, and we are
-told how Kingchurch unexpectedly produced ‘chops done to a turn,’ or
-Cobb’s stew ‘was a triumph,’ or how ‘the indefatigable Hugh cooked chops
-while it still rained, and after dark he cooked mutton for to-morrow.’
-The chronicler, in his gratitude, says: ‘Such men deserve to be
-remembered, and to have their honoured names handed down to posterity,’
-and so they find a place in this History. One night, when rain was being
-driven in sheets by a howling wind across the bare hillside, some of
-Lumsden’s Horse could find no better shelter than an ant-heap, round the
-lee side of which they grouped themselves, huddling together for warmth.
-Kingchurch, finding them there, said in his whimsical way that they had
-selected the ‘most epithetally uncomfortable ant-heap in all South
-Africa.’
-
-It is almost impossible to follow consecutively the movements of General
-French’s columns, which consisted of a nominal brigade under General
-Mahon (the 8th and 14th Hussars and M Battery R.H.A.), a second under
-General Gordon (7th Dragoon Guards, Scots Greys, and guns), and a third,
-which included Lumsden’s Horse, a half-battalion Suffolk Regiment, O
-Battery R.H.A., and pom-pom section, under General Dickson. Two Cavalry
-regiments, the Scots Greys and Carabiniers, with a battery of Artillery,
-were kept under General French’s personal direction on at least one
-occasion, and used by him with great effect when by marching out of
-Bethel he induced the Boers to come in, and then pounced on them. This,
-however, is general history. The operations in which Lumsden’s Horse
-took part are described by several correspondents in the following
-narrative:
-
- At the beginning the original idea was to move on a wide front through
- Carolina, Ermelo, Bethel to Heidelberg, and in consequence we started
- in the afternoon of October 11 with Dickson’s brigade in the centre,
- its main duty being to escort and protect the reserve convoys of all
- three columns, Mahon being eight to nine miles off on our right and
- Gordon a similar distance on our left, these two columns taking with
- them only necessary supplies for a few days.
-
- The very first day Mahon got a severe check, losing some five officers
- and fifty men, while the next day Gordon on the left was in turn hotly
- engaged. After this General French deemed it politic to bring in the
- flank columns closer, and thenceforth we proceeded with only half our
- former front, thus rendering mutual assistance more easy. Although the
- division consisted of three brigades, so called, Mahon’s was only
- about 500 strong, Gordon’s 600, and Dickson’s 700, amounting in all to
- only three regiments on full strength.
-
- Our task was an extremely arduous and difficult one, for the first few
- marches were through hilly country, and the convoy advancing in a
- single string covered seven miles. To protect it from surprise we had
- but 400 mounted troops, the Infantry being kept more or less
- concentrated near the waggons. You can imagine, therefore, that our
- sphere of operations was a very extended one, much being evidently
- left to the initiative of individuals, as personal control by officers
- was well-nigh impossible. This was the kind of fighting that brought
- into prominence the good points of Irregular troops, of which every
- man is used to act on his own responsibility as occasion demands,
- wherein he differs from the trained soldier, who is educated to act on
- orders only. The nature of the convoy added greatly to the fatigue men
- had to endure. Oxen formed part of the convoy and, as they are unable
- apparently at this season of the year to march except in the cool of
- the morning and evening, the working day comprised twenty-four hours.
- The usual marching hour for ‘ox’ was 4 A.M., necessitating _réveille_
- at 2.15 often in the rain, the ‘mule’ following an hour later. The
- convoy commenced packing at 8 o’clock, and a halt was observed till 2
- or 3 in the afternoon. In the afternoon ‘mule’ led off, the ‘ox’
- following. By this arrangement the ‘ox’ avoided all heat, but never
- got into camp till 9 P.M. or thereabouts. Mounted troops had far the
- worst of this, for while the Infantry could put in a long sleep and
- have a good meal, the mounted troops, broken up into small parties,
- were posted on hills all round, and the need to keep a sharp look-out
- left them few opportunities for sleeping or getting meals. This bit of
- country was particularly hard on the men, as it was with the greatest
- difficulty that one could obtain firewood and water by day; and as we
- often arrived in camp long after dark, it was still more difficult to
- get an evening camp fire. To add to the trials, half of the available
- men were on picket over night, and during the day we were surprised
- incessantly. Our picket duties brought us into constant little
- engagements in which the corps had the opportunity of acting on its
- own, and, being ably handled by Major Chamney, quite distinguished
- itself in a small way.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Photo: Vandyk_
- CAPTAIN C. LYON SIDEY
-]
-
- When General Dickson’s brigade, or rather huge convoy, to which we
- were attached as the only mounted troops, began its march _en route_
- for Carolina, the Brigadier’s method was to make an early start, halt
- at 10 or 11 o’clock for three or four hours, and then make easy
- progress on to camp for the day. The veldt was changing into its
- spring coat of green, so that the cattle could graze during halts; in
- consequence, their condition was not so bad. On the morning of the
- 12th the camp was aroused by the sound of big guns booming to our
- right front, and though the brigade was booked to start at 6 A.M. it
- was not till 7.30 that the convoy got on the way. Later in the day the
- news was heliographed that the Boers had made a determined attack on
- General Mahon’s camp, had driven in the outposts, and had only been
- beaten back after severe fighting, Mahon’s casualties being as high as
- fifty. On the 13th the music of big guns was again heard at dawn, but
- to our left front, and the news came through that the Boers had
- attacked Gordon, but this time received a reception they were totally
- unprepared for, while Dickson with the convoy had camped by 1.30 P.M.
- outside Carolina. As Carolina had been in Boer occupation since the
- time General Mahon touched there on his way to Barberton, every
- precaution was taken against any surprise. Rumour said the Boers had
- sworn to trap French or take the convoy, and therefore our escort was
- augmented by the 7th Dragoon Guards, Scots Greys, and O Battery R.H.A.
- Our experience for the second time of Carolina was a bitter one; not
- only was the weather intensely cold, but the whole regiment was sent
- out on outlying picket for twenty-four hours. On the 15th a five-mile
- march was made, but on the 16th at 2.30 A.M. _réveille_ was whistled,
- and at 3.45 Lumsden’s had started at a gallop as advance guard, a
- dense fog prevailing. A midday halt of three hours was made at
- Krantzpan, but camp was pitched at Klipsteple after dark. Klipsteple
- is the highest point in the Transvaal, and a huge smooth-faced boulder
- stands on the highway. On this boulder visitors have engraved their
- names, so that it is almost covered with letters and dates, though the
- names, so familiar to all, of the leaders of the Boer cause are
- conspicuously absent. On the 17th we formed the rearguard, and were
- engaged in destroying a farm when a party of about 200 Boers
- reconnoitred our vicinity. We looked at one another, and they
- evidently decided against a fight, for Mahon had that morning beaten
- this same lot rather badly. They retired on Carolina, and we proceeded
- onward to camp. From this point our further progress was slow, as the
- Boers hugged the flanks and persistently attacked the rearguard. It
- was a new light to view the enemy in, and it came somewhat as a
- surprise. Hitherto the Boer had adopted the running game. It was very
- gratifying to hear that the enemy possessed neither guns nor big-gun
- ammunition. On the 18th A Company were doing advance guard, supported
- by B Company, when they suddenly encountered the fire of thirty Boers
- strongly entrenched at point-blank range. They fell back, and No. 4
- Section, B Company, advanced and, opening volley fire under Captain
- Sidey’s orders, soon cleared the front, while O Battery sent shell
- after shell into the fleeing horsemen. Captain Kenna—well known in
- India—Dickson’s Brigade Major, was good enough to speak favourably of
- us. It was the first ‘scrap’ we had had under his leadership. During
- the cannonade a funny incident occurred. A rifle and bandolier were
- found in a farm where only women were to be seen. As this meant
- burning the farm and seizing all stock, the Boer’s wife, riding on a
- man’s saddle, sought out the General, who chivalrously acceded to her
- request, and the burning was countermanded. The next day passed
- quietly as far as we were concerned, though Mahon’s guns could be
- heard in rear from time to time. Hitherto the enemy had employed guns,
- but to-day the welcome intelligence was passed along that they were
- completely out of gun ammunition. The camp was pitched at Bethel, a
- town containing only some six families, three of them English. On the
- 20th (morning) the regiment paraded for inspection by General French,
- who took advantage of the day’s halt at Bethel to say a few words of
- encouragement to each regiment. Addressing Lumsden’s Horse, he said
- ‘that the reputation of the corps stood very high; their behaviour and
- gallantry were spoken of by everyone, and, though he had no personal
- knowledge of the corps, he had heard of their splendid work and the
- good service they had done. There was no doubt that everyone of all
- ranks was anxious for a rest, which was well deserved. There was no
- saying, however, what might happen, but he hoped the onward march to
- Heidelberg would be an easy one, and he trusted to Lumsden’s Horse
- maintaining to the end that reputation for gallantry they had worthily
- earned.’ At the conclusion of the address, Major Chamney called for
- three cheers for General French. As the Boers were hovering all round
- us, the entire regiment spent the night on outlying picket; and it was
- a night!—wet, cold, and miserable. At 3 A.M. on the 22nd the brigade
- stood to arms, and by 4.30 Bethel had been left behind. The Boers were
- most persistent, and tenaciously hung round us, losing no opportunity
- of sniping. About 2 P.M. we were caught in a terrific hailstorm, the
- hail lying an inch thick upon the veldt, when it ceased, leaving us
- shivering and drenched, though cheerful enough as we resumed our
- onward course at the gallop to restore circulation in men and horses.
- Before camping we did some distant shooting at the enemy, but gave it
- up as too long a range. The water at this camp was inky black, but in
- the absence of better had to be used for tea and coffee, though many
- decided to defer a wash till next day. The whole regiment were again
- put on duty as pickets, and in their exposed positions had a bitter
- experience of a typical South African hailstorm during that afternoon.
- The next day the _réveille_ whistle sounded at 2.30 A.M., and the
- different brigades were on the move by 4.15. The enemy kept up sniping
- systematically on the flanks, while the guns in rear were in action
- some half-a-dozen times during the day. During the afternoon a
- terrific hailstorm burst over us, saturating our garments and making
- everybody very miserable. The hail lay inches deep on the veldt.
- Prisoners were taken daily, and a few refugee women were under our
- protection. A singular incident occurred on this day. One of the
- prisoners who had surrendered handed in a Lee-Metford rifle belonging
- to Lumsden’s Horse, which has since been identified as belonging to
- Corporal Macgillivray, of A Company, who had been taken prisoner at
- Ospruit, our first fight. The 25th, however, was a great day. No. 4
- Section B Company was rearguard left flank, the 7th Dragoon Guards in
- the centre-rear, and A Company right flank. Immediately we had taken
- up positions the Boers pressed home an attack on the left, and No. 3
- Section B Company, acting as support, was engaged. The Carabiniers had
- retired some ten minutes when the left flankers rose from cover and
- moved towards their led horses. As they mounted, the Boers reached a
- ridge commanding our position and within range; they peppered us very
- smartly as we galloped out of range without a single casualty. In the
- meantime O Battery had come into action, doing excellent practice.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Photo: Hana, Ltd._
- D. MORISON
-]
-
- Startled by the firing, Captain Clifford’s horse took fright, and,
- galloping away, was lost in the distance, Clifford being then on foot
- controlling the firing. ‘General’ Parks gallantly offered to ride out
- and catch the beast, and was allowed to do so. He quickly vanished
- from sight, and nobody knew whither he had gone. As the convoy had
- moved on, orders came for the rearguard to do likewise, and our corps,
- together with the 7th Dragoon Guards, retired in extended line to the
- next ridge, an observation post, to endeavour to show Parks the way
- in. As there was no sign of him for a considerable time, Captain
- Taylor, the Adjutant, who had been indefatigable all the morning,
- exposing himself to encourage us while we were in a really tight
- corner, took out a subsection and scoured the country round searching
- for Parks, but without success. The sections (Nos. 4 and 2 of B
- Company) had to move on, but Corporal Graves and Troopers Morison,
- Maxwell, and Betts, on their own responsibility and in a Quixotic
- spirit of chivalry, resolving not to abandon Parks, stayed behind to
- assist him. There was danger in that decision, as it exposed those men
- to the risk of getting mixed up with, or, at any rate, mistaken, for
- the enemy. Captain Sidey noticed their absence, and, being certain
- they were in danger from our own guns, sent Trooper Behan to order the
- adventurous troopers back. In a sporting spirit, however, the men who
- had made up their minds to see Parks through refused to come in and
- remained on the observation post. Shortly after, another messenger was
- sent, with threats of instant arrest if orders were not obeyed. Just
- as this man arrived, Parks was seen through a glass leading the
- Captain’s horse about two miles away to the left rear and close to the
- flanks of the former position from which the Boers had been firing. He
- was making a very bad line to rejoin us, so Morison offered to gallop
- down and endeavour to show him the way, despite the half-company
- officer’s orders. This he did and succeeded in bringing in Parks, but
- directly our small party, retiring, crowned the rise, O Battery, from
- a distance of 4,600 yards, being informed that we were most certainly
- Boers, plumped a shell into the middle of us, the wind of the shell
- knocking off Graves’s hat and bursting a horse’s length behind the
- party, and, needless to say, we galloped in for all we were worth.
- Luckily for us, the gunner was informed who we were before sending a
- second shot along. He remarked, however, that he thought it was a
- jolly good shot.
-
-Captain Taylor gives a slightly different version of the incident:
-
- We were acting as rearguard to Dickson’s column, when Captain
- Clifford’s horse took fright and ran away while his master was
- dismounted. One of our sailors, Parks, went after it, and followed it
- for two miles at right angles to our line of advance. We saw him catch
- the horse and begin leading it back, and then saw him no more, though
- we waited half an hour. As messages were coming from the rearguard
- commander to us to follow more quickly, we had to leave, all fully
- convinced that our poor Parks had been ambushed.
-
-[Illustration: CORPORAL J. GRAVES]
-
- After a mile or so, our widely extended line came down a long, fairly
- steep incline, on the top of the opposite slope of which we saw our
- Battery O in position. As we neared the bottom of the intervening
- valley the battery opened fire with one round, which burst on the top
- of the slope we had just left, and looking round we saw a party of six
- men riding down at a gallop, waving a handkerchief. They turned out to
- be some of our own men, who, having at the last moment seen Parks
- coming in, waited for him. The battery had seen the heads of mounted
- men in slouch hats advance quickly, and, mistaking them for Boers
- following us, had ‘laid’ for them. The shot was such a good one that
- it knocked off the hat of Sergeant Graves, and the Adjutant’s office
- went near to losing its clerk, and the Bank of Bengal one of its
- rising staff.
-
-Another correspondent continues the narrative:
-
- On the 26th the united brigades reached Heidelberg by sundown, but
- sustained two casualties in the rearguard. The safe escort of the
- convoy is locally reported as a creditable performance, and there were
- no fewer than 150 casualties in the united brigades since leaving
- Machadodorp. It was a very trying march, as rain fell nearly every day
- in torrents. Sleep was out of the question in deep pools of water, and
- _réveille_ daily at 2.30 A.M. gave us little rest. We had taken 109
- prisoners and brought on some twenty refugee families. Heidelberg is
- the prettiest town we have yet seen in the Transvaal, nestling as it
- does at the base of a rugged kopje in a perfect tope of eucalyptus,
- willow, peach, and oak trees. The majority of the houses are above the
- ordinary type—flowers abound in the gardens, and the surrounding veldt
- has donned its spring coat of green; the fruit trees are loaded with
- fruit, which in another month should sweeten our rations of dry
- biscuits. But—there is a ‘but’—the stores are absolutely barren.
- Foodstuffs and provisions of every kind are badly needed by the
- residents themselves. A Wesleyan clergyman informed the writer that he
- hadn’t tasted meat for a week.
-
- Roses abounded in the gardens attached to the picturesque villas, and
- altogether a feeling of peace and security seemed to prevail. Our stay
- was a limited one, and on the 30th (morning) the trek was resumed
- through Nigel to Springs. The country we had to traverse is rich in
- mineral wealth, gold and coal mines being already in existence, while
- hundreds of claims are pegged out against the setting-in of peace and
- the advance of the capitalist. At Springs, on the return journey to
- Pretoria, we were saluted by Colt guns, which were repeatedly fired at
- us as we approached the trenches, manned by British troops. Our men
- were naturally very irate, and wanted very much to fire back. They
- considered it particularly hard lines, since we had been marching in
- the open and heliographing from a distance of ten miles. The 31st was
- a great day, as a parade before His Excellency Lord Roberts was fixed
- for 10.30 A.M. The Commander-in-Chief was punctual to time, and during
- the inspection addressed himself to the several companies as he met
- them. The various regiments then went past in order of brigades and
- returned to camp. Major Chamney, before dismissing Lumsden’s Horse,
- paraphrased what Lord Roberts had said to him for the benefit of the
- regiment. Briefly, it was to the effect that the disbandment of the
- corps was at the present time impossible, but Lord Roberts had
- telegraphed to His Excellency the Viceroy asking him to use his
- influence in keeping appointments open as far as possible.
-
- Lumsden’s Horse had requested disbandment on the reasonable grounds of
- pressing business in India, and the fact of local Colonial and other
- Volunteer corps—notably the C.I.V., Loch’s Horse, and others—having
- been disintegrated. At first an abrupt refusal was given, but
- yesterday General French telegraphed to Lord Kitchener and strongly
- recommended our case. A reply has been received that only those having
- business of an urgent nature in India may return, but they must pay
- their own expenses back, only a railway ticket to port of embarkation
- being provided. Needless to say, many are going even on these
- conditions, but those who desire to go to England have to hang on for
- an indefinite period of time still. Only from Machadodorp three Surma
- Valley men were allowed to leave, as their appointments were in
- jeopardy. These men had free passages back given them. Again, a
- fortunate few have been given employment in South Africa, and they
- were permitted to leave as their appointments were secured. These
- number altogether about twenty. Colonel Lumsden is unfortunately still
- away from the regiment, sick at Pretoria. Major Chamney, officiating
- in command, finds his hands tied to some extent, and cannot do much
- for us in matters of such moment. But the feeling in the regiment is
- very strong, and the term ‘Volunteer’ is sneered at as a misnomer. If
- the war was not over it would be quite another matter; but it has been
- announced that the war is practically ended, and the duties now to be
- performed are in the nature of police work.
-
- All round Springs was a hotbed of Boers, and patrols proceeding two or
- three miles from camp were invariably sniped at. Just outside Springs
- we had great luck in finding a brewery which, despite the war, had not
- ceased to brew, and we regaled ourselves with limited quantities of
- Colonial stout in a vain endeavour to keep out the eternal rain. The
- Boers, who were used to dealing with a garrison armed with carbines,
- were rather surprised one day when going to round up some cattle they
- ran into a small patrol of our corps, and Trooper Consterdine fetched
- one of them out of the saddle with a good shot at 1,800 yards, and
- thus gave them a lesson which will probably make them more careful.
-
- The weather now became absolutely vile. There were hailstorms every
- afternoon, just late enough to spoil any chance of getting dry for the
- night. The roads were very heavy, and horses could not get on. We
- hoped and concluded the Boers were in the same fix. From Springs the
- Boers ceased to give trouble, but this was more than atoned for by the
- abominable weather and going. For forty-eight hours it poured torrents
- without ceasing, and there was not a dry skin or blanket in the
- division. To remove misapprehension, it is necessary to say men had
- seen no tents for practically eight months. Bad it was for us and the
- horses, but worse for the Transport, the animals dying daily to such
- an extent that it was all they could do to drag empty waggons into
- Pretoria. Pistol-shots every morning latterly had announced the death
- of animals that had dragged our carts for many miles, and to save the
- waggons from falling into the hands of the Boers there was nothing to
- do but burn them. It was no uncommon sight to see cattle lying in the
- last stages of exhaustion on the road, and ere death ensued being cut
- up and looked upon as a great treat by the local Kaffirs.
-
- Everybody was struck by the formation of our Transport when out of
- hilly country; the waggons moved along in a dense mass with a frontage
- of about a quarter of a mile and depth of half a mile, the whole mass
- forcing its way over nullahs and obstacles irresistibly. It will be
- obvious to all that this formation of the convoy lent itself much more
- easily to protection than a stream of waggons seven miles long.
-
- At 5 A.M. of November 1 the trek was resumed, the direction being
- Pretoria. A heavy drizzle of rain was falling, and without
- intermission it continued for three days, only ceasing when Pretoria
- was seen in the distance on the morning of the 3rd. Every garment,
- whether on the person or in the kit bags, was wet, and never was
- sunshine more welcome than on that morning. By 11 A.M. the regiment
- had camped on the far side of the racecourse, and for the first time
- since April experienced the shelter of tents.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVIII
- _HOMEWARD BOUND—APPROBATION FROM LORD ROBERTS—CAPE
- TOWN’S ACKNOWLEDGMENTS—FAREWELL TO SOUTH
- AFRICA_
-
-
-Though they did not know it at the time, Lumsden’s Horse as a corps had
-done their last march in the Transvaal, and fired their last shot
-against the Boers. They had begun to think that others, with less chance
-of serving the Empire elsewhere and fewer interests calling them home,
-could very well do all the work that remained to be done in South
-Africa. Yet up to that time their expressions of a wish to be relieved,
-as other Volunteer contingents had been, from the fruitless pursuit of
-guerilla raiders, was productive of no result. It is hardly surprising,
-therefore, after the miserable experiences of a sweeping movement, by
-which nothing of any importance had been achieved, and from which nobody
-suffered much except the troops engaged in it, that a spirit of
-discontent should have begun to manifest itself among men who knew that
-every day they remained in South Africa might jeopardise all their
-future careers. They were running the risk of losing all and gaining no
-commensurate advantage either for themselves or for the Empire. It is
-little to be wondered at, therefore, that they should have envied the
-City Imperial Volunteers, the Canadians, and some other Colonial
-contingents which had been allowed to leave for home when Lord Roberts
-declared that regular warfare was at an end. Even the departure of some
-of their own comrades, whose plea of urgent private affairs had
-prevailed over military considerations, seemed to some extent a
-grievance, so that when Thesiger, Townsend-Smith, and Moir-Byres were
-allowed to go many others regretted that they also had not applied for
-passages to India instead of England. So far back as October 9, Army
-Orders had contained the following:
-
- COLONIAL CONTINGENTS
-
- It has been brought to the notice of the Field-Marshal
- Commanding-in-Chief that many men of the Colonial contingents made
- arrangements before leaving their homes for only one year, which has
- now nearly expired. Though precise date cannot yet be fixed on which
- all will be free, commanding officers may submit names of any urgent
- cases at once, and the Field-Marshal hopes that within the next few
- weeks he may be able to dispense with their services, which have
- proved invaluable to the Empire.
-
-But Lord Roberts, with every wish to meet the convenience of those who
-had sacrificed much for the sake of serving under him, found himself
-hampered by unforeseen circumstances, which were fully explained in one
-of his despatches about this date. ‘There still remained much for the
-Army in South Africa to do before the country could be said to be
-completely conquered. Certain Boer leaders, notably De Wet and De la
-Rey, had still to be dealt with, and the guerilla warfare carried on by
-them put a stop to.’ This state of affairs made it imperative that the
-Army should be broken up into several comparatively small columns of
-increased mobility. Mounted troops were therefore in more demand than
-ever.
-
- Great difficulty was experienced in carrying out these necessary
- changes owing to the time having arrived for the withdrawal of the
- Royal Canadian Dragoons, the Royal Canadian Regiment, the three
- batteries of Canadian Artillery, and the greater part of the first
- contingents furnished by Australia, New Zealand, and Tasmania, and
- allowing the members of the second South African corps to return to
- their homes and employments after having been embodied for twelve
- months. It was impossible to disregard the urgent reasons given by our
- Colonial comrades for not being able to remain longer at the seat of
- war. They had done admirable service and shown themselves well fitted
- to take their places by the side of Her Majesty’s Regular troops, and
- I witnessed their departure with deep regret, not only on account of
- their many soldierly qualities, but because it materially impaired the
- mobility and efficiency of the Army in South Africa for the time
- being, a very critical time, too, until indeed a fresh body of Mounted
- Infantry could be formed from the nearest available Line battalions,
- and the several South African local corps could be again recruited up
- to their original strength.
-
-[Illustration: SERGT. G.E. THESIGER]
-
-[Illustration: E.B. MOIR-BYRES]
-
-[Illustration: J.A. BROWN]
-
-[Illustration: H. EVETTS]
-
-[Illustration: SERGT. J.L. STEWART]
-
-[Illustration: CORPL. W.T. SMITH]
-
-[Illustration: H.N. SHAW]
-
-[Illustration: E.S. CLARKE]
-
-[Illustration: B.E. JONES]
-
- N.C.O.S. AND TROOPERS
-
-Thus, the Commander-in-Chief, having declared that regular warfare was
-at an end, found himself unable to deal effectually with raiding
-guerilla bands for want of enough mobile troops. In this difficulty he
-kept faith with those who had completed the year of service for which
-they had enlisted by letting them go. Lumsden’s Horse did not come
-within that category, and, though Lord Roberts recognised the justice of
-their Colonel’s plea on behalf of men who were sacrificing much, he
-would promise nothing until fresh companies of Mounted Infantry could be
-formed to fill the places left vacant by Canadians, New Zealanders, and
-Australians who had gone. Colonel Lumsden’s ceaseless efforts, however,
-had so impressed the Commander-in-Chief that he sent a cable message to
-the Viceroy urging him, as Honorary Colonel of Lumsden’s Horse, to use
-all his influence with employers on behalf of members of the corps, so
-that their appointments in India might be kept open for them a little
-longer. Lord Roberts added: ‘I trust the war is nearly over, but it is
-essential that all shall hold together till the end, and it would be a
-hardship to members of a corps that has done such gallant service if
-they were to suffer for their devotion to the cause of the Empire.’
-Several men whose cases were exceptionally urgent got permission to
-leave for India, and others who had accepted commissions in Regular
-regiments or civil appointments were necessarily taken off the strength
-of the corps, which consequently became reduced to little more than a
-full company. One of the Colonel’s Staff, therefore, thought it an
-opportune time to trace the whereabouts of men who had ceased to serve
-in the ranks of Lumsden’s Horse. He therefore prepared a record in
-tabulated form, which was at that time the most complete return
-available, though he prefaced it with an apology for incompleteness:
-
- The corps has shifted about such a lot recently that it is difficult
- to know accurately what has happened to many men who were left sick at
- various points in the march. But the following is pretty correct so
- far as it goes.
-
- Follett, M. } Died in hospital
- Maclaine }
- Adlam }
- Burnett }
- Bankes, E.N. }
- Bewsher }
- Birch }
- Burn-Murdoch }
- Campbell, H. A.,
- Sergeant }
- Campbell, L. C. }
- Cheshire }
- Cooper }
- Dawson, Ernest }
- Elliott, Sergeant }
- Glascock }
- Hunter-Muskett } Invalided,
- Jameson, J.V. } England
- Keating }
- Logan }
- McMinn }
- Martin, A. }
- Martin, C.K. }
- Mitchell }
- Neville, Lieutenant
- (since rejoined) }
- Oldham }
- Saunders }
- Skelton }
- Thelwall, H.W. }
- Walton }
- A.N. Woods }
- Baldwin } Invalided
- Thompson, F.C. } India
- Turnbull }
- Howes—Invalided, Burma
- Follett, F.B.
- (convalescent) } Invalided,
- Gough, H. (convalescent) } Cape
- Noblett, Captain (since
- rejoined) } Town
- Bearne—Military Governor’s Office, Pretoria
- Booth—Corps Depôt, Pretoria
- Chartres, Corporal—Medical Office, Middelburg.
- Conduit—Pretoria Police
- Firth, Corporal—Military Governor’s Office, Pretoria
- Francis—Rest Camp, Cape Town
- Huddleston—Assistant-Commissioner of Police, Kroonstad
- Macgillivray—Corps Depôt, Pretoria
- Morris, Corporal—Remount Department, Johannesburg
- Pugh, Lieutenant—Assistant-Commissioner of Police, Bloemfontein
- Richey—Corps Depôt, Pretoria
- Stuart, C.E.—Military Governor’s Office, Pretoria
- Shaw, H.N.—Corps Depôt
- Watson, Remount Department, Johannesburg
- Warburton—Secretary, Irish Hospital,Pretoria
- Woollright—Medical Officer, Elandsfontein
- Anderson }
- P.W. Banks }
- H.K. Dawson }
- Evetts }
- Fuller } Transferred temporarily
- FitzGerald } to A.S.
- F.B. Johnstone } Corps, Pretoria
- Meares }
- Nightingale }
- Pringle }
- Rice }
- Waller }
-
- Hayward } Regular signallers
- Longman } transferred to
- Lowe } Hamilton’s Division
- Lee }
-
- Braine }
- Chapman, E.S. }
- Charles, J. } Hospital, Pretoria
- Clifford, F.M.
- (convalescent) }
- Wilkinson }
-
- Clerk } Hospital,
- Forbes } Germiston
- Haines, R.P. }
-
- Harvey, C.C. (convalescent) } Hospital,
- Kenny (convalescent) } Bloemfontein
- Puckeridge (convalescent) }
- Pryce (convalescent) } Hospital,
- Walker, Arthur
- (convalescent) } Bloemfontein
- Willis }
-
- Jones, B.E.—Convalescent, Elandsfontein
- Sladden—Hospital, East London
- Walton, C.F.—Hospital, Johannesburg
-
- Cayley } Granted discharge, England
- Cubitt }
-
- Graham, J.A.—Granted leave, India
-
- Of the above-named, Elliott, Burn-Murdoch, and C.A. Walton were
- invalided on account of wounds. J.S. Saunders cracked a bone in his
- arm when he took the fall at Spytfontein which cost him his liberty,
- and he has been sent home by the medical authorities as being
- incapacitated for further service. C.E. Stuart is also unfit for
- active service, as the wound in his foot sustained at the taking of
- Pretoria has left permanent effects. He moves about gingerly, and is
- buoyed up with the hope of a pension for life. Stuart wears
- spectacles, and he’ll need ’em badly when it comes to drawing his
- quarterly allowance.
-
- Poor Maclaine, who died here of pneumonia on August 29, makes the
- eighth death in the regiment. Though most of us are enjoying splendid
- health and spirits, it is sad to reflect that to so many our campaign
- in South Africa has brought but sickness and broken constitutions.
-
- Some record of those old comrades whose services have won well-merited
- recognition, and whose subsequent movements I have endeavoured to
- trace for the delectation of cousins, aunts, creditors, and insurance
- company secretaries, would not come amiss. The home authorities and
- Lord Roberts himself have treated the regiment most generously in the
- matter of commissions in the Regular Army, as the following list will
- show. Men named have been gazetted, as far as I can remember, to the
- regiments stated below:
-
-
- W. Douglas Jones, A.S. Corps │J.A. Fraser, West India
- │ Regiment
-
- Montagu Bates, East Surrey │Percy Smith, Oxfordshire L.I.
- Regiment │
-
- J.S. Biscoe, West India │G.P.O. Springfield, 3rd
- Regiment │ Dragoon Guards
-
- P.J. Partridge, │P. Strahan, South
- Northamptonshire Regiment │ Staffordshire Regiment
-
- B.C.A. Steuart, Black Watch │F.W. Wright, A.S. Corps
-
- Arathoon, 3rd Dragoon Guards │H.S.N. Wright, A.S. Corps
-
- R.G. Collins, West India │T.B. Nicholson, West India
- Regiment │ Regiment
-
- Fletcher, A.S. Corps │Norton, West India Regiment
-
- C.R. Macdonald, Argyll and │Hugh Blair, Somersetshire L.I.
- Sutherland Highlanders │
-
-
- Of the above, Macdonald’s, I think, has not yet been confirmed, but
- all the others have gone, some to their regiments in the country, and
- others to report at the War Office. Arathoon, who has been one of the
- best and cheeriest of the regiment, is, I am sorry to say, in the
- Irish Hospital here recovering from a bad go of rheumatic fever, which
- will prevent him from joining his new regiment for a long time.
-
-Meanwhile it appears that Colonel Lumsden had been trying to secure for
-Calcutta one of the guns so gallantly captured by his men. He received
-the following letter:
-
- Army Headquarters, Johannesburg: November 8, 1900.
-
- DEAR COLONEL LUMSDEN,—With reference to your request to be permitted
- to take back to Calcutta one of the guns captured from the enemy, the
- Field-Marshal Commanding-in-Chief desires me to inform you that he
- fears you must wait until he knows definitely what guns he has to
- dispose of.
-
- Believe me, yours sincerely,
-
- H.V. COWAN, Lieutenant-Colonel, Military Secretary.
-
-That the corps were not so homesick as to have lost their zest for sport
-or for the simple pleasures that came in their way may be gathered from
-the following note furnished by their late Adjutant:
-
- On the conclusion of the march from Machadodorp we were left to
- re-equip for ten days at Pretoria, and were one day asked to produce
- an officers’ polo team. We had some seven officers to choose from, and
- a few chargers which were small enough for the game; no sticks, and
- only parade saddles, and we had never played together. However, we
- produced a team and went to the fray. We found it was quite a big
- affair. There was a crowd of spectators, with a fair ground, umpires,
- whistles, &c., and we agreed to play ‘Hurlingham Rules,’ which none of
- us knew. They kindly lent us polo-sticks of sorts, and the game began.
- It was a really good game, and the chargers, rendered docile by work
- and starvation, played wonderfully. However, we were beaten by two
- goals to one, and in the return match we each got one goal. We were
- quite proud of the show, as our opponents represented the whole
- garrison, including one Cavalry division, and were in some practice.
-
-[Illustration: H.S.N. WRIGHT]
-
-[Illustration: J.D.L. ARATHOON]
-
-[Illustration: S.L. LONG-INNES]
-
-[Illustration: F.W. WRIGHT]
-
-[Illustration: R.G. COLLINS]
-
-[Illustration: A.E. NORTON]
-
-[Illustration: CORPL. F.S.M. BATES]
-
-[Illustration: W. DOUGLAS-JONES]
-
-[Illustration: T.B. NICHOLSON]
-
- GAZETTED TO THE REGULAR ARMY
-
-One day about this time the Editor was present at a little scene which
-may be interesting as an example of the many strange meetings that
-characterised a campaign in which men from all parts of the world came
-together. His son, a lieutenant in the Army Service Corps, had just been
-transferred from an Irregular Cavalry regiment, and they were
-celebrating the first occasion of being together since the relief of
-Ladysmith. At another table Colonel Lumsden and some of his officers
-were dining. Introductions followed, when suddenly Captain Holmes and
-the young lieutenant greeted each other by familiar nicknames which
-neither had heard for some years. As students they had served together
-in the Artists’ Volunteers, of which Lord Leighton was then Honorary
-Colonel. They had been fighting through the campaign, one from Natal,
-the other from Bloemfontein. Their paths had crossed several times
-without either knowing it, and here at the end they met in Pretoria for
-the first time since boyhood. Such incidents occurred frequently until
-they ceased to be strange, and they illustrate the all-prevailing power
-of a sentiment that drew men from every quarter of the globe to South
-Africa, where the Empire’s interests centred. All were then beginning to
-think that there might be still a long spell of campaigning before them,
-and, in spite of a little natural grumbling, they took the prospect
-philosophically enough, as we may see by the following extract from a
-trooper’s letter:
-
- At Pretoria we were joined by Captain Noblett and Captain Stevenson,
- who had been away on two months’ sick leave visiting Natal
- battlefields, and Lieutenant Neville, who had left us sick in June,
- been to England, and come back, and little expected to find any of us
- still there. We were overjoyed to hear we were to have ten days’ rest
- in tents, the first we had seen for many months. We were now living on
- the fat of the land, with—luxury of luxuries—a dry canteen where you
- could buy at half price those necessaries of life which had lately
- been considered luxuries, the balance being paid out of the funds
- provided by our kind friends in India. Here we waxed fat. Colonel
- Lumsden, in his absence from the corps, had not been idle, and had
- been putting before the highest authorities the real urgency in many
- cases to men for whom prolonged absence from India would mean absolute
- ruin. To such purpose did he work that a week after arrival we
- received the welcome news that seventy of the most urgent cases were
- permitted to go. We saw them off on November 15 under Major Chamney,
- and then returned to camp in full anticipation of another year of it.
- A week after this came the joyful news that the whole corps was also
- to return at once, and on the 22nd we entrained for Cape Town. Despite
- various alarms, railway accidents, and breaking up of the line in
- front of us, we arrived in Cape Town without mishap.
-
-Alas! for the horses. Only four remained to come back with the corps.
-Some troopers hoped to have brought the regimental dog, who was quite a
-veteran and by distinguished service fully entitled to ease, with a
-pension for life. Trooper D. Morison gives the following sketch of him:
-
- He first attached himself to the regiment at Irene in July 1900. He
- very soon became a popular character among us, and went by the name of
- Kruger, and from that time on he was always to be found with the
- regiment. His intelligence was almost human, and it is a mystery how
- he could always find the regiment when marching with other troops. On
- more than one occasion he has been the means of finding men in distant
- parts of the field owing to his white colour. That dog and Trooper
- Burgess seemed to understand each other perfectly. He started from
- Pretoria with the regiment _en route_ for India, but unfortunately got
- left behind one morning at a wayside station.
-
-On November 21 Lord Roberts telegraphed to Colonel Adye, A.A.G. for
-Colonial Forces:
-
- Please convey the following message to Colonel Lumsden. Am extremely
- sorry to be unable to see Colonel Lumsden’s regiment and say good-bye
- before they leave South Africa. I am telegraphing to the Viceroy, who
- is Honorary Colonel of the regiment, to express my appreciation of the
- admirable work done by all ranks during the present war. Colonel
- Lumsden and all serving under him have my best wishes for their future
- success.
-
-Lieutenant-Colonel Lumsden replied:
-
- Kindly convey to Field-Marshal Lord Roberts the deep appreciation felt
- by my regiment and myself of the great kindness expressed in his
- telegram and shown to us throughout the period we have had the honour
- of serving under him.
-
-That telegram was not known in Cape Town when, on November 22, Major
-Chamney, with the convalescents and those who had been allowed to leave
-the corps a week earlier, marched to the Docks, headed by the band of
-the Cheshire Regiment, and embarked for India on board the ‘Catalonia.’
-They went off amid loud cheers from ship and shore, little thinking that
-the corps would so soon follow or that its departure would be marked by
-a great demonstration complimentary to every man in its ranks.
-
-Sixteen of the corps embarked, under Major Chamney’s command, in the
-‘Catalonia,’ and sailed from Table Bay in the company of 600 Boer
-prisoners. At Durban, finding measles on board the ‘Catalonia,’ they
-disembarked, and took the Clan steamer ‘Sinclair’ to Calcutta, calling
-at Galle by the way. They were Sergeants Stewart, Pratt, and Oakley;
-Corporal Horne, Lance-Corporal Phillips, Troopers Dalton, Clarke, Elsie,
-Biscoe, H. Allardice, Elwes, Hight, Lucas, Moore, Brown, and H.C. Wood.
-The last named was seized with measles and had to be left at Galle.
-
-On November 23 Field-Marshal Lord Roberts telegraphed to His Excellency
-the Viceroy of India (Lord Curzon of Kedleston) as follows:
-
- Lumsden’s Horse left Pretoria to-day for India, about 120 strong. I
- cannot allow the corps to leave South Africa without expressing to
- your Excellency, as their Honorary Colonel, my appreciation of the
- excellent services rendered throughout the war by officers,
- non-commissioned officers, and men. Many of them have received
- commissions in the Regular forces, and many are remaining in South
- Africa in various employments, to take their part in the settlement of
- that country which they have assisted to add to Her Majesty’s
- dominions. It has been a pride and a pleasure to me to have under my
- command a Volunteer contingent which has so well upheld the honour of
- the Indian Empire.
-
-The Viceroy, on November 26, replied:
-
- It is a great satisfaction to me, as Honorary Colonel of Lumsden’s
- Horse, to receive the message in which you have testified to their
- gallantry and services in the war. India will welcome those who are
- coming back with enthusiasm, and wish God-speed to those who stay and
- have served in such a campaign, and have earned the praises of such a
- commander.
-
-Colonel Lumsden, with the remainder of the corps, embarked in the
-‘Atlantian’ on December 5, at Cape Town, after a farewell speech from
-the Mayor of Cape Town, Mr. T.J. O’Reilly.
-
-The following appeared in the ‘Cape Times’ of December 6:
-
- About 2 o’clock yesterday afternoon His Worship the Mayor (Mr. T.J.
- O’Reilly), accompanied by the Town Clerk (Mr. C.J. Byworth) and the
- Mace Bearer, attended at the South Arm to say farewell to the Indian
- Volunteer contingent known as Lumsden’s Horse, under the command of
- Colonel Lumsden. The men were drawn up on the South Arm, alongside of
- which lay the huge transport ‘Atlantian,’ which was to convey them to
- India.
-
- Colonel Lumsden, having called the men to attention, stated that it
- was very gratifying to him to know that His Worship the Mayor had so
- kindly come down to the Docks to say a few words to them before they
- sailed.
-
-[Illustration: RECEIVING THE MAYOR OF CAPE TOWN’S FAREWELL ADDRESS ON
-THE SOUTH ARM]
-
-[Illustration: CHEERING IN RESPONSE]
-
- His Worship said: Colonel Lumsden, Officers, and Men of Lumsden’s
- Horse,—I am very pleased indeed to have the honour of saying a few
- words to you to-day before you leave South Africa. We are all very
- grateful to you for the noble services you have rendered in the field
- for us for upwards of twelve months. You are now going home covered
- with honour and glory, and I earnestly trust you will find all those
- you left behind you well and anxious to give you a hearty welcome,
- which I feel sure awaits you on your return. On the outbreak of
- hostilities in this country Colonel Lumsden at once offered his
- services, and also to organise a corps to proceed to South Africa to
- fight for Queen and country. Out of 1,000 men who eagerly offered
- themselves in response to the call for volunteers, 250 were accepted.
- This gratifying response is an eloquent testimony to the patriotic
- spirit by which the British race all over the world are animated. To
- the public of India and to Colonel Lumsden belong the credit for the
- equipment of your corps with everything needful excepting rifle and
- bandolier, and I can only characterise the action of your Colonel as
- patriotic in the highest degree, and deserving the hearty thanks of
- all, apart from the splendid services rendered in the field. I feel
- assured that if Lord Roberts were now to ask Colonel Lumsden to again
- return to the field, his request would be most willingly and promptly
- complied with by one and all of the contingent here to-day, who would
- be only too eager to follow their trusted and tried leader to further
- honour and glory. Some of your members have fallen in the field
- fighting bravely for the dear old flag and the honour and prestige of
- the Empire. Others, more fortunate, have secured civil and other
- appointments in the country in which they have acquitted themselves
- with so much credit to the corps and the country from which they hail.
- Out of the 250 men comprised in the corps as originally organised,
- twenty-five have received commissions, a most gratifying percentage,
- while fifteen men have received civil appointments and thirty have
- joined the constabulary force commanded by General Baden-Powell, so
- that on the whole your corps have done exceedingly well as regards
- employment in South Africa. It is also very pleasing to learn that the
- contingent holds a splendid record from Field-Marshal Lord Roberts
- downwards. I wish to impress upon you the fact that, after your Queen
- and the Empire, you were fighting for the vital principles of right
- and justice claimed by Mr. Chamberlain and Sir Alfred Milner, and if
- Mr. Kruger and Mr. Steyn had been willing to recognise the equity of
- such claim there would have been no necessity to have recourse to the
- sword. It is recognised that the only man who is capable of
- establishing permanent peace and settlement in South Africa is His
- Excellency Sir Alfred Milner, and by urging this fact, in season and
- out of season, whenever the opportunity occurs upon your return to
- India you will be rendering a further service to the country which you
- have already placed under a lasting debt of gratitude for services
- already performed. We are going to send you a little souvenir of your
- sojourn in South Africa, and as a slight token of our gratitude and
- appreciation for the great work you have done for us; and as the years
- roll on and your children and grandchildren gather around you,
- probably you may be asked by a son or a grandson as to the history of
- the souvenir from South Africa. In telling the story remember the
- refrain of the soldier’s song:
-
- Roll drums merrily, march away,
- Soldiers glory famed in story.
- His laurels were green when his locks were grey,
- Hurrah for the life of a soldier.
-
- When you look at the souvenir in after-years, when, perhaps, your
- locks are grey, you can always bear in mind that the laurels you have
- won in this country will remain ever green with us, and we hope ever
- green with you. Colonel Lumsden, officers, and men, I now bid you _bon
- voyage_, a safe return home, a happy Christmas on board the good ship
- ‘Atlantian,’ and a bright and prosperous New Year in your distant
- homes in India.
-
- Colonel Lumsden said: Your Worship,—On behalf of Lumsden’s Horse and
- myself, I thank you most cordially for the eloquent speech you have
- made to-day, and I also thank you for coming down here, I feel sure at
- no little inconvenience, to bid us farewell on our departure from
- these shores. We shall ever think of the time we spent in South
- Africa, but I should like you to understand, Mr. Mayor, that in coming
- here we were only actuated by our duty to our Queen and to our
- country. I have again to thank you for the trouble you have been good
- enough to take in coming down to the Docks this afternoon, and to
- assure you that we greatly appreciate your courtesy and kindness.
-
- Colonel Lumsden then called upon the officers and men to join with him
- in giving three hearty cheers for the Mayor, and the call was
- enthusiastically responded to. His Worship then shook hands with the
- Colonel and officers, and expressed the hope that the men would enjoy
- their voyage and have a happy Christmas.
-
-So, amid cheers and many good wishes, Lumsden’s Horse took their
-farewell of South Africa, leaving behind them a reputation of which any
-regiment might have been proud. They had fought side by side with
-Regular soldiers of the British Army, and earned a character for courage
-among men whose self-sacrificing devotion they, in turn, regarded with
-admiration and strove to emulate. They had made many friends among all
-branches of the Service, Imperial and Colonial, and had won the respect
-even of their enemies. It had been their good fortune to serve under
-three at least of the ablest leaders who came to the front in the course
-of that long campaign, and from every one of these they won commendation
-as a body of troopers on whom reliance might be placed in any emergency.
-No better name need any soldiers want to take home with them and hand
-down to their children’s children.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Photo: R. Brow_
- LANCE-CORPORAL JOHN CHARLES
-]
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIX
- _THE RETURN TO INDIA—WELCOME HOME—HONOURS
- AND ORATIONS—DISBANDMENT_
-
-
-On arrival at Cape Town, Colonel Lumsden was told that the accounts of
-his corps were the only pay-sheets of any Irregular contingent that had
-been kept up to date; and the men of Lumsden’s Horse left South Africa
-not only in possession of every shilling of pay then due to them, but
-just as they had left India ten months earlier, owing not a debt in the
-country, though the country owed them much in the form of obligations
-that can never be forgotten except by the men, who, conscious of duty
-nobly done, need no other reward. They were leaving South Africa assured
-by every testimony that high approval could give that they had done
-their duty and done it well. They had with other soldiers taken their
-full share of great hardships. The weariness of long marches, the trying
-ordeals of exposure to fierce heat by day and bitter cold at night,
-sometimes drenched to the skin when they lay down to rest on the bare
-veldt with no tent to shelter them and not always a blanket to cover
-them, at other times benumbed by the icy coldness of a wind that
-stiffened their wet khaki tunics with frost which the sluggish blood had
-not warmth enough to thaw—all these things they had borne with a manly
-fortitude that won the respect of war-hardened veterans; and they were
-going back with the knowledge that the Commander-in-Chief of such an
-army as Great Britain had never sent to war before in all the long
-course of her Empire-making history, had signified his approval of their
-conduct in that telegram to the Viceroy of India expressing recognition
-of the excellent service rendered by officers, non-commissioned
-officers, and men, of whom he said: ‘It has been a pride and a pleasure
-to me to have under my command a Volunteer contingent which has so well
-upheld the honour of the Indian Empire.’
-
-With these words assuring them of a great soldier’s appreciation, they
-were going back to the certainty of an enthusiastic welcome from the
-people of India, to whose honour all the good deeds of Lumsden’s Horse
-redound. Of the warmth of that welcome His Excellency the Viceroy had
-given them a foretaste when, in his reply to the message received from
-Lord Roberts, he sent back by cable the inspiriting words: ‘India will
-welcome those who are coming back with enthusiasm and wish God-speed to
-those who stay.’
-
-It was with knowledge of the deep interest taken by Lord Curzon in all
-things concerning Lumsden’s Horse that the Commander-in-Chief
-telegraphed to him something more than a formal recognition of their
-services. It was with characteristic intuition and tact that the Viceroy
-replied, giving voice to the wishes of a whole people and expressing
-those wishes in the choicest of phrases. In this telegram Lord Curzon
-epitomised the meaning of all that he had said or done for the welfare
-of Lumsden’s Horse since the corps was formed nearly a year earlier, and
-his desire that its services should be recognised both officially and
-publicly as a bond between India and the Mother Country—an epoch-making
-event in which all classes of the Empire might equally take pride. All
-this and more His Excellency continued to demonstrate by the share he
-took in welcoming the warriors home, when his eloquent words appealed
-alike to the quick sympathies and to the intelligence of those who heard
-him speak, or read what he had to say. And long after the flood of
-popular enthusiasm had reached its height he continued to manifest his
-interest in the corps by practical efforts to benefit its surviving
-members, and by a most graceful tribute to the memory of those whose
-lives had been sacrificed for the honour of the Empire. At his own cost,
-Lord Curzon erected a tablet in St. Paul’s Cathedral, Calcutta, on which
-was inscribed the name of every man of the corps who had died in South
-Africa, and himself wrote the touching lines that will through
-after-ages commemorate the services they rendered. Throughout, Lord
-Curzon’s great aim was to foster and encourage the spirit of
-volunteering, the importance of which to a world-wide Empire nobody
-realises more fully than he. As a proof of his conviction in this
-regard, he has succeeded in getting an Inspector-General of Volunteers
-appointed on the Staff in India, and the first holder of this office is
-Major-General Hill, of the Bombay Staff Corps.
-
-[Illustration: SERGT. STOWELL]
-
-[Illustration: SERGT. DONALD]
-
-[Illustration: SERGT. RUTHERFOORD]
-
-[Illustration: L.-CORPL. GODDEN]
-
-[Illustration: SERGT. H.J. FOX]
-
-[Illustration: S.C. GORDON]
-
-[Illustration: E.A. THELWALL]
-
-[Illustration: F.-SERGT. EDWARDS]
-
-[Illustration: A.P. COURTENAY]
-
- HOME FROM SOUTH AFRICA—N.C.O.S AND TROOPERS
-
-Directly it was known through the telegram sent by Lord Roberts from
-Irene that Lumsden’s Horse were actually on their way home, a committee
-met at the Chamber of Commerce and elected Sir Patrick Playfair as its
-chairman. This body was thoroughly representative of the mercantile
-community and all the complex elements that constitute the most
-influential sections of society in Calcutta. It included judges,
-barristers, doctors, solicitors, besides the most prominent native
-merchants and princes, and formed altogether one of the most typical
-assemblages ever known in the city. It was called to decide what sort of
-reception should be given to Lumsden’s Horse, and its deliberations
-closed with the unanimous resolve to make the occasion worthy alike of a
-great country and of those who had fought for its honour with a courage
-and devotion characteristic of British soldiers. The decision was
-telegraphed to His Excellency the Viceroy, who was at that time absent
-from Calcutta on tour. The Committee were very anxious that Lumsden’s
-Horse should arrive in time to take part in the New Year Proclamation
-Parade commemorating the Empress of India’s accession, when, according
-to custom, there is a great military concentration in Calcutta of
-Regular troops, Volunteers, and all branches of the Imperial Service to
-be reviewed by the Viceroy.
-
-In reply to Sir Patrick Playfair’s message the following telegram was
-received:
-
- _Copy of a Telegram from U.S.V. to Sir Patrick Playfair, dated
- Bangalore, December 8, 1900._
-
- The Viceroy will be very glad to take part in any reception that it
- may be possible to organise for Lumsden’s Horse on their return to
- Calcutta, and would gladly entertain them to lunch or in some other
- way; he consulted military department upon the subject a fortnight
- ago, but has received no reply; difficulty seems to be, first, that
- force is coming back in separate batches; second, that all of these do
- not come to Calcutta, one batch being due at Bombay December 24; it is
- for consideration whether it would be possible to invite the whole
- force to Calcutta and give them public reception, but there may be
- difficulties in this course.
-
-About this time the Executive Committee received a most gratifying
-tribute to the reputation that the contingent had made for itself in
-South Africa. This was an intimation that Lloyd’s Patriotic Fund had
-voted 500_l._, under the rules of the institution, towards the expenses
-of Lumsden’s Horse in acknowledgment of their services to the Empire. A
-cheque for this generous amount had been forwarded to the Government of
-India.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Photo: A. Saché & Co._
- J.S. COWEN
-]
-
-Taking up again the thread of events, Major Neville Taylor tells the
-story of the voyage from Cape Town to Bombay in his own cheery way:
-
- We had no horses to look after and no drill; no saddles or rifles, but
- plenty of accommodation for the men. I think everyone enjoyed the rest
- immensely.
-
- Proceeding to Durban, we picked up most of the men who had left on
- urgent private affairs in the ‘Catalonia,’ which had been unexpectedly
- stopped at Durban. After the rough living of the veldt, the good
- feeding on board ship was very welcome, and rapidly told its tale in
- the condition of the men. Before leaving Cape Town, the Colonel had
- authorised the purchase of extra stores for the men out of the corps
- funds. Two or three evenings every week were wiled away with
- sing-songs, and many hours of each day devoted to sport of some sort.
- These gave Trooper J.S. Cowen, the regimental artist, many
- opportunities of adding character sketches to the portfolio that was
- already well filled with subjects from the war. On Christmas Day the
- men had a really good dinner, and the officers were the guests of
- Captain Wallace, the kind veteran commander of our ship, the
- ‘Atlantian.’ After a very lively voyage, during which but one ship was
- sighted since the South African coast sank below the horizon, we drew
- near the land of Hindustan once more. A day or so before our arrival
- everyone was very busy putting things clean and straight. On the
- morning of December 31 we came in sight of the mark-boat, which was
- gaily dressed with flags in our honour and gave us a salute with her
- gun. This was the first hint we had of the enthusiastic reception
- awaiting us in India. As soon as anchor was dropped, we officers
- received an invitation from the General to lunch with him at the Yacht
- Club, and an intimation that the men were all to land at 5 P.M.
-
-On December 26, Brigadier-General Ventris, Commanding at Bombay, had
-issued the following Garrison Order:
-
- In connection with the expected arrival of Lumsden’s Horse from South
- Africa per transport ‘Atlantian’ on or about the 28th inst., the
- Officers commanding 2nd Bombay Grenadiers and 21st Bombay Infantry
- will be good enough to detail their bands to be in attendance at the
- Ballard Pier at 8 A.M. (on date to be hereafter notified).
-
- All Officers of the Garrison, Regular and Volunteers, are invited to
- be present.
-
- Dress.—Review order, summer clothing.
-
-The following appeared in the District Orders for the next day:
-
- On the arrival of Lumsden’s Horse they will be marched from the
- Ballard Pier to Victoria Terminus, _viâ_ Elphinstone Circle, Church
- Gate Street, and Hornby Road.
-
- The troops and Volunteers in garrison will line each side of Hornby
- Road from the Floral Fountain to Victoria Terminus in the following
- order, on Friday, the 28th inst., commencing at the Floral Fountain:
- Royal Garrison Artillery; Norfolk Regiment (Detachment at Colaba); 2nd
- Bombay Grenadiers; 21st Bombay Infantry; Bombay Volunteer Artillery;
- Bombay Volunteer Rifles; and 1st B.B. & C.I. Railway Volunteer Rifle
- Corps.
-
- The Bombay Light Horse will, if possible, furnish a mounted escort.
-
- The Regular troops will rendezvous at the Floral Fountain and the
- Volunteers at the Victoria Terminus at 7.30 A.M. As Lumsden’s Horse
- pass, troops should shoulder arms. When they have reached Victoria
- Terminus troops may march to quarters.
-
- Dress.—Review order, summer clothing.
-
- The signal for the arrival of the transport ‘Atlantian’ with Lumsden’s
- Horse on board will be four guns to be fired from the Saluting
- Battery.
-
- Officers commanding corps are requested to have someone at the
- Saluting Battery up to 6 A.M. on the 28th inst., to ascertain if the
- transport is signalled. Should the steamer be signalled after 6 A.M.
- the parade will not take place till the 29th inst. at the same hour.
-
-The ‘Atlantian,’ however, did not reach Bombay Harbour until 7 A.M. on
-December 31, with the following officers, non-commissioned officers, and
-men of Lumsden’s Horse on board:
-
- Colonel Lumsden, Captain and Adjutant Taylor, Captain
- Beresford, Captain Noblett, Captain Holmes, Surgeon-Captain
- Powell. Staff—Regimental Sergeant-Major Hewitt, Regimental
- Quartermaster-Sergeant Dale, Staff-Sergeant Stephens, Farrier-Sergeant
- Marshall, Farrier-Sergeant Edwards, Pay-Sergeant Fraser, Orderly-Room
- Sergeant Graves, Sergeant Longman, Lance-Sergeant S.S. Cuthbert,
- Saddler Briggs, Privates Lowe, Lee, and Hayward. A Company—Company
- Sergeant-Major Mansfield, Company Quartermaster-Sergeant Booth,
- Sergeants Fox, Llewhellin, Stowell, Donald, and Rutherfoord, Corporal
- Macgillivray, Lance-Corporals Lemon and Godden, Privates E.S.
- Clifford, F.M. Clifford, C.H.M. Johnstone, Corbett, Dickens, Bradford,
- Cowen, Webbe, Kennedy, Courtenay, Zorab, Renny, Ritchie, Gordon,
- Atkinson, Watson, Brown, Henry, Allan, Aldis, John, Newton, Reid,
- Campbell, Bell, Macdonald, Haines, Smith, Hughes, Tancred, Bolst,
- Burnand, Dowd, and Palmer; Transport-Sergeant Power, Privates
- Lovegrove, Doyle, Manville, Paxton, Daly, and Scott; and
- Lance-Corporal Wheeler. B Company—Sergeant Conduit, Lance-Sergeant
- Warburton, Corporal Jackman, Privates Nicolay, Bagge, Innes, Williams,
- Nolan, Betts, Turner, Powis, Thelwall, Lytle, Spicer, Lungley, Winder,
- Dexter, Martin, Moorhouse, Maxwell, and Allardice; Transport-Sergeant
- Smith, Privates Rice, Crux, Meares, Rust, and Quartermaster-Sergeant
- Morris.
-
-Before going on shore at Bombay, Colonel Lumsden received the following
-telegram from Sir Patrick Playfair, C.I.E., Chairman of the Calcutta
-Reception Committee:
-
- The people of Calcutta bid you and your gallant corps welcome. They
- are proud of the way in which Lumsden’s Horse has represented India
- against Britain’s enemies. They wish to do you honour on arrival in
- Calcutta. You will be given a public reception, and the military bands
- will play you into your camp. It is proposed that your corps should
- take part in the Proclamation Parade on the morning of January 1, and
- then attend a special Divine Service at the Cathedral. His Excellency
- the Viceroy will entertain the corps at luncheon on Wednesday, January
- 2, and the reception committee are organising an evening party in the
- Town Hall for the night of the same day.
-
-[Illustration: W.H. NICOLAY]
-
-[Illustration: A. ATKINSON]
-
-[Illustration: C.H. JOHNSTONE]
-
-[Illustration: G. SMITH]
-
-[Illustration: SERGT. J. BRENNAN]
-
-[Illustration: N.V. REID]
-
-[Illustration: W.R. WINDER]
-
-[Illustration: R.M. CRUX]
-
-[Illustration: L.K. ZORAB]
-
- HOME FROM SOUTH AFRICA—N.C.O. AND TROOPERS
-
-Sir Patrick Playfair supplemented his telegram by a characteristically
-cordial letter which Colonel Lumsden found also awaiting him when the
-‘Atlantian’ reached Bombay two days later:
-
- Calcutta: December 24, 1900.
-
- MY DEAR LUMSDEN,—Welcome back to India! You and your gallant men have
- done splendid service, of which your countrymen in India, and your
- native friends here, are justly proud, and you will have a great
- reception. Owing to the numbers that wish to give you and the members
- of your corps a hearty welcome, it may not be possible to inaugurate a
- public banquet, and the alternative may be a reception in the Town
- Hall on the evening of the 1st if His Excellency the Viceroy can be
- present after the State dinner at Government House.
-
- The Viceroy is taking the keenest interest in the return of the corps,
- and is considering what had best be done. He has expressed his wish to
- give the corps a luncheon at Government House.
-
- It is suggested that you should arrive here on the evening of the 31st
- or at dawn of the 1st, and be accommodated in camp on the Maidan and
- take part in the Proclamation Parade on the morning of the 1st, attend
- a short service in the Cathedral, and have a reception in the Town
- Hall in the evening.
-
- A meeting has been called, to be held in the rooms of the Bengal
- Chamber of Commerce on Wednesday, the 26th, to form a Reception
- Committee.
-
- You will be brought across at Government expense, and when in camp the
- corps will draw ration pay, and the Executive Committee of Lumsden’s
- Horse will arrange as formerly for your food while in camp.
-
- It is to be hoped that all the members of your corps will come across;
- and the Viceroy is further desirous that members of the corps who have
- already returned to India and taken their discharge should be invited
- to come to Calcutta and take part in the parade and public
- demonstration. I am, therefore, communicating with those members who
- have already returned to India, so far as I am aware of their names
- and addresses.
-
- The corps will be disbanded here, and the members will receive
- warrants for railway fare to their homes.
-
- Expenses connected with the public reception of the corps will be met
- independently of the Lumsden’s Horse Fund. There is a balance here of
- about Rs. 14,000 at credit of the fund. From your telegram received
- from Durban—for which I thank you—we infer that you are returning with
- about Rs. 40,000. The settlement of account for horses originally
- contributed by troopers to the corps has yet to be made. This is
- rather a large item. If the above balances be left, there should be a
- fair sum at the disposal of the corps after liabilities are met.
-
- Messrs. King, King, & Co. have kindly undertaken to have _sola topees_
- waiting your arrival, as requested by telegram, and also to deliver
- letters on board.
-
- I am asking King, King, & Co. to wire to me whenever the steamer is
- sighted, and again so soon as they ascertain how many of the corps are
- with you—officers and men—on board. This is necessary and desired, as
- there is some inconsistency between the military telegraphic
- information and that received by me from you with regard to your
- numbers.
-
- Let me know the date and hour when you will leave Bombay, and the date
- and hour when you will reach Howrah; also where, and on what dates,
- telegrams will reach you when crossing India.
-
- I shall not ascertain the programme and details of your reception
- until after the 27th, and I shall have to wire all this.
-
- Bombay may wish to entertain you, and in accepting their hospitality
- be sure that their arrangements will bring you to Calcutta in time to
- take part in the Proclamation Parade on the Maidan on the morning of
- January 1.
-
- It is doubtful if we can mount you. That remains to be seen. If we
- cannot do so, the corps must march past, and will probably be formed
- into a guard of honour to His Excellency thereafter.
-
- Have you got your arms with you?
-
- Is there anything in the matter of furnishing that the members of the
- corps require on arrival?
-
- I shall be very glad to see you, old fellow, and join in the hurrahs
- that are waiting for you.
-
- Please remember me to all your officers and to the members of the
- corps.
-
- I may write to you again to-morrow, but I cannot delay a letter any
- longer in case my communication should miss you.
-
- With the warmest greetings to you and your gallant officers and men,
- and wishing you all a Merry Christmas,
-
- Believe me,
-
- Yours sincerely,
-
- P. PLAYFAIR.
-
- Lieutenant-Colonel Lumsden (Lumsden’s Horse),
- Bombay.
-
-Colonel Lumsden replied, December 31, 1900:
-
- On behalf my corps please offer my best thanks to people of Calcutta
- for promised reception. Much regret we have arrived too late to join
- in Proclamation Parade. Our numbers are seven officers and eighty-nine
- men. No arms. Our train leaves Bombay 7 to-night, timed arrive
- Calcutta 6 P.M. Wednesday.
-
-The luncheon was a delightful success, as it always is at the Yacht
-Club. Then all officers went on board and the official disembarkation
-was got through.
-
-The ‘Times of India’ of January 1, 1901, had the following:
-
- Among those present at the Bunder when the troops arrived from the
- ‘Atlantian’ were: His Excellency Lord Northcote, Governor of Bombay;
- Brigadier-General F. Ventris, Commanding the Bombay District;
- Lieutenant-Colonel R. Owen, Military Secretary to Lord Northcote;
- Captain Greig, A.D.C.; Colonel Riddell, Assistant Adjutant-General;
- Major Butcher, Commanding R.A., Colaba; Captain Oldfield, R.A.,
- Captain Edwardes, Deputy Assistant Adjutant-General; the Honourable
- Mr. Justice Crowe; the Honourable Mr. S.M. Moses; the Honourable Mr.
- John R. Greaves; Major A. Leslie, Bombay Volunteer Artillery; Major
- Soundy, V.D., Bombay Volunteer Rifles; Major Fowle, R.A.; Captain
- Browne; Lieutenant G.W. Moir, Bombay Light Horse; Captain Stoddart,
- B.V.A.; Lieutenant Robertson, R.A.; Captain J. Leash, Captain Savage,
- Captain Rogers, Lieutenant Deane, Lieutenant Sharp, Lieutenant
- Wilkinson, Lieutenant Moens, and Lieutenant Greaves, all of the Bombay
- Volunteer Rifles; Prince Samatsingji of Palitana, the Nawab of
- Radhanpore, and others.
-
- Outside the Bunder shed were drawn up twenty men of the Governor’s
- Bodyguard, and a detachment of the Bombay Light Horse under the
- command of Lieutenant G.W. Moir.
-
- The men belonging to Lumsden’s Horse left the ‘Atlantian’ in two
- Government troop-boats, and landed at the Ballard Pier at 5 P.M.,
- where they were given a cordial welcome by the Bombay Volunteers and
- the general public, who had assembled at the pierhead in large
- numbers. They were loudly cheered, and, forming fours, were marched
- through the shed to the pavilion, in front of which stood the
- Governor, Lord Northcote. Brigadier-General Ventris presented Colonel
- Lumsden to His Excellency who cordially greeted him. The men took up
- their position outside the shed, where they were inspected by Lord
- Northcote.
-
- The Governor then addressed the men in front of a large gathering of
- spectators. He said: The present opportunity is one that it gives me
- great pleasure to avail myself of to extend, on behalf of the Bombay
- Presidency, a most cordial welcome to you, members of the gallant
- band, some 281 strong, I believe, who left India some ten months ago
- to serve our Queen-Empress in South Africa. We have followed with the
- deepest interest the fortunes of your gallant corps, and we have read
- with pride and pleasure the testimony that has been borne to your
- valour and your service by Dr. Conan Doyle in his history of the war
- and from many other sources. We read with pride and pleasure how you
- gentlemen, sacrificing your ease and comforts and the luxuries of your
- Eastern life, went forth to do your duty to your country in South
- Africa—an object-lesson of patriotism to the Empire, and worthily
- maintaining the traditions of Outram’s Volunteers. Well indeed have
- the members of Lumsden’s Horse merited the warm eulogium which the
- Commander-in-Chief in South Africa paid to you. Most truly did the
- Viceroy say that the whole of India would greet your return with
- enthusiasm. You gave us in your first fight a taste of the stuff of
- which you were made when you cut your way through superior forces, one
- detachment of you having been surrounded; and you won our admiration
- by your return when, after losing a large percentage of your number,
- every member came back with marks of bullets on him. That was but one
- incident of your career of honour throughout the campaign. This is not
- the occasion for anything in the nature of a long speech. You are
- about to proceed to Calcutta, where you will receive a more formal,
- but not a more hearty, welcome than we in Bombay extend to you to-day.
- We in Bombay have seen too many valiant soldiers, both Native and
- European, go forth from time to time to serve the Queen-Empress, not
- to seize with pride and pleasure every opportunity of welcoming them
- back again. It is with interest that we learn that many of you remain
- to colonise and develop those countries which you have aided to
- enfranchise. Some of your comrades, alas! sleep their last, an
- honoured sleep, beneath the South African veldt. They were men who
- held their lives as naught when it came to sealing their loyalty with
- their life’s blood. To their memory be all honour and all gratitude
- paid by their fellows in India. You, gentlemen, I will repeat once
- more, have our heartiest congratulation and our warmest welcome.
-
- Colonel Lumsden, in reply, said: On behalf of the corps which I have
- the honour to command, let me offer you our warmest thanks and
- gratitude for the very kind and cordial reception you have given us
- to-day. I believe the present war was the first which had the honour
- of calling out the Volunteers from across the seas, and we as the few
- who represented India feel with deep respect and gratitude the warm
- welcome you have given us on our return. Gentlemen (turning to his
- men), I cannot make a long speech, but I ask you all to give three
- cheers for the Governor and the residents of Bombay for having given
- us such a hearty welcome.
-
- The members of the corps responded to the call lustily, and the crowd
- answered again with three cheers for Lumsden’s Horse.
-
- A few brief orders, and the procession formed to march to the station.
- It was headed by the Bodyguard and the Governor’s carriage as far as
- the Floral Fountain. The band of the B.V.A. then led the way, followed
- by the Bombay Light Horse and Lumsden’s Horse. Behind these came
- numbers of carriages, and on either side pressed a crowd that seemed
- unable to show its enthusiasm sufficiently. From the offices of the
- Port Trust, by Elphinstone Circle and along Hornby Road, every window
- was occupied. Handkerchiefs were to be seen waving on all sides, until
- even the walls of the houses seemed to awake to the wonder of the
- scene. After all, it was one such as India has rarely witnessed. The
- Imperial instinct was aroused. The handful of men following the
- Colonel they had bravely followed through all the chances and changes
- of war, by whom they had stood for the sake of their country while the
- bullets whistled and carried death around, were the embodiment of a
- great idea, a noble sentiment. And the people saw and appreciated. The
- crowd that had assembled to await the arrival of the troops as they
- passed along joined in the march. Some pressed eagerly to speak to the
- warriors—most were content to realise what it meant, this wave of
- patriotism. The band in front changed the march tune. The music seemed
- to become more jubilant as the great mass of soldiers and people swung
- along in step. Bombay was rejoicing in very truth. The banners hung
- out from the buildings told of it. The spirit of gladness pervaded
- everything. Here was a grand ending of the old year. What would the
- new year bring? A detachment of the Bodyguard had formed a line
- outside the Victoria Terminus. The Bombay Light Horse took up a
- position alongside. The band of one of the Native regiments played a
- welcome, and under the portico Lumsden’s Horse tramped in, followed by
- an enormous crowd. The officers of the garrison had arranged to give
- the corps dinner in the refreshment-room. When the meal was over the
- guests were fairly besieged. In the station itself it seemed as if
- thousands of spectators had assembled. They shook hands with Lumsden’s
- men. ‘Welcome,’ ‘Good Luck,’ and ‘A Happy New Year’ were heard
- everywhere. It was a great day—one worth waiting for. As the train
- steamed out of the station the building resounded again and again with
- the cheering. On the line detonators sounded a parting salute, and the
- crowd, now hoarse with shouting, dispersed.
-
-Major Taylor also deals with these incidents briefly, and then carries
-on a lively narrative up to the hour when Lumsden’s Horse, having made a
-record journey across India, arrived at Calcutta:
-
- When the troops landed there was a great crowd with bands playing. The
- Governor (Lord Northcote) made us a speech full of kindly references
- and good wishes as he bade us welcome home. The corps then marched
- with the band and an enthusiastic throng—among which numbers of
- Parsees were particularly prominent—to the railway station. There all
- Lumsden’s Horse found themselves the honoured guests of the Bombay
- Garrison, officers of the Regulars and Volunteers having combined,
- with the most gratifying unanimity, to give us festive welcome. All
- the regimental and private baggage had been taken over by our kind
- hosts and put on the train, so that all the men had to do was just to
- march into the train. Great enthusiasm prevailed. The fine band of a
- Native regiment (the 21st Bombay Infantry) played us off, and so, amid
- much cheering, the train steamed out, firing a salute in our honour as
- it passed over lines on which detonating signals had been placed at
- regular intervals. About 10 o’clock at night we passed a Volunteer
- camp and stopped at the station, where bands were playing. The whole
- force from camp was paraded on the platform, a great honour at that
- time of night. Then we went on again at full speed, stopping only for
- meals at stations, which were dressed gaily with flags, and at each of
- these bands of sorts assembled, and we were entertained free of cost.
- One halt was called at a very small station, but even there we were
- escorted from the train to the dining-tent by the best band they had.
- It was native and local, its instruments being one big drum, two
- kettledrums, three flutes, two penny whistles. That was all they could
- do, but they did it. Their desire to honour us was evident, though
- their means were small—except the big drum—and this demonstration
- touched us perhaps even more than the most elaborate ceremonials
- prepared for our reception. Eventually, at about 7 o’clock, we reached
- Calcutta, having performed the journey in record time, which was due
- entirely to the skill, kindness, and courtesy of Mr. T.R. Wynne,
- manager of the Bengal-Nagpur Railway, who caused all other traffic to
- be shunted wherever necessary in order that Lumsden’s Horse might keep
- faith with the multitude of friends who were waiting to welcome them
- in the city from which they had set out.
-
-The following orders were issued by the military authorities at Army
-Headquarters:
-
- Lumsden’s Horse will be accorded a public reception on their arrival
- in Calcutta at about 4 P.M. on January 2.
-
- The General Officer Commanding and Staff will meet Lumsden’s Horse at
- Howrah station; regimental and departmental officers not on duty are
- invited to attend. Dress: drill order, serge.
-
- Lieutenant-Colonel Swaine, R.I.R., will command the troops; Staff
- Officers, Major Carpendale and Captain Hill.
-
- The following arrangements will be made at Howrah:
-
- On the arrival of Lumsden’s Horse a procession will be formed. The
- Calcutta Light Horse will form the advanced guard, followed by the
- 14th Bengal Lancers. Regimental bands will follow in the following
- order: 2nd Madras Infantry, 7th Bengal Infantry, Royal Irish Rifles
- Volunteers. Then will follow General Officer Commanding and Staff and
- Lumsden’s Horse. The several Volunteer corps will be formed up in line
- in the order hereinafter detailed, with ranks opened and facing
- inwards to form a lane, and as the procession passes they will in
- succession ‘shoulder arms.’ On Lumsden’s Horse passing the Calcutta
- Port Defence Volunteers, the several Volunteer corps will join in the
- procession in the order in which they are standing.
-
- The units will be formed in the following order, commencing from
- Howrah station: E.I.R. Volunteers, E.B.S.R. Volunteers, 3rd Battalion
- C.V.R., 2nd Battalion C.V.R., 1st Battalion C.V.R., Cossipur Artillery
- Volunteers, C.P.D. Volunteers.
-
- The procession will proceed along the following route: Hugli Bridge,
- Strand Road, Clive Ghat Street, Clive Street, Dalhousie Square North,
- Dalhousie Square East, Old Court House Street, the Lawrence Monument,
- to Lumsden’s Horse Camp pitched on the Maidan between Calcutta and
- Plassey Gates.
-
- The Fort William Garrison will line the route from Government Place to
- the camp in the following order: 20th Bombay Infantry, 2nd Madras
- Infantry, Royal Irish Rifles, No. 9 Company E.O.R.G.A., 45th Battery
- R.F.A.
-
- On Lumsden’s Horse reaching their camp, officers commanding corps will
- form up independently and march to quarters. Should the arrival of
- Lumsden’s Horse be delayed till after dark, torches will be provided,
- with reference to which subsidiary orders will be issued.
-
- Definite information as to the time of arrival will be circulated at
- noon on January 2.
-
- Corps should be in position twenty minutes before the train is due.
-
- The Chief Commissariat Officer will provide transport for the baggage
- of Lumsden’s Horse, and the 7th Bengal Infantry will furnish an escort
- of a N.C.O. and twelve men to escort the baggage from Howrah to Camp.
-
- By order,
-
- J.M. CARPENDALE, Major,
-
- Officiating Garrison Quartermaster.
-
-In substitution of the memo, bearing the same date:
-
- Officers attending the reception at the Town Hall in honour of
- Lumsden’s Horse on the evening of January 2 will wear mess dress.
-
- Officers who have been invited as guests by His Excellency the Viceroy
- to luncheon on January 3, to meet Lieutenant-Colonel Lumsden and
- officers and men of Lumsden’s Horse, will appear in drill order.
- (Mounted officers, undress overalls and Wellington boots.)
-
- By order,
-
- E.R. ELLES, Major-General,
-
- Adjutant-General in India.
-
- Army Headquarters, Fort William: December 31, 1900.
-
-Major Carpendale, of the Bombay Cavalry, acting as Garrison
-Quartermaster, with great kindness took upon himself all arrangements
-for the camp. This was pitched on the glacis of Fort William,
-overlooking the broad Maidan, and provided with every necessary article
-of equipment, the mess tents and others being in all respects complete
-and comfortable. The following appeared in the ‘Englishman’ of January
-3, 1901:
-
- Punctually at 5.30 yesterday evening, the time previously announced
- for its arrival, the eagerly awaited train bringing Lumsden’s Horse
- from Bombay, drew up alongside the new arrival platform of the
- Bengal-Nagpur Railway Company at Howrah. The scene which the station
- presented to the returning Volunteers must have struck those who were
- not wrapt up in more important personal concerns as exceptionally
- bright and picturesque. The Lieutenant-Governor of Bengal (His Honour
- Sir John Woodburn) paid to the corps and its commanding officer the
- great compliment of coming with his Staff and a brilliant escort to
- receive them at the station. Outside, where the Bengal Lancers in
- their striking uniforms, with pennons flying, together with the
- Calcutta Light Horse, were drawn up, were long rows of tall Venetian
- masts, from which strings of gaily coloured flags fluttered. ‘Welcome’
- in bold white letters on a groundwork of red appeared as the chief
- feature of an ornamental arch facing the entrance. The roof of the
- platform itself and the pillars were most tastefully decorated with
- festoons of evergreens and arrangements of bunting. When mention is
- also made of the ladies occupying specially erected stands on either
- side of the gateway, and of the large and representative assembly of
- officials, military and civilian, gathered, sufficient has been said
- to warrant the men of Lumsden’s Horse, as they looked out from the
- carriage windows, feeling that Calcutta was not unmindful of them and
- had prepared a fitting reception. As the coaches came to a standstill
- the friends of the ‘boys in khaki’ flocked round to bid them welcome
- by a hearty grip of the hand, to exchange greetings and news. There
- were no scenes. Britons do not, as a rule, make public parade of their
- deepest feelings. The occasion, moreover, was a gladsome one, and it
- did all present good to note the magnificently robust health of the
- men displayed in their sturdy figures and ruddy and bronzed faces; all
- looked remarkably fit, and none more so than the gallant Colonel
- himself, who was first to step from his carriage. He at once walked
- towards the group where the Lieutenant-Governor, Bishop Welldon,
- General Leach, and other distinguished personages were standing. After
- a course of hand-shaking, the Colonel directed his attention to the
- detraining of his men. Soon they were busily engaged in getting out
- their kits. When this task was accomplished, they were formed into
- line and His Honour the Lieutenant-Governor said:
-
- Colonel Lumsden,—The citizens of Calcutta give you and your gallant
- men of the Indian contingent a very hearty and enthusiastic welcome.
- You have had a hard time abroad, and suffered great privations. But I
- should like you to know that your career has been followed by those
- left behind in Calcutta with the greatest admiration and pride.
- Gentlemen all, let us give Colonel Lumsden and his gallant men three
- hearty cheers.
-
- Needless to say there was a quick and cheerful response to this
- request, and before it had quite subsided Sir John called for ‘one
- cheer more,’ which was given with equal heartiness. Colonel Lumsden,
- in a voice the huskiness of which betokened the depth of his feelings,
- called on the men of the Indian contingent to respond with ‘three
- cheers for the Lieutenant-Governor.’ Their effort emphasised the fact
- that in lung power and appreciation for Sir John Woodburn their trip
- to South Africa had effected no deteriorating influences, nor was
- there anything wanting in the worth of the response to the gallant
- Colonel’s call for ‘one more for the citizens of Calcutta.’ The men
- then formed fours and marched out to receive the welcome of the
- thousands collected round the approaches to the station and along the
- route.
-
- Among those present on the platform were: The Hon. Mr. Cotton, Chief
- Commissioner of Assam (now Sir Henry Cotton, K.C.S.I.); General Leach,
- commanding Presidency District; the Most Rev. Dr. Welldon,
- Metropolitan of India and Lord Bishop of Calcutta; Major the Hon. E.
- Baring, Military Secretary to the Viceroy; Sir Patrick Playfair; Mr.
- R.T. Greer, Chairman of the Calcutta Corporation; Rev. Mr. Jackson;
- Mr. Harry Stuart; Mr. Apjohn, Vice-Chairman Port Commissioners; Major
- Harington, Commandant Artillery Company C.P.D.V.; Captain Bradshaw,
- Artillery Company C.P.D.V.; Major Churchill, commanding 9th
- E.D.G.R.A.; Captain Deverill; Lieutenant-Colonel Meade, Officiating
- Commandant Calcutta Volunteer Rifles; Dr. J. Neild Cook, Health
- Officer; Mr. Dring, Agent E.I. Railway; Major Cooper, C.V. Rifles;
- Colonel Master, Assistant Adjutant-General; Captain Iggulden,
- Deputy-Assistant Adjutant-General; Mr. H.M. Rustomjee, and a host of
- others.
-
- It was about a quarter to 6, the dusk just merging into dark, when the
- picturesque procession swung over the bridge. The Calcutta Light
- Horse, neat and trim, sitting firmly in their saddles, composed the
- van. The Native Cavalry from Alipur followed—great black-bearded men
- mounted on fretting horses; then the bands of four regiments, the 2nd
- Madrasis, the 20th Bombay Infantry, the Royal Irish Rifles, and the
- Calcutta Volunteers. Immediately behind were Lumsden’s Horse—on foot.
- The bridge and its approaches were packed with seething masses of
- people, who were with difficulty restrained from breaking through the
- ranks of the Calcutta Port Defence and the Rifle Volunteers who lined
- each side of the roadway and brought up the rear of the procession
- after Lumsden’s Horse had passed through.
-
- On the Calcutta side of the bridge a novel element was introduced, the
- flanks of the column being illuminated by numbers of men carrying
- acetylene lamps on poles—a very efficient substitute for torches. The
- route taken was almost an historic one, for by it all our great
- Viceroys have entered Calcutta; but it may safely be said that never
- have the Strand Road, Clive Road, and that stretch flanked by
- magnificent buildings which leads direct to the Maidan, witnessed
- scenes of more moving enthusiasm than when Lumsden’s Horse, after
- perils oft and tribulations, came marching home again. From Howrah to
- the camp on the Maidan the roadway and buildings beside were lined
- with the densest masses of humanity the eye can conceive. The
- spectacle was a striking illustration of the variety and numbers of
- the population of Calcutta. Naturally the crowds were thickest in the
- northern part of the route, where the close-packed Native city
- contributed its thousands, but even in the more European part of the
- town one wondered whence the sightseers had come. It is probably no
- exaggeration to say that so large a multitude of civilian Europeans
- has never before been drawn together for a similar demonstration in
- the East.
-
- The decorations were most tasteful, especially down Dalhousie Square
- South and Old Court House Street, where the larger shops were
- brilliantly lighted behind the groups of well-dressed people who
- thronged the verandahs and balconies. Partly because the Oriental is
- by nature averse to violent demonstration, and partly because there
- does not exist in India that class which ‘mafficks’ in London streets,
- there was never any real roar of sustained cheering, but there could
- be no mistaking the reality and fervour of the emotion that shook the
- crowd as the returning warriors marched along. Besides, no man of
- Lumsden’s Horse could have regretted the absence of that which made
- more touching felicitations possible. The repression of the masculine
- desire to express feelings by making a noise afforded the feminine
- element an opportunity of extending a pretty and graceful welcome by
- waving handkerchiefs and little flags, and uttering with each flutter
- some tiny cry of admiration and delight, which reached distinctly the
- ears of those for whom it was meant. The second part of the route was
- lined by the troops in garrison, including the battery from
- Barrackpur. Along the Maidan roads down to the camp the crowds were
- the least dense, but represented the most wealthy sections of the
- community. In dealing with them there was not the same necessity for
- police supervision, and if people broke through the line of soldiers,
- rushing forward to welcome their friends in the ranks, and escorted
- them to the camp, why, no harm was done. Indeed, unrehearsed incidents
- of this kind added the final touch to the heartiness and friendliness
- of India’s greeting to those who had fought for our Empire in a far
- country. When the long procession drew near Government House in the
- gathering darkness, H.E. the Viceroy and Lady Curzon, with their
- children and a large number of the Viceregal Staff, walked to the
- south-east gate, and, standing on the roadway, waved a welcome to the
- corps as it marched past. The roads on each side, and hence through
- the Maidan skirting Eden Gardens, were lined by companies of the Royal
- Irish Rifles. Of course, the appearance and bearing of the Volunteers
- whom all had assembled to honour were keenly watched. The men had
- grown leaner and browner than when they sailed away, and their
- marching was in strong contrast to the stiff upright gait of the Port
- Defence Volunteers behind them. It happens that in the stern, actual
- business of war men learn to grasp only essentials. These returning
- soldiers had plumbed the realities of life. Hunger they had known, and
- thirst, and heat, and cold, and wounds, and the ever-present risk of
- death. In such conditions the formalities that surround the British
- Army in peace time drop away. Soldiers learn—and their officers
- too—that, for instance, it matters not how one marches so long as one
- does march. Thus it is that Lumsden’s Horse came through the streets
- of Calcutta with bodies swinging carelessly forward, with eyes eager
- and roving instead of being fixed at ‘attention,’ with ranks loosened
- instead of being set in compact stiffness. It has sometimes been said
- that war spoils men for drill. But it is something that the Volunteer
- ranks in India have been leavened by men who know what campaigning is
- really like. The feeling of those Calcutta Volunteers who assisted in
- the procession was thus partly one of pride, for were not Lumsden’s
- Horse also of themselves, and partly of prospective gratitude, for had
- not the successes of their comrades in the great war opened the way
- for their own employment also? No longer can it be said that unless
- Volunteers attain an irreproachable precision in drill and smartness
- in bearing they are useless as fighting men.
-
- Large crowds of well-dressed persons, natives, and equipages of all
- descriptions followed the corps up to the camp, where gunners of the
- 45th Field Battery lined the way. On arrival there three hearty cheers
- were given for the men of Lumsden’s Horse, the cheers being repeated
- over and over till the men were dismissed. In camp the scene was an
- animated one. Men of the corps, singly and in groups, were centres of
- attraction to friends and strangers alike. Conversation was free,
- eager questions being good-humouredly answered, and questions repeated
- and answered over and over again. The scene was well illuminated. A
- well-ordered little camp of twenty tents has been pitched on the old
- cricket ground of the Calcutta Cricket Club, exactly south of the Eden
- Gardens. The camp has been furnished in ordinary military style and is
- pitched in rows of three, with one tent for the officers of the corps,
- a large mess tent, a canteen, and the usual necessaries. Camp
- furniture only is allowed, consisting of a wooden folding-bed with a
- straw mattress and pillow, and a few zinc tubs and basins for lavatory
- purposes. The mess tent consists of four fly tents, open at the sides,
- with a long table, big enough to accommodate a hundred hungry men,
- running along its entire length.
-
- After dinner, the men were formed up at 8.45 P.M. and marched into the
- Town Hall, where they arrived at 9 P.M. After a short stay downstairs
- they were ordered upstairs, where a most brilliant reception awaited
- them.
-
- This evening reception at the Town Hall was an entire success. The
- decorations of the hall were most elaborate and characterised by great
- taste.
-
- On the landing upstairs, in addition to greenery in profusion, a
- number of naval 9-pounders and a Hotchkiss machine gun, Nordenfeldts
- and Maxims were arranged to form a central group, all these being
- flanked by a number of small ancient ship’s brass cannons and
- howitzers.
-
- A daïs was erected in the centre of the hall, facing the main
- entrance, which was occupied by His Excellency the Viceroy, Lady
- Curzon, His Honour the Lieutenant-Governor, the Commander-in-Chief,
- General Leach, Sir E. Buck, Bishop Welldon, Sir F. Maclean, Lady
- Jenkins, and others, while the space in front was roped off, and here
- stood in lines the members of Lumsden’s Horse, whose Colonel, as the
- Viceroy’s party passed through, presented to His Excellency every
- officer of the corps in turn. No time was lost, after the arrival of
- Lord and Lady Curzon, in proceeding with the object of the gathering.
-
- His Excellency the Viceroy said:
-
- Colonel Lumsden, Officers and Men of Lumsden’s Horse,—It is not yet a
- year since I was bidding you farewell at Kidderpur Docks. You had
- appointed me the Honorary Colonel of a corps of Volunteers that had
- never seen warfare, but that was starting out at the call of duty, and
- in many cases at great personal sacrifice, to fight for the Queen and
- the Empire. Now you have come back, the war-stained and laurel-crowned
- veterans of a long and arduous campaign; and we are all here this
- evening to welcome you home and to do you honour. I, your Honorary
- Colonel, am as proud of you as if I had been through the campaign at
- your side, which being a man of peace I am very glad to think that I
- was not called upon to do; and all of us here, the citizens of
- Calcutta who subscribed to your outgoing, and have kept a watch upon
- you ever since, feel a sort of parental glow at receiving back again
- our one corps of Indian Volunteers to South Africa, who have shown
- that the Englishman in India is not one whit behind his countrymen at
- home or his cousin in the Colonies in daring and risking and suffering
- for the flag that waves above us all.
-
- For we know well through what hardships and experiences you have
- passed since you steamed away down the Hugli in February last. The one
- characteristic that has struck me most in this South African campaign
- has been the physical strain and suffering which it has imposed. We
- have robbed travel and sport and adventure nowadays of most of their
- roughness, but war, even when your enemy is out of sight, and you
- scarcely ever set eyes upon him, though it has lost in romance, has
- not lost, nay—I think it has gained—in peril and privation. We have
- followed you in your breathless marches across the dismal veldt, in
- your assaults upon those deadly kopjes, in your days of endurance and
- fighting, in your grim nights under the cold stars. We have
- commiserated you when some of your number were taken prisoners, but we
- were consoled when we heard that you were more frequently the pursuers
- than the pursued, that you captured far more of the enemy than the
- enemy did of you. We felt a thrill of pleasure when you were praised
- by the Generals and, above all, by the brave old Field-Marshal who
- knew what our men from India could do; and when you were publicly
- thanked in despatches we all of us felt as if our own names had
- appeared in the ‘Birthday Gazette.’ One thousand five hundred miles of
- marching, twenty-nine actions of one kind or another—and all this in
- the space of ten months. This is not a bad record for our pioneer body
- of Indian Volunteers.
-
- I was delighted, Colonel Lumsden, that in one respect you most
- strictly obeyed the final instructions which as your Commanding
- Officer, in mufti, I ventured to address to you in February of last
- year. I urged you and your men to be there or thereabouts when the
- British forces entered Pretoria. Knowing your keen sense of
- discipline, it was with no surprise that I learned that on June 5
- Lumsden’s Horse marched into that place in the van of Lord Roberts’s
- occupying force. I only regret that I did not issue a few more timely
- injunctions to you, such, for instance, as the capture of General De
- Wet, since I have little doubt that you would have carried them out to
- the letter.
-
- There was one other remark that I made a year ago to which I must
- allude. I said that there were some among those whom I was addressing
- who might have to face the supreme peril without which war cannot be
- waged. You all of you carried your lives in your hands, and a few of
- your number have handed in your cheques at the great audit. But we
- rejoice that it was only a few—a brave and heroic fraction, but still
- only a fraction. You lost your second in command, the gallant Major
- Showers, whom Nature had intended for a soldier and whom destiny in
- his first encounter claimed as a hero. But besides him only five
- others were killed, while two only died of disease in the entire
- campaign. Indeed, the total casualties were fewer than twenty-four,
- which in a force of over 250 men is, I think, a very remarkable
- result. I doubt not that all the rest of you have often faced death,
- and that many have triumphed over disease. So much the more cause is
- there for satisfaction at coming back on your part and for rejoicing
- on ours.
-
- Colonel Lumsden, I am only addressing less than one half of the force
- that mustered before me a year ago. Some have stayed behind in Africa
- to continue, in the Regular Army, in the police, or in civil
- appointments, the good service which they have rendered during the
- past ten months. Though they are far away, and have cut the painter
- from India, we include them in our gratitude and well-wishes to-night.
- Others have already gone back to their Indian homes, and have been
- unable to attend here to-day. We honour them in honouring you. In
- their distant plantations or in their employments, wherever they may
- be, possibly they will read of this gathering, and will know that they
- equally have their places in our reception. As for the rest of those
- here present, you, Colonel Lumsden, will always have the pride of
- recollecting that it was to your initiative and liberality that this
- corps owed its being, and that in the history of the war it bore your
- name with credit and without a stain; while you, officers and men, as
- you revert to your several avocations in civil life, and as the past
- year fades into a hazy dream, will never forget that at a critical
- moment in the fortunes of your country you came forward, and staked
- much, endured much, and wrought much for the honour of the greatest
- thing on earth—namely, the British name.
-
- Officers and men, it was a pride to me to bid you God-speed nearly a
- year ago. It is an inexpressible pleasure to me to welcome you back
- this evening, and to thank you, in the name of India, for what you
- have done in the service of the Empire.
-
- Colonel Lumsden said: Your Excellency, your Honour, Ladies and
- Gentlemen,—I feel it, though a pleasure, a hard task to endeavour to
- express the feelings of my men and myself for the very hearty welcome
- we have received and the very kind speech which our Honorary Colonel
- the Viceroy has given us this evening. Our Honorary Colonel mentions,
- and with truth, his words of advice in speaking to us on leaving. We
- no doubt did our best to act up to it in every way, and I am sure,
- speaking for myself as leader, there was no difficulty to do so when
- followed by such men as I had. It was not altogether a party of
- pleasure. There were rough things and hard times, and I often feared
- that the Indian man, accustomed as he always is to the well-known
- _kai-hae_, would not take to the labour of the veldt as well as he
- did. I can assure your Excellency that never at any moment when things
- were at their worst did I hear a word that was not cheerful and
- pleasant from my men. We have been a fortunate corps in more ways than
- one. We have been specially fortunate in our health. As our Honorary
- Colonel remarked, only two men in the whole corps died of sickness.
- This I think shows in a great measure how well the soldiers were
- treated. There have been many complaints, I believe, in several
- quarters as to the treatment of the soldiers there. But taking the
- class of men I had to deal with, the small percentage of deaths from
- disease shows we had not much to complain about in that respect. We
- were fortunate also in our list of casualties. We were all very much
- touched by the Viceroy’s allusions to those who have gone. No better
- man existed than Major Showers, no greater loss could be felt by the
- corps than in his death. He died, I believe, as he often thought he
- would. He was a soldier to the backbone, and nothing pleased him
- better than being in the field. Five died besides Major Showers,
- giving a total of six altogether. That out of 250 men may be looked
- upon as a small percentage. On the whole, in spite of the hardships
- the men have gone through, I think there is not one, if the call to
- arms were sounded to-morrow, who would not love to go back again. We
- were greatly honoured at having the Viceroy as our Honorary Colonel,
- and that pleasure was deeply felt by the men and remained in their
- memory throughout the campaign. When any meed of praise was bestowed
- upon us one and all felt sure our Honorary Colonel would be pleased to
- hear of it. I cannot make a long speech to-night. I think the Viceroy
- himself touched upon most of the points of interest connected with the
- corps. I can only say how pleased we are with the reception we have
- got. When we landed in Bombay the Governor said a few kindly words.
- The streets were lined by thousands of people, and we had a welcome
- such as we can never forget. Another thing I would wish to touch upon.
- I think all the corps are proud of the number of commissions our men
- have got. For this we have entirely to thank the Field-Marshal the
- Commander-in-Chief. From start to finish there is no doubt his love of
- India led Lord Roberts to take a keen interest in our Indian corps.
- Our welcome to Calcutta to-day will, I am sure, sink deeply into all
- our hearts and be long remembered. I can only say on behalf of my
- officers and comrades that I thank you all deeply and sincerely. In
- doing so I feel certain I am expressing the gratitude of us all, not
- only for what we have received, but what I am told we have yet to
- receive. I thank you, Sir, very heartily indeed on behalf of the whole
- corps for the extremely kind way in which you have spoken of us and
- our work.
-
-The temporary barriers having been removed, the men were soon busily
-engaged in conversation with their many friends and acquaintances. The
-band discoursed a bright selection of music for the remainder of the
-evening.
-
-The ‘Englishman’ of Friday, January 4, 1901, contained the following:
-
- Yesterday afternoon His Excellency the Viceroy and Lady Curzon
- entertained Colonel Lumsden and the officers and men of the Indian
- contingent to luncheon at Government House. The function took place in
- the Marble Hall. The officers and men of Lumsden’s Horse, who were in
- khaki, occupied two long tables running down the centre of the room at
- right angles to that at which the Viceroy sat. The floral decorations
- of the tables were of an exceptionally chaste and artistic character.
- On the verandah the members of the Viceroy’s band were located, and
- the most appropriate selection of national and patriotic music which
- they rendered contributed largely to the success of the luncheon.
- Ninety-two officers, non-commissioned officers, and men of Lumsden’s
- Horse were present, and with the guests and Viceroy’s Staff the total
- number sitting down to luncheon was 169. A pleasing feature of the
- luncheon was the presence of Lady Curzon and the following ladies:
- Lady Woodburn, Lady Palmer, Mrs. Harrington, Mrs. Tyler, Mrs.
- Laurence, Miss Trevor, and Miss Law. The list of guests also included:
- His Honour Sir John Woodburn, Sir Power Palmer, Sir Francis Maclean,
- the Metropolitan, Sir Edwin Collen, Sir Arthur Trevor, Sir Edward Law,
- Hon. Mr. Raleigh, Hon. Mr. Rivaz, Hon. Sir Henry Cotton, Sir Edward
- Elles, General Luck, General Maitland, Surgeon-General Harvey, General
- Wace, General Henry, General Dyce, Colonel Buckingham, Sir Patrick
- Playfair, Mr. Justice Harington, Sir Henry Prinsep, Sir Allan Arthur,
- Captains Taylor, Beresford, Noblett, Holmes, and Powell of Lumsden’s
- Horse, Hon. Mr. Bourdillon, Colonel Masters, Colonel Meade, Colonel
- MacLaughlin, Major Churchill, Colonel O’Donoghue, Captain Wilson,
- Commander Petley, Colonel Swaine, Major Hoore, Captain Bradshaw,
- Colonel Wynne, Major Ferror, Captain Ayerst, Rev. J. Hatton, Messrs.
- Stuart, Sutherland, Elworthy, Kerr, Tremearne, Woodroffe, Turner,
- Greer, and Apcar.
-
- At the conclusion of the luncheon the toasts of ‘The Queen,’ ‘Colonel
- Lumsden, Officers and Men of Lumsden’s Horse,’ and ‘The Viceroy’ were
- enthusiastically honoured.
-
- The same evening the members of Lumsden’s Horse marched to the
- Cathedral to attend a special thanksgiving service for their safe
- return. The congregation was a large and most representative one, and
- included their Excellencies Lord and Lady Curzon, Sir John and Lady
- Woodburn. The service was brief and bright, the musical portion
- predominating. The hymns, being well known, were taken up heartily by
- the congregation, and a magnificent rendering was given by the choir
- of the ‘Hallelujah Chorus,’ to which result the inclusion of a number
- of ladies in the choir and an orchestral accompaniment largely
- contributed. The clergy present were the Metropolitan, Canons Luckman
- and Cogan, Revs. Brown, Gee, Nansen, Kitchen, Clarke, Wickens, Otley,
- and Campbell, The men of Lumsden’s Horse occupied the front pews, and
- at the conclusion of the service filed out immediately behind the
- choir and the clergy.
-
- The following was the address which the Metropolitan delivered:
-
- It is my privilege, brethren, to offer you in the house of God the
- words of welcome which have been in all hearts, and upon all lips,
- since your landing in India—the last words perhaps that shall be
- addressed to you as a military force. It was here on the fourteenth
- day of February last that you sought God’s blessing at a special
- service before setting sail for the war, and it is here by a natural
- consequence that you come again to render Him thanks on your return.
-
- Brethren, we have followed you with earnest prayers in your long
- absence. There has not been a Sunday when we have not entreated God to
- bless you, and keep you safe, and to give victory to your arms, and to
- bring you home in peace. You will not say or think those prayers have
- been unheard. The memory of the friends who were far away, of their
- care for you, and their sympathy in your perils must often have been
- present to your minds. It may even have happened that you felt
- strengthened and inspired, as others have felt by the consciousness,
- of their intercession in your behalf.
-
- Brethren, you have fought, not in a light cause, but for the Empire,
- whose members and citizens you are. You have been the witnesses, and
- in part the authors, of a new solidarity between the widely severed
- forces of the Empire. That solidarity is the great fact, the permanent
- result, of the war in South Africa. Its influence upon the destiny of
- mankind will be more and more declared in the new-born century. A new
- spirit of confederation has dawned upon the Empire, and it is your
- spirit, and the spirit of men such as you.
-
- May I remind you of a sentence spoken by a high authority on a
- critical occasion in modern European history? Goethe relates that
- after the battle of Valmy, at which he was present, he was asked by
- his comrades in camp to pronounce an opinion upon its significance. He
- said—and his language may have seemed extravagant when he used
- it—‘From this place, and from this day forth, commences a new era in
- the world’s history, and you can all say that you were present at its
- birth.’ Brethren, the birthday of Imperial solidarity is likewise an
- event fraught with issues of untold power and moment for mankind; but
- that solidarity has been born in South Africa, and you can all say
- that you were present at its birth.
-
- Once more you have realised, and we too, how great and solemn is the
- cost of an Imperial destiny. It is not by mere child’s play, but by
- sorrow, pain, and death, that a wide-world Empire, like a Universal
- Church, is achieved and maintained. You have hazarded your lives, some
- of your comrades have laid theirs down, for that high cause; and the
- issue of your sacrifice and theirs has been a solemnisation of the
- Empire in the last year. It has been good for us that we have known
- the reverses and anxieties which ennoble the ultimate victory. We have
- felt the hand of God laid upon us. You who have come home, and we who
- bid you so glad a welcome, shall spend the residue of our lives with
- an enhanced moral seriousness, with a more profound apprehension of
- the Providence which regulates and determines human ends.
-
- Brethren, I shall not detain you longer in this holy place. Only let
- your home-coming be worthy of your warfare. There are dangers in peace
- as well as in war. Let the spirit, then, of your future lives be
- grave, responsible, temperate, sublime, as befits your religion and
- your race.
-
- May the God of our fathers bless you all, and bring you all to Heaven!
-
-The ‘Englishman’ of Monday, January 7, 1901, gave the following report
-of another interesting scene:
-
- Immediately after the Thanksgiving Service held at the Cathedral on
- Thursday, the officers and men of our pioneer corps celebrated the
- closing function of their active military career. It took its form in
- a dinner given expressly by Colonel Lumsden, and the guests included
- Sir Patrick Playfair, the Hon. Mr. Buckingham, Colonel MacLaughlin,
- Mr. Harry Stuart, and several friends of the non-commissioned officers
- and men. After an excellent dinner supplied by Mr. Wallace, of the
- Italian Restaurant, who also catered for the corps prior to their
- departure in February last, the toast of the Queen was proposed and
- received with enthusiasm.
-
- Private Turner, in a very apt little speech, then asked the Colonel if
- he would very kindly consent to present, on behalf of the men, to
- Sergeant-Major Hewitt, Quartermaster-Sergeant Dale, and Sergeant-Major
- Brennan, souvenirs to mark their appreciation of the admirable work
- done by these three non-commissioned officers. They always had the
- knack of taking the men the proper way. To Quartermaster-Sergeant
- Dale, _alias_ ‘Daddy,’ or ‘Bobby’ Dale, was due the excellent form in
- which the men found themselves. They looked none the worse for their
- trying marches and watchful nights simply because the man in charge of
- the food arrangements was Dale. Colonel Lumsden said he had much
- pleasure in presenting, on behalf of the men, a silver flask to
- Sergeant-Major Hewitt, a silver flask to Quartermaster-Sergeant Dale,
- and a silver cigar-case to Sergeant-Major Brennan.
-
- The Colonel then proposed the health of the Executive Committee, who,
- he said, had worked so indefatigably when the corps was being
- organised. Their labours did not end there, however, for always while
- the corps was in South Africa, and still on its return, they were all
- concerned in its well-being and interests. It was a pleasure to him
- and to his men to have been the recipients of so hearty a welcome as
- that which met them on their arrival at Howrah on the evening of the
- 2nd inst. The work which the raising of a force such as Lumsden’s
- Horse entails is extensive, complicated, and laborious, but thanks to
- the able committee formed on the inception of the corps, they were
- able to be equipped and despatched to the country they had just
- returned from with comparatively no delay. To Sir Patrick Playfair
- particularly he was deeply indebted for his energy in seeing things
- put through in such an efficient manner and without a hitch, and he
- was proud of now having an opportunity of asking his men to drink the
- health of the gentlemen of the Executive Committee, with three times
- three cheers for Sir Patrick Playfair.
-
- Sir Patrick Playfair, in reply, said that he was sorry another very
- important public function required the presence of many of the
- Executive Committee who otherwise would have been present at this
- dinner, Colonel Lumsden, he thought, was too lavish in his praises of
- the work done by the Executive Committee. The work was a labour of
- love, in the execution of which every member of that Committee took a
- pleasure and a pride. He had met and known Colonel Lumsden very many
- years before a certain day in November 1899, when he received from
- Australia a cable from Colonel Lumsden intimating his willingness to
- raise and have equipped a suitable corps capable of giving a good
- account of themselves in South Africa. He had the fullest confidence
- in Colonel Lumsden, and knew that the class of men to whom Colonel
- Lumsden had particular recourse were the right sort. He, therefore,
- did his utmost to encourage Colonel Lumsden in accomplishing his noble
- object. Great obstacles for a time blocked the way, but in time, by
- virtue of the personal influence of His Excellency the Viceroy, the
- War Office sanctioned the raising of a corps which has now returned
- loaded with honours, complimented time after time by Generals and in
- official despatches for gallantry in the field. The Committee always
- followed with interest the operations of the corps in South Africa,
- and it was a pride and an honour to them to be in a position to say
- that they were so closely connected with its formation. He regretted
- that a few men should have found their appointments closed against
- them on their return, but he assured them that the Executive
- Committee, and particularly himself, would only be too glad to help
- any man in finding suitable employment. He said he had already made
- reference to the cases of men so placed to the Lieutenant-Governor,
- and had asked that, all things else being equal, the men who had
- served in Lumsden’s Horse should have the preference when appointments
- were vacant. Sir Patrick Playfair then thanked Colonel Lumsden, the
- officers, and men of the corps for the hearty way in which they had
- drunk the health of the Committee.
-
- Sergeant Fraser then, in a very humorous speech, announced to the
- Colonel the intention of the men to present him with a sword of
- honour as a memento and a token of their respect and esteem. Within
- the last few days they had heard the Governor of Bombay, the
- Lieutenant-Governor of Bengal, and the Viceroy himself, express warm
- admiration of Colonel Lumsden for the manner in which he had
- conceived, organised, and led the corps. But he ventured to consider
- that the men of Lumsden’s Horse were even in a better position than
- these exalted gentlemen to express an opinion upon Colonel Lumsden,
- for they had been with him in South Africa and seen with their own
- eyes what he had done. It was in consequence of what they had seen
- that they now asked Colonel Lumsden to accept from the men who had
- been his comrades a sword of honour as the highest compliment they
- knew how to pay him. He would remind them that Colonel Lumsden,
- during the action at Ospruit, had ridden out to the rescue of a
- wounded trooper, placed him on his own horse, and led the horse back
- at a walk a distance of 200 yards, all under heavy fire.[14] Colonel
- Lumsden had never asked his men to go where he did not lead himself,
- and it will be within the recollection of all of them, after
- climbing kopjes representing Kinchingjunga at six stone, that they
- invariably found the Colonel on top busy with his binoculars, whilst
- they themselves were helpless from loss of breath. His concern had
- always been for his men without regard to his own convenience, and
- it was because Colonel Lumsden had proved himself both gallant and
- unselfish, that they desired to present him with the sword. If they
- had a fault to find with Colonel Lumsden, it was that he was too
- lenient with misdemeanants. They had frequently seen men marched
- before him and sternly interrogated regarding their sins. But the
- end of such interviews was generally a private conversation
- regarding old times in Assam, or elsewhere, and no punishment. The
- result was that the men swore by their Colonel, even those he had
- been compelled to send to ‘cells’—there was one of these, half rear,
- at the present moment loudly applauding all he was saying. Colonel
- Lumsden was not only their commanding officer, but a personal friend
- to each man, a combination which had led to the maintenance of an
- extraordinary degree of discipline. They were all proud of the corps
- they had the honour to belong to, but they were prouder, if
- possible, of the officer whose name the corps bore. The only fault
- they ever found with Colonel Lumsden was that he was too lenient
- with the men, and in the goodness of his heart refrained from meting
- out punishment where it was perhaps well deserved. However, it is
- not every delinquent who would regard that as a fault. The men
- regretted that time had not given them an opportunity of providing
- the sword for presentation that night, but it would come in the
- fulness of time. The Colonel’s health was then drunk with musical
- honours, the men shouting themselves hoarse.
-
-[Illustration: Ceremonial Sword]
-
- Colonel Lumsden, in reply, said that this was truly and in every sense
- the proudest moment of his life. He had already had the pleasure of
- making a few speeches since the corps was raised, but he found it a
- difficult thing to hit on words to express at all adequately his
- appreciation of the eulogistic terms in which Sergeant Fraser, on
- behalf of his comrades, had referred to him. He always had the
- greatest confidence in his men and relied on their honour rather than
- on strict and rigid discipline for the execution of his orders. He
- knew his men thoroughly, and saw that they were prepared to play the
- game as it should be played, and he felt proud, as any officer must,
- of the men he commanded. The sword of honour proposed to be presented
- to him would be his most treasured possession—he would always be proud
- to refer to it and the happy associations it recalled. The past twelve
- months had been the happiest in his whole career, and nigh forty-eight
- summers had passed over his head. Turning to Sir Patrick Playfair’s
- remark, he said that he, too, would do his utmost to have the men
- without billets provided for. He was a believer in the great future in
- store for South Africa, and wished every success to those of the corps
- who had remained behind. He also said that Captain Petley had very
- kindly placed the ‘Koladyne’ at the disposal of those who had no
- friends to stay with in Calcutta, and that they only had to signify to
- Captain Petley, who had taken a deep interest in the corps, their wish
- to avail themselves of this kind offer. He would now say good-bye and
- God-speed with every good wish for their future welfare, requesting
- that, before breaking up camp, every man should promise to send his
- photo.
-
- The men were visibly touched by Colonel Lumsden’s speech, and, after
- cheering him over and over again, chaired him and all the officers,
- and Sergeant-Major Stephens, at great risk to those chaired.
-
-The Sword of Honour, exquisitely wrought by Messrs. Hamilton & Co., of
-Calcutta, and presented to Colonel Lumsden with such gratifying
-evidences of good-will from those whom he had commanded, was of silver
-with ring-mountings of gold, and bore upon its scabbard the following
-inscription:
-
- SOUTH AFRICA, 1900.
-
- CAPE COLONY.
-
- ORANGE FREE STATE.
-
- JOHANNESBURG.
-
- PRESENTED TO LIEUTENANT-COLONEL D.M. LUMSDEN, C.B.,
- BY THE N.C.O.S AND MEN OF LUMSDEN’S HORSE
-
- AS A TOKEN OF THEIR PERSONAL REGARD, AND AS A MARK OF THEIR APPRECIATION
- OF HIS HIGH QUALITIES AS A COMMANDING OFFICER.
-
------
-
-Footnote 14:
-
- Trooper Betts has since been awarded the D.C.M. for accompanying the
- Colonel on this occasion—to carry in Franks, who was mortally
- wounded.
-
------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XX
- _A STIRRING SEQUEL—THE STORY OF THOSE WHO STAYED—MEMORIAL
- TRIBUTES TO THOSE WHO HAVE GONE_
-
-
-On January 4, 1901, just one year after they had assembled on the Maidan
-full of high hopes and noble aspirations, these Indian Volunteers, who
-had made for themselves a name that will long be honoured among British
-soldiers, were disbanded. So the curtain fell on the war scene in which
-the two hundred and fifty men known to history as Lumsden’s Horse played
-their parts. They had been in the field ten months, marched from camp to
-camp over 1,500 miles, fought in thirty-nine actions, lost seven men
-killed in action, two from enteric, several at various times
-incapacitated by wounds; they had left nearly sixty of their number in
-South Africa, some as administrators, some in the Regular Army, and some
-in the Police; they had brought back to Calcutta only four of the horses
-with which they started, and had used up 750 remounts. They had been
-twice mentioned in despatches by the Field-Marshal, and had been praised
-by every General under whom they served. Out of a total of fifteen
-officers, one, Colonel Lumsden, was decorated by Her Majesty Queen
-Victoria with the C.B.; another, Major Chamney, received the C.M.G.; two
-others, Captain Rutherfoord and Lieutenant Pugh, obtained the D.S.O. The
-Adjutant and the two Regular officers who had commanded companies were
-promoted a step, to the rank of Brevet-Major. Trooper J.A. Graham, whose
-act of valour at Crocodile River has been recorded, received the
-Distinguished Conduct Medal; similar decorations were awarded to
-Corporal Percy Jones, Troopers P.C. Preston, H.N. Betts, W.E. Dexter,
-and Regimental Sergeant-Major Marsham; while seven other N.C.O.s and
-troopers were mentioned in despatches. It is a noteworthy fact that of
-all those whose names were brought forward by Colonel Lumsden not one
-failed to obtain recognition from the Commander-in-Chief, and only three
-received less honourable distinctions than their Colonel thought they
-were entitled to. All these things prove that nobody was recommended
-except for meritorious services of which clear and conclusive evidence
-could be given. All soldiers will appreciate what that means. And of
-twenty-three who obtained commissions in the Regular Army and others
-gazetted to Irregular corps, only two resigned subsequently. Colonel
-Lumsden was exceptionally fortunate in securing this number of
-commissions, and still more fortunate in selecting men worthy to retain
-them. It must not be forgotten, however, that the majority of those
-serving in the ranks of Lumsden’s Horse were Public School boys, some of
-whom may have failed in their examinations for Sandhurst, and gone out
-to fight their way in India as indigo, tea, and coffee planters, and
-who, when the occasion arose, were just the right men to fill the
-appointments they got. Their merits were recognised not only by our own
-military authorities, but also by the enemy. One Boer told the Rev. J.H.
-Siddons, of Great Berkhampstead, whose letter is quoted by permission,
-that Lumsden’s Horse were ‘exceptionally good both at scouting and
-shooting.’ The same authority also says that he had similar testimony to
-their merits from a corporal of one of the Cavalry regiments. This is
-not surprising, as Lumsden’s Horse and their comrades of the Line were
-always on good terms, and had a mutual admiration for each other. In a
-letter to the Colonel, Trooper D. Morison says:
-
- I am afraid I cannot help you much with my personal experiences and
- views. No doubt everyone who writes you on the subject will be full of
- praise and admiration for Mr. Thomas Atkins as we found him on the
- veldt. But I should like to record what a splendid chap he is. Whether
- Scotch, Irish, Welsh, or from any other part of the country, he is all
- the same when it comes to a tight corner.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Photo: Davies Brothers, Johannesburg_
- MEMBERS OF LUMSDEN’S HORSE WHO JOINED THE JOHANNESBURG POLICE,
- DECEMBER 1900
-]
-
-Though the records of active service with Lumsden’s Horse as a body
-closed when the corps left South Africa on December 6, 1900, many of its
-members fought on in the Transvaal with the same undaunted spirit that
-had quickened them and their comrades throughout, the same determination
-to be true to their old regimental motto, and ‘Play the Game.’ The
-following accounts of the affair at Benoni, in the Boksburg mining
-district, give a good idea of the fighting qualities of the
-Anglo-Indians who had won their spurs in Lumsden’s Horse:
-
- At the beginning of December 1900 many of the gallant little band had
- enrolled themselves under Major-General Baden-Powell in the South
- African Constabulary, others again in the Rand Mounted Rifles under
- Mr. Henry, erstwhile Inspector-General of Police, Bengal, whose
- companies were then holding entrenched positions at different portions
- of the Rand. The one at Benoni for the protection of cattle, refugees,
- and the mines was deemed an important duty, as the neighbourhood had
- been in a very disturbed state for months past, and from time to time
- had been visited by small parties of Boers. These were always put to
- flight by the ordinary mounted patrols. But on Boxing Day at 4 A.M.
- the alarm was given that a strong force of Boers was in the vicinity.
- Immediate defensive measures were taken, and when a party of 100 of
- the enemy rode up to the Post Office, they were accorded a greeting
- very different from the Christmas one of ‘Peace and goodwill.’ They
- scuttled, but later a second party engaged the right flank of the
- police post. A second time they were compelled to retire, but poor
- dear old Sergeant Walker (Lumsden’s Horse) was killed outright, a
- bullet entering his head in the region of the temple. He was the
- senior non-commissioned officer, and died bearing his responsibility
- nobly. The command then devolved on Sergeant ‘Tim’ Lockhart, also of
- Lumsden’s Horse, who displayed great dash and courage, exposing
- himself at the most dangerous points, and thus inspiring his men to
- avenge poor Walker. In the meanwhile the Boers took up a very strong
- position on the left front, from which they harassed the gallant
- little body of defenders. Finding that rifle-fire was ineffective, the
- Boers brought a pom-pom and a Maxim to bear on the position, and
- considerable damage was done to the head-gear machinery of the mine.
- Lieutenant Evans, in command of a detachment of the Railway Pioneer
- Regiment, finding he could not relieve the brave fellows, despatched
- Trooper Tooley to Boksburg for reinforcements. The Boers, however,
- true to their traditions, were now effecting a hurried retirement, and
- to prevent a surprise Sergeant Lockhart sent out patrols (Troopers
- Granville, Kelly, and Lloyd-Jones—all of Lumsden’s Horse). Lloyd-Jones
- came to grief, falling from his horse and breaking his wrist,
- otherwise the movement was eminently successful. The Boers were
- retiring in very good order, and succeeded in doing considerable
- damage to the New Kleinfontein and the New Chimes mines, held by
- Lieutenant Evans and twenty-three men. Sergeant Lockhart had, all
- told, eleven men, and two officers of the Intelligence Department and
- Mrs. Hunter, the wife of one of these gentlemen. The post consisted of
- twenty-three of all ranks, principally men of Lumsden’s Horse. Among
- them were ‘Tim Lockhart’—now blossomed into a Sergeant of Mounted
- Police—Walter Walker, Kelly, Arthur Nicholson, Jones, Harris,
- Bradford, Kearsey, Petersen, Grenville, and Tooley; the remainder
- being Railway Pioneer men. Their duty was to protect the mines from
- raids by Boer patrols, and it was in the head-gear of the mine
- workings that the defenders ensconced themselves when the attack was
- made.
-
- Pom-pom, Maxim, and the rifle-fire of 300 Boers under Viljoen and
- Erasmus played merrily on them from 4.20 A.M. till afternoon, the
- pom-pom shells playing havoc with the wood and iron work of the
- head-gear, but without hurting anybody.
-
-[Illustration: A. NICHOLSON]
-
- It has been definitely ascertained that the Boers were 400 strong, and
- possessed a pom-pom and Maxim gun. Trooper Harris (Lumsden’s Horse)
- was responsible for the work of ‘entrenching the position,’ and his
- comrades testify to the creditable manner in which he executed his
- duty. Of the 1,400 head of cattle in the British laager, not a single
- one was taken. Viljoen was in command of the Boers.
-
- Poor Walker lies in the Johannesburg cemetery. He was accorded a
- military funeral that was attended very largely.
-
- The reinforcements under Lieutenant Wynyard Battye (a cousin of the
- Indian fighting Battyes) came up too late to render any immediate aid,
- but they pursued the retreating Boers as far as Springs.
-
- Between 2 and 3 in the afternoon relief came, but not until
- 300,000_l._ worth of damage had been done to machinery and buildings
- near. The telegram given below speaks for itself, and it is pleasant
- reading that those of our fellows who stayed behind are continuing to
- play the game so well.
-
- _Telegram_
-
- To Officer Commanding Police, Boksburg, from Lord Kitchener, dated
- December 28, 1900.
-
- ‘Commander-in-Chief has heard with much pleasure of the successful
- defence of their post by the Police at Benoni against an attack by
- greatly superior numbers. He considers their gallant conduct does all
- ranks of their garrison the greatest credit. He much regrets the loss
- of their sergeant.’
-
- This telegram, with flattering endorsements by the Military Secretary
- to the Commander-in-Chief and the Military Governor of Johannesburg,
- was ordered to be read to the men.
-
-Another and fuller version is given in a letter to Colonel Lumsden by
-Trooper D. Morison, who writes:
-
- Just to show how the reputation of the corps is being kept up and
- added to by those who remained in South Africa, I enclose an extract
- from a letter received a short while ago from Sergeant Renny, now
- serving in the Johannesburg M.M. Police. It gives an account of the
- heroic death of Sergeant Walker at Benoni last Boxing Day. Renny says:
- ‘On December 5, after a fortnight’s stay in Johannesburg, we were sent
- off in two parties to take up police duties. One company, consisting
- of nine men and Sergeant Walker, was sent to this place (Benoni), the
- other party going to Brakpan coal-mines, half-way between Boksburg and
- Springs. When we first came here there were four men of the Railway
- Pioneer Rifles, together with whom we formed the garrison. We are in
- charge of 1,300 head of cattle and sheep. We send out patrols every
- day and mount three guards every night. Our three guards are posted
- round the enclosure where the cattle are kept at night—one about 150
- yards in front, one in an empty dynamite magazine about 250 yards in
- rear, and the third one is posted near where we sleep. We live in a
- corrugated iron room on the top of a gold dump, half-way up to
- heaven—that is, about 30 feet from the ground. A verandah runs round
- it which we have fortified with sandbags. We have also dug trenches
- all round the room, as a big body of Boers is reported to be in laager
- twenty miles from us—the same commando that paid us so much attention
- on French’s famous march. We had hardly settled down here before the
- Boers paid us a visit. On December 10 I was on guard with a Railway
- Pioneer Regiment man, and at 11.30 I suddenly heard the sound of
- whips, as if cattle were being driven out of the kraal. I immediately
- fired two shots in rapid succession. This had the desired effect of
- hurrying the Boers out of the kraal and at the same time of warning
- the other men. There was a small moon up and we could just distinguish
- a dark body of men. At this we fired as fast as we could load, and had
- the satisfaction of completely surprising the Boers, several of whom
- we hit. They had got all the cattle out of the kraal, but were in such
- a hurry to get away that they left these all behind. They exchanged a
- few shots when at a safe distance. But where their bullets went none
- of us know, as none came in our direction. After this they left us in
- peace till December 26.
-
-[Illustration: G.D. NICOLAY]
-
- Reinforced after the first attack, we mustered twenty-seven guns on
- the morning of the 26th, a day never to be forgotten by the little
- garrison at Benoni. The Boers attacked us at 4.30 A.M. in large force,
- numbering over three hundred men, with two pom-poms and a Maxim. Those
- not on guard were in bed, when Tooley, who was outside the room,
- shouted that the Boers were on us. We rushed out as quickly as we
- could, and had just time to get into the trenches before a body of
- about fifty Boers charged down upon us in regular cavalry fashion. We
- waited till they were within 200 yards and then we gave them a volley
- which cooled their ardour a bit and sent them back in hot haste with a
- few of their saddles emptied. They then took up positions on mounds
- right round us and began to pour in a hot rifle-fire from ranges
- varying from 200 to 800 yards, using rifles of every description, even
- fowling pieces, as we heard several charges of buckshot scatter over
- us. Poor Walker, whom we all liked, exposed himself, and was shot
- immediately. We returned their fire as well as we could, bowling over
- a good few, both horses and men. We exchanged rifle shots till 9 A.M.,
- when, finding that they could not dislodge us, they brought their
- pom-poms and Maxim up, and for half an hour gave us as lively a time
- as we have ever had. Our room was riddled from top to bottom, any kit
- hanging on the walls being perforated. The noise of the shells going
- through the corrugated iron was most terrific and made us feel pretty
- queer. We had to lie low in our trenches, expecting shells to drop
- into the middle of us at any moment. The Boers crept closer under
- cover of the pom-poms, but luckily for us the supply of pom-pom
- ammunition gave out. Then rifle-fire recommenced and we soon drove
- them back to their original positions. They had fired whole belts of
- shells at us at a time. So you can imagine the lively time we had.
- Rifle-fire was kept up till 2 P.M., when the Boers decamped on seeing
- reinforcements arriving from Johannesburg and Boksburg. They burnt two
- mines and several dwelling-houses and looted the stores before they
- cleared out. We have had great praise for holding out so long—4.30
- A.M. to 2 P.M.—and have received congratulatory telegrams from Lord
- Kitchener, Sir Alfred Milner, Colonel McKenzie, Governor of
- Johannesburg, and Colonel Davies, Military Commandant of Johannesburg.
- The Boers were led by Ben Viljoen, Hans Botha, and Erasmus.’ The names
- of men with Rennie were Nicholson, Kelly, G.D. Nicolay, Jones,
- Petersen, late of A Company; Harris, Grenville, Bradford, Kearsey,
- late of Transport; Tooley, of Loch’s horse.
-
-Mr. E.R. Henry, lately commanding the Rand Mounted Rifles, writes thus
-to Sir P. Playfair, C.I.E.:
-
- New Scotland Yard: July 31, 1901.
-
- DEAR PLAYFAIR,—You asked me last night to note down briefly some
- details of the attack on the Chimes West mine. Here are the facts as
- well as I remember them.
-
- We had a Police post at this mine on the Rand about nine miles from
- Boksburg, a place you will find on all maps. Our force consisted of
- sixteen Railway Pioneer Regiment and nine Lumsden’s Horse, the latter
- under Sergeant Walker.
-
- On the morning of December 26 this small force—which, by-the-by, was
- located in what I may term the first floor of the head-gear of the
- Chimes West mine—was attacked by 300 Boers, who had with them two
- pom-poms.
-
-[Illustration: H. KELLY]
-
- The Boers fired volleys, and a good many pom-pom shells went through
- the quarters occupied by Lumsden’s Horse. I saw dozens of shell-holes,
- not only through the iron sheets which formed the walls of their
- quarters, but also through the great wooden beams or baulks of a foot
- or more in diameter. From one of the earliest of these volleys
- Sergeant Walker was killed as he was kneeling behind a sandbag.
-
- Our men were under fire for several hours, and, seeing that we were so
- greatly outnumbered, Tolley volunteered to ride through the Boers into
- Boksburg, a distance of nine miles, and did so—a gallant feat. Kelly,
- Grenville, and Jones volunteered to make a dash for a tailings or
- dump-heap, so as to enfilade the Boers. Kelly and Grenville got home,
- Jones’s horse fell, and he fractured his arm and lay there. Kelly and
- Grenville did excellent work from the tailings heap, and made it so
- uncomfortable for the Boers that they had to shift their position. I
- was there next day and met General Barton on the ground. On receipt of
- his report the Commander-in-Chief, Lord Kitchener, wired us the
- following message: ‘Congratulate Police on gallant defence Benoni.
- Deplore loss of their sergeant.’ Lord Kitchener is temperate in
- praise, so I take it his commendation meant much. I understand that
- three of the men whose names I have given above have been since
- mentioned in despatches on account of their behaviour on December 26.
-
- E.I. Lockhart, of Lumsden’s Horse, became senior sergeant on Walker’s
- death, and is a gallant old fellow. He is much younger than I, but
- everyone dubs him old. He behaved very well. His name should be
- mentioned in any account of this particular incident.
-
- Our men saved the Chimes West mine. What this means you can infer from
- what the Boers did to the Modderfontein mine, close by, which our men
- could not defend. In less than half an hour the Boers did damage
- estimated at from 250,000_l._ to 300,000_l._
-
- We buried poor Walker on December 27 at Boksburg, and a memorial has
- been subscribed for.
-
- I hope this gives you the data you require.
-
- Yours,
-
- E.R. HENRY.
-
- List of Lumsden’s Horse who joined the Johannesburg Police in December
- 1900:
-
- A COMPANY.
-
- No. 63, Sergeant W.L. Walker │No. 4, Trooper I.A. Irwin
- ” 88, Trooper B.R. Lloyd-Jones│ ” 55, ” G.D. Nicolay
- ” 83, ” I.G. Petersen │ ” 10, ” A.J.H. Nicholson
- ” 72, ” L.H. Bell │ ” 11, ” H.R. Kelly
- ” 29, ” F.W.C. Lawrie │ ” 97, ” J.D.W. Holmes
- ” 30, ” A.H. Buskin │ ” 60, ” K. Boileau
- ” 274, Driver L.H. Bradford │ ” 272, Driver W.E. Harris
- ” 254, ” R.A. Grenville │ ” 270, ” P.W. Anderson
-
- B COMPANY.
-
- Sergeant Lockhart │Trooper Smith
- Lance-Sergeant Goodliffe │ ” Walton
- Corporal Campbell │Driver Fitzgerald
- Trooper Renny
-
-[Illustration: K. BOILEAU]
-
-Well may the names of men who fought that good fight at Benoni be
-enrolled with honour in the records of Lumsden’s Horse; and proud indeed
-must be the Colonel, who, commanding such a corps through all the
-vicissitudes of an arduous campaign, won the affectionate respect of all
-ranks serving under him. To this the officers have testified by
-combining to present him with a silver statuette that will be a
-gratifying memento to place beside the sword of honour given by his
-troopers.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- SILVER STATUETTE OF COLONEL LUMSDEN
- _Manufactured by the Goldsmiths and Silversmiths’ Company, Limited,
- 112 Regent Street, London_
-]
-
-A history of Lumsden’s Horse would be incomplete were the names of those
-noble sisters, the Misses Keyser, omitted. They nursed and looked after
-several officers of the corps who were invalided home, and on this
-account Colonel Lumsden thinks a tribute of admiration and an expression
-of grateful thanks are due to them. Miss Keyser and her sister Miss
-Agnes (Sister Agnes) have, since the commencement of the war, devoted
-their house, their money, and their time to nursing officers invalided
-home from wounds and sickness, and are still continuing their noble
-work. Their contribution to the War Fund has been one of which the
-nation may feel justly proud. King Edward’s Convalescent Home, which
-their house is now styled, has been indeed ‘sweet home’—a place of rest
-and unalloyed comfort—to over 300 officers who have been invalided from
-South Africa, and the self-sacrifice of ladies whose days have been
-devoted to the alleviation of suffering will be gratefully appreciated
-by all those who have received kind treatment at their hands, and by the
-British public.
-
-Colonel Lumsden, on his return to London, applied to get pay for his men
-raised to the Colonial standard of 5_s._ per diem, but was told by Lord
-George Hamilton that as Indian taxpayers would not be asked to
-contribute to the cost either of the war in South Africa or of the war
-in China, it would be quite impossible to make up the difference between
-the British standard of pay and the Colonial standard. The Cape Colony
-and Natal Governments had, in special cases, defrayed the difference out
-of their own exchequers.
-
-On applying to the Secretary of State for War, the Colonel was informed
-by Mr. Brodrick that, were his request granted, the whole of the
-Yeomanry who went out in 1900 would be entitled to a similar increase,
-and therefore he could not assist. Colonel Lumsden, in explanation, said
-the request had not been made by any of the men themselves, but by him
-on their account, and, although a sense of duty to them had impelled him
-to make this claim, he considered that they would be all the prouder for
-having served their country on 1_s._ 2_d._ a day.
-
-For nearly eighteen months after the disbandment of the corps its former
-Colonel gave up his time to details connected with it. In the event of
-another Volunteer contingent being despatched from India, it is doubtful
-whether anyone of Colonel Lumsden’s position and resources would take
-such an interest in the force or would have the time to give to work
-that might be more properly undertaken by the War Office.
-
-Colonel Lumsden endeavoured successfully to get employment for those of
-his troopers who had given up lucrative engagements to join the corps.
-There were certain men who could not obtain their former appointments,
-and their old commandant devoted his time and attention to further their
-interests. He found that, however willing the Government of India and
-the Government of Bengal were to find employment for these men in
-Government service as some recognition of what they had done for the
-Empire while serving with Lumsden’s Horse, neither the Viceroy nor the
-Lieutenant-Governor of Bengal had appointments at his disposal owing to
-the system of competitive examination for all posts under their
-administration. Therefore Colonel Lumsden was greatly indebted to
-merchants, tea proprietors, and others for the help they gave him in
-obtaining situations for certain of his men. The fact that no
-appointments are reserved for the benefit of soldiers or sailors who
-have served their country well is a blot on the competitive system both
-in India and in England. It may prove to be a serious discouragement to
-the desire for volunteering in future emergencies.
-
-Very few, even among Colonel Lumsden’s most intimate friends and old
-comrades, know that after all his hard work he went out to India again
-in the first week of December 1901 with instructions from the War Office
-to raise another corps of Indian Volunteers for service in South Africa,
-provided sufficient numbers of the right class of men were available. On
-arrival in Calcutta, and after consultation with His Excellency the
-Viceroy, Colonel Lumsden wrote to Officers Commanding the different
-Volunteer corps from whose ranks most of his previous contingent had
-been recruited. Their replies showed, however, that the three great
-industries, indigo, tea, and coffee, were not in a position to bear
-another strain so soon. The Colonel’s sporting offer therefore came to
-nothing. His efforts, however, were appreciated both by the Secretary of
-State for War and by the Commander-in-Chief, and duly recognised in a
-letter of thanks from the Adjutant-General.
-
-Colonel Lumsden and Sir Patrick Playfair have hardly yet finished their
-labours in connection with the corps, of which all accounts have been
-carefully audited by Messrs. Lovelock & Lewes, the actuaries in
-Calcutta, and have been balanced to a point showing the expenditure in
-India to equip the corps, the remittances made to South Africa for
-urgent requirements, all disbursements in connection with the
-disbandment of the corps, and the balance that remains. These
-accounts[15] may be valuable in the future as guides to the probable
-expenditure in similar cases, and they are interesting now as proving
-the accuracy of calculations made at the outset, whereby the cost of
-equipping and maintaining such a force in the field for twelve months
-was estimated at 1,000 rupees per man, exclusive of gifts in kind. In
-dealing with accounts previous to disbandment of the corps, much
-valuable assistance was given by Major Ramsden, Controller of Military
-Accounts, Bengal; but for the completeness and accuracy of pay-sheets
-and other regimental documents, great credit is due to Mr. Fraser, of
-the Bank of Bengal, and to his assistant paymaster, Mr. Graves, of the
-same bank, both of whom did hard clerical work under difficulties in the
-office without neglecting their duties as soldiers. After all expenses
-are paid, there will probably be a balance of twenty or thirty thousand
-rupees in hand. Colonel Lumsden has suggested that it cannot be devoted
-to a better purpose than as a subsidy towards the maintenance of a
-paying ward for sick or disabled Volunteers in the New General Hospital
-in Calcutta. The general wish is that this should henceforth be known as
-the Lumsden’s Horse Ward in commemoration of men who did good service to
-their country at some personal sacrifice.
-
-To the memory of those who fell in battle or passed through the portals
-of sickness to infinite peace in the midst of war Lord Curzon has paid
-tribute by the erection of a handsome mural tablet in St. Paul’s
-Cathedral, Calcutta. That monument was unveiled by the Viceroy on March
-23, 1902, after Evensong, when a specially appropriate service was
-arranged by Canon Luckman. Members of the Corps were invited to assemble
-in full dress at the south transept door of St. Paul’s Cathedral at 6.15
-o’clock that Sunday evening. They entered the Cathedral and passed in
-procession, following the choir and clergy, to seats provided for them
-in the aisle.
-
-At the conclusion of the service His Excellency the Viceroy, Honorary
-Colonel of Lumsden’s Horse, unveiled the brass tablet he had personally
-presented to the Cathedral in memory of those members of the corps who
-died in South Africa. The tablet had been placed on the south wall of
-the entrance to the chancel, in front of the statue to Bishop Heber.
-After the singing of the Offertory hymn the procession was formed in the
-following order:
-
- The Choir.
- The Clergy.
- His Excellency the Viceroy.
- Staff.
- The Executive Committee of Lumsden’s Horse.
- Lieutenant-Colonel Lumsden, C.B.
- Members of Lumsden’s Horse.
-
-The troopers then formed up in front of and facing the tablet. His
-Excellency took up a position in front of the tablet; Lieutenant-Colonel
-Lumsden standing at the Viceroy’s left, and the Executive Committee and
-Staff to the right of His Excellency, while Canon Luckman offered up the
-prayers. His Excellency then unveiled the tablet. The choir sang the
-hymn ‘Fight the good fight,’ and the Blessing was pronounced by the
-Venerable the Archdeacon, Bishop’s Commissary in charge of the diocese.
-
-That tribute to the honoured memory of gallant comrades was the last
-scene in which Lumsden’s Horse were to take part. Thenceforth they could
-lay aside the frayed and war-stained khaki and say, ‘I have done my
-duty.’ To the living as to the dead Lord Curzon’s eloquent words, with
-one slight change, apply:
-
- Those sons of Britain in the East
- Fought not for praise or fame;
- They served for England, and the least
- Made greater her great name.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- TABLET IN ST. PAUL’S CATHEDRAL, CALCUTTA
- (_From a photograph by Messrs. Bourne & Shepherd_)
-]
-
------
-
-Footnote 15:
-
- Appendix X.
-
- APPENDICES
-
-
-
- APPENDIX I
- _ROLL OF LUMSDEN’S HORSE, INCLUDING TRANSPORT_
-
- ┌──────────────────┬────────────────────────┬────────────────────────┐
- │Rank │Name │Occupation and Address │
- ├──────────────────┼────────────────────────┼────────────────────────┤
- │ │ OFFICERS │ │
- │Lieut.-Colonel │Dugald Mactavish Lumsden│Gentleman, Oriental │
- │ │ (Commandant) │ Club, Hanover │
- │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ Square, London │
- │Major │Eden C. Showers │Tea Planter, Surma │
- │ │ │ Valley │
- │Captain │Neville C. Taylor │14th Bengal Lancers, │
- │ │ (Adjutant) │ Allahabad │
- │ ” │James Hugh Brownlow │3rd Sikhs │
- │ │ Beresford │ │
- │ ” │John Brownley │Indigo Planter, Behar │
- │ │ Rutherfoord │ │
- │ ” │Louis Hemington Noblett │Royal Irish Rifles, │
- │ │ │ Calcutta │
- │ ” │Henry Chamney[A] │Tea Planter, Surma │
- │ │ │ Valley │
- │ ” │Frank Clifford │Coffee Planter, Mysore │
- │ ” │Samuel Arthur Powell │Medical Officer, Cachar │
- │ ” │Bernard Willoughby │Medical Officer, E.I. │
- │ │ Holmes │ Railway │
- │Veterinary Captain│William Stevenson │Veterinary Surgeon, │
- │ │ │ Rangoon │
- │Lieutenant │George Augustus Neville │Tea Planter, Assam │
- │ ” │Charles Edward Crane │Indigo Planter, Behar │
- │ ” │Charles Lyon Sidey[A] │Tea Planter, Assam │
- │ ” │Herbert Owain Pugh │Jute Broker, Calcutta │
- │ │ │ │
- │ │ A COMPANY │ │
- │ │ NO. 1 SECTION │ │
- │ │ │ │
- │Company │James Brennan[A] │York and Lancaster │
- │ Quartermaster- │ │ Regiment, Agra │
- │ Sergeant │ │ │
- │Farrier-Sergeant │William Marshall │54th Battery, R.F.A., │
- │ │ │ Meerut │
- │Sergeant │Herbert James Fox │Assistant Manager, │
- │ │ │ Dumraon Raj, Shahabad │
- │ │ │ District │
- │Corporal │Percy Jones │Indigo Planter, Benipore│
- │ │ │ Concern, Sakri, │
- │ │ │ Durbunga │
- │ ” │Herbert Wheeler Marsham │Indigo Planter, Motihari│
- │ │ │ Concern, Motihari, │
- │ │ │ Chumparan │
- │Lance-Corporal │Hugh F. Blair │Indigo Planter, Lalouria│
- │ │ │ Concern, Bettiah, │
- │ │ │ Chumparan │
- │Trooper │John Alexander Irwin │Indigo Planter, Dhroomra│
- │ │ │ Concern, Mozufferpore,│
- │ │ │ Tirhoot District │
- │ ” │Arthur John Hampton │Indigo Planter, Thurma │
- │ │ Nicholson │ Concern, Sitamari, │
- │ │ │ Tirhoot District │
- │ ” │Hector Rupert Kelly │Indigo Planter, │
- │ │ │ Bhagulpore │
- │ ” │Leonard Kars Zorab │Indigo Planter, │
- │ │ │ Bhagulpore │
- │ ” │John Stewart Campbell │Indigo Planter, Sunyat │
- │ │ │ Concern, Mozufferpore,│
- │ │ │ Tirhoot District │
- │ ” │Claud Leonard Bell │Indigo Planter, Sunyat │
- │ │ │ Concern, Mozufferpore,│
- │ │ │ Tirhoot District │
- │ ” │John Alexander Brown │Indigo Planter, │
- │ │ │ Jeetwarpore Concern, │
- │ │ │ Durbunga │
- │ ” │George Maxwell Smith │Indigo Planter, Begum │
- │ │ │ Sarai Concern, │
- │ │ │ Durbunga │
- │ ” │Charles Reginald │Indigo Planter, │
- │ │ Macdonald │ Dowlutpore Concern, │
- │ │ │ Durbunga │
- │ ” │George Patrick Osborn │Indigo Planter, Singhea │
- │ │ Springfield │ Concern, Hajipore, │
- │ │ │ Tirhoot │
- │ ” │John Alexander Fraser │Indigo Planter, │
- │ │ │ Mozufferpore, Tirhoot │
- │ ” │D.C. Percy Smith │Assistant Superintendent│
- │ │ │ of Police, Dinapore │
- │ ” │E. Harry Gough │Indigo Planter, Suddowat│
- │ │ │ Concern, Sewan, Saran │
- │ ” │Robert G. Collins │Indigo Planter, Singhea │
- │ │ │ Concern, Hajipore, │
- │ │ │ Tirhoot │
- │ ” │Bruce Macgregor Allan │Indigo Planter, Begum │
- │ │ │ Sarai Concern, │
- │ │ │ Durbunga │
- │ ” │John Henry │Indigo Planter, │
- │ │ │ Turcouleah Concern, │
- │ │ │ Chumparan │
- │ ” │Osborne Aldis │Indigo Planter, Dulsing │
- │ │ │ Sarai, Durbunga │
- │ ” │Henry George Newton │Indigo Planter, │
- │ │ │ Jaintpore Concern, │
- │ │ │ Mozufferpore │
- │ ” │Robert Pheydell Haines │Indigo Planter, │
- │ │ │ Mortipore Concern, │
- │ │ │ Mozufferpore │
- │ ” │Frederick William │Indigo Planter, Kahunia │
- │ │ Charles Lawrie │ Concern, Gorukhpore │
- │ ” │Allan Henry Buskin │Indigo Planter, Dooriah │
- │ │ │ Concern, Mozufferpore │
- │ │ │ │
- │ NO. 2 SECTION │
- │ │ │ │
- │Regimental │Cyril Montagu Charles │Indigo Planter, Serryah │
- │ Sergt.-Major │ Marsham │ Concern, Mozufferpore │
- │Sergeant │Francis Stewart │Indigo Planter, │
- │ │ McNamara[A] │ Burhoulie Concern, │
- │ │ │ Sewan, Saran │
- │Corporal │George Elliott Pollnitz │Indigo Planter, Burhoga │
- │ │ Llewhellin │ Concern, Saran │
- │Signr. │William Lee │York and Lancaster │
- │ Lance-Corporal │ │ Regiment, Agra │
- │Lance-Corporal │Arthur Helme Firth │Indigo Planter, Kanti │
- │ │ │ Cour Concern, │
- │ │ │ Mozufferpore, Tirhoot │
- │ ” │Angus Macgillivray │Indigo Planter, Sohazra │
- │ │ │ Concern, Sewan, Saran │
- │Saddler │Richard James Lance │3rd (K.O.) Hussars, │
- │ │ │ Lucknow │
- │Trooper │R.J. Clayton Daubney │Indigo Planter, Belsund │
- │ │ │ Concern, Durbunga │
- │ ” │Selwyn Long-Innes │Indigo Planter, Peeprah │
- │ │ │ Concern, Motihari, │
- │ │ │ Chumparan │
- │ ” │Howard Herbert Julian │Indigo Planter, │
- │ │ Hickley[A] │ Bhicanpore Concern, │
- │ │ │ Mozufferpore, Tirhoot │
- │ ” │Leslie Gwatkin Williams │Indigo Planter, Rajkund │
- │ │ │ Concern, Mozufferpore,│
- │ │ │ Tirhoot │
- │ ” │Burton Disney │Indigo Planter, Peeprah │
- │ │ Rutherfoord[A] │ Concern, Motihari, │
- │ │ │ Chumparan │
- │ ” │Charles Bertram H. │Indigo Planter, │
- │ │ Mansfield │ Ramcollah Concern, │
- │ │ │ Saran │
- │ ” │Philip Stanley │Indigo Planter, Bhamoo │
- │ │ │ Concern, Saran, Chupra│
- │ ” │Harry C. Lumsden │Indigo Planter, Chuckhea│
- │ │ │ Concern, Sewan, Saran │
- │ ” │Norman James Vaughan │Indigo Planter, Moniarah│
- │ │ Reid │ Concern, Gopalgunje, │
- │ │ │ Saran │
- │ ” │Spencer Cochrane Gordon │Indigo Planter, Matihari│
- │ │ │ Concern, Motihari, │
- │ │ │ Chumparan │
- │ ” │Christie West Fletcher │Indigo Planter, Dholi │
- │ │ │ Concern, Mozufferpore,│
- │ │ │ Tirhoot │
- │ ” │William Gordon Watson │Indigo Planter, │
- │ │ │ Mozufferpore, Tirhoot │
- │ ” │George Innes Watson │Indigo Planter, │
- │ │ │ Chitwarrah Concern, │
- │ │ │ Mozufferpore, Tirhoot │
- │ ” │Reginald N. Macdonald │Indigo Planter, Jogapore│
- │ │ │ Concern, Sewan, Saran │
- │ ” │Percy Strahan │Indigo Planter, Dulsing │
- │ │ │ Sarai Concern, │
- │ │ │ Durbunga │
- │ ” │John Pringle Kennedy │Indigo Planter, Munjoul │
- │ │ │ Concern, Monghyr │
- │ ” │Gilbert Denis Nicolay │Indigo Planter, Durbunga│
- │ ” │Cecil W. John │Indigo Planter, Peeprah │
- │ │ │ Concern, Motihari, │
- │ │ │ Chumparan │
- │ ” │Cyril Darcy Vivian │Indigo Planter, │
- │ │ Cary-Barnard │ Mozufferpore, Tirhoot │
- │ ” │R. Upton Case │Indigo Planter, │
- │ │ │ Chumparan │
- │ ” │Julian Victor Jameson │Indigo Planter, Ottur │
- │ │ │ Concern, Mozufferpore,│
- │ │ │ Tirhoot │
- │ ” │Knyvett Boileau │Indigo Planter, │
- │ │ │ Chitwarrah Concern, │
- │ │ │ Mozufferpore, Tirhoot │
- │ │ │ │
- │ NO. 3 SECTION │
- │ │ │ │
- │Sergeant │Walter Larkins Walker │Tea Planter, Doom Dooma │
- │ │ │ T.E., Assam │
- │Vety. │James Lee Stewart │Coffee Planter, Thollol │
- │ Lance-Sergeant │ │ Coffee Estate, Beber, │
- │ │ │ Mysore │
- │Paymaster-Sergeant│David Stewart Fraser │Assistant, Bank of │
- │ │ │ Bengal, Agra │
- │Lance-Sergeant │James Stemhurst Elliott │Tea Planter, Assam │
- │ │ │ Company, Towkok │
- │ │ │ Nazira, Assam │
- │Lance-Corporal │Arthur Collier Walker │Tea Planter, Doom Dooma │
- │ │ │ T.E., Assam │
- │ ” │Denis J. Keating │Assistant, Calcutta Port│
- │ │ │ Trust │
- │Signaller │Arthur Thomas Hayward │3rd Hussars, Lucknow │
- │Trooper │George E. Kenny │Tea Planter, Doom Dooma │
- │ │ │ T.E., Assam │
- │ ” │Arthur Leigh Godden[A] │Assistant, Messrs. │
- │ │ │ Kilburn & Co., │
- │ │ │ Calcutta │
- │ ” │Edward Nugent Bankes │Tea Planter, Majuli Tea │
- │ │ │ Co., Ltd., Behali, │
- │ │ │ Darrang, Assam │
- │ ” │Henry Cecil Charleton │Tea Planter, Darjeeling │
- │ │ Bennett │ │
- │ ” │Arnold Daniell Radford │Gentleman, Rose Cottage,│
- │ │ │ Sonada, Darjeeling │
- │ ” │Arthur Noel Woods │Tea Planter, Surmah │
- │ │ │ Valley T.E., South │
- │ │ │ Sylhet │
- │ ” │Lionel Hugh Bell │Tea Planter, Badlipar, │
- │ │ │ Sibsagar │
- │ ” │Arthur Henry Luard[A] │Tea Planter, Kingsley │
- │ │ │ Golaghat Tea Co., │
- │ │ │ Jorhat, Assam │
- │ ” │Clarence A. Walton │Tea Planter, Badlipar, │
- │ │ │ Golaghat, Assam │
- │ ” │Hugh Stanley Cheshire │Engineer, Assam-Bengal │
- │ │ │ Railway, Hathikhola │
- │ ” │Bertie Edward Jones │Tea Planter, Singh Tea │
- │ │ │ Co., Jaboka, Sibsagar │
- │ ” │Herbert Pearce Brown │Tea Planter, Khonjea │
- │ │ │ T.E., Rajmai, Sibsagar│
- │ ” │Charles Edward Stuart │Tea Planter, Assam │
- │ ” │John W.A. Skelton │Tea Planter, Salonah Tea│
- │ │ │ Co., Ltd., Nowgong, │
- │ │ │ Assam │
- │ ” │Rupert Henry Mackenzie │Tea Planter, Hattigor │
- │ │ │ T.E., Mungledai, Assam│
- │ ” │Edward Bayley Hadden │Tea Planter, │
- │ │ Parkes │ Doolapudung, Assam │
- │ ” │Johan Gottfried Petersen│Assistant, R.S.N. Co., │
- │ │ │ Ltd., Garden Reach, │
- │ │ │ Calcutta │
- │ ” │John Stratford Saunders │Tea Planter, Jorhat Tea │
- │ │ │ Co., Ltd., Nimaligarh,│
- │ │ │ Sibsagar │
- │ ” │John Francis Hughes │Tea Planter, Amalgamated│
- │ │ │ Tea Estate, Dibrugarh,│
- │ │ │ Assam │
- │ ” │Frank Tancred │Gentleman, Lahore │
- │ ” │Bertie Rhys Lloyd Jones │Survey Department, │
- │ │ │ Lahore │
- │ │ │ │
- │ NO. 4 SECTION │
- │ │ │ │
- │Company │Edgar Hall Mansfield │Assistant Examiner, │
- │ Sergeant-Major │ │ Milty. Accts. Dept., │
- │ │ │ Punjab Command, Lahore│
- │Sergeant │Robert Septimus Stowell │Brewer, Messrs. Meakin &│
- │ │ │ Co., Kirkee │
- │Corporal │George Lawrie │Photographer, Lucknow │
- │Lance-Corporal │William Solomon Lemon │Travelling Agent, │
- │ │ │ Calcutta │
- │ ” │Edward James Ballard │Planter, Peshawar │
- │Trooper │Charles Frederick Hayes │Clerk, Calcutta │
- │ ” │Ernest Phillip Sanders │Travelling Agent, │
- │ │ │ Calcutta │
- │ ” │Ernest Stanley Clifford │Gentleman, Delhi │
- │ ” │John David William │ │
- │ │ Holmes │ │
- │ ” │Harry Warren Puckridge │Bangalore │
- │ ” │Arthur Edward │Inspector of Police │
- │ │ Consterdine │ │
- │ ” │Donald Robert Graham │Planter, Palumpur │
- │ │ Glascock │ │
- │ ” │Frederick Charles Warren│ │
- │ │ Mercer │ │
- │ ” │John Haviland Sperrin │ │
- │ │ Richardson │ │
- │ ” │Isambard Clarke Webbe │ │
- │ ” │Frederick Maurice │Extra Assist. │
- │ │ Clifford │ Commissioner, Delhi │
- │ ” │James Sydney Cowen │Agent to the Amir of │
- │ │ │ Afghanistan, Peshawar │
- │ ” │Hubert Noel Shaw │Planter, Palumpur │
- │ ” │Wilfred Herbert Holme │Planter, Palumpur │
- │ ” │Arthur Patrick Courtenay│Gentleman, Umballa │
- │ ” │Charles Henry Mortimer │Gentleman, Kalka │
- │ │ Johnstone │ │
- │ ” │Charles Hilliard Donald │Assistant, Messrs. │
- │ │ │ Spedding & Co., │
- │ │ │ Kashmir │
- │ ” │Hugh Stopford Northcote │Plague Department, │
- │ │ Wright │ Secunderabad, Deccan │
- │ ” │Frank Graham Bateman │Planter, Mysore │
- │ ” │Frederick Wilford Wright│Assistant, N.G.S. │
- │ │ │ Railway, Secunderabad │
- │ ” │Alexander Atkinson │Gentleman, Lahore │
- │ ” │John Daly Lecky Arathoon│Assistant, Alliance Bank│
- │ │ │ of Simla, Calcutta │
- │ │ │ │
- │ MAXIM-GUN DETACHMENT │
- │ │ │ │
- │Sergeant │Ephraim Robert Dale │Contractor, Jubbulpore, │
- │ │ │ C.P. │
- │Trooper │Patrick Terence Corbett │Loco. Dept., E.I. │
- │ │ │ Railway, Jamalpore │
- │ ” │Ivan Victor G. Dowd │Loco. Dept., E.I. │
- │ │ │ Railway, Jamalpore │
- │ ” │Noel Jocelyn Bolst │Loco. Dept., E.I. │
- │ │ │ Railway, Asansol │
- │ ” │Charles Vivian Scott │Loco. Dept., E.I. │
- │ │ Dickens │ Railway Jamalpore │
- │ ” │John Joseph Booth[A] │Traffic Dept., E.I. │
- │ │ │ Railway, Howrah │
- │ │ │ (formerly Royal │
- │ │ │ Artillery) │
- │ │ │ │
- │ B COMPANY │
- │ NO. 1 SECTION │
- │ │ │ │
- │Sergeant │Gerald Edward Pierson │Tea Planter, Tarapore │
- │ │ Thesiger │ Tea Co., Cachar │
- │Corporal │William Townsend Smith │Tea Planter, Tarapore │
- │ │ │ Tea Co., Cachar │
- │ ” │Edward A. Chartres │Doctor, Ballacherra │
- │ │ │ T.E., Cachar │
- │Lance-Corporal │John Maclaine │Tea Planter, Hatticherra│
- │ │ │ T.E., Cachar │
- │Bugler │Hugh Kirkwood F.A.H. │Custom House Officer, │
- │ │ Dawson │ Calcutta │
- │Trooper │Charles Alexander Forbes│Tea Planter, Vernerpore │
- │ │ │ T.E., Hailakandi, │
- │ │ │ Cachar │
- │ ” │Cecil Wilfred Spicer │Tea Planter, Alyne T.E.,│
- │ │ │ Lukipore, Cachar │
- │ ” │William Reid │Tea Planter, Chargola │
- │ │ │ T.E., Sylhet │
- │ ” │William Edward Clifford │Tea Planter, Pathemara │
- │ │ Johnson │ T.E., Cachar │
- │ ” │Ian George Sinclair │Tea Planter, Kalline │
- │ │ │ T.E., Cachar │
- │ ” │Walter Reginald Winder │Tea Planter, Bhuberighat│
- │ │ │ T.E., Sylhet │
- │ ” │Archibald William │Tea Planter, Coombirgram│
- │ │ Harrison │ T.E., Cachar │
- │ ” │James Henry Archibald │Tea Planter, │
- │ │ Burn-Murdoch │ Dullabcherra T.E., │
- │ │ │ Sylhet │
- │ ” │Ernest Adair Thelwall │Tea Planter, Lungla Tea │
- │ │ │ Co., Sylhet │
- │ ” │Stanley Ducat │Tea Planter, Chargola │
- │ │ │ Tea Co., Sylhet │
- │ ” │James Whyte Stevenson[A]│Tea Planter, Hattikhira │
- │ │ │ T.E.,Sylhet │
- │ ” │Arthur Philip Woollright│Medical Officer, Assam │
- │ │ │ Bengal Railway │
- │ ” │Frederick Vivian Clerk │Engineer, Assam-Bengal │
- │ │ │ Railway │
- │ ” │Richard Tait Innes │Tea Planter, Chandypore │
- │ │ │ T.E., Hailakandi, │
- │ │ │ Cachar │
- │ ” │Arthur Ruthven Thornton │Journalist, Calcutta │
- │ ” │Malcolm Hunter Logan │Engineer, Assam-Bengal │
- │ │ │ Railway │
- │ ” │Robert Brooke Lungley │Tea Planter, Deundi │
- │ │ │ T.E., South Sylhet │
- │ ” │Herbert Wallace Thelwall│Tea Planter, Dooars │
- │ ” │Edmond Stewart Chapman │Tea Planter, Rema T.E., │
- │ │ │ South Sylhet │
- │ ” │Rawdon Graham Hunter │Tea Planter, Ballacherra│
- │ │ │ T.E., Cachar │
- │ ” │Alexander Lytle │Tea Planter, Alyne T.E.,│
- │ │ │ Cachar │
- │ ” │Edward B. Moir-Byres │Tea Planter, Tarrapore │
- │ │ │ Tea Co., Cachar │
- │ ” │Bernard Charles Albert │Tea Planter, Silcaorie │
- │ │ │ T.E., Cachar │
- │ ” │Philip Partridge │Tea Planter, Silcaorie │
- │ │ │ T.E., Cachar │
- │ ” │William Turnbull │Tea Planter, │
- │ │ │ Pathecherra, T.E., │
- │ │ │ Cachar │
- │ ” │Oliver Charles John │Tea Planter, Jalinga │
- │ │ Stevenson-Hamilton │ T.E., Cachar │
- │ ” │Harvey Davies │Tea Planter, South │
- │ │ │ Sylhet │
- │ │ │ │
- │ NO. 2 SECTION │
- │ │ │ │
- │Company │William Burrell │Royal Irish Rifles, │
- │ Sergeant-Major │ Hewitt[A] │ Calcutta │
- │Sergeant │Walter Arnold Conduit │Assistant Engineer, B.N.│
- │ │ │ Railway │
- │Lance-Sergeant │Philip Bunbury Warburton│Assistant, Bank of │
- │ │ │ Bengal, Calcutta │
- │Farrier-Sergeant │Frederick Edwards │15th Hussars, Meerut │
- │Corporal │Francis Stuart Montagu │Merchant, Rangoon │
- │ │ Bates │ │
- │Lance-Corporal │Charles Maclean Jack │Assistant, Messrs. Shaw,│
- │ │ │ Wallace, & Co., │
- │ │ │ Calcutta │
- │ ” │Graham Peddie[A] │Assistant District │
- │ │ │ Traffic │
- │ │ │ Superintendent, E.I. │
- │ │ │ Railway │
- │Saddler │Henry Briggs │15th Hussars, Meerut │
- │Trooper │Harry Howes │Superintendent, Rangoon │
- │ │ │ Boat Club │
- │Trooper │Lewis Hills Cubitt │Broker, Calcutta │
- │ ” │Herbert Nicholson Betts │Jute Broker, Calcutta │
- │ ” │Walter Douglas Jones │Merchant, Calcutta │
- │ ” │William Burton Elwes │Indo-European │
- │ │ │ Telegraphs, Madras │
- │ ” │Charles Edward Turner │Assistant, Messrs. │
- │ │ │ Bullock │
- │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ Brothers, │
- │ │ │ Rangoon │
- │ ” │Thomas Brinsley │Coffee Planter, Yercand │
- │ │ Nicholson │ │
- │ ” │Phillip Chamberlayne │Indigo Planter, Purneah │
- │ │ Preston │ │
- │ ” │Harry Bright Oldham │Tea Planter │
- │ ” │George Alfred Gowenlock │Tea Planter, Darjeeling │
- │ ” │Eian Ingram Lockhart │Indigo Planter, Behar │
- │ ” │Reginald William Royds │Indigo Planter, Purneah │
- │ │ Birch │ │
- │ ” │Alfred Frederick Franks │Assistant Engineer, │
- │ │ │ B.-N. Railway │
- │ ” │Morris William Clifford │P.W.D. Accounts, Lahore │
- │ ” │Cecil Grant Huddleston │Mining Engineer, │
- │ │ │ Hyderabad State │
- │ ” │John Graves[A] │Assistant, Bank of │
- │ │ │ Bengal, Hyderabad │
- │ ” │Alfred Holberton Francis│Assistant, Messrs. Thos.│
- │ │ │ Cook │
- │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ & Sons, Rangoon │
- │ ” │Charles Henry McMinn │N.W.P. Police │
- │ ” │William Harold Nicolay │N.W.P. Police │
- │ ” │Harry Baden Powis │Tutor, Simla │
- │ ” │Harold Cooper │Assistant Engineer, East│
- │ │ │ Coast Railway │
- │ ” │Henry Dawson Were │Gentleman, Broadclyst, │
- │ │ │ S. Devon │
- │ │ │ │
- │ NO. 3 SECTION │
- │ │ │ │
- │Sergeant │Harry Alexander Campbell│Coffee Planter, │
- │ │ │ Natroeull Estate, │
- │ │ │ Koppa, Kadur Dist. │
- │Corporal │Lionel Edward Kirwan │Coffee Planter, │
- │ │ │ Santaweri Estate, │
- │ │ │ Birur, Kadur Dist. │
- │Lance-Corporal │George Horne │Coffee Planter, │
- │ │ │ Bykarhully Estate, │
- │ │ │ Sakluspur, Hassan │
- │ │ │ Dist. │
- │ ” │Talbot Cox │Coffee Planter, Santi │
- │ │ │ Kappa Estate, North │
- │ │ │ Coorg │
- │Trooper │Bernard Cayley │Coffee Planter, Honpet │
- │ │ │ Estate, Santaweri, │
- │ │ │ Birur, Kadur Dist. │
- │ ” │Lionel Kingchurch │Coffee Planter, │
- │ │ │ Balihonur Estate, │
- │ │ │ Kadur Dist. │
- │ ” │Francis Bere Follett │Coffee Planter, Bynekhan│
- │ │ │ Estate, Chickamagloor,│
- │ │ │ Kadur Dist. │
- │ ” │Henry Percy Cobb │Coffee Planter, │
- │ │ │ Arabedicool Estate, │
- │ │ │ Chickamagloor, Kadur │
- │ │ │ Dist. │
- │ ” │James Charles Dent │Coffee Planter, Bynekhan│
- │ │ Bewsher │ Estate, Chickamagloor,│
- │ │ │ Kadur Dist. │
- │ ” │Arthur Ernest Norton │Coffee Planter, │
- │ │ │ Santaweri Estate, │
- │ │ │ Birur, Kadur Dist. │
- │ ” │Thomas Edward Marmaduke │Indigo Broker, Madras │
- │ │ Lawson │ │
- │ ” │Montagu Beadon Follett │Coffee Planter, │
- │ │ │ Nungangode Estate, │
- │ │ │ Mysore │
- │ ” │Crosbie Charles Harvey │Coffee Planter, Davekhan│
- │ │ │ Estate, Koppa, Kadur │
- │ │ │ Dist. │
- │Trooper │Hugh Allardice │Coffee Planter, Burgode │
- │ │ │ Estate, Chickamagloor,│
- │ │ │ Kadur Dist. │
- │ ” │Melville Seymour Biscoe │Coffee Planter, │
- │ │ │ Chickolly Estate, │
- │ │ │ Chickamagloor, Kadur │
- │ │ │ Dist. │
- │ ” │Herbert Cecil Wood │Coffee Planter, Mercara,│
- │ │ │ North Coorg │
- │ ” │Thomas Lawrence Dalton │Coffee Planter, Huntrey │
- │ │ │ Estate, Shanwara │
- │ │ │ Santi, Mungerabad │
- │ ” │John Arthur Graham │Coffee Planter, Halari │
- │ │ │ Estate, Mercara, North│
- │ │ │ Coorg │
- │ ” │Claude Kennedy Martin │Coffee Planter, Palamado│
- │ │ │ Estate, Mercara, North│
- │ │ │ Coorg │
- │ ” │Lewis Collingwood Bearne│Coffee Planter, │
- │ │ │ Pollibetta Estate, │
- │ │ │ South Coorg │
- │ ” │Rex Johnston Smith │Coffee Planter, │
- │ │ │ Pollibetta Estate, │
- │ │ │ South Coorg │
- │ ” │Herbert Evetts │Coffee Planter, │
- │ │ │ Murguddi, Sullibile, │
- │ │ │ Kadur Dist. │
- │ ” │Claude Francis Walton │Police Inspector, Mysore│
- │ │ │ Service, Mudigiri, │
- │ │ │ Kadur Dist. │
- │ ” │David Onslow Allardice │Coffee Planter, Gubcull │
- │ │ │ Estate, Mudigiri, │
- │ │ │ Kadur Dist. │
- │ ” │Seymour Sladden │Coffee Planter, Badni │
- │ │ │ Estate, Sudaspore, │
- │ │ │ Hassan Dist. │
- │ ” │Ernest Alfred Sydenham │Coffee Planter, │
- │ │ Clarke │ Hitherhulli Estate, │
- │ │ │ Shanwara Santi, │
- │ │ │ Mungerabad │
- │ ” │Charles Elsee │Coffee Planter, Shanwara│
- │ │ │ Santi, Mungerabad, │
- │ │ │ Hassan Dist. │
- │ ” │Divie Robertson │Coffee Planter, Kerke │
- │ │ │ Coondah Estate, │
- │ │ │ Sullibile, Kadur Dist.│
- │ ” │Francis Hannay │Coffee Planter, Could │
- │ │ Cunningham │ Hilton Estate, Koppa, │
- │ │ │ Kadur Dist. │
- │ │ │ │
- │ NO. 4 SECTION │
- │ │ │ │
- │Sergeant │Ernest Dawson │Uncovenanted Civil │
- │ │ │ Service, Pagan, Burmah│
- │Vety.-Sergeant │Lewis Joseph Orland │Superintendent of │
- │ │ Oakley │ Stables, Maharajah of │
- │ │ │ Cooch-Behar │
- │ ” │Frank Deccan Sheriff │Tea Planter, Eastern │
- │ │ Mitchell │ Assam Co., Balijan │
- │Sig.-Sergeant │Albert John Longman │Sergeant Signaller, 3rd │
- │ │ │ Hussars, Lucknow │
- │Corporal │Alick Cyril Pratt[A] │D.I.S., B. & N.W. │
- │ │ │ Railway, Somastipore │
- │Lance-Corporal │Arthur D. Butler │Assistant, Messrs. Oakes│
- │ │ │ & Co., Madras │
- │ ” │Albert Hedley Jackman[A]│Traveller, Messrs. │
- │ │ │ Wrenn, Bennett & Co., │
- │ │ │ Madras │
- │Signaller │William Lowe │3rd Hussars, Lucknow │
- │Shoeing-Smith │Osborne Reginald │Shoeing Smith, 15th │
- │ │ Cuthbert │ Hussars, Meerut │
- │Trooper │William Kilner Brown │Assistant, Audit Office,│
- │ │ │ E.I. Railway, Calcutta│
- │ ” │Herbert James Moorhouse │P.O. Department, │
- │ │ │ Bangalore │
- │ ” │John Boyd Johnston │Assistant, Planters’ │
- │ │ │ Stores and Agency Co.,│
- │ │ │ Ltd., Calcutta │
- │ ” │Charles W. Maxwell │Assistant, Messrs. │
- │ │ │ William Watson & Co., │
- │ │ │ Calcutta │
- │ ” │Hugh James Renny │Tea Planter, Jalpaiguri │
- │ ” │George Augustus │Secretary, Rampur Raj, │
- │ │ Phillips[A] │ Rampur, N.W.P. │
- │ ” │David Liddell │2nd Officer, B.I.S.N. │
- │ │ Livingstone │ Co., Calcutta │
- │ ” │James Moore │Cawnpore Woollen Mills, │
- │ │ │ Cawnpore, N.W.P. │
- │ ” │William Walter Hight │Coffee Planter, │
- │ │ │ Valakadai Peak │
- │ │ │ Estate,Yercand, Salem │
- │ ” │Edward John Burgess │Assistant to the │
- │ │ │ Secretary, Government │
- │ │ │ of India, Home Dept. │
- │ ” │Robert Pennington │Chief Officer, B.I.S.N. │
- │ │ Williams │ Co., Calcutta │
- │ ” │Richard Grant Dagge │Captain, B.I.S.N. Co., │
- │ │ │ Calcutta │
- │ ” │Arthur King Meares │Gentleman, Ranchi, Chota│
- │ │ │ Nagpur │
- │ ” │Willie King Meares │Gentleman, Ranchi, Chota│
- │ │ │ Nagpur │
- │ ” │Walter Ernest Dexter │Chief Officer, Hajee │
- │ │ │ Cassim Line of │
- │ │ │ Steamers, Bombay │
- │ ” │Sydney Ward Circuitt │Jute Merchant, Pubna, │
- │ │ Lucas │ Lower Bengal │
- │ ” │Harry Rufus Parks │Asiatic Steam Navigation│
- │ │ │ Co., Calcutta │
- │ ” │Robert Charles Nolan │Mounted Police, Calcutta│
- │ ” │Joseph Seymour Biscoe │Salt Revenue Dept., │
- │ │ │ Northern Frontier, │
- │ │ │ Singum │
- │ ” │John Lewis Behan │Journalist, Calcutta │
- │ ” │Douglas Morison │Tea Planter, Assam │
- │ ” │Harry McGregor │Engineer, B.I.S.N. Co., │
- │ │ │ Calcutta │
- │ │ │ │
- │ A COMPANY TRANSPORT │
- │ │ │ │
- │Sergeant │Fred. Stephens │Indian Commissariat │
- │ │ │ Transport Department, │
- │ │ │ Howrah │
- │Driver │George Edward Wilkinson │Clerk, Medical College │
- │ │ │ Hospital, Calcutta │
- │ ” │Sydney Graham │Clerk, B.I.S.N. Company │
- │ │ Nightingale │ │
- │ ” │Leo. Davis │Tea Planter, Darjeeling │
- │ ” │Herbert Gregory Phillips│Clerk, B.I.S.N. Company │
- │ ” │Douglas Daly │Foot Police, Calcutta │
- │ ” │Richard Arthur Grenville│Foot Police, Calcutta │
- │ ” │Percy William Pryce │Assistant, Messrs. │
- │ │ │ Peliti & Co., Calcutta│
- │ ” │Percy Harrington Paxton │Custom House Officer, │
- │ │ │ Calcutta │
- │ ” │Frederick Charles │Custom House Officer, │
- │ │ Manville │ Calcutta │
- │ ” │Richard Parker │Assistant, Grand Hotel, │
- │ │ Estabrooke │ Darjeeling │
- │ ” │George Johnston Shaw │Guard, E.I. Railway, │
- │ │ │ Jamalpore │
- │ ” │Edmond John Power │Travelling Agent, │
- │ │ │ Messrs. Phelps & Co., │
- │ │ │ Calcutta │
- │ ” │John Charles[A] │Rice Broker, Rangoon │
- │ ” │Trewren Hare Scott │Rawalpindi │
- │ ” │George William Harrison │Guard, E.I. Railway, │
- │ │ │ Calcutta │
- │ ” │John Canute Doyle │Reporter, ‘Englishman,’ │
- │ │ │ Calcutta │
- │Driver │George William Palmer │Gentleman, Calcutta │
- │ ” │William G. Arthurton │Assistant, Messrs. │
- │ │ │ Whiteaway, Laidlaw, & │
- │ │ │ Co., Calcutta │
- │ ” │Lionel Willis │Theatrical Agent, │
- │ │ │ Calcutta │
- │ ” │John Frederick Richey │Audit Department, E.I. │
- │ │ │ Railway, Jamalpore │
- │ ” │Patrick W. Anderson │Assistant, Great Eastern│
- │ │ │ Hotel, Calcutta │
- │ ” │William Edward Harris │Clerk, E.I. Railway, │
- │ │ │ Calcutta │
- │ ” │Charles William │Assistant, Messrs. │
- │ │ Lovegrove │ Whiteaway, Laidlaw, & │
- │ │ │ Co., Calcutta │
- │ ” │Leo Horatio Bradford │Assistant, Messrs. Ball,│
- │ │ │ Mudie, & Co., Lahore │
- │ ” │Sherbrook William Cullen│Assistant, Messrs. │
- │ │ │ Harman & Co., Calcutta│
- │ ” │William Burnand │Clerk, E.I. Railway, │
- │ │ │ Jamalpore │
- │ │ │ │
- │ B COMPANY TRANSPORT │
- │ │ │ │
- │Driver │John James Campbell │Assistant Tea Planter, │
- │ │ │ Dibrugarh, Assam │
- │ ” │Alfred Morris │Assistant, Adelphi │
- │ │ │ Hotel, Calcutta │
- │ ” │William B. Brown │Engineer, B.I.S.N. Co. │
- │ ” │John Francis E. Morley │Assistant Tea Planter, │
- │ │ │ Kandie, Ceylon │
- │ ” │Francis Campbell │Clerk, E.I. Railway, │
- │ │ Thompson │ Calcutta │
- │ ” │Walter Henry Wheeler │Manager, Charing Cross │
- │ │ │ Hotel, Lahore │
- │ ” │Harry Archibald Campbell│Assistant, Messrs. │
- │ │ │ Davis, Leech, & Co., │
- │ │ │ Calcutta │
- │ ” │Albert Martin │Custom House Officer, │
- │ │ │ Calcutta │
- │ ” │Ernest Henry Waller │Coffee Planter │
- │ ” │Henry Tomlinson Smith │Travelling Agent, Great │
- │ │ │ Eastern Hotel, │
- │ │ │ Calcutta │
- │ ” │Harry Richard Rice │Clerk, Custom House, │
- │ │ │ Calcutta │
- │ ” │George Goodliffe │Veterinary Surgeon, │
- │ │ │ Messrs. Brown & Co., │
- │ │ │ Calcutta │
- │ ” │Richard Millett Crux │Military Accounts │
- │ │ │ Office, Lahore │
- │ ” │Sydney Herbert Bradford │Assistant, Messrs. Ball,│
- │ │ │ Mudie, & Co., Lahore │
- │ ” │Stephen Harry Kearsey │Military Accounts │
- │ │ │ Office, Lahore │
- │ ” │Edward Adlam │Railway Coolie │
- │ │ │ Contractor, Lahore │
- │ ” │Ormond Edward Fitzgerald│Tea Planter, Kangra │
- │ │ │ Valley │
- │ ” │Henry William Fuller │Coffee Planter │
- │ ” │William Rust │Agent for the Maharajah │
- │ │ │ of Nepal, Calcutta │
- │ ” │John Braine │Tea Planter, Gauhati, │
- │ │ │ Assam │
- │ ” │Robert Wallace Hyde │Assistant, Bristol │
- │ │ │ Hotel, Calcutta │
- │ ” │Harry Macgregor │Engineer, B.I.S.N. Co., │
- │ │ │ Wellington, New │
- │ │ │ Zealand │
- │ ” │Richard Pringle │Clerk, Custom House, │
- │ │ │ Calcutta │
- │ ” │Fred Leslie Lowther │Clerk, Custom House, │
- │ │ │ Calcutta │
- │ ” │Patrick William Banks │Guard, E.I. Railway, │
- │ │ │ Jamalpore │
- │ ” │Robert Henry Baldwin │Custom House Officer, │
- │ │ │ Calcutta │
- └──────────────────┴────────────────────────┴────────────────────────┘
-
-Footnote A:
-
- Subsequently promoted.
-
-
- APPENDIX II
- _MOBILISATION SECTION, ARMY HEADQUARTERS_
-
- DATED FORT WILLIAM, JANUARY 1900
-
- _Scheme for the despatch of Two Companies Mounted Volunteers
- to South Africa_
-
-
-Her Majesty’s Government having accepted the offer of the Government of
-India to provide a force of Mounted Volunteers for service in South
-Africa, two companies of Mounted Infantry, to be called ‘The Indian
-Mounted Infantry Corps (Lumsden’s Horse),’ will be raised immediately at
-Calcutta under the command of Lieutenant-Colonel D. McT. Lumsden, of the
-Volunteer Force of India, Supernumerary List, Assam Valley Light Horse.
-
-_Terms of Enlistment._—The term of enlistment for officers and men will
-be for one year, or for not less than the period of the war.
-
-All members of the force will be entitled to free passages to India on
-discharge or completion of engagement.
-
-Preference will be given to Volunteers from Mounted Volunteer corps, but
-Volunteers belonging to Infantry corps who may possess the requisite
-qualifications will also be eligible.
-
-_Qualifications._—Candidates must be from twenty to forty years of age
-and of good character. Infantry Volunteers must show that they are good
-riders.
-
-All candidates must obtain a medical certificate of fitness for active
-service. Civil surgeons will be asked to examine free of charge all
-candidates applying for enlistment.
-
-_Pay._—The pay and allowances for officers and men will be at British
-Cavalry rates from date of enlistment.
-
-_Allowances._—Particulars regarding wound pensions, gratuities, and
-family pensions will be given later.
-
-_Rations._—All ranks will receive rations as for British soldiers from
-date of joining.
-
-_Organisation._—_Establishment._—The corps will be organised in two
-companies as under:
-
-
- ─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
- Officers Sergeants Artificers Buglers R.&F. Total
- ─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
- Staff—
- Lieutenant-Colonel 1 — — — — 1
- Second in Command 1 — — — — 1
- Adjutant and 1[B] — — — — 1
- Quartermaster
- Medical Officer 1 — — — — 1
- Quartermaster- — 1[B] — — — 1
- Sergeant
- ─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
- Total 4 1 — — — 5
- ─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
- Detail of one
- Company—
- Major (or Captain) 1[B] — — — — 1
- Captain or 4 — — — — 4
- Subalterns
- Company — 1[B] — — — 1
- Sergeant-Major
- Company
- Quartermaster-
- Sergeant — 1[B] — — — 1
- Sergeants — 4 — — — 4
- Farrier-Sergeant — 1[B] — — — 1
- Shoeing-Smiths — — 2[C] — — 2
- Saddlers — — 1 — — 1
- Signallers — 1 — — 1 2
- Buglers — — — 2[C] — 2
- Rank and File — — — — 104 104
- ─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
- Total of one Company 5 8 3 2 105 123
- ─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
- Total of two 10 16 6 4 210 246
- Companies
- ─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
- Total of Staff 4 1 — — — 5
- ─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
- GRAND TOTAL OF UNIT 14 17 6 4 210 251
- ─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
-
-
- ───────────────────────────────────────────────
- Horses Ponies Private
- or Mules Followers
- ───────────────────────────────────────────────
- Staff—
- Lieutenant-Colonel 2 3
- Second in Command 2 3
- Adjutant and 2 3
- Quartermaster
- Medical Officer 2 3
- Quartermaster- 1 —
- Sergeant
- ───────────────────────────────────────────────
- Total 9 12
- ───────────────────────────────────────────────
- Detail of one
- Company—
- Major (or Captain) 2 3
- Captain or 8 12
- Subalterns
- Company 1 —
- Sergeant-Major
- Company
- Quartermaster-
- Sergeant 1 —
- Sergeants 4 —
- Farrier-Sergeant 1 —
- Shoeing-Smiths 2 —
- Saddlers 1 —
- Signallers 2 —
- Buglers 2 —
- Rank and File 104 —
- ───────────────────────────────────────────────
- Total of one Company 128 15
- ───────────────────────────────────────────────
- Total of two 256 30
- Companies
- ───────────────────────────────────────────────
- Total of Staff 9 12
- ───────────────────────────────────────────────
- GRAND TOTAL OF UNIT 265 42
- ───────────────────────────────────────────────
-
-
-Footnote B:
-
- From Regular Army.
-
-Footnote C:
-
- One from Regular Army, the other a Volunteer.
-
-The following officers, non-commissioned officers, and men will be drawn
-from the Regular Army:
-
- Adjutant and Quartermaster 1
- Company Commanders (Majors or Captains) 2
-
- Total Officers 3
- Quartermaster-Sergeant 1
- Company Sergeant-Majors 2
- Company Quartermaster-Sergeants 2
- Farrier-Sergeants 2
- Shoeing-Smiths 2
- Saddlers 2
- Signallers 4
- Buglers 2
- —
- Total 17
-
-The force will be equipped and trained as Mounted Infantry.
-
-Officers will be equipped and armed as far as possible like the men.
-
-Officers and men will provide their own horses.
-
-Officers’ Servants.—Officers will be allowed one personal native servant
-each and one syce for each charger. Total, three native servants per
-officer.
-
-_Ordnance Department._—Arms, ammunition, accoutrements, and equipment
-will be issued _free_ by the Ordnance Department according to the scales
-given.
-
-Officers and men will be armed with ·303 rifles and bayonets.
-
-All members of Volunteer corps of Light Horse or Mounted Rifles joining
-the corps may, if they so wish it, bring with them the saddlery and
-equipment issued to them in their present corps.
-
-Saddlery and camp equipment, according to the scales given, will be
-supplied under regimental arrangements. If required the Ordnance
-Department will supply saddlery and camp equipment on payment.
-
-The Ordnance Department will supply _free_ transport saddlery and
-draught harness according to scale given.
-
-Line gear including one knee halter per horse will be provided _free_ by
-the Ordnance Department.
-
-Two horse loads of entrenching tools as for a British Cavalry regiment,
-together with complete equipment of saddlery, bridles, and entrenching
-tool bags for two horses, will be provided _free_ by Ordnance
-Department.
-
-Artificers’ tools and stores and miscellaneous stores, including two
-light forges for pack saddles, will be issued _free_ by Ordnance
-Department.
-
-_Signalling._—Signalling equipment will be issued _free_ on the field
-service scale for a British Cavalry regiment.
-
-_Ammunition._—Small-arm ammunition will be issued at the rate of 650
-rounds per rifle, calculated according to the following scale:
-
- On soldier 100 rounds per rifles
-
- 1st Reserve (34 boxes) 132 ” ”
-
- 2nd ” (Ammunition Column and 268 ” ”
- Park)
-
- Practice ammunition 150 ” ”
-
-Mark II. ·303 ammunition only will be taken for use in South Africa. The
-practice ammunition may be black powder ammunition.
-
-Revolver ammunition will be issued at the rate of 150 rounds per
-officer’s revolver calculated as under:
-
- On person 24 rounds per revolver
-
- 1st Reserve 26 ” ”
-
- 2nd ” (Ammunition Column and 50 ” ”
- Park)
-
- Practice ammunition 50 ” ”
-
- Total 150
-
-Two boxes of revolver ammunition will be carried with the 1st reserve
-rifle ammunition. All the above ammunition will be issued at Calcutta.
-
-The 2nd reserve of rifle and revolver ammunition will on arrival of the
-corps in South Africa be handed over to the Ordnance Department as may
-be directed by the local military authorities.
-
-_Cooking Utensils._—Cooking utensils will be provided _free_ by the
-Commissariat Department if required—viz., five sets of three oval camp
-kettles (with one gridiron, chopper, and ladle for each kettle) per
-company; one set weighs 39½ lb.
-
-_Transport._—Transport mules or ponies will be provided by the corps for
-1st reserve ammunition, medical equipment and signalling equipment.
-These animals should be trained to draught or pack work. Army transport
-_carts_ as required will be provided _free_ by the Commissariat
-Department.
-
-_Clothing._—Sea kit, as prescribed for the Cape Route in Army
-Regulations, India, Volume V., Article 2166 (but without mattresses),
-will be issued _free_ to all non-commissioned officers and men by the
-Commissariat Transport Department.
-
-Clothing will be provided under regimental arrangements, but field
-service and other clothing as required will be issued on payment indent
-by the Commissariat Transport Department.
-
-_Supplies._—(_a_) Thirty days’ sea rations for men and animals will be
-placed on the transport by the Commissariat Department.
-
-(_b_) In addition to the above sea rations, three months’ rations for
-men and one month’s crushed gram and compressed hay for animals will be
-provided and shipped by the Commissariat Department.
-
-(_c_) Supplies will be packed in one-maund packages and in waterproof
-bags where necessary.
-
-_Veterinary._—The Principal Veterinary Officer in India will arrange for
-the veterinary inspection of horses before embarkation and for the
-necessary veterinary arrangements for the voyage. The corps will be
-provided _free_ with two field veterinary chests and two veterinary
-wallets.
-
-_Medical._—The Principal Medical Officer of her Majesty’s Forces in
-India will issue orders for the necessary medical arrangements for the
-voyage. The corps will be provided _free_ with medical equipment as for
-a British Cavalry regiment on field service, except that two field
-stretchers and four blanket stretchers will be provided.
-
-_Office Stationery._—The Superintendent Government Stationery will issue
-_free_ such stationery as may be required for use in the regimental
-office.
-
-The Superintendent Government Printing will supply _free_ such books and
-forms as may be required for use in the regimental office.
-
-The officers in charge Mathematical Instrument Office will issue _free_
-such instruments as may be required on a scale not exceeding that of a
-British Cavalry regiment on field service.
-
-_Embarkation._—The force will be embarked at Calcutta. The Director of
-the Royal Indian Marine will arrange for the necessary sea transport for
-conveyance of the force, informing the General Officer Commanding
-Presidency District of the vessel or vessels he proposes to charter. The
-vessels will then be surveyed in accordance with Army Regulations,
-India, Volume X., and as soon as the date of sailing is known the
-General Officer Commanding the Presidency District will arrange for the
-embarkation of the force. Details regarding the transports engaged, date
-of sailing, and probable date of arrival at Durban should be sent to
-Army Headquarters and to the Bengal Command.
-
-_Stores, Rest Camps._—The General Officer Commanding the Presidency
-District will make such arrangements as may be needed to facilitate the
-raising of the force, the provision of such storage accommodation as may
-be necessary, and for rest camps. He will be responsible for receiving
-stores for the force and for loading the transport.
-
-_Telegrams._—The Lieutenant-General Commanding the Forces, Bengal, will
-authorise the despatch of telegrams on the ‘debit note’ system from such
-offices as may be concerned with the raising, equipment, and despatch of
-the force. He will communicate to the Director-General of Telegraphs the
-designations and head-quarters of officers whom he authorises to use the
-‘debit note’ system, and any other offices from which such telegrams are
-likely to be despatched. ‘Debit note’ telegrams cannot be despatched
-from railway offices.
-
-All telegrams will be endorsed, ‘Lumsden’s Horse. Debit cost to Military
-Department.’
-
-_Report and Maps of Transvaal._—Copies of ‘A Short Military Report on
-the Transvaal,’ together with maps, will be supplied by the Intelligence
-Branch, Quartermaster-General’s Department, Simla.
-
-_Press Correspondents._—No member of the corps will be permitted to act
-as a Press correspondent except with the special permission of the
-military authorities in South Africa.
-
-_Expenditure Accounts._—The various departments of the Army are
-authorised to issue on ‘payment indents’ such supplies, stores,
-equipment, and clothing as may be required, in addition to the free
-issues referred to above. All such payment indents will be clearly
-marked ‘Lumsden’s Horse. On payment.’
-
-All supplies, stores, equipment, and clothing issued from stock to the
-force should be replaced as soon as possible, and all charges connected
-with the raising, equipping, and despatching of the force other than
-those borne by the corps itself should be debited to the Government of
-India under the heading ‘Lumsden’s Horse.’
-
-FORT WILLIAM: _January 1900_.
-
- FIELD-SERVICE KIT
-
- ┌──────────────────────────────────────────┬────────────┬────────────┐
- │ —— │ Officers │ N.C.O. and │
- │ │ │ Men │
- ├──────────────────────────────────────────┼────────────┼────────────┤
- │ │ │ │
- │ _On Person_ │ │ │
- │Helmet with khaki cover, pagri, and chin │ 1 │ 1 │
- │strap (or felt hat) │ │ │
- │Khaki serge coat │ 1 │ 1 │
- │Pantaloons, Bedford cord │ 1 │ 1 │
- │Khaki putties or leather gaiters │ 1 │ 1 │
- │Walking boots │ 1 │ 1 │
- │Spurs, jack │ 1 │ 1 │
- │Drawers │ 1 │ 1 │
- │Flannel shirt │ 1 │ 1 │
- │Socks, woollen pairs │ 1 │ 1 │
- │Vest │ 1 │ 1 │
- │Flannel belt │ 1 │ 1 │
- │Braces │ 1 │ 1 │
- │Pocket handkerchief │ 1 │ — │
- │Sword │ 1 │ 1 │
- │Revolver (and ammunition) │ 1 │ — │
- │Belts set │ 1 │ 1 │
- │Bandolier │ 1 │ 1 │
- │Field glasses (if not on saddle) │ 1 │ 1 (N.C.O. │
- │ │ │ only) │
- │Compass │ 1 │1 (ditto)│
- │Watch │ 1 │1 (ditto)│
- │Note-book │ 1 │1 (ditto)│
- │Water-bottle │ 1 │ 1 │
- │Haversack, with knife, fork, and cup │ 1 │ 1 │
- │Map, linen (if available) │ 1 │ 1 (N.C.O. │
- │ │ │ only) │
- │First field dressing (in special pocket) │ 1 │ 1 │
- │Descriptive card (ditto) │ — │ 1 │
- │Emergency ration (if available) │ 1 │ 1 │
- │Pocket dressing-case │ 1 (Medical │ — │
- │ │ Officer │ │
- │ │ only) │ │
- │ │ │ │
- │ _Carried in Kit_ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │
- │Khaki helmet cover, spare │ 1 │ 1 │
- │Khaki drill coat │ 1 │ 1 │
- │Khaki serge coat │ 1 │ 1 │
- │Khaki trousers, serge │ 1 │ 1 │
- │ ” ” drill │ 1 │ 1 │
- │Pantaloons, Bedford cord │ 1 │ 1 │
- │Field service cap │ 1 │ 1 │
- │Walking boots (and spare laces) │ 1 │ 1 │
- │Putties, khaki pair │ 1 │ 1 │
- │Drawers │ 2 │ 1 │
- │Flannel shirts │ 2 │ 1 │
- │Socks, woollen pairs │ 3 │ 1 │
- │Vests │ 2 │ 1 │
- │Flannel belt │ 1 │ 1 │
- │Pocket-handkerchiefs │ 5 │ 2 │
- │Housewife │ 1 │ 1 │
- │Holdall │ 1 │ 1 │
- │Towels │ 2 │ 2 │
- │Blankets │ 2 │ 2 │
- │Wolseley valise │ 1 │ — │
- │Waterproof sheet │ 1 │ 1 │
- │Basin, canvas │ 1 │ — │
- │Dubbing tin │ 1 │ 1 │
- │Small book │ — │ 1 │
- │Diary │ 1 │ — │
- │Field Service Departmental Code, Medical │ 1 (Medical │ │
- │ │ Officer │ │
- │ │ only) │ │
- │Writing-case │ 1 │ — │
- │Lantern │ 1 │ — │
- │Cardigan jacket │ 1 │ 1 │
- │Warm coat │ 1 │ 1 │
- │Mittens pair │ 1 │ 1 │
- │Balaclava cap │ 1 │ 1 │
- │Cooking utensils set │ 1 │ — │
- │Enamelled tin plates, cups, &c. set │ 1 │ 1 │
- │Logline for packing, 15 feet │ — │ 1 │
- └──────────────────────────────────────────┴────────────┴────────────┘
-
-
- _Artificers’ Tools and Stores (to be supplied free by
- Government)_
-
- Armourer’s tools and stores 80 lb.
-
- Saddler’s tools and stores 160 ”
-
- Materials for repairs of accoutrements, saddlery, 160 ”
- and line gear
-
- Shoeing iron and charcoal 160 ”
-
- Reserve of shoes with nails 160 ”
-
- _Miscellaneous Stores (to be supplied free by Government)_
-
- Handcuffs 2 pairs
-
- Steelyards, with weights, complete 1 set
-
- Scales, weights, with small stores, &c. 1
-
- Light forges, Mark IV., pack saddle, I.P. 2
-
- _Veterinary Stores (to be supplied free by Government)_
-
- Universal field veterinary chests 2
-
- Veterinary wallets 2
-
- _Medical Stores (to be supplied free by Government)_
-
- Medical field panniers 1 pair
-
- Field medical companion 1
-
- ” surgical haversack 1
-
- ” ” Cavalry bag 1
-
- ” stretchers 2
-
- Blanket stretchers 4
-
-
- _Quartermaster’s Stores (to be supplied on payment by
- Government if required)._
-
- Drawers, cotton 25 pairs
-
- Coats, khaki serge 25
-
- Trousers, serge, khaki 25 pairs
-
- ” drill ” 25 ”
-
- Boots, ankle 25 ”
-
- Socks, woollen 25 ”
-
- Shirts, flannel 25
-
- Caps, forage 10
-
- Buttons, coat, small 6 doz.
-
- ” iron, trousers 2 gross
-
- Cloth, serge, khaki 20 yds.
-
- Chin, strapers, helmet, leather 10
-
- Thread, black and coloured 5 lb.
-
- ” khaki 4 ”
-
- Dubbing
- Soap, washing 30 ”
-
- Scissors, tailor’s, 9” 1 pair
-
- Oil, Rangoon (1 gallon per company) 2 cans
-
- _Shoemakers’ Tools and Stores (to be supplied free by
- Government)_
-
- Soles, half pairs 50
-
- Lifts ” ” 50
-
- Tips ” ” 50
-
- Nails, tip 1 lb.
-
- Rivets 7 ”
-
- Feet, iron, 9” 2
-
- Leather, spare
- Hemp balls, 24-lb. 1
-
- Tools, shoemakers’ 10
-
- _Entrenching Tools (to be supplied free by Government)_
-
- Shovels, light 20
-
- Pickaxes, ” 20
-
- Felling axes 8
-
- Bill-hooks 16
-
- Hooks, reaping 32
-
- Bags, entrenching tool 2 pairs
-
- Carried on one horse per company.
-
- _Maxim Equipment_
-
- One Maxim gun. One tripod mounting, &c.
-
- _Camp Equipment (to be supplied under regimental
- arrangements)_
-
- Officers, 80-lb. tent each. Non-commissioned officers and men,
- 8 per 80-lb. G.S. tent. Office, 80-lb. tent. Surgery, 80-lb.
- tent. Quarter-guard, 80-lb. tent. Rearguard, 240-lb. tent.
-
-
- _Baggage._
-
- Officers, 80 lb. each. Non-commissioned officers and men, 40
- lb. each.
-
-
- _Saddlery and Line Gear (to be supplied free by Government)_
- _For each Horse_
-
- One hay-net. │One set head and heel ropes.
- One nosebag, canvas. │One set heel-pegs.
- One watering-bridle. │One jhool.
- One horse-brush. │One blanket.
- One curry-comb. │One set spare shoes with nails.
- One knee-halter. │One horse rubber.
- One canvas water-bucket. │One waterproof harness wrapper.
- One numnah. │Water buckets, one to four horses.
- One eye-fringe. │Sponges, one to ten horses.
- One chagul. │Clipping machines, one to ten horses.
- One headstall. │Hoof-pickers, one to five horses.
-
- _Miscellaneous_
-
- Cooking utensils, five sets per company 10 sets
- Tables, office, 14 lb. each 2
- Chairs ” 4 lb. each 2
- Yakdans, office. Weight full 80 lb. each 1 pair
-
- _Reserve Saddlery (to be supplied free by Government)_
-
- Saddle. │Horse brush. │Headstall.
- Numnah. │Curry-comb. │Head-ropes.
- Bridle. │Knee-halter. │Heel-pegs.
- Reins. │Canvas water-bucket.│Jhool.
- Bit, complete. │Eye-fringe. │Blanket.
- Nosebags, canvas. │Chaguls. │
- Watering bridle. │ │
-
-Pay as for British Cavalry of the Line (_vide_ Article 780, Royal
-Warrant for Pay and Promotion):
-
- ┌────────────────────────────────────┬─────────────────┐
- │Rank │ Per day │
- │ │ _£._ _s._ _d._│
- │Lieutenant-Colonel │ 1 1 6│
- │Major │ 15 0│
- │Captain │ 13 0│
- │Lieutenant │ 7 8│
- │Second-Lieutenant │ 6 8│
- │Adjutant (and Quartermaster) │ 5 0[D]│
- │Quartermaster-Sergeant │ 4 4│
- │Company Sergeant-Major │ 4 4│
- │Company Quartermaster-Sergeant │ 3 4│
- │Sergeant │ 2 8│
- │Farrier Sergeant │ 2 10│
- │Shoeing Smith │ 1 8│
- │Saddler │ 1 9½│
- │Bugler │ 1 4│
- │Corporal (if paid as Lance-Sergeant)│ 2 4│
- │Corporal │ 2 0│
- │Private (appointed Lance-Corporal) │ 1 6│
- │Private │ 1 2│
- └────────────────────────────────────┴─────────────────┘
-
-Footnote D:
-
- In addition to pay of rank.
-
-
- APPENDIX III
- THE ADJUTANT’S NOTE-BOOK
-
-
-Captain and Adjutant Taylor contributes the following notes and
-suggestions for consideration:
-
- There were a certain number of points which struck me very forcibly
- during the campaign, and I should like to give them for what they are
- worth. There may be certain conditions to be considered, the
- importance of which outweighs all others, so that the following notes
- must be regarded only as an attempt to carry out the duty which every
- man owes to his profession, by showing things in the light in which he
- saw them. Higher authorities, busy about big affairs, fail sometimes
- to notice the important details with which juniors are brought in
- daily contact.
-
- _Spare Horses._—The corps started from India with one horse per man
- and the necessary complement of transport animals. There were a few
- casualties on the journey, which were replaced at Cape Town, and the
- corps began work in good condition, but with no spare animals. The
- supposition apparently is that men fall out just as fast as the
- horses. This did not prove correct in South Africa, and it is hard to
- believe that it would be so elsewhere provided the work required was
- of an active mounted kind. Therefore true economy would seem to
- dictate the provision of spare horses. Very soon with us a few horses
- got slight sore backs, but as every mounted man available was required
- it was found impossible to ease these horses; the inevitable result
- being that after a few days they were unfit for work. Consequently a
- similar number of men had to be taken from the fighting strength and
- their saddles put into the carts. As the work continued, more horses
- gave out, and more loads were put into the carts. Hence, while the
- transport animals grew weaker their loads grew heavier. To take
- figures. The nominal strength of the mounted portion of the corps was
- 250 men; actually the largest number we ever had in action was 185.
- The average in the fighting line was under 150; of the remainder,
- fifty were short on account of sickness and casualties, and fifty on
- account of horses short. Had we had fifty spare horses, every
- available man could have been mounted. As a matter of fact, thirty
- spare horses would probably have sufficed, as, on the principle of ‘a
- stitch in time,’ the timely ‘easing’ of trivial cases—such as a slight
- sore back or temporary indisposition—would have saved many a horse’s
- usefulness or life. The further you go, the more necessary such
- reliefs become. The exact number of spare horses depends upon the
- class of work required. To my mind, this is one of the lessons we
- should learn from the Boers, who generally had two horses per man, and
- often five. These spare horses can conveniently march with the
- veterinary hospital and be taken care of by a small ‘native’ staff.
- Working on this principle, Lumsden’s Horse kept every man mounted
- during two months’ ceaseless trek, and the horses were practically all
- fit and well at the end of it. On the other system each man used up
- seven horses in as many months. To put it in brief. A corps of 250 men
- and 250 horses, with their baggage, would, at the end of a week’s hard
- marching and fighting, be less efficient than a corps of 200 men with
- 250 horses, in that they would have no more mounted men in the field,
- while their transport would have to carry food and kit for the extra
- fifty men, in addition to the fifty saddles of the dismounted men,
- weighing some five stones each, and also probably the fifty dismounted
- men themselves.
-
- The same principles affect the question of the number of baggage
- animals.
-
- _Method of Carrying Ammunition._—Our equipment for ammunition to be
- carried by the man took the shape of a belt with two cross braces. On
- the former were leather pouches to hold packets of cartridges, and on
- the latter bandolier attachments to take single cartridges. The
- disadvantages were many. (1) It necessitated the man carrying a heavy
- weight constantly on his body or else hiding packets of ammunition in
- his holsters, whence they were difficult to extract and where he often
- left them in the hurry of a dismount. (2) The pouches were a great
- discomfort to the men when lying down to snatch much-needed rest in
- the many short intervals at their disposal. (3) The whole weight of
- the ammunition came on to the saddle when the man was mounted, and
- went some way towards causing sore backs. (4) Marching on foot with
- this load of ammunition was so irksome that it soon tired the soldier
- and made him urge and take every possible excuse for remaining
- mounted.
-
- _The proposed remedy_ is to give every man two bandoliers holding
- fifty rounds each and a bayonet-belt to take fifty rounds. The
- bandoliers to be habitually buckled round the horse’s neck, like
- collars. When going into action the man can transfer one or both
- bandoliers to his own shoulders even without dismounting. Should he
- have under-estimated the amount of ammunition required, and have left
- one or both of these bandoliers on his horse, they can be sent for and
- found with no difficulty, the distribution being also very simple.
- Taking the weight of this ammunition off the saddle helps to save sore
- back. The man will walk unencumbered, and consequently will walk more
- readily, and can do so for longer distances, besides being in a better
- state for duties when he gets to camp. On a similar principle the
- rifle should not be carried by the soldier when marching dismounted,
- as it is better to keep his weight, say eleven stone, off the horse’s
- back as long as possible, and it will be longer if you put the
- rifle-weight, seven pounds, on to the horse and not on to the man.
-
- _Spare Ammunition._—Anything in excess of this 150 rounds per man
- should be, and was, carried on a led mule or horse, who could keep up
- with the mounted men.
-
- _Picketing Gear_ caused us much trouble, as every kind of ground
- entailed a different stamp of peg—_e.g._, a small iron peg did not
- hold in sandy soil, wooden ones broke in rocky ground, while the
- bundle of rope and pegs was an extra weight on the horse, and caused
- the saddle to roll besides making the man less handy at getting on and
- off his horse. The remedy was to have no heel-ropes or pegs carried on
- the saddle horse, and to substitute three big iron pegs with fifty
- yards of ‘line rope’ and a heavy mallet to every fifty men, carried on
- a pack-animal with the ammunition mules. On arrival in camp these pegs
- were driven in, the line rope stretched between them, and the horses
- tied to each side of it by their head-ropes: heel-ropes were not found
- necessary. This worked perfectly except on detached duties, when
- perhaps ten men were separated for some ‘post,’ when they had to
- ‘ring’ their horses—i.e., tie them together by their head-ropes in a
- circle, heads inwards. They are unable to lie down in comfort, which
- is of course a weak point, but it does not often happen.
-
- _Marching._—When the object to be attained was to cover as much ground
- as possible it was found best to trot long stages, with walking
- intervals between, when the men were made to dismount and lead. The
- man should never be on his horse except when going faster than a walk.
- It was found better to trot a good deal than to walk and lead even,
- because the time saved by the faster pace gave the men and horses time
- for an appreciable rest and for food while they were ‘off-saddled,’
- which should always be done when the enemy’s movements in any way
- admit of it.
-
- _Shoeing._—Each horse, in marching order, is supposed to carry one
- complete set of shoes. If every man were trained to see constantly
- that his horse’s shoes were on firm, a shoe ought seldom to be lost.
- If a farrier is present, and the man has the necessary nails, a
- doubtful or loose nail can be drawn and replaced, hence we made the
- rule that the men should not carry spare shoes, but should carry
- nails, and we had the farriers with us. Occasionally a horse lost a
- shoe when on detached duty, but only then; and, after all, if the
- rider is careful, no serious damage should result. In any case, it is
- not worth while for every horse to carry a complete set of shoes
- always, on the chance of one horse requiring one shoe occasionally.
-
- _The Usefulness of Followers_ may be gathered to a certain extent from
- the fact that none of the officers had chargers killed by anything but
- bullets. Every officer had an Indian syce, and when a horse had had a
- hard time it was found that one day marching with the syce restored
- him. The follower has nothing to think about except to feed the horse
- when he can, and it is wonderful what good one hour in a field of
- green wheat or on a good bit of grass does for a tired and underfed
- animal; besides, the follower often chances on a bundle or two of
- oat-straw or some such luxury, and in any case the horse has plenty of
- time for grazing during the delays of the march. The men latterly
- employed Kaffir boys to a considerable extent, paying them wages out
- of their own pockets. These Kaffirs received no rations, living on
- their masters’ leavings and occasional steaks out of dead horses.
- Taking all considerations together, it would appear to be a saving to
- use the soldier as much as possible for fighting purposes _only_, and
- to use native followers for all work that does not entail fighting.
- Cooks and syces, even in small numbers, would to a great extent ease
- the fighting man of arduous labour which the follower could do just as
- well. We should have fewer cases of sickness from want of rest and
- lack of time to cook properly if a few native cooks accompanied each
- regiment. And a few syces might save the lives of many horses that
- have to be neglected by the men when, after a long march and perhaps a
- fight, they are ordered out on picket directly they arrive in camp.
- The native is cheaper to feed and more docile to manage, not minding
- things which Tommy hates—such as cutting grass, for instance. His food
- is simple, and he can eat it very comfortably going along the road, so
- that when he gets into camp he is quite fit to go to work. I was told
- by an officer of the Indian Transport train, who was with General
- Buller’s force in Natal, that he had taken his corps with his native
- followers right through to Belfast, and landed his animals there
- without a single casualty, and not only well, but fat. He attributed
- it solely to the fact that the servants understood their work and
- would unload without a murmur a dozen times a day, and cut a heap of
- grass for every animal when they got to camp. Why not employ the
- cheaper labourer, and save the dearer for work that suits him better
- and which the follower cannot do? The answer, I am aware, is that an
- armed transport man can help to defend the convoy. This is of course
- true to a limited extent. Our transport men never had a chance of
- firing a shot, and I think few had. All the ox-waggons and
- mule-waggons were driven by Kaffirs, on the same grounds as advocated,
- so why not apply the reasoning to other cases? The argument in favour
- of the armed transport reminds one of the sportsman who goes out armed
- with a gun, rifle, and pig-spear, ready for all emergencies, but never
- has the right weapon in his hand when the game springs up. The spare
- horse-shoes are another case of the same thing, and there are many
- others. It is impossible to provide for every contingency.
-
- _Rations._—In a general way the men’s rations were very good, but one
- or two improvements suggest themselves. First, everyone who has tried
- it knows that when spirits are not available the body acquires a great
- craving for sugar, which is no doubt recognised, and hence the jam
- issue. Chocolate is cheap, by which I mean light to carry, and is
- enormously appreciated; but more important than anything appear to be
- the tea, coffee, or cocoa rations, because, in a great measure, on the
- plentifulness of these depends the amount or otherwise of many
- diseases, notably enteric. No man will boil water and let it cool
- simply because he knows it’s a healthy thing to do, but he will boil
- it to have a good drink of hot tea. If you give him enough, he will
- have his drink before he goes to bed, another in the morning, and he
- will also fill his water-bottle with it. Half an ounce per man will
- accomplish this. I believe the amount allowed per man in South Africa
- was ⅟16 oz. By the time this had been distributed in the dark, the
- ration became so small that half-a-dozen men used to toss for the lot,
- in the hope that one at least would get a good drink. Tea, moreover,
- is very light. An ox-waggon load is 4,000 lbs., which is 128,000
- rations of ½ oz. each; which means that 4,000 men could be given ½ oz.
- of tea daily for a month, at the cost of one ox-waggon added to the
- convoy. On our trek from Machadodorp to Pretoria, we carried supplies
- for about 4,000 men for about a month, and the convoy was many _miles_
- long, and I do not think that one ox-waggon added thereto would have
- given any trouble.
-
- _Firing off Horseback._—The value of this practice on occasions is
- another of the lessons we might learn from the Boers. I do not pretend
- that the shooting is accurate, yet it has a great moral advantage in
- certain circumstances. Imagine yourself on a big rolling veldt doing
- rearguard. The slopes are easy, and the ridges about 1,000 yards from
- crest to crest. You hold one and the enemy the next. In order to keep
- your horses out of fire they must be 200 yards or so away. All is well
- till you begin to retire, but on rising you at once become visible to
- the Boer, who first of all shoots at you, and then follows you up at a
- gallop to have a shot at you before you can gain the next ridge. You
- retire in a hurry, run the risk of being shot, and have the
- demoralising feeling that the enemy is gaining rapidly on you and will
- ‘get at you’ before you gain the next ridge. _But_ leave near the
- ridge a few mounted men, place them back so far that while they can
- see the Boer’s ridge, the enemy can only possibly see their heads and
- shoulders, and order your dismounted men to retire, crawling at first,
- then stooping, and finally rising. They do this leisurely, as they can
- see the mounted sentinels watching and they are reassured. These
- sentinels have no fear, for they can at any time retire at a gallop,
- while the enemy, hearing the firing, do not like advancing on an
- unknown number. During the march from Machadodorp to Pretoria, this
- practice enabled us to do in perfect comfort a rearguard duty which
- was considered by all other corps very ‘nasty.’
-
- _Suggestions with regard to raising Mounted Volunteer Corps in the
- future._—Besides the actual experiences of the fighting in South
- Africa, there were one or two points in connection with the raising of
- the corps itself, which came to my special notice in the course of my
- duties as Adjutant and Quartermaster, the knowledge of which would, I
- think, facilitate matters in the event of anyone raising another
- Volunteer corps in India for active service.
-
- In my opinion the most important point of all is to make certain that
- secrecy is maintained. Before any steps are taken for enrolling men,
- the Adjutant and other officers from the Regular Army should be
- selected and apportioned their work in connection with the raising of
- the corps. The ‘Regular’ N.C.O.s should be chosen, and the official
- scheme drawn up. The first duty falls on the ‘office,’ and it should
- be properly organised in every detail. Three or four rooms,
- Quartermaster’s store accommodation, a shorthand writer, at least
- three or four competent clerks, as well as mounted orderlies, are
- necessary. A camp pitched complete in every detail should be ready to
- receive the men, especial attention being paid to the provision of a
- temporary mess for the men as well as ‘dry’ and ‘wet’ canteens, and of
- a native food-shop for followers. This can all be done
- ‘confidentially.’ When the arrangements are complete, the intention to
- raise the corps and the terms may be made public.
-
- If the fact of the raising of the corps had not leaked out, Government
- would of course have made all the above suggested arrangements, and
- things would have gone smoothly from the outset. As it was, every
- Government official assisted Colonel Lumsden to his utmost power. As a
- sample of this I may mention that, at their own request, the one
- squadron of the 14th Bengal Lancers at Alipur supplied eight mounted
- orderlies daily for six weeks, rendering invaluable assistance in
- carrying letters. This same squadron marked out the camp for us, and
- lent their _bunniahs’_ (grain-sellers’) shops for the use of the swarm
- of servants who came in attendance on the Volunteers. Another
- difficulty which it would be good to avoid, if possible, was that
- under existing regulations it was found to be impossible to attest the
- men until the day before embarkation, so that for some weeks they were
- in camp and being trained without being under military law. Their good
- feeling alone preserved discipline.
-
- _Regulars._—A certain number of men who were specialists in various
- lines, such as saddlers, farriers, signallers, and shoeing-smiths,
- together with a sprinkling of non-commissioned officers, were lent to
- the corps from the Regular Army, and they were of the greatest use to
- us. It is essential that the selection of these be made with great
- care. There is little doubt that the gentleman Volunteer is not always
- easy to get on with, so that the Regular should be a man of character
- and tact. When called upon for men, Commanding Officers send fully
- qualified men, but have a tendency to ‘give a man a chance’ in novel
- circumstances. Unless a Regular is a tactful, good fellow, he is
- unlikely to be of much use with Volunteers.
-
- _Selection of Horses._—As far as we could learn from our experience in
- South Africa, the three main points in the selection of a horse are:
- (1) hardiness, (2) true action, (3) ‘good doing’; while for
- convenience in mounting and dismounting he should not be over fifteen
- hands high. Comparative slowness, light legs, and slight unsteadiness
- do not seem to matter, but he must be hardy, he must be clear of any
- suspicion whatever of brushing, and he must be the sort likely to
- ‘live on sticks and stones.’ The work is all very slow, but it is
- continuous. There were practically no cases of lameness from sprains,
- or indeed of anything except ‘brushing,’ and after a month’s work, the
- horse which could go the furthest and fastest was the one that kept
- the best condition. One of the horses that did the best work in the
- corps was a little Boer pony of Private Graham’s, which was only about
- twelve hands high. As transport animals, our little ‘Bhootia’ ponies
- did most excellently, and were better than mules, in that while they
- were quite as hardy, they were heavier and more game.
-
- _Shipping Horses._—At Calcutta the quays are only a few feet above the
- water-level, and as the horses all have to be put on the upper and
- main decks, the custom is to ‘sling’ them on board by means of cranes
- and tackle attached to belly-bands. I saw a whole ship being laden
- with horses in this way. The operation took one entire day and cost
- five rupees per horse. One horse at least was dropped and had to be
- destroyed, a large proportion suffered injuries, and all were
- terrified. On meeting the officer in charge afterwards, I learnt that
- hardly any of the horses would feed at all for a day at least. For us
- the authorities erected a zigzag gangway by the aid of which 200
- horses were put on board without accident in one hour and a half.
- Moreover, the gangway could not have cost 100_l_. Communication
- gangways between the decks were also fitted up, thus enabling us to
- transfer horses from one deck to another, and these proved very
- valuable in dealing with sick cases during the voyage.
-
- _Horse Standings._—Once on the ship each horse had a stall in a row,
- each stall being just big enough for a horse to stand in, and
- surrounded by a four-foot rail. On the floor-boards were fixed four
- strong battens, two inches square in cross section, at intervals of
- eighteen inches. The horse’s fore feet fell naturally on to the first
- batten and his hind feet on to the last. He was thus forced to stand
- always in a constrained position. For my own horses I had the battens
- otherwise distributed, putting one six inches from either end and one
- in the middle. The fore feet came naturally behind the first batten
- and the hind feet before the rear one, while the middle one did not
- interfere with the horse’s position, and was only used by the horse
- when necessitated by bad weather. It was, I think, a great
- improvement. This was not my idea, but was what the Australian horse
- ‘shippers’ recommend and use.
-
- _Shoes._—The orders in the Service are that all horses go on board
- shod, which is contrary to the custom of the big Australian shipping
- firms, who say that shod horses slip up when it is rough. We had no
- rough weather, and so could not prove this, but owing to the shoe
- keeping the foot off the constantly damp boards, the feet of our
- horses were, on arrival, in infinitely better condition than those of
- the horses brought over by Australian ‘shippers’ to India.
-
- _Exercising Horses on Board Ship._—This is, I learn, never done, but
- we gave the idea a trial, and it turned out to be quite practicable.
- Our ship was a very small one, and we had some difficulty about space
- for exercise ground. However, we found three places in different parts
- of the ship where we could get a small circle. Matting was put down,
- to prevent slipping, and it was found that on each of these ten horses
- could be led at a time, one behind the other. In this manner we
- managed to give every horse half an hour a day of walking exercise.
- While these ten horses were out, the next ten had twice as much room
- to stand in, which enabled the men to give them half-an-hour’s
- grooming. It was very noticeable how the legs ‘fined’ with the
- exercise, and it must have been a great relief to the horse. Our
- horses landed in very good condition, and, except for being soft, they
- were fit to go to work at once. It is obviously only possible to
- exercise horses like this when you have a large number of hands as we
- had.
-
-
- APPENDIX IV
-
- _LIST OF OFFICERS, N.C.O.S, AND MEN WHO HAVE BEEN
- AWARDED DECORATIONS, COMMISSIONS, OR CIVIL
- APPOINTMENTS_
-
- DECORATIONS
-
- Colonel D.M. Lumsden, Assam Valley Light C.B.
- Horse
-
- Major H. Chamney, Surma Valley Light C.M.G.
- Horse
-
- Captain J.B. Rutherfoord, Behar Light D.S.O.
- Horse
-
- Lieutenant H.O. Pugh, Calcutta Light D.S.O.
- Horse
-
- CIVIL EMPLOYMENT
-
- Major H. Chamney District Commissioner, Potchefstroom
-
- Lieutenant H.O. Pugh Assistant District Commissioner,
- Heilbron
-
- Trooper C.G. Huddleston Assistant District Commissioner,
- Kroonstad
-
- MILITARY AND CIVIL APPOINTMENTS
-
- Driver P.W. Anderson Johannesburg Police
- Trooper J.D.L. Arathoon Gazetted to 3rd Dragoon Guards
- (resigned);
- returned to Calcutta
- Lance-Corporal E.J. Ballard Johannesburg Police
- Driver P.W. Banks Chief Warder, Barberton Gaol
- Corporal F.S. Montagu-Bates East Surrey Regiment
- (Commission)[E]
- Trooper L.H. Bell Johannesburg Police
- ” J.S. Biscoe 2nd Batt. W.I. Regiment
- (Commission)[E]
- ” H.F. Blair Northumberland Fusiliers
- (Commission)
- ” K. Boileau Johannesburg Police
- Driver L.H. Bradford Johannesburg Police
- ” J. Braine S.A. Constabulary
- Trooper A.H. Buskin Johannesburg Police
- Sergeant H.A. Campbell Imperial Yeomanry (Commission)
- Transport-Corpl. H.A. Campbell Johannesburg Police
- Trooper C.D.V. Cary-Barnard Wiltshire Regiment (Commission)[E]
- ” E.S. Chapman Johannesburg Police
- Corporal E.A. Chartres Royal Irish Fusiliers Medical
- Officer (Commission)
- Trooper R.G. Collins W.I. Regiment (Commission)
- Lance-Corporal S.W. Cullen S.A. Constabulary
- Driver O.E. Fitzgerald Johannesburg Police
- Trooper C.W. Fletcher Army Service Corps (Commission)[E]
- ” C.A. Forbes Re-enlisted in S.A. corps (not
- known)
- ” A.H. Francis Scottish Horse (re-enlisted
- November)
- ” J.A. Fraser W.I. Regiment (Commission)[E]
- Veterinary-Sergeant G. Goodliffe Johannesburg Police
- Driver R.A. Grenville Johannesburg Police
- ” W.E. Harris Johannesburg Police
- Trooper W.H. Holme Stated to be gazetted to Yeomanry
- (Commission)
- ” J.D.W. Holmes Johannesburg Police
- ” S.L. Innes Stated to be gazetted to Yeomanry
- ” B.R. Lloyd-Jones Johannesburg Police
- Quartermaster-Sergt. W.D. Jones Army Service Corps (Commission)[E]
- Driver S.H. Kearsey Johannesburg Police
- Trooper H.R. Kelly Johannesburg Police
- ” F.W.C. Lawrie Johannesburg Police
- ” E.I. Lockhart Johannesburg Police
- ” C.H. McMinn Gazetted to a Colonial corps
- (December 1900)
- ” C.B.H. Mansfield 19th Hussars (Commission)[E]
- Reg. Sgt.-Maj. C.M.C. Marsham S.A. Constabulary (Commission)
- Driver A. Martin Scottish Horse, South Africa
- Transport-Corporal A. Morris Re-enlisted in Yeomanry at
- Aldershot
- Trooper T.B. Nicholson W.I. Regiment (Commission)[E]
- ” G.D. Nicolay Johannesburg Police
- ” A.E. Norton W.I. Regiment (Commission)[E]
- ” G.W. Palmer W.I. Regiment (Commission)[E]
- ” P. Partridge Northampton Regiment
- (Commission)[E]
- ” J.G. Petersen Johannesburg Police
- Driver P.W. Pryce Scottish Horse
- Trooper H.J. Renny Johannesburg Police
- ” D.C. Percy Smith Middlesex Regiment (Commission)[E]
- ” R.J. Smith Johannesburg Police
- ” G.P.O. Springfield 3rd Dragoon Guards (Commission)[E]
- ” B.C.A. Steuart Royal Highlanders (Black Watch)
- (Commission)[E]
- ” P. Strahan South Staffordshire Regiment
- (Commission)[E]
- ” C.F. Walton Johannesburg Police
- Driver G.E. Wilkinson Brabant’s Horse
- Trooper L.G. Williams North Staffordshire Regiment
- (Commission)[E]
- ” A.N. Woods Royal Garrison Artillery
- (Commission)[E]
- ” A.P. Woollright Imperial Military Railway, Medical
- Officer
- (Commission)
- ” F.W. Wright Army Service Corps (Commission)
- ” H.S.N. Wright Army Service Corps (Commission)
-
-Footnote E:
-
- Verified by the Army list.
-
-
- APPENDIX V
- _HONOURS AND PROMOTIONS_
-
-Following are the recommendations made by Lieutenant-Colonel Lumsden,
-late commanding Lumsden’s Horse, in bringing the names of the
-undermentioned officers and men to the favourable notice of
-Field-Marshal Lord Roberts, the Commander-in-Chief, as having done
-special and meritorious work during the service of his corps in South
-Africa. The promotions or honours given subsequently are placed within
-parentheses.
-
-Previous to the date of these recommendations, Major Chamney had been
-gazetted a Companion of St. Michael and St. George, while Captain
-Rutherfoord and Lieutenant Pugh had received the decoration of the
-Distinguished Service Order.
-
-
- FOR D.S.O.
-
-CAPTAIN N.C. TAYLOR, _14th Bengal Lancers_.
-
-This gentleman filled the post of adjutant (difficult in a corps like
-mine) with great judgment, and fulfilled his arduous duties to my entire
-satisfaction. He behaved splendidly under fire on many trying occasions,
-displayed great coolness and self-reliance, and proved himself a dashing
-and able leader, and was of much service to me throughout the campaign.
-(Brevet Major.)
-
-CAPTAIN L.H. NOBLETT, _Royal Irish Rifles_.
-
-In command of B Company Lumsden’s Horse. I cannot speak too highly of
-this gentleman as a leader of Mounted Infantry. His services to me
-from the raising of the corps until its disbandment were
-invaluable—clear-headed and cool in any circumstances; and the way he
-handled his men in action won their unbounded confidence and mine. To
-raise or lead a corps of Mounted Infantry I know no one I would sooner
-select. (Brevet Major.)
-
-CAPTAIN J.H.B. BERESFORD, _3rd Sikhs_.
-
-Commanded A Company Lumsden’s Horse. This gentleman took immense trouble
-and interest in his company from start to finish, displaying much tact
-in handling his men, with whom he was a great favourite. As a soldier I
-can only say his long and honourable record added herewith speaks for
-itself. (Brevet Major.)
-
- _Previous War Services_
-
- Burmese Expedition, 1886-7 Medal with clasp.
- Hazara ” 1888 Clasp.
- Miranzai ” 1891 —
- Hazara ” 1891 Clasp.
- Waziristan ” 1894-5. Action at Wana Clasp.
-
-North-West Frontier of India, 1897-8. Operations on the Samana and in
-the Kurram Valley during August and September 1897. Medal with two
-clasps.
-
-Tirah, 1897-8. Action on Dargai and capture of the Sampagha Pass.
-Reconnaissance for the Saran Sar operations against the Khan Khel
-Chamkanis. Operations in the Bazar Valley, December 25 to 30, 1897.
-Clasp.
-
- FOR MENTION
-
- OFFICERS
-
-CAPTAIN B.W. HOLMES, _East India Railway Volunteers_.
-
-This officer was in command of the Maxim-gun contingent sent by the East
-India Railway. He did excellent service with his Maxim gun, on many
-occasions displaying much coolness, especially in the action at the Zand
-River, when, by his accurate fire, he dislodged the enemy from Kopje
-Allien. In fact, throughout the campaign he and his Maxim-gun contingent
-were a most useful and reliable addition to my corps. (Mention in
-despatches.)
-
-CAPTAIN F. CLIFFORD.
-
-Commanded the contingent from the Coorg and Mysore Volunteer Rifles.
-This gentleman did good service on many occasions, and had some very
-trying duties to perform, especially while scouting on two occasions in
-the Crocodile Valley in July, while we were stationed at Irene, as well
-as on another occasion when his detachment was located at Springs.
-(Mention in despatches.)
-
-LIEUTENANT C.E. CRANE.
-
-Was badly wounded and taken prisoner at Houtnek on April 30. He behaved
-splendidly on that day in a very difficult position and in trying
-circumstances. He rejoined at Pretoria, and went through the remainder
-of the campaign with us with great credit to himself.
-
-If possible I should like this gentleman to receive the D.S.O. (Mention
-in despatches.)
-
-CAPTAIN C.L. SIDEY, _from the Surma Valley Light Horse Volunteers_.
-
-This officer did _very_ good and consistent work throughout the
-campaign. Was most popular with his men, and was never off a single
-march during our stay in South Africa. (Mention in despatches.)
-
-SURGEON-CAPTAIN S.A. POWELL, M.D., _Surma Valley Light Horse
-Volunteers_.
-
-This gentleman carried out his duties on many occasions under much
-personal danger and difficulty, especially in assisting to carry Major
-Showers when wounded into a place of safety under heavy fire. On June 4,
-near Pretoria, as well as on the day prior to entering Johannesburg, he
-also displayed much coolness in attending to some cavalrymen who were
-wounded, also under fire. I consider him fully deserving of honourable
-mention. (Mention in despatches.)
-
- RECOMMENDED FOR VICTORIA CROSS
-
-Trooper J.A. Graham—as per my letter attached. I have wired to India for
-Trooper Caley’s statement of the case.
-
-The above happened in the end of July, when we were stationed at Irene.
-Captain Clifford reported the matter to me on the evening of the event.
-
-I consider Trooper Graham behaved with great gallantry, risking his life
-to endeavour to save that of Trooper Cayley, and, with exemplary
-coolness, bringing in Cayley’s rifle as well as capturing and bringing
-in under a heavy fire a horse which would otherwise have fallen into the
-hands of the enemy.
-
-I strongly recommend him for the Victoria Cross. (Distinguished Conduct
-Medal.)
-
- RECOMMENDED FOR DISTINGUISHED CONDUCT MEDALS
-
- 1. Corporal Percy Jones }
- 2. Trooper P.C. Preston } (Distinguished
- 3. ” H.N. Betts } Conduct Medal.)
- 4. ” W.E. Dexter }
- 5. Regimental Serg.-Major C.M.C. Marsham }
- 6. Corporal G. Peddie (Mention in despatches.)
-
-The men I have recommended for this decoration behaved splendidly
-throughout the campaign, and did many individual plucky actions. They
-were the pick of my scouts, and were always selected when any difficult
-or dangerous duty had to be performed.
-
- FOR HONOURABLE MENTION
-
- 1. Corporal J. Graves }
- 2. Sergeant D.S. Fraser }
- 3. ” E.R. Dale } (Mention in despatches.)
- 4. Trooper H.R. Parks }
- 5. Sergeant G. Llewhellin }
- 6. Corporal C.E. Turner }
-
-In my recommendations for honourable mention I feel I must particularise
-Corporal Graves and Sergeant Fraser, of the Bank of Bengal. They
-rendered me invaluable service as orderly-room clerk and paymaster
-respectively, besides rendering excellent service in the field. To carry
-out efficiently both duties was no light measure, and on our arrival at
-Cape Town I was complimented by the Pay Department as the only corps
-which had come down with its pay-sheets up to date, all credit for which
-is due to the above-named gentlemen.
-
-The remaining four named have all done meritorious work throughout the
-campaign, and are extremely deserving of the honour I am soliciting for
-them.
-
-In a corps like mine, where all did so well, I have found it a most
-difficult and invidious duty in making my selections.
-
-
- REGULAR NON-COMMISSIONED OFFICERS
-
-The following non-commissioned officers lent from the Regulars did
-excellent work with me throughout the campaign, and I have much pleasure
-in mentioning them:—
-
-1. SERGEANT HEWITT, of the Royal Irish Rifles, acted as Company
-Sergeant-Major to B Company until November 1900, when he was made
-Regimental Sergeant-Major, in succession to Sergeant-Major Marsham, who
-then vacated the post for a commission in the South African
-Constabulary. He had also acted temporarily as Regimental Sergeant-Major
-from May 1 to September 1. He showed much tact throughout, and was of
-the greatest possible assistance to the Adjutant; and I can strongly
-recommend him for any similar appointment. He was most popular with all
-members of the corps from the raising of the same to its disbandment.
-
-2. STAFF-SERGEANT STEPHENS, of the Indian Transport, was with the corps
-throughout the war. It is impossible to over-estimate the assistance
-given by him. He was in direct command of the whole of the regimental
-transport and carried out his duties with skill, energy, tact, and
-determination. He was most popular with his Volunteer drivers, and
-managed them with great credit.
-
-3. FARRIER-SERGEANT MARSHALL, 54th Battery Royal Field Artillery, was in
-subordinate charge of the horse hospital throughout the war, and
-performed his duties most satisfactorily. He was especially tactful with
-Volunteers.
-
-4. SERGEANT BRENNAN, of the York and Lancaster Regiment, was always
-capable, willing, obliging, and uniformly well behaved. He took his
-position where wanted in any capacity without a murmur, and, at various
-times, filled the posts of Company Sergeant-Major, Company
-Quartermaster-Sergeant, Regimental Sergeant-Major, and Regimental
-Quartermaster-Sergeant. He also displayed much tact in dealing with
-Volunteers.
-
-BRIGGS, CUTHBERT, and EDWARDS, shoeing-smiths, of the 15th Hussars, did
-their work well and willingly from start to finish. They also worked
-well with the Volunteers.
-
-Signallers LANCE-CORPORAL LEE, of the York and Lancaster Regiment,
-Privates LOWE, LONGMAN, and HAYWARD, of the 3rd Hussars, did good and
-useful work for the brigade, but were almost invariably detached from
-the corps and placed on special service. From the end of May to the end
-of November they were with General Sir Ian Hamilton, only rejoining when
-my corps returned to Bloemfontein. While with me they were in every way
-satisfactory.
-
- (Signed) D.M. LUMSDEN, Lieutenant-Colonel,
-
- Late Commanding Lumsden’s Horse.
-
-
- APPENDIX VI
-
- _HONORARY RANK IN THE ARMY_
-
-The undermentioned officers of Colonel Lumsden’s corps are, on the
-disbandment of the corps, granted honorary rank in the Army as follows,
-with permission to wear the uniform of the corps:—
-
- To be Honorary Lieutenant-Colonel:—
-
- Lieutenant-Colonel D. McT. Lumsden, C.B. (Dated January 12, 1901.)
-
- To be Honorary Major:—
-
- Major H. Chamney, C.M.G., Second-in-Command. (Dated January 12,
- 1901.)
-
- To be Honorary Captains:—
-
- Captain F. Clifford }
-
- ” B.W. Holmes }
-
- ” J.B. Rutherfoord, D.S.O. } (Dated January 12,
-
- ” C.L. Sidey } 1901.)
-
- ” S.A. Powell, M.D., Medical }
- Officer
-
- To be Honorary Lieutenants:—
-
- Lieutenant H.O. Pugh, D.S.O. }
- ” G.A. Neville } (Dated January 12,
- ” C.E. Crane } 1901.)
- ” F.S. McNamara }
-
- To be Honorary Veterinary-Captain:—
-
- Veterinary-Captain W. Stevenson, Veterinary Officer. (Dated January
- 12, 1901.)
-
-—‘London Gazette,’ June 24, 1902.
-
-
- APPENDIX VII
- _LUMSDEN’S HORSE EQUIPMENT FUND_
-
- CONTRIBUTIONS IN CASH
-
- Name of Subscriber Amount
-
- Rs. a. p.
-
- H.E. the Viceroy (Lord Curzon of Kedleston) 1,500 0 0
-
- H.E. the Governor of Bombay (Lord Sandhurst) 200 0 0
-
- H.E. the Commander-in-Chief in India (Sir
- William Lockhart) 500 0 0
-
- H.H. the Lieutenant-Governor of Bengal (Sir
- John Woodburn) 500 0 0
-
- H.H. the Lieutenant-Governor of the Punjab
- (Sir W. Mackworth Young) 250 0 0
-
- H.H. the Lieutenant-Governor of the N.W.P.
- and Oudh (Sir A.P. MacDonnell) 200 0 0
-
- H.H. the Lieutenant-Governor of Burmah (Sir
- F.W.R. Fryer) 200 0 0
-
- H.J.S. Cotton, Esq., I.C.S. 100 0 0
-
- Lieut.-Colonel D.M. Lumsden 50,000 0 0
-
- Sir H. Seymour King, K.C.I.E., M.P., on
- account of Messrs. Henry S. King & Co.,
- Messrs. King, Hamilton, & Co., and Messrs.
- King, King, & Co. 10,000 0 0
-
- Maharajah Sir Jotendro Mohun Tagore, K.C.S.I. 5,000 0 0
-
- Rajah Sir Sourindro Mohun Tagore, Kt., C.I.E. 5,000 0 0
-
- F.T. Verner, Esq., M.P. 5,000 0 0
-
- Kumar Radha Prosad Roy 5,000 0 0
-
- Nawab Sir Sidi Ahmed Khan, K.C.S.I. 5,000 0 0
-
- Messrs. Apcar & Co. 5,000 0 0
-
- Babu Kally Kissen Tagore 2,500 0 0
-
- H.H. the Maharajah of Bharatpur 2,500 0 0
-
- The Khulsor State 2,500 0 0
-
- The Nawab Bahadur of Murshidabad, G.C.I.E. 2,000 0 0
-
- H.H. the Maharajah of Kooch Behar, G.C.I.E.,
- C.B. 2,000 0 0
-
- Kwajah Mahomed Khan of Mardan 2,000 0 0
-
- H.H. the Maharajah of Jodhpur, G.C.S.I. 2,000 0 0
-
- Messrs. Cooper, Allen, & Co. 2,000 0 0
-
- ” Prawn, Kissen, Law, & Co. 2,000 0 0
-
- ” Jardine, Skinner, & Co. 1,000 0 0
-
- ” Gillanders, Arbuthnot, & Co. 1,000 0 0
-
- ” Bird & Co. 1,000 0 0
-
- ” Andrew Yule & Co. 1,000 0 0
-
- ” Geo. Henderson & Co. 1,000 0 0
-
- ” Anderson, Wright, & Co. 1,000 0 0
-
- ” Kettlewell, Bullen, & Co. 1,000 0 0
-
- ” Mackinnon, Mackenzie, & Co. 1,000 0 0
-
- ” Balmer, Lawrie, & Co. 1,000 0 0
-
- ” Barry & Co. 1,000 0 0
-
- ” Turner, Morrison, & Co. 1,000 0 0
-
- ” Ewing & Co. 1,000 0 0
-
- ” Gladstone, Wyllie, & Co. 1,000 0 0
-
- ” Octavius Steel & Co. 1,000 0 0
-
- ” Ralli Brothers 1,000 0 0
-
- ” Grindlay & Co. 1,000 0 0
-
- ” Piggott, Chapman, & Co. 1,000 0 0
-
- ” Becker, Ross, & Co. 1,000 0 0
-
- ” J. Thomas & Co. 1,000 0 0
-
- ” McLeod & Co. 1,000 0 0
-
- ” Birkmyre Brothers 1,000 0 0
-
- ” Jessop & Co. 1,000 0 0
-
- ” Finlay, Muir, & Co. 1,000 0 0
-
- ” Shaw, Wallace, & Co. 1,000 0 0
-
- ” Lyall, Marshall, & Co. 1,000 0 0
-
- ” Marshall, Sons, & Co. 1,000 0 0
-
- Peninsular and Oriental Steam Navigation Co.,
- Ltd. 1,000 0 0
-
- Eastern Insurance Co. 1,000 0 0
-
- Triton Insurance Co. 1,000 0 0
-
- Messrs. Hamilton & Co. 1,000 0 0
-
- ” Whiteaway, Laidlaw, & Co. 1,000 0 0
-
- ” Bathgate & Co. 500 0 0
-
- ” Cooke, Kelvey, & Co. 500 0 0
-
- ” Lovelock & Lewes 500 0 0
-
- ” E. Meyer 500 0 0
-
- ” S. Menasseh & Sons 500 0 0
-
- ” Macintosh, Burn, & Co. 500 0 0
-
- ” Meakin & Co. 500 0 0
-
- ” E. Dyer & Co. 500 0 0
-
- ” Hoare, Miller, & Co. 500 0 0
-
- ” F.W. Heilgers & Co. 500 0 0
-
- ” Halford, Smith, & Co. 500 0 0
-
- ” M. David & Co. 500 0 0
-
- The Murree Brewery Co. 500 0 0
-
- Messrs. Bhama, Churn, Bhur, & Co. 260 10 0
-
- ” Duncan Brothers & Co. 250 0 0
-
- Messrs. Peace, Siddons, & Gough 250 0 0
-
- ” Walter Locke & Co. 250 0 0
-
- The Hong Kong and Shanghai Banking
- Corporation, Ltd. 250 0 0
-
- Messrs. Baines & Co. 250 0 0
-
- ” F. & C. Osler 250 0 0
-
- ” Lazarus & Co. 250 0 0
-
- ” Stewart & Co. 250 0 0
-
- ” Thacker, Spink, & Co. 250 0 0
-
- ” Dykes & Co. 250 0 0
-
- ” Armfield & Chard 250 0 0
-
- ” H. Goldspink & B. Thompson 250 0 0
-
- ” Harding & Monk 250 0 0
-
- ” Cook & Co. 250 0 0
-
- ” Manton & Co. 250 0 0
-
- ” Grunberg Brothers 250 0 0
-
- ” Davenport & Co. 250 0 0
-
- ” R. Knight & Sons 250 0 0
-
- ” Norman Brothers 250 0 0
-
- ” McDowell & Co. 250 0 0
-
- ” Mackenzie, Lyall, & Co. 250 0 0
-
- ” McVicar, Smith, & Co. 250 0 0
-
- ” Davidson & Co. 250 0 0
-
- ” Smith, Stanistreet, & Co. 250 0 0
-
- ” A. & J. Main & Co. 250 0 0
-
- ” John King & Co. 250 0 0
-
- ” Arracan Co., Ltd. 250 0 0
-
- ” David Sassoon & Co. 250 0 0
-
- ” T.E. Thomson & Co. 200 0 0
-
- ” R. Scott, Thomson, & Co. 200 0 0
-
- ” Francis Harrison, Hathaway, & Co. 200 0 0
-
- The South British Fire and Marine Insurance
- Co. 250 0 0
-
- Messrs. Jas. Monteith & Co. 200 0 0
-
- ” Moore & Co. 100 0 0
-
- ” Watts & Co. 100 0 0
-
- ” Broomfield & Co. 100 0 0
-
- ” Ahmuty & Co. 100 0 0
-
- ” Marrison, Cottle, & Co. 100 0 0
-
- ” W. Newman & Co. 100 0 0
-
- ” J. Boseck & Co. 100 0 0
-
- ” Cuthbertson & Harper 100 0 0
-
- ” Hall & Anderson 100 0 0
-
- ” Phelps & Co. 100 0 0
-
- ” Stockwell & Co. 100 0 0
-
- ” Harold & Co. 100 0 0
-
- Messrs. Bourne & Shepherd 100 0 0
-
- ” J.B. Norton & Sons 100 0 0
-
- ” B. Smyth & Co. 100 0 0
-
- ” Traill & Co. 100 0 0
-
- ” M.S. Hathaway & Co. 100 0 0
-
- The Naini Tal Brewery Co. 100 0 0
-
- The Crown Brewery Co. 100 0 0
-
- Messrs. S.G. Tellery & Co. 50 0 0
-
- ” T.E. Bevan & Co. 50 0 0
-
- ” J.A. Dykes & Co. 50 0 0
-
- ” J.C. Bechtler & Sons 50 0 0
-
- ” Jamasji & Sons 21 0 0
-
- Staff of the Bank of Bengal, Calcutta 2,000 0 0
-
- H.H. the Maharajah of Ajodhya, K.C.I.E. 1,000 0 0
-
- Hon. Rajah Ranajit Sinha Bahadur of Nashipur 1,000 0 0
-
- Maharajah Manindra Chandra Nundy of
- Cossimbazar 1,000 0 0
-
- H.H. the Maharajah of Bikanir 1,000 0 0
-
- H.H. the Maharajah Bahadur of Durbhanga 1,000 0 0
-
- Malik Ahmed Wali Khan 1,000 0 0
-
- H.H. the Rajah of Charkhari 1,000 0 0
-
- H.H. the Rajah of Datia 1,000 0 0
-
- H.H. the Maharajah Bahadur of Oorcha,
- K.C.I.E. 1,000 0 0
-
- Hon. Nawab Mumtaz-ud-Dowla Mahomed Fairaz Ali
- Khan of Pahasu, Bulandshahr 500 0 0
-
- H.H. the Maharajah of Benares, G.C.I.E. 500 0 0
-
- Rajah Bijoy Singh of Kunari, Kotah 500 0 0
-
- Babu Sotish Chunder-Chowdhari, Zemindar of
- Bhowanipur 500 0 0
-
- Babu Romanath Ghose 500 0 0
-
- Rai Cameleshwari Prosad Singh Bahadur of
- Monghyr 400 0 0
-
- Zinzbur Disit 251 0 0
-
- Rao Saheb Bahadur Singh, C.I.E. 200 0 0
-
- H.H. the Maharajah Bahadur of Gidhour,
- K.C.I.E. 200 0 0
-
- Kumar Dakshineswar Mallia 200 0 0
-
- Khan Bahadur Moulvi Syed Ali Ahmed Khan 200 0 0
-
- H. Mustafa Khan 150 0 0
-
- Nawab Walakader Syed Hossein Ali Mirza 150 0 0
-
- Nawab Syed Mahomed Zain-ul-Abidin,
- Murshidabad 100 0 0
-
- Syed Bahadur Nawab Goozree, Patna 100 0 0
-
- Rajah Mumtaz Ali Khan (Utraula) 100 0 0
-
- Rajah of Naldanga 100 0 0
-
- Rai Budri Dass Mookim Bahadur 100 0 0
-
- Maharajah Sir Narendra Krishna Deb Bahadur 100 0 0
-
- Babu Nolin Behary Sircar 100 0 0
-
- Babu Nibaron Chunder Dutt 100 0 0
-
- Nawab Syed Ameer Hossein, C.I.E. 100 0 0
-
- Babu Jumna Prosad 100 0 0
-
- Lalla Ram Saran Dass 100 0 0
-
- Golam Hashim Ariff 100 0 0
-
- Babu Chakan Lall Roy 60 0 0
-
- Talukdar of Haswar 50 0 0
-
- Nawab Mahomed Hayat Khan, C.S.I. 50 0 0
-
- Prince Mehomed Bukhtyar Shah, C.I.E. 25 0 0
-
- Lieut.-Col. J.L. Walker 1,000 0 0
-
- ” D.P. Masson, C.I.E. 1,000 0 0
-
- W. Malings Grant, Esq. 1,000 0 0
-
- G.T. Spankie, Esq. 1,000 0 0
-
- C.W. McMinn, Esq. 750 0 0
-
- C.R.S. Walker, Esq. 700 0 0
-
- Hon. Mr. Clinton Dawkins 500 0 0
-
- ” Sir Griffith P. Evans, K.C.I.E. 500 0 0
-
- ” Mr. J.T. Woodroffe (Advocate-General) 500 0 0
-
- ” Sir Francis Maclean, K.C.I.E. (Chief
- Justice of Bengal 150 0 0
-
- Hon. Mr. Justice C.H. Hill 100 0 0
-
- ” ” Stanley 100 0 0
-
- ” ” Harington 100 0 0
-
- ” ” Wilkins 100 0 0
-
- ” ” Rampini 100 0 0
-
- ” ” Stevens 100 0 0
-
- ” ” S.G. Sale 100 0 0
-
- ” Sir H.T. Pinsep 100 0 0
-
- ” Sir Wm. Macpherson 100 0 0
-
- ” Mr. Justice W.O. Clark, I.C.S. 50 0 0
-
- ” ” R. L, Harris, I.C.S. 50 0 0
-
- ” ” J.A. Anderson, I.C.S. 50 0 0
-
- ” ” Gooroo Dass Bannerjee 100 0 0
-
- ” ” Chunder Mudhab Ghose 100 0 0
-
- ” ” O.H.S. Reid 50 0 0
-
- ” ” P.C. Chatterjee 32 0 0
-
- Subscriptions from Tezpur District (per L.
- Mackay, of Borjulie Tea Estate) 1,109 0 0
-
- ‘A Sympathiser’ 1,000 0 0
-
- An ex-Deputy Commissioner of Assam and
- Trooper of the S.V.L.H. 1,000 0 0
-
- Officers, Non-commissioned Officers, and Men
- of the Imperial Service Camel Corps of
- Bikanir 500 0 0
-
- Officers and Men of the Cossipur Artillery
- Volunteers 471 0 0
-
- Staff of the Hong Kong and Shanghai Banking
- Corporation, Ltd. 400 0 0
-
- ‘A Recruit’ 250 0 0
-
- Committee of the Mounted Infantry Send-off
- Fund, Rangoon 196 10 0
-
- Staff of Messrs. Cook & Co. 186 0 0
-
- Officers of Executive Engineer, S.M. Railway 111 4 0
-
- Manager and Staff of Jhainpur Concern 160 0 0
-
- Darjeeling Bench and Bar 123 0 0
-
- Mirzapore Detachment, B Company, Ghazipur
- Volunteer Rifles 106 0 0
-
- ‘C.O.S.’ (Bombay) 105 0 0
-
- Staff of Messrs. Davis, Leech, & Co. 100 0 0
-
- Employés of the Bengal Central Railway 100 0 0
-
- Officers, Non-commissioned Officers, and
- Troopers of B Troop A.V.L.H., and Civilian
- Residents of the District 1,078 0 0
-
- Staff of Messrs. Moore & Co. 67 9 6
-
- Officers, Non-commissioned Officers, and Men
- of H Company 3rd Battalion C.V.R. 65 0 0
-
- Hajipur Division, B. & N.W. Railway 61 5 5
-
- District Superintendent and Inspector of
- Police (Balaghat C.P.) 60 0 0
-
- ‘A.’ 50 0 0
-
- ‘F.’ 100 0 0
-
- ‘Rot’ 50 0 0
-
- Subscriptions collected at Spence’s Hotel 47 0 0
-
- Staff of Messrs. Bevan & Co. 41 0 0
-
- Subscriptions through Punjab Banking Company,
- Ltd. 35 0 0
-
- No. 21, Fort Sandeman 30 0 0
-
- ‘S.C.’ 30 0 0
-
- Members of B Troop, N.B.M.A. 45 0 0
-
- ‘X.Y.Z.’ (Sonai) 25 0 0
-
- ‘A Corporal of the Agra Volunteers’ 25 0 0
-
- ‘E.L.C.’ 25 0 0
-
- Morton Institution 10 0 0
-
- ‘T.H.I.’ 10 0 0
-
- ‘G.H.D.’ 5 0 0
-
- W. Garth, Esq. 500 0 0
-
- Geo. Foster, Esq. 500 0 0
-
- J.H. Thomson, Esq. 500 0 0
-
- Geo. Williamson, Esq. 500 0 0
-
- Cairns Deas, Esq. 500 0 0
-
- C.H. Moore, Esq. 500 0 0
-
- Colonel Kirwan 500 0 0
-
- J.A. Devenish, Esq. 500 0 0
-
- Harry Stuart, Esq. 500 0 0
-
- Miss Mackinnon 365 0 0
-
- Sir William J. Cuningham, K.C.S.I. 250 0 0
-
- Hon. Sir A.C. Trevor, K.C.S.I. 250 0 0
-
- R. Nathan, Esq. 250 0 0
-
- L.P.D. Broughton, Esq. 250 0 0
-
- J.S. Ritchie, Esq., I.C.S. 250 0 0
-
- R.B. Pringle, Esq. 300 0 0
-
- J.H.S. Richardson, Esq. 300 0 0
-
- R.H. Mackenzie, Esq. 300 0 0
-
- C.E. Turner, Esq. 300 0 0
-
- Shirley Tremearne, Esq. 250 0 0
-
- G.S. Henderson, Esq. 250 0 0
-
- R.J. Reid, Esq. 250 0 0
-
- A.M. Dunne, Esq. 250 0 0
-
- J.M.G. Prophit, Esq. 250 0 0
-
- A.S. Dott, Esq. 250 0 0
-
- Hon. Mr. J. Buckingham, C.I.E. 250 0 0
-
- G. Champion, Esq. 250 0 0
-
- F. Robinson, Esq. 250 0 0
-
- F.G. Harris, Esq. 250 0 0
-
- J.A. Beattie, Esq. 250 0 0
-
- W.L. Bailey, Esq. 250 0 0
-
- H. Wicks, Esq. 250 0 0
-
- A.W. Forbes, Esq. 250 0 0
-
- Major-General Sir Edwin Collen, K.C.I.E. 250 0 0
-
- F. Herlihy, Esq. 248 0 0
-
- F.S. Hamilton, Esq., I.C.S. 200 0 0
-
- L. Hare, Esq., I.C.S. 200 0 0
-
- E.A. Short, Esq. 200 0 0
-
- J.B. Lee, Esq. 200 0 0
-
- J.F. Hughes, Esq. 200 0 0
-
- F.R. Roe, Esq. 200 0 0
-
- A.W. Davis, Esq. 200 0 0
-
- R.W. Maxwell, Esq. 200 0 0
-
- D.J. Macpherson, Esq., C.I.E., I.C.S. 150 0 0
-
- G. Rivett-Carnac, Esq. 150 0 0
-
- D. Coats Niven, Esq. 150 0 0
-
- A.L. Johnston, Esq. 150 0 0
-
- A.S. Crum, Esq. 150 0 0
-
- Hon. Mr. C.W. Bolton, C.S.I. 100 0 0
-
- ” Mr. J.D. Rees, C.I.E. 100 0 0
-
- Brigadier-General C.R. McGregor, C.B. 100 0 0
-
- ” ” Sir E.R. Elles, K.C.B. 100 0 0
-
- ” ” Sir A. Gaselee, K.C.B. 100 0 0
-
- ” ” H.P.P. Leigh, C.I.E. 100 0 0
-
- Sir Adelbert C. Talbot, K.C.I.E. 100 0 0
-
- Surgeon-General R. Harvey, C.B., I.M.S. 100 0 0
-
- F.A. Upcott, Esq., C.S.I. 100 0 0
-
- The Lord Bishop of Calcutta (Dr. J.E.C.
- Welldon) 100 0 0
-
- H.F. Evans, Esq., I.C.S. 100 0 0
-
- A.U. Fanshawe, Esq., C.I.E., I.C.S. 100 0 0
-
- J. Douglas, Esq. 100 0 0
-
- G.H. Sutherland, Esq. 100 0 0
-
- W. Skinner, Esq. 100 0 0
-
- Dr. G.A. Ferris 100 0 0
-
- Otto Eck, Esq. 100 0 0
-
- D.B. Horn, Esq. 100 0 0
-
- C.E. Pittar, Esq. 100 0 0
-
- E.G. Colvin, Esq. 100 0 0
-
- W.F. Wells, Esq., I.C.S. 100 0 0
-
- H. Luson, Esq., I.C.S. 100 0 0
-
- Captain H. Daly, C.I.E. 100 0 0
-
- L.C. Turner, Esq., I.C.S. 100 0 0
-
- T. Higham, Esq., I.C.S. 100 0 0
-
- F.J. Jeffries, Esq., I.C.S. 100 0 0
-
- Hon. Mr. G. Toynbee, I.C.S. 100 0 0
-
- E. Molony, Esq., I.C.S. 100 0 0
-
- Major-General T.B. Tyler, R.A. 100 0 0
-
- A. Goodeve, Esq., I.C.S. 100 0 0
-
- Lieutenant-Colonel C.H. Joubert, I.M.S. 100 0 0
-
- Hon. Mr. W.B. Oldham, C.I.E. 100 0 0
-
- Lieutenant-Colonel B. Scott, C.I.E. 100 0 0
-
- S.H. Freemantle, Esq., I.C.S. 100 0 0
-
- H.C. Williams, Esq., I.C.S. 100 0 0
-
- F.F. Handley, Esq., I.C.S. 100 0 0
-
- W.H. Cobb, Esq., I.C.S. 100 0 0
-
- H.F. Maguire, Esq., I.C.S. 100 0 0
-
- J. Lang, Esq., I.C.S. 100 0 0
-
- F.D. Simpson, Esq., I.C.S. 100 0 0
-
- Ross Scott, Esq., I.C.S. 100 0 0
-
- M.L. Darrah, Esq. 100 0 0
-
- Lieutenant-Colonel H. St. P. Maxwell, C.S.I. 100 0 0
-
- J. Taylor, Esq. 100 0 0
-
- William Dods, Esq. 100 0 0
-
- H.H. Jelliott, Esq. 100 0 0
-
- H.S. Ashton, Esq. 100 0 0
-
- C. Greenway, Esq. 100 0 0
-
- Geo. Girard, Esq. 100 0 0
-
- H.C. Begg, Esq. 100 0 0
-
- J.D. Nimmo, Esq. 100 0 0
-
- J. Arbuthnot, Esq. 100 0 0
-
- J.H. Apjohn, Esq. 100 0 0
-
- Otto Hadenfelt, Esq. 100 0 0
-
- T.B.G. Overend, Esq. 100 0 0
-
- E.W.J. Bartlett, Esq. 100 0 0
-
- H. Hensman, Esq. 100 0 0
-
- C.P. Hill, Esq. 100 0 0
-
- Captain W.J. Bradshaw, P.D.V.R. 100 0 0
-
- George Irving, Esq. 100 0 0
-
- W.H. Cheetham, Esq. 100 0 0
-
- F. Mathewson, Esq. 100 0 0
-
- W.C. Bonnerjee, Esq. 100 0 0
-
- R. Allen, Esq. 100 0 0
-
- M.J. Beattie, Esq. 100 0 0
-
- R.H. Tickell, Esq. 100 0 0
-
- Mrs. F.A. Burnham 100 0 0
-
- W. Bull, Esq. 100 0 0
-
- J.L. Maddox, Esq. 100 0 0
-
- F.M. Shaw, Esq. 100 0 0
-
- W.H. Holmes, Esq. 100 0 0
-
- A. Pedler, Esq. 100 0 0
-
- Mrs. J.A.C. Skinner 75 0 0
-
- E.P. Chapman, Esq. 75 0 0
-
- Examiner of Accounts and Circle Paymaster,
- Rangoon 68 0 0
-
- Dr. J. Neild Cook 60 0 0
-
- Hon. Mr. R.B. Buckley 50 0 0
-
- Major-General Hobday, C.B. 50 0 0
-
- C.E. Pitman, Esq., C.I.E. 50 0 0
-
- Captain J.H. Murray 50 0 0
-
- F.F. Duke, Esq., I.C.S. 50 0 0
-
- H. Paget, Esq. 50 0 0
-
- W.O. Grazebrook, Esq. 50 0 0
-
- J. Allison, Esq. 50 0 0
-
- G.H.D. Walker, Esq. 50 0 0
-
- Victor Murray, Esq. 50 0 0
-
- W.S. Meyer, Esq. 50 0 0
-
- Frank Lyall, Esq. 50 0 0
-
- P.E. Guzdar, Esq. 50 0 0
-
- H. Robinson, Esq. 50 0 0
-
- A.F. Simson, Esq. 50 0 0
-
- R.D. Mehta, Esq., C.I.E. 50 0 0
-
- H.N. Harris, Esq. 50 0 0
-
- W.H. McKewan, Esq. 50 0 0
-
- Mrs. A.C.M. Harrison 50 0 0
-
- H.J. Bell, Esq. 50 0 0
-
- F. McL. Carter, Esq. 50 0 0
-
- S. Brandreth, Esq. 50 0 0
-
- G.F. Stainforth, Esq. 50 0 0
-
- W.E. Curry, Esq. 50 0 0
-
- Arthur Casperz, Esq. 50 0 0
-
- St. John Stephens, Esq. 50 0 0
-
- H.S. Tozer, Esq. 50 0 0
-
- F.W. Roberts, Esq. 50 0 0
-
- G.C. Lawrie, Esq. 50 0 0
-
- S. Finney, Esq. 50 0 0
-
- H.C. Woodman, Esq. 50 0 0
-
- W. Touch, Esq. 50 0 0
-
- J.R.E. Younghusband, Esq. 50 0 0
-
- James Lackersteen, Esq. 50 0 0
-
- J.G. Jennings, Esq. 50 0 0
-
- C.H. Browning, Esq. 50 0 0
-
- H.B. Warner, Esq. 50 0 0
-
- Mair R. Buksh 50 0 0
-
- C.P. Beachcroft, Esq., I.C.S. 50 0 0
-
- Major H.W. Pilgrim, I.M.S. 50 0 0
-
- B. Foley, Esq., I.C.S. 50 0 0
-
- L.A.G. Clarke, Esq., I.C.S. 50 0 0
-
- H. Ware, Esq., I.C.S. 50 0 0
-
- J. Hope Simpson, Esq., I.C.S. 50 0 0
-
- C.E. Crawford, Esq., I.C.S. 50 0 0
-
- F.J. Cooke, Esq., I.C.S. 50 0 0
-
- Capt. St. J. Shadwell 50 0 0
-
- F.G. Mayne, Esq. 50 0 0
-
- H.W. Sutcliffe, Esq. 50 0 0
-
- A.J. Fraser Blair, Esq. 50 0 0
-
- D. McLaren Morrison, Esq. 50 0 0
-
- F.E. Durham, Esq. 50 0 0
-
- W.M. Beresford, Esq. 50 0 0
-
- G.H.L. Mackenzie, Esq. 50 0 0
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- A.F.M. Abdur Rahman, Esq. 50 0 0
-
- E.L.S. Russell, Esq. 50 0 0
-
- J. Reid, Esq. 50 0 0
-
- L.B. Goad, Esq. 50 0 0
-
- R. Sykes, Esq. 50 0 0
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- R. Todd, Esq. 50 0 0
-
- R.W. Hilliard, Esq. 50 0 0
-
- B. Harrison, Esq. 50 0 0
-
- E.N. Drury, Esq. 50 0 0
-
- P.R. Cadell, Esq. 50 0 0
-
- Captain N. Rainier 50 0 0
-
- Babu Baij Nath Goenka 33 0 0
-
- ” Nand Kumar Lall 33 0 0
-
- ” Jowhary Lall 33 0 0
-
- Captain W.J. McElhinny 32 0 0
-
- Major E.A. Waller, R.E. 32 0 0
-
- J.E. Phillimore, Esq., I.C.S. 32 0 0
-
- R.N. Burn, Esq. 32 0 0
-
- S. Halliwell, Esq. 32 0 0
-
- G. Kingsley, Esq. 32 0 0
-
- G.D. Oswell, Esq. 32 0 0
-
- Trevor Lloyd, Esq. 32 0 0
-
- P. Hennesy, Esq. 32 0 0
-
- H. Lyall, Esq. 32 0 0
-
- G.L. Hendley, Esq. 32 0 0
-
- F.C.W. Dover, Esq. 30 0 0
-
- E.R. Osgood, Esq. 30 0 0
-
- E. Staples, Esq. 30 0 0
-
- W.G. Hemingway, Esq. 30 0 0
-
- H. Richardson, Esq. 30 0 0
-
- Rao Gungadhur Mahdev Chitnavis, C.I.E. 30 0 0
-
- Major D. Prain, I.M.S. 25 0 0
-
- J.S. Harris, Esq. 25 0 0
-
- Thomas Watson, Esq. 25 0 0
-
- W. Parsons, Esq. 25 0 0
-
- John Bathgate, Esq. 25 0 0
-
- C.A. Walsh, Esq. 25 0 0
-
- Colin A. Paterson, Esq. 25 0 0
-
- H.H. Macleod, Esq. 25 0 0
-
- W.J. Cotton, Esq. 25 0 0
-
- G.H. Le Maistre, Esq. 25 0 0
-
- W.B. Browne, Esq. 25 0 0
-
- O. Ghilardi, Esq. 25 0 0
-
- Chas. F. Baker, Esq. 25 0 0
-
- W.T. Grice, Esq. 25 0 0
-
- F.H. Ware, Esq. 25 0 0
-
- P.J. Macdonald, Esq. 25 0 0
-
- E.J.R. Dyer, Esq. 25 0 0
-
- C.E. Dard, Esq. 25 0 0
-
- John Leslie, Esq. 25 0 0
-
- F.C. Simpson, Esq. 25 0 0
-
- H.W.G. Herron, Esq. 25 0 0
-
- J.C. Hewitt, Esq. 25 0 0
-
- N. Williamson, Esq. 25 0 0
-
- A.J. Lloyd, Esq. 25 0 0
-
- Hon. Babu Doorgagati Bannerjee, C.I.E. 25 0 0
-
- Babu Davendro Nath Dutt 25 0 0
-
- Nawab Mehdi Hassan 25 0 0
-
- Syed Manjhla Nawab 25 0 0
-
- F. Williams, Esq., C.E. 20 0 0
-
- Captain G.W. Rawlins 20 0 0
-
- C.H. Atkins, Esq. 20 0 0
-
- Captain I.C. Beresford 20 0 0
-
- G. Huddleston, Esq. 20 0 0
-
- M.C. Fitzgibbon, Esq. 20 0 0
-
- Dr. Scott 20 0 0
-
- Babu Krishna Chunder Bannerjee 20 0 0
-
- Babu Gobind Sahai 17 0 0
-
- Babu Ram Dhari Singh 17 0 0
-
- A.H. Diack, Esq., I.C.S. 16 0 0
-
- Captain P. Thompson, I.S.C. 16 0 0
-
- Colonel B. Franklin, I.M.S. 16 0 0
-
- Captain T.J. Kennedy 16 0 0
-
- Lieutenant-Colonel J.A. Parkinson 16 0 0
-
- Major J.M. Reid 16 0 0
-
- ” J.R. Harwood 16 0 0
-
- A.S. Barrow, Esq. 16 0 0
-
- E. Walker, Esq. 16 0 0
-
- T. Major, Esq. 16 0 0
-
- J.B. Lloyd, Esq. 16 0 0
-
- H.R. Klugh, Esq. 16 0 0
-
- F. Stevenson, Esq. 16 0 0
-
- W. Muir Masson, Esq. 16 0 0
-
- James Jameson, Esq. 16 0 0
-
- S.M. Robinson, Esq. 16 0 0
-
- Rev. E.F.C. Wigram 16 0 0
-
- R.P. Atkinson, Esq. 16 0 0
-
- S.E. Madan, Esq. 16 0 0
-
- C. Roe, Esq. 16 0 0
-
- S. Waterfield, Esq. 16 0 0
-
- F. Field, Esq. 16 0 0
-
- S.W. Emery, Esq. 16 0 0
-
- H.P. Cowley, Esq. 16 0 0
-
- J.F. Mure, Esq. 16 0 0
-
- Lieutenant G. Wilkinson, R.A. 15 0 0
-
- A.B. Dalgetty, Esq. 15 0 0
-
- A.W. Thomas, Esq. 15 0 0
-
- Chas. H. Hacking, Esq. 15 0 0
-
- Lieutenant W.B. Huddleston 10 0 0
-
- ” L.T. Gage 10 0 0
-
- Major E. Bowring 10 0 0
-
- F. Fischer, Esq. 10 0 0
-
- J.M. D’Costa, Esq. 10 0 0
-
- C.H. Jones, Esq. 10 0 0
-
- D.S. Richmond, Esq. 10 0 0
-
- T.F. Richardson, Esq. 10 0 0
-
- V.E. Nepos, Esq. 10 0 0
-
- A. Stevenson, Esq. 10 0 0
-
- Mrs. E. Clarke 10 0 0
-
- ” L. Macalister 10 0 0
-
- A.E. Jones, Esq. 10 0 0
-
- A.J. Stavridi, Esq. 10 0 0
-
- K.C. Chronopolo, Esq. 10 0 0
-
- E.S.L. Morton, Esq. 10 0 0
-
- W.L. Dallas, Esq. 10 0 0
-
- Mrs. L.P. Patton 10 0 0
-
- E.C. Richardson, Esq. 10 0 0
-
- Rai Medni Prosad Singh Bahadur 10 0 0
-
- Babu Tin Cowry Rai 6 0 0
-
- Mirza Habib Husain 5 0 0
-
- A.S. Cooper, Esq. 5 0 0
-
- W.H. Burgess, Esq. 5 0 0
-
- J. Harding, Esq. 5 0 0
-
- W.H. Russell, Esq. 5 0 0
-
- Malik Mahomed Khan 5 0 0
-
- Babu Behary Lall Mukerji 5 0 0
-
- Captain L.C. Dunsterville 5 0 0
-
- Babu B.M. Laha 3 8 0
-
- —————————
-
- TOTAL 2,20,353 6 11
-
- Proceeds of Ladies’ Ball given in Town Hall 6,898 1 0
-
- —————————
-
- GRAND TOTAL 2,27,251 7 11
-
- CONTRIBUTIONS IN KIND
-
- Name of Contributor Contribution
-
- H.H. the Maharajah of 50 Arab chargers and saddlery
- Bhownagar
-
- The Maharani Regent of Mysore 20 country-bred chargers
-
- Maharaj Kumar Prodyat Coomar A complete set of _x_-ray
- Tagore apparatus
-
- Colonel Desraj Urs 30 horses
-
- Rajah of Mursan 25 horses
-
- The Maharajah Bahadur of 12 horses
- Soubarsa, C.I.E.
-
- Nawab Mahomed Khan, Chief of 2 horses
- Mardan
-
- Mahomed Mazamullah Khan of 2 horses, 1 mule, and 2
- Aligarh sleeping cottage tents
-
- Natives of Aligarh 27 horses and 1 mule
-
- Kashmir Durbar 300 Kashmir putties
-
- Victoria Mills Company of 125 thick double blankets for
- Cawnpore syces
-
- The Muir Mills, Cawnpore Tents for the force
-
- The Woollen Mills, Cawnpore Serge cloth for all coats
- complete, 1,000 pairs ribbed
- stockings, 400 yards fawn
- flannel, 400 pairs khaki
- putties
-
- The Brush Factory, Cawnpore Brushes
-
- The Wense Tannery, Cawnpore Leather goods
-
- Messrs. Cooper, Allen, & Co., 300 pairs of gaiters
- Cawnpore
-
- New Egerton Mills, Dharwal 300 Cardigan jackets
-
- F.H. Abbott, Esq. Fodder
-
- G.C. Mookerjee & Sons 2 lever clocks
-
- Messrs. Hart Bros. Fodder, shoes, veterinary
- nails, &c.
-
- ” James Murray & Co. 6 field glasses
-
- Russell of Dinapore 1 box Diamond Ointment
-
- Messrs. Lipton, Ltd. Tea and coffee for the force
- for the voyage to South
- Africa
-
- Lawrie Johnstone, Esq., and 5,000 Manilla cigars
- J.R. Stewart, Esq.
-
- C.F. Chadburn, Esq. 7,200 boxes of matches
-
- G.F. Kellner & Co. 10 cases of whisky
-
- Robinson, Morrison, & Co. 2 hogsheads beer
-
- Whiteaway, Laidlaw, & Co. 300 hats
-
- Ranken & Co. Officers’ uniforms
-
- Harman & Co. Making one suit of clothes for
- each man
-
- W. Leslie & Co. 12 sets of aluminium
- cooking-pots
-
- J.F. Madan 30 doz. Charles Southwell’s
- whole fruit jams, 15 doz.
- Rowat’s pickles, 72 doz.
- Rowat’s Sauce, 200 lb.
- Mackenzie & Mackenzie’s
- biscuits, 96 doz. Universal
- potted meat, 10 doz. Brand’s
- essence of beef, 25 galls.
- English malt vinegar, 30 lb.
- fresh ground coffee, 50 lb.
- orange Pekoe tea
-
- Various People 7 volumes ‘Blackwood’s
- Magazine,’ 4 volumes
- ‘Harper’s Monthly Magazine,’
- 6 volumes ‘The Century
- Magazine,’ 72 paper books
- (miscellaneous)
-
-
- APPENDIX VIII
- _FRIENDS AND SUPPORTERS OF THE CORPS_
-
-The following gentlemen played prominent parts in connection with the
-raising and equipment of Lumsden’s Horse:
-
- H.E. the Commander-in-Chief—Sir William Lockhart, G.C.B., K.C.S.I.,
- whom illness, however, prevented from inspecting the corps prior to
- their departure to South Africa.
-
- Major-General Sir Edwin Collen, K.C.I.E., C.B., Military Member of
- Council.
-
- Major-General P.J. Maitland, C.B., Secretary to the Government of
- India Military Department.
-
- Major the Hon. E. Baring, Military Secretary to H.E. the Viceroy.
-
- Brigadier-General Sir E.R. Elles, K.C.B., Adjutant-General in India.
-
- Brigadier-General Sir Arthur Gaselee, K.C.B., Quartermaster-General in
- India.
-
- Sir Patrick Playfair, C.I.E.
-
- Captain A.L. Phillips, Indian Staff Corps.
-
- Major-General R. Wace, C.B., Director-General of Ordnance.
-
- Surgeon-General R. Harvey, C.B., Director-General of I.M.S.
-
- Colonel P.A. Buckland, Superintendent Army Clothing.
-
- Major-General T.F. Hobday, Commissary-General.
-
- Captain W.S. Goodridge, Director R.I.M. (Bombay).
-
- Captain A. Gwyn, Deputy Director R.I.M. (Kidderpur Docks).
-
- William Currie, Esq., Messrs. Mackinnon, Mackenzie & Co.
-
- The Most Rev. J.E.C. Welldon, Lord Bishop of Calcutta and Metropolitan
- of India.
-
- Shirley Tremearne, Esq.
-
- Canon A. Luckman, Senior Chaplain, St. Paul’s Cathedral, Calcutta.
-
- H.E.A. Apjohn, Esq., Chairman, Port Commissioners.
-
- Brigadier-General Leach, C.B., G.O.C. Bengal.
-
- Colonel Money, Assistant Adjutant-General.
-
- Colonel Mansfield, Commissary-General for Transport.
-
- Thanks are due to the following:
-
- The Indian Press for the free notices and list of subscriptions
- inserted from time to time.
-
- A.U. Fanshawe, Esq., C.I.E., Director-General of Post Offices.
-
- C.E. Pitman, Esq., C.I.E., Director-General of Telegraphs, for
- establishing Post and Telegraph Offices in Camp.
-
- The Lieutenant-Governor of Bengal (Sir John Woodburn).
-
- Her Excellency Lady Curzon of Kedleston.
-
- Lady Woodburn, the Misses Pugh, and the other ladies of Calcutta who
- organised the Ball.
-
- THE LADIES’ BALL, CALCUTTA, JANUARY 1900,
-
- IN AID OF THE FUNDS FOR EQUIPPING LUMSDEN’S HORSE.
-
- _Patroness_
- Her Excellency LADY CURZON OF KEDLESTON, C.I.
-
- _Vice-Patronesses_
- Lady _Woodburn_ Lady LOCKHART
-
- Lady MACLEAN H.H. the MAHARANI OF
- COOCH BEHAR
-
- Mrs. COTTON
-
- _General Committee._
-
-Mrs. Aldam
- ” C.H. Allen
- ” Apjohn
- ” Baker
- ” Barkley
- ” Barrow
- ” Birkmyre
- ” Bolton
- ” Boyd
- ” Branson
- ” Beadon-Bryant
- ” Buckland
- ” Campbell
- ” Chappell
- ” Charles
- ” Churchill
-Lady Collen
-Mrs. Comley
- ” Constable
- ” Coulter
- ” Dangerfield
- ” Lindsay Daniell
- ” Dawkins
- ” Dring
- ” Duke
- ” Dunne
- ” Eggar
- ” Ellis
-
-Mrs. Elworthy
- ” Trevor Forbes
- ” Gayer
- ” Gemmell
- ” Gibbs
- ” A.S. Gladstone
- ” Banks-Gwyther
- ” Haggard
- ” Harington
- ” Havell
- ” Hill
- ” Huddleston
- ” Iggulden
- ” Joubert
- ” Judge
- ” Ker
- ” Knight
- ” Luson
- ” Maconochie
- ” Mair
- ” Maitland
- ” Mansfield
- ” Mawdsley
- ” Melville
- ” Miller
- ” R.L. Morgan
-Hon. Mrs. McLaren Morrison
-
-Mrs. Morris
- ” Murray
- ” Goodwin Norman
- ” Oakley
- ” Ormond
- ” Orr
- ” Paget
- ” Pearson
- ” Petersen
- ” Phelps
- ” Poppe
- ” Pratt
- ” Pugh
- ” Renny
- ” Seymour
- ” Silk
-Kanwar Rani Lady Harnam Singh
-Mrs. Assheton-Smith
- ” Sparkes
- ” Stanley
- ” Foster Stevens
- ” Stone
- ” Watkins
- ” Wallis-Whiddett
- ” Wicks
- ” Wilkins
- ” Wynne
-
- _List of the Stewards._
-
-Captain Allanson
-Mr. C.H. Allen
- ” Rob Allen
- ” G.G. Anderson
- ” E.W. Antram
- ” A.A. Apcar
- ” Gregory Apcar
- ” J.G. Apcar
- ” J.H. Apjohn
- ” E.C. Apostolides
-Hon. Mr. Allan Arthur
-Captain Badcock
-Mr. L.C. Baines
-Major the Hon. E. Baring
-Mr. A.S. Barrow
- ” C.P. Bartholomew
- ” W.E. Bayley
- ” C.F. Beadel
- ” V. Beatty
- ” H.C. Begg
- ” W.M. Beresford
- ” A.J. Fraser Blair
- ” D.C. Blair
- ” E.G. Buck
-Hon. Mr. J. Buckingham
-Mr. P.L. Buckland
- ” A.L. Butter
-Dr. Arnold Caddy
-Mr. G. Caine
- ” P.E. Cameron
-Captain Campbell, A.D.C.
-Mr. John Campbell
-Captain Baker-Carr, A.D.C.
-Mr. N. Bonham Carter
- ” W.D. Carter
- ” W.D. Cartwright
- ” E. Chapman
- ” E.P. Chapman
- ” E.C. Coates
- ” G. Colville
- ” W. Ross Craig
- ” W.D. Cruickshank
- ” J.E. Cubitt
- ” R.H.S. Dashwood
-Hon. Mr. Clinton Dawkins
-Mr. Cairns Deas
-
-Mr. W. Dods
-Major Dolby
-Mr. W.A. Dring
- ” W.K. Eddis
- ” W.H. Edwards
-Sir G.H.P. Evans
-Hon. Mr. A.U. Fanshawe
-Mr. R.R. Gales
- ” J. Gemmell
- ” G. Girard
- ” W.O. Grazebrook
- ” R.J. Green
-Captain Grimston
-Mr. J.D. Guise
- ” F.F. Handley
-Hon. Mr. Justice Harington
-Surgeon-General Harvey
-Mr. H. Hensman
- ” C.R. Hills
- ” H. Hookey
- ” G. Huddleston
- ” A.D. Ingram
- ” P. Ismay
- ” C.M. Jack
- ” J.R. Johnston
- ” C. Lawrie Johnstone
- ” C.B. Jourdain
- ” A.S. Judge
- ” C.H.B. Jurret
- ” Paul Knight
-Captain Knox, A.D.C.
-Brigadier-General Leach, C.B.
-Mr. A.M. Lindsay
- ” Allan Mackinnon
-Sir Francis Maclean
-Mr. A. McNiven
-Sir Wm. Macpherson
-Mr. A.G.H. Macpherson
-Major-General Maitland, C.B.
-Mr. J.R. Maples
- ” E.J. Marshall
- ” E.S. Martin
- ” Harold Martin
- ” Francis Matthewson
-Colonel Money
-Mr. D. McLaren Morrison
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-Mr. A.K. Muir
-Hon. Mr. A.C. Murray
-Mr. J. Needham
- ” John Nicoll
-Captain Noblett
-Major Ormerod
-Mr. J.A. Ormiston
- ” E.W. Ormond
- ” J.C. Orr
- ” J.W. Orr
- ” W. Orrell
- ” J.J. Page
-Captain Phillips
-Mr. G. Pickford
- ” A. Pickford
-Sir Patrick Playfair, C.I.E.
-Mr. F. Power
- ” A.J. Pugh
- ” L.P. Pugh
- ” R.A.C. Pugh
- ” C. Radcliffe
- ” A. Rawlinson
-Hon. Mr. J.D. Rees
-Mr. A. Rodachanachi
- ” L.E.D. Rose
- ” C.L.S. Russell
-
-Mr. A. Short
- ” J.A. Simpson
-Hon. Mr. D.M. Smeaton
-Mr. C.E. Smyth
- ” C.D. Stewart
- ” H. Stokes
- ” Harry Stuart
-Earl of Suffolk and Berks, A.D.C.
-Mr. H.W. Sutcliffe
- ” G.H. Sutherland
- ” R.G.D. Thomas
- ” W.L. Thomas
- ” Shirley Tremearne
- ” J.M. Turner
-Captain Tyrrell
-Major Verschoyle
-Mr. S. Verschoyle
- ” C.L.W. Wallace
-Captain Waters
-Mr. Martyn Wells
- ” D. Westmacott
- ” Thos. Westmacott
-Hon. Mr. Justice Wilkins
-Captain Wilkinson
-Mr. H.D. Wood
-
-
- APPENDIX IX
- _LUMSDEN’S HORSE RECEPTION COMMITTEE_
-
-The following is the first list of names of the Reception Committee:
-
- _Patron_
-
- His Excellency Lord Curzon
-
- _Vice-Patrons_
-
- His Excellency the Commander-in-Chief
- His Honour the Lieutenant-Governor of Bengal
- Hon. the Chief Commissioner of Assam
- Hon. the Chief Justice of Bengal
- Most Rev. the Lord Bishop of Calcutta
-
- _Members_
-
- Mr. A.F.M. Abdur Rahman
- ” J.A. Anderson
- ” A.A. Apcar
- ” A.G. Apcar
- Captain Apostolides
- Mr. J. Arbuthnot
- Hon. Sir Allan Arthur, Kt.
- Mr. H.S. Ashton
- ” R.P. Ashton
- Lieutenant Baines
- Mr. W.A. Bankier
- Hon. Mr. Justice Gooroo Das Bannerjee
- Major the Hon. E. Baring
- Mr. A.S. Barrow
- ” H. Bateson
- ” H.C. Begg
- ” W.M. Beresford
- Colonel J. Binning
- Mr. D.C. Blair
- Hon. Mr. C.W. Bolton, C.S.I., I.C.S.
- ” Major J. Bourdillon, C.S.I., I.C.S.
- Captain W.J. Bradshaw, P.D.V.
- Hon. Mr. J. Buckingham, C.I.E.
- ” Mr. C.E. Buckland, C.I.E., I.C.S.
- ” Mr. R.B. Buckley
- ” Prince Mahomed Bukhtyar Shah, C.I.E.
- Mr. E. Cable
- Lieutenant Caddy
- Captain Baker-Carr
- Dr. J. Nield Cook
- Hon. Mr. W.E. Cooper, C.I.E.
- Mr. H.E.A. Cotton
- Dr. William Coulter
- Mr. W.D. Cruickshank
- Sir William J. Cuningham, K.C.S.I.
- Mr. Lindsay Daniell
- ” Walter J. Davies
- ” Cairns Deas, C.E.
- ” J.G. Dickson
- Lieutenant Dunbar
- Mr. E.B. Eden
- Hon. Mr. H. Elworthy
- ” Sir Griffith Evans, K.C.I.E.
- ” Mr. H.F. Evans, C.S.I., I.C.S.
- Mr. A.U. Fanshawe, C.I.E., I.C.S.
- ” J. Finlay
- Hon. Mr. M. Finucane, C.S.I., I.C.S.
- Mr. J.S. Fraser
- ” J. Gemmell
- Hon. Mr. Justice Chunder Madhub Ghose
- Mr. C. Greenway
- ” R.T. Greer, I.C.S.
- Captain Griffiths
- Mr. H.B. Hall
- ” D.M. Hamilton
- Hon. Major Harington
- Mr. John Harper
- Surgeon-General R. Harvey, C.B., I.M.S., &c.
- Mr. Gilbert S. Henderson
- Captain Henry
- Mr. H. Hensman
- ” J.P. Hewett, C.S.I., C.I.E.
- Hon. Mr. Justice Hill
- Mr. T.W. Holderness, C.S.I., I.C.S.
- Hon. Nawab Syed Ameer Hossein, C.I.E.
- Mr. A.J. Ker
- ” D. King
- ” H.A. Kirk
- ” H.M. Kisch, M.A., I.C.S.
- ” Paul Knight
- Hon. Sir Edward Law, K.C.M.G.
- Brigadier-General H.P. Leach, C.B., R.E., &c.
- Mr. W. Leslie
- ” A.M. Lindsay, C.I.E.
- ” A.S. Lovelock
- Rev. Canon Luckman
- Mr. A.A. Lyall
- ” F.G. Maclean
- ” D.J. Macpherson, C.I.E., I.C.S.
- Maharajah Sir Narendra Krishna Bahadur, K.C.I.E.
- Major-General P.J. Maitland, C.B., I.S.C.
- Mr. E.J. Marshall
- Colonel A. Masters
- Mr. W.J.M. McCaw
- Lieut.-Colonel McLaughlin, S.V.L.H.
- Mr. F. Matheson
- ” Norman McLeod
- Major J.R. Maples
- Lieut.-Colonel J.J. Meade
- Mr. R.D. Mehta, C.I.E.
- Colonel J.A. Miley, C.S.I., I.S.C.
- Mr. Charles Morris
- Mr. A.K. Muir
- ” Reginald Murray
- Hon. Mr. F.A. Nicholson, C.I.E.
- Mr. John Nicoll
- Mr. A.F. Norman
- Hon. Mr. C.W. Odling, C.S.I., M.E.
- Mr. G.A. Ormiston
- ” C.R. Orr
- ” T.B.G. Overend
- ” W. Parsons
- ” A. Pedler, F.R.S.
- Captain E.W. Petley, C.I.E.
- Mr. W.H. Phelps
- Major H.W. Pilgrim, I.M.S.
- Sir Patrick Playfair, Kt., C.I.E.
- Major D. Prain, M.B., I.M.S.
- Hon. Mr. Justice Pratt, M.A., I.C.S.
- ” Sir H.T. Prinsep, Kt.
- Mr. J.M.G. Prophit
- Mr. L.P. Pugh
- Hon. Mr. T. Raleigh
- ” Mr. Justice Rampini
- Colonel Rankin, M.D., I.M.S.
- Hon. Mr. C.M. Rivaz, C.S.I.
- Mr. W.T.M. Robertson
- ” A. Rodocanachi
- ” H.M. Ross
- ” H.M. Rustomji
- ” J. O’B. Saunders
- ” F.N. Schiller
- ” J.C. Shorrock
- Hon. Sir Harnam Singh, K.C.I.E.
- ” Mr. D.M. Smeaton, C.S.I.
- Mr. C.E. Smyth
- ” T.W. Spink
- Hon. Rai Sri Ram Bahadur
- ” Mr. Justice Stanley
- Mr. W.R. Stikeman
- Major Strachey
- Mr. Harry Stuart
- Hon. Mr. Sutherland
- Maharajah Sir Jotendro Mohun Tagore Bahadur, K.C.S.I.
- Maharaj Kumar Prodyat Coomar Tagore
- Rajah Sir Sourindro Mohun Tagore, Kt., C.I.E.
- Mr. W.L. Thomas
- ” T. Traill
- ” Shirley Tremearne
- Hon. Sir A.C. Trevor, K.C.S.I.
- Mr. M.C. Turner
- ” F.R. Upcott, C.E.
- Major-General R. Wace, C.B., R.A.
- Mr. A.H. Wallis
- Mr. C.H. Wilkie
- ” George Williamson
- ” H.C. Williamson, C.S.
- ” J. Wilson
- Hon. Mr. J.T. Woodroffe, Advocate-General
- Colonel T.R. Wynne
-
- APPENDIX X
- _THE FINAL ACCOUNTS_
-
- _To the Editor of the ‘Indian Daily News.’_
-
- SIR,—May I ask you to be good enough to publish for the benefit of the
- subscribers to the Indian Mounted Infantry Corps (Lumsden’s Horse)
- Fund a detailed account of the receipts and expenditure?
-
- On behalf of myself, officers, and men of the corps, I desire to
- tender our grateful acknowledgment to His Excellency Lord Curzon,
- Honorary Colonel, not only for having sanctioned the raising of the
- corps and for his patronage, but also for the very material assistance
- he graciously gave us and for the interest he took in our operations
- on active service.
-
- I take the opportunity, at the completion of our campaign, again to
- thank the public for the splendid manner in which they equipped the
- corps for active service in South Africa and for the cordial way they
- welcomed it back again. The public appreciation of their services to
- the Army has been to the officers and men of Lumsden’s Horse ample
- recompense for any hardships they may have endured. For myself I can
- only repeat that I never wish to be associated with more gallant
- comrades. I am indebted to General Sir E.R. Elles, Adjutant-General,
- General Gaselee, Quartermaster-General, Surgeon-General Harvey,
- Director-General I.M.S., and General Wace, Director-General of
- Ordnance, for the assistance given in obtaining equipment for the
- corps and facilitating its despatch.
-
- More than special thanks are also due to Sir Patrick Playfair for the
- great interest he has taken in the corps from start to finish, as well
- as to the other members of the committee.—Yours, &c.,
-
- D.M. LUMSDEN, Lieutenant-Colonel,
-
- Commanding Lumsden’s Horse.
-
- April 17, 1900.
-
- LUMSDEN’S HORSE EQUIPMENT FUND
-
- THE EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE IN ACCOUNT WITH THE FUND FROM THE DATE OF THE
- OPENING OF THE FUND
- TO APRIL 9, 1900
-
- ───────────────────────────────
- RECEIPTS.
- Rs. a. p.
- Subscriptions 2,22,225 7 11
- and
- Donations
-
- Rs. 2,22,225 7 11
- ═══════════════════════════════
-
- ─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
- DISBURSEMENTS.
- Rs. a. p. Rs. a. p.
- Equipment 31,027 2 1
- Uniform, Clothing, &c. 30,320 7 11
- Ponies and Transport 27,459 9 7
- Horses and Remounts 15,337 15 0[F]
- Medicines 695 14 6
- ————————— 1,04,841 1 1
- Camp Messing 19,301 9 0
- Camp Equipage 2,522 14 6
- Camp Conservancy 529 0 0
- Camp Sundry Expenses 1,523 9 0
- Office Establishment and
- Expenses 1,631 7 9
- Stationery, Printing, and
- Advertising 628 11 6
- Postages and Telegrams 373 5 6
- Salaries of Native Followers 862 0 0
- ————————— 27,372 9 3
- Canteen and Stores for South
- Africa 12,059 13 9
- £2,000 taken to South Africa 29,912 10 0
- ————————— 41,972 7 9
- —————————
- 1,74,186 2 1
- Advances to Recover 1,277 13 0
- Balance in Hand:
- With Bank of Bengal 46,241 2 1[G]
- With Honorary Treasurers 520 6 9
- ————————— 46,761 8 10
- —————————
- Rs. 2,22,225 7 11
- ═════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
-
-Footnote F:
-
- There is a further liability under this head of about Rs. 20,000.
-
-Footnote G:
-
- From Bank Balance in Hand a credit of £2,000 has been opened for the
- contingent with the Standard Bank of South Africa.
-
-
-Audited and found correct.
- LOVELOCK & LEWES, Chartered Accountants,
- _Honorary Auditors_.
-CALCUTTA: _April 14, 1900_.
-
-
- APPENDIX XI
- _LUMSDEN’S HORSE TRANSPORT_
-
-The following article is by Sergeant Stephens, of the Indian
-Commissariat and Transport Department, attached to Lumsden’s Horse:
-
- The Government of India at the last moment not sanctioning native
- drivers for the corps, fifty Europeans had to be enlisted under the
- same terms as those of trackers, receiving kit, equipment, &c. As
- there was no time to pick and choose, the men were taken, if
- physically fit, more by personal appearances than recommendations.
- With the exception of a few, they worked remarkably well and never
- complained of the hardships they had to endure while we were in South
- Africa.
-
- When each member joined the corps he was handed over a pair of ponies
- or mules, also harness for same, with cart complete. The majority of
- them had never driven or ridden a horse in their lives, so that the
- breaking-in of horses and men was not an easy task. Of fifty pairs of
- animals received for draught purposes not a pair was broken to
- harness, and when the heavy breechen was placed on their backs they
- did their best to kick it off, but the girths supplied by Government
- were strong enough to keep that in place. Our next difficulty was to
- put them together in carts. Immediately the curricle bar or iron
- support rested on their backs they wanted to be off for their lives,
- and in some instances got away and did a lot of mischief before they
- came to grief, cart and all. Privates Hyde and Braine once trying to
- stop a pair got severely hurt; Hyde putting his shoulder out, while
- Braine got his head badly cut. Both were sent to the General Hospital
- for treatment, but recovered in time to join B Company.
-
- The Transport men were very willing, took a delight in their duty, and
- worked hard from 7 A.M. to 6 P.M. daily, and at that rate we were able
- to have the worst of the animals broken to harness before we left
- Calcutta. At the same time, the men were improving daily in the care
- and treatment of animals, and when the General Officer Commanding held
- his inspection, every one of them was able to drive, or seemed to
- think he could, so we had A Company’s Transport out for inspection.
- After inspecting carts, animals, and drivers, the General expressed
- himself pleased with the very ready way in which they had been got in
- order, and stated that he thought we should get on well in Africa.
-
- The men had not the slightest idea of what a muleteer was until they
- got on board ship. Then the work started, and dirty work it was for
- about two hours every morning. Even then there were no complaints. The
- officer commanding the corps and the captain of the ship gave great
- praise to the Transport men every day for having the cleanest deck.
- The captain afterwards said that with Regular troops he had never seen
- it better kept. They had to perform the same duties as the troopers,
- the only difference being that they had extra work daily from 2 P.M.
- to 4 P.M. dubbing and cleaning harness.
-
- While on board ship the Transport of A Company was divided into four
- sections, consequently four non-commissioned officers had to be made.
- This was the first promotion in the Transport, and was given to those
- who seemed to take most interest in their work. The names of men
- promoted were Power, Palmer, Cullen, and Estabrooke. Power afterwards
- worked up to sergeant, was a very good non-commissioned officer
- throughout, and quite deserved the rank he held. Work on board ship
- was the same daily, nothing fresh occurring till we landed at Cape
- Town. That night carts had to be got ready, and the following morning
- we had to take our own baggage to Maitland Camp. That was about the
- worst day we had while in Africa. It was impossible to look to our
- front—animals would not face the sand-storms—it was not sand, but
- small stones beating against our faces, and our eyes were sore for
- weeks after our first day at the Cape. It was very hard to harness the
- Transport animals in carts; but after being about twenty-six days on
- board ship, they had not much mind for bolting that first day. The
- camp, when we got there, was knee-deep in sand. Maitland at that time
- was a dirty hole, and we were pleased when we got our orders to shift.
- But a few things happened during our stay there which we cannot
- forget. The Government came on us, thinking we had too many carts, and
- they had to be reduced by ten. So we handed our ten carts and ten
- pairs of ponies to the Transport Officer, Cape Town, and, instead of
- them, got thirty-eight pairs of mules, with leader harness complete,
- to act as leaders for our remaining carts. That meant instead of two
- ponies to a cart, as we left India, we had to put four ponies or
- mules. This complicated matters a long time, for some of the drivers
- could never manage four-in-hand, so had to be left with a pair only.
- They said that two ‘donkeys’ (which they would insist upon calling
- their chargers) were quite enough for them to look after. In the end,
- everything turned out very well. We kept those animals spare, and
- whenever any in the teams showed signs of fatigue, got lame, or
- otherwise unfit, we had others to take their places.
-
- The Transport Officer at the Cape did not think much of his bargain.
- He could not get the Cape boys to make head or tail of our Indian
- carts and harness. It was harder for them to put a pair of our ponies
- in their cart than their own span of ten, which they could use as they
- liked.
-
- After receiving orders for the front with a light heart, every man
- thought the minutes too long until he got an opportunity of
- distinguishing himself. We were ordered to Bloemfontein, and everybody
- was on the war-path at once. We railed to that station, which did not
- do the animals any good, and on arrival there were ordered to join a
- brigade at Deel’s Farm, about three miles beyond the town. Having to
- draw our stores from Bloemfontein station prepared our transport and
- drivers for the work which lay before them, and during our stay there
- they got in excellent order.
-
- The first day our Transport carts went out with spare ammunition for
- the corps, nothing unusual occurred, and, in fact, all returned
- disappointed, but this showed the ammunition drivers what they must
- expect when going out again. All in charge of these carts were picked
- men, being the best drivers with the best animals. They had to canter
- and trot over rough country with eight boxes of ammunition, to keep in
- touch with their corps, over hills or otherwise, and be always where
- they were wanted; our carts were very handy, and could go where others
- failed.
-
- Next day was the well-remembered Ospruit fight, and the carts had a
- narrow escape then. The enemy got their range, and the pom-poms
- played round them for some time, a few of the shells landing between
- the carts; but the drivers were just as easy as ever, and when
- ordered to retire did it in excellent style, smoking and passing
- jokes as the shells followed them up. Private Lowther, who was on
- stretcher-bearer’s duty that day, will not forget what he called a
- cool order. When the drivers were getting out of range one of their
- hats was blown off, and Lowther, being on foot, was ordered to pick
- it up. He looked twice, but went back and got it. Shells were a bit
- thick, but he remembered he was a soldier. The day after the fight
- we had to send a cart out to bring in Major Showers. Corporal Cullen
- and Private Arthurton went with it on duty, Cullen corporal in
- charge, Arthurton the driver. After finding the Major’s body, they
- were joined by some Boers, who assisted to put the Major in the
- cart, had a friendly chat with them, passed cigarettes and tobacco
- round, and Cullen said when he came back to camp that there were
- very few Boers among them, nearly all English-speaking and of a very
- respectable class. They had very little to say regarding the fight
- the previous day, but said they were sorry our Colonel was killed.
- They had found some papers in the pockets of young Lumsden, whom
- they took to be the Colonel.
-
- We had most trouble with our carts and animals when night marching.
- The ponies were excellent for draught purposes; the Cape mules did not
- last nearly as well. If properly fed the ponies would have worked
- throughout our stay in Africa; but they were often days without
- anything but what they could pick when we got an hour’s halt. On one
- occasion which I remember well they were thirty-six hours under
- harness without food of any kind, and only watered once. People might
- say, Why not oftener? Water was not procurable.
-
- Another thing that came against us was the cunning Kaffir. He could
- walk around at night, take the best of our animals, and have them
- disfigured in such a way that nobody could recognise them the
- following morning. We put up with this for a long time, until our
- stock of spare mules ran short, and then we had to carry out the same
- tricks as the remainder by doing unto others as they had done to us.
- We were able to take to Pretoria every one of the carts with which we
- left Bloemfontein. When we got there, everything, of course, was the
- worse for wear, but complete in every other respect. If anything ever
- frightened our Transport drivers it was the word ‘drift.’ You should
- have seen their worried looks when they heard that there was a drift
- ahead; but they braved everything, thinking that Pretoria would finish
- all. But to our surprise when we got there we found out that the show
- was only then starting. We had a little rest after the surrender,
- being sent to a station ten miles off called Irene. While there the
- Transport kept the horses of the corps well fed on oat-hay, which we
- brought from all the farms within ten miles of the place. We remained
- at Irene until August 1, and then got attached to a brigade going
- after De Wet in the Rustenburg direction. We were on this march for
- twenty-eight days without rest, which was the cause of killing all our
- Indian ponies except twelve. The whole of that month’s march was a
- dead pull for the Transport—some days it was up to the ankle in sand,
- while next it was just the same in black sticky earth. We were not the
- only lot that suffered; every unit experienced just the same. It took
- us all our time to get our carts back to Pretoria. At the end of
- August we were only a day in Pretoria before being ordered off again
- on the march to Barberton. Things had to be got ready as quickly as
- possible, and off we went on September 1 for another long trek. When
- starting on this march we had to leave twelve of our carts in
- Pretoria, and as many men of the corps had come down we reduced our
- Transport. During the whole of this period we had very little time for
- carrying out repairs to carts and harness. The saddles began to give
- out in the leather, as they had not been repaired since we left
- Calcutta except a stitch here and there. During our stay in Africa we
- never had an animal suffer from sore back. This, we think, was due to
- the excellent way in which the saddles were stuffed before leaving
- Calcutta. Although newly received from the Ordnance Department, they
- did not satisfy the Commissariat and Transport Sergeant-Major, who had
- them stuffed to his own liking.
-
- On the march to Barberton and back we had very bad weather, which
- completely destroyed our gear, and, arriving at Pretoria for the third
- time, we thought of getting it thoroughly repaired. We had done our
- best, and, in fact, had all the saddles restuffed and lined in a very
- short time, when orders were received for the corps to be disbanded.
-
- The number of animals with which we left India was—Ponies, 100; mules,
- 5; total, 105. The five mules lasted throughout, but only eight ponies
- lived to see the finish. Two of these, driven by Private Arthurton,
- seemed to be in better condition at the finish than when they left
- Calcutta. He took great care of his animals. Two others were in charge
- of Driver Estabrooke. As he intended remaining in South Africa, the
- Colonel presented him with his pair.
-
- The whole of the carts and gear were handed over to the Ordnance,
- Pretoria, before our departure, with three hearty cheers from
- Lumsden’s muleteers.
-
-
- APPENDIX XII
- TOPICAL SONG
-
- BY J. HENRY, TROOPER IN LUMSDEN’S HORSE
-
- I
-
- The long campaign is over,
- And we are homeward bound;
- We think about what’s waiting us on shore:
- Of the dâks at country stations,
- Of the evenings in the club,
- And the pleasures of a civy rig once more.
-
- CHORUS.
-
- For the ration jam is sweet,
- And the ‘bully’ beef is good,
- And ‘Machonochie’ is nothing short of prime;
- But give me, yes, oh, give me,
- Oh, how I wish you would,
- ‘Moorghi’ cutlets and my peg at evening time.
-
- II
-
- We have often groused and grumbled,
- But not a man would say
- He’s sorry that he joined the good old corps;
- And the longest marches seem now
- But fair share of work and play,
- When we know we’ve not to do them any more.
-
- (Chorus.)
-
- III
-
- It really is annoying
- When you march at break of day,
- To find your moke has vanished from the line;
- And you curse the stable picket,
- And on your knees you pray
- You may never see another ‘Argentine.’
-
- (Chorus.)
-
- IV
-
- We’re very near the finish,
- And in a week or so
- We will scatter over India, hill and plain;
- But when two of us foregather,
- ’Mid the clouds of smoke we blow
- We’ll follow-Colonel Lumsden once again.
-
- (Chorus.)
-
-
- _Errata_
-
- Page 100, line 16, _for_ Grobelaar’s _read_ Grobler’s
-
- ” 182, ” 20, _for_ East Indian Railway Volunteer
- Rifles _read_ East India Railway
- Volunteer Rifles
-
- ” 257, ” 20, _for_ Private J.E. Cubitt _read_ Private
- L.H. Cubitt
-
- ” 267, ” 25, _for_ Thompson, T. _read_ Thompson, F.C.
-
- ” ” ” 32, _for_ Henry, G.E. _read_ Henry, J.
-
- ” 364, ” 4, _for_ Burnett _read_ Bennett
-
- ” ” ” 10, _for_ Campbell, L.C. _read_ Campbell,
- J.S.
-
- ” 384, ” 13, _for_ Johnstone, E.J. _read_ Johnstone,
- C.H.
-
- ” ” ” 15, _for_ Ritchie _read_ Richey
-
- ” ” ” 20, _for_ Bagge _read_ Dagge
-
- ” 395, ” 35, _for_ Rustomjee _read_ Rustomji
-
-HISTORY OF LUMSDEN’S HORSE
-
-
-
-
- INDEX
-
-
- Abbott, Mr. F.H., 475
-
- Abdur Rahman, Mr. A.F.M., 471, 480
-
- Adlam, E., 267, 364, 436
-
- Adye, Colonel, 370
-
- Ahmed Khan, Nawab Sir Sidi, 25, 462
-
- Ahmed Wali Khan, Malik, 465
-
- Ahmuty & Co., 464
-
- Ajodhya, Maharajah of, 465
-
- Aldam, Mrs., 477
-
- Aldis, O., 384, 428
-
- Aligarh, 25, 475
-
- Aligarh, Mahomed Mazamullah Khan of, 475
-
- Alipur, 451
-
- Alipur Native Cavalry, 395
-
- Allan, B.M., 384, 428
-
- Allanson, Captain, 478
-
- Allardice, D.O., 267, 344, 346, 384, 434
-
- Allardice, H., 344, 346, 371, 434
-
- Allen, Mr. C.H., 478
-
- Allen, Mr. R., 470, 478
-
- Allen, Mrs. C.H., 477
-
- Allison, Mr. J., 470
-
- Anderson, P.W., 364, 418, 436, 454
-
- Anderson, Mr. Justice, 466
-
- Anderson, Mr. G.G., 478
-
- Anderson, Mr. J.A., 480
-
- Anderson, Wright & Co., 463
-
- Anley, Captain, 104
-
- Anstruther, Colonel, 316
-
- Antram, Mr., 478
-
- Apcar, Mr., 402
-
- Apcar, Mr. A.A., 478, 480
-
- Apcar, Mr. A.G., 480
-
- Apcar, Mr. J.G., 478
-
- Apcar & Co., 25, 462
-
- Apjohn, Mr., 395, 470, 476, 478
-
- Apjohn, Mrs., 477
-
- Apostolides, Captain, 480
-
- Apostolides, Mr., 478
-
- Arathoon, J.D.L., 311, 365, 367, 431, 454
-
- Arbuthnot, Mr. J., 469, 480
-
- Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders, 296
-
- Armfield & Chard, 464
-
- Army Service Corps, 311
-
- Arracan Co., Ltd., 464
-
- Arthur, Sir A., 402, 480
-
- Arthur, Mr. A., 478
-
- Arthurton, W.G., 436, 487, 489
-
- Artillery, _see_ Royal Horse
-
- Artists’ Volunteers, 369
-
- Ashton, Mr. H.S., 469, 480
-
- Ashton, Mr. R.P., 480
-
- Asonsole, 183
-
- ‘Assam Gazette,’ 180
-
- Assam Valley Light Horse, 4, 12, 38, 467
-
- Atkins, Mr. C.H., 473
-
- Atkinson, A., 72, 384, 385, 431
-
- Atkinson, Mr. R.P., 473
-
- ‘Atlantian’ transport, 371, 372, 382, 383, 384, 387, 389
-
- Australian Volunteers, 184, 217, 219, 220, 239, 293, 296, 338, 360, 363
-
- Avoca, 335
-
- Ayerst, Captain, 402
-
-
- Badcock, Captain, 478
-
- Baden-Powell, General, 288, 289, 292, 293, 294, 296, 300, 305, 306,
- 309, 310, 311, 413
-
- Baden-Powell, Major, 293
-
- Bailey, Mr. W.L., 468
-
- Baileytown, 121
-
- Baines, Lieutenant, 480
-
- Baines, Mr., 478
-
- Baines & Co., 464
-
- Baker, Mr. C.F., 472
-
- Baker, Mrs., 477
-
- Balaghat Police, 467
-
- Baldwin, R.H., 267, 364, 436
-
- Ballard, Lance-Corporal, 75, 430, 454
-
- Balmer, Lawrie, & Co., 463
-
- Balmoral, 316, 328
-
- Bank of Bengal, 423, 465
-
- Bankes, E.N., 267, 364, 430
-
- Bankier, Mr. W.A., 480
-
- Banks, P.W., 364, 436, 454
-
- Bannerjee, Mr. Justice, 466, 480
-
- Bannerjee, Babu Doorgagati, 473
-
- Bannerjee, Babu Krishna Chunder, 473
-
- Barberton, 190, 314, 315, 316, 320, 324, 327, 332, 333, 336, 339, 340,
- 349, 351, 488
-
- Baring, Hon. E., Major, 395, 476, 478, 480
-
- Barkley, Mrs., 477
-
- Barotse Tribe, 306
-
- Barrackpur, 396
-
- Barrow, Mr. A.S., 473, 478, 480
-
- Barrow, Mrs., 477
-
- Barry & Co., 463
-
- Bartholomew, Mr., 478
-
- Bartlett, Mr. E.W.J., 470
-
- Barton, General, 417
-
- Bateman, F.G., 347, 431
-
- Bates, Corporal, 268, 311, 365, 367, 432, 454
-
- Bateson, Mr. H., 480
-
- Bathgate, Mr. J., 472
-
- Bathgate & Co., 463
-
- Battye, W., Lieutenant, 414
-
- Bayley, Mr., 478
-
- Beachcroft, Mr. C.P., 471
-
- Beadel, Mr., 478
-
- Bearne, L.C., 277, 280, 281, 364, 434
-
- Beattie, Mr. J.A., 468
-
- Beattie, Mr. M.J., 470
-
- Beatty, Mr., 478
-
- Bechtler & Sons, 465
-
- Bechuanaland, 287
-
- Becker, Ross, & Co., 463
-
- Begg, Mr. H.C., 469, 478, 480
-
- Behan, J.L., 364, 435
-
- Behar, 172, 173
-
- Behar Contingent, 15, 38
-
- Behar Light Horse, 12
-
- Belfast, 337, 344, 449
-
- Bell, C.L., 384, 428
-
- Bell, L.H., 418, 430, 454
-
- Bell, Mr. H.J., 470
-
- Benares, Maharajah of, 465
-
- Bengal, 178
-
- Bengal Central Railway, 467
-
- Bengal Lancers (14th), 451
-
- Bennett, H.C.C., 267, 364, 430
-
- Benoni, 413, 414, 417, 418
-
- Beresford, Captain, 31, 33, 120, 126, 266, 312, 316, 333, 334, 335,
- 337, 340, 343, 344, 345, 349, 384, 402, 427, 457
-
- Beresford, Captain, I.C., 473
-
- Beresford, Mr. W.M., 471, 478, 480
-
- Bergendal, 313
-
- Berkshire Regiment, 290
-
- Bethany, 124
-
- Bethel, 350, 353
-
- Bethulie, 86, 91, 92, 121, 122, 223
-
- Bevan & Co., 465, 467
-
- Bewsher, J.C.D., 244, 267, 332, 364, 433
-
- Bhama, Churn, Bhur, & Co., 463
-
- Bharatpur, Maharajah of, 462
-
- Bhownagar, Maharajah of, 25, 474
-
- Bidenhamp, Dr., 333
-
- Bijoy Singh, Rajah of Kunari, Kotah, 465
-
- Bikanir, Maharajah of, 465
-
- Bikanir Imperial Service Camel Corps, 466
-
- Binning, Colonel, 480
-
- Birch, R.W.R., 267, 364, 433
-
- Bird & Co., 463
-
- Birkmyre, Mrs., 477
-
- Birkmyre Brothers, 463
-
- Biscoe, J.S., 268, 346, 365, 435, 454
-
- Biscoe, M.S., 371, 434
-
- Bishop of Calcutta, _see_ Welldon
-
- Blair, Lance-Corporal, 71, 75, 119, 267, 268, 365, 427, 454
-
- Blair, Mr. A.J.F., 471, 478
-
- Blair, Mr. D.C., 478, 480
-
- ‘Blake’s Ruffians,’ 312
-
- Bloemfontein, 86, 90, 93, 96, 98, 99, 101, 110, 111, 112, 113, 117,
- 120, 122, 123, 124, 127-143, 150, 177, 194, 199, 208, 224, 226, 253,
- 257, 258, 269, 369, 460, 487, 488
-
- Boesman’s Kop, 99, 106, 107
-
- Boileau, K., 90, 111, 418, 429, 454
-
- Bokfontein, 304
-
- Boksburg, 242, 244, 271, 273, 413, 414, 415, 416, 417, 418, 425
-
- Bolst, N.J., 77, 183, 384, 431
-
- Bolton, Mr. C.W., 468, 480
-
- Bolton, Mrs., 477
-
- Bombay, 387-391
-
- Bombay Infantry (20th), 395
-
- Bonnerjee, Mr. W.C., 470
-
- Booth, J.J., 183, 364, 384, 431
-
- Bosek & Co., 464
-
- Botha, Hans, Commandant, 416
-
- Botha, Louis, General, 97, 150, 178, 200, 234, 236, 248, 251, 260, 261,
- 270, 287, 289, 301, 313, 315, 338
-
- Bothaville, 118, 331
-
- Bourdillon, Major, 480
-
- Bourdillon, Mr., 402
-
- Bourne & Shepherd, 465
-
- Bowring, Major, 474
-
- Boyd, Mrs., 477
-
- Brabant, General, 150
-
- Bradford, L.H., 235, 414, 416, 418, 436, 454
-
- Bradford, S.H., 384, 436
-
- Bradshaw, Captain, 395, 402, 470, 480
-
- Braine, J., 321, 364, 436, 454, 485
-
- Brakpan, 208
-
- Brandfort, 136, 140, 141, 142, 143, 150, 176, 177, 189, 193, 208, 209,
- 213, 258, 311, 343
-
- Brandreth, Mr. S., 471
-
- Branson, Mrs., 477
-
- Brennan, Sergeant, 385, 404, 405, 427, 460
-
- Briggs, H., 384, 432
-
- Broadwood, General, 98, 99, 100, 101, 102, 106, 177, 300
-
- Brodrick, Mr. St. John, 421
-
- Bronkhurst Spruit, 316
-
- Broomfield & Co., 464
-
- Broughton, Mr. L.P.D., 468
-
- Brown, J.A., 361, 428
-
- Brown, H.P., 341, 430
-
- Brown, W.B., 267, 371, 384, 436
-
- Brown, W.K., 434
-
- Brown, Rev. Mr., 403
-
- Browne, Captain, 389
-
- Browne, Mr. W.B., 472
-
- Browning, Mr. C.H., 471
-
- Bryant, Mrs. Beadon, 477
-
- Buck, Sir E., 398
-
- Buck, Mr. E.G., 478
-
- Buckingham, Colonel, 4, 26, 64, 402
-
- Buckingham, Mr., 404, 468, 478, 480
-
- Buckland, Colonel, 29, 64, 476
-
- Buckland, Mr. C.E., 480
-
- Buckland, Mr. P.L., 478
-
- Buckland, Mrs., 477
-
- Buckley, Mr. R.B., 470, 480
-
- Buffalo River, 91
-
- Buffalo Spruit, 320
-
- Bukhtyar Shah, Prince Mahomed, 480
-
- Buksh, Mair R., 471
-
- Bull, Mr. W., 470
-
- Buller, General, 85, 87, 180, 314, 449
-
- Burgess, E.J., 370, 435
-
- Burgess, Mr. W.H., 474
-
- Burmese Mounted Infantry, 106
-
- Burn, Mr. R.N., 472
-
- Burn-Murdoch, J.H.A., 136, 149, 159, 161, 163-166, 171, 267, 364, 365,
- 432
-
- Burnand, W., 183, 321#, 384, 436
-
- Burnham, Mrs. F.A., 470
-
- Bushman’s Kop, _see_ Boesman’s
-
- Buskin, A.H., 418, 428, 454
-
- Butcher, Major, 389
-
- Butler, Lance-Corporal, 267, 332, 434
-
- Butter, Mr. A.L., 478
-
- Byres, _see_ Moir-Byres
-
-
- Cable, Mr. E., 480
-
- Cachar, 181
-
- Caddy, Lieutenant, 480
-
- Caddy, Dr. Arnold, 478
-
- Cadell, Mr. P.R., 471
-
- Caine, Mr. G., 478
-
- Calcutta, 11, 35, 41, 45, 48, 63, 86, 182, 206, 225, 269, 366, 378,
- 381, 391-408, 422, 423, 488
-
- Calcutta ladies’ work for the corps, 38, 64, 95
-
- Calcutta Light Horse, 12, 395
-
- Calcutta Port Defence, 396
-
- Calcutta Volunteers, 395, 467
-
- Cameron, Mr. P.E., 478
-
- Campbell, Captain, 478
-
- Campbell, Sergeant, 227, 364, 433, 454
-
- Campbell, Corporal, 418, 436, 454
-
- Campbell, J.J., 384, 436
-
- Campbell, J.S., 231, 267, 364, 428
-
- Campbell, Mr. John, 478
-
- Campbell, Rev. Mr., 403
-
- Campbell, Mrs., 477
-
- Canadian Volunteers, 273, 296, 343, 359, 360, 363
-
- Cape Colony, 97, 110, 195
-
- ‘Cape Times,’ 371
-
- Cape Town, 85, 88, 89, 90, 110, 111, 142, 266, 268, 369, 370, 371, 377,
- 382, 486
-
- Carabiniers, 350, 354
-
- Carolina, 311, 314, 316, 318, 320, 350, 351, 352
-
- Carpendale, Major, 393, 394
-
- Carr, Captain Baker, 478, 480
-
- Carrington, General, 288, 293, 294
-
- Carter, Mr. F. McL., 471
-
- Carter, Mr. N. Bonham, 478
-
- Carter, Mr. W.D., 478
-
- Cartwright, Mr. W.D., 478
-
- Cary-Barnard, C.D.V., 231, 246, 429, 454
-
- Case, R.U., 72, 157#, 159, 161, 173, 178, 194, 425, 429
-
- Casperz, Mr. A., 471
-
- ‘Catalonia’ transport, 370, 371, 382
-
- Cathcart, 94
-
- Cawnpore, 25
-
- Cawnpore Brush Factory, 475
-
- Cawnpore Woollen Mills, 475
-
- Cayley, B., 210, 277, 278, 279, 280, 281, 365, 436
-
- Chadburn, Mr. C.F., 475
-
- Chakan Lall Roy, Babu, 466
-
- Chamney, Captain, 31, 33, 152, 155, 165, 166, 178, 179, 266, 271, 334,
- 349, 351, 353, 356, 357, 369, 370, 409, 427, 454, 456, 461
-
- Champion, Mr. G., 468
-
- Chapman, E.S., 167, 168, 171, 231, 364, 432, 454
-
- Chapman, Mr. E., 478
-
- Chapman, Mr. E.P., 470, 478
-
- Chappell, Mrs., 477
-
- Charkhari, Rajah of, 465
-
- Charles, Lance-Corporal, 75, 364, 376, 435
-
- Charles, Mrs., 477
-
- Chartres, Corporal, 3, 155, 311, 344, 364, 431, 454
-
- Chatterjee, Mr. Justice, 466
-
- Cheetham, Mr. W.H., 470
-
- Cherra Gardens, 180
-
- Cheshire, H.S., 249, 267, 364, 430
-
- Cheshire Regiment, 95, 141, 370
-
- Chitnavis, Rao Gumgadhur Mahdev, 472
-
- Christian, Princess, hospital train, 349
-
- Chronopolo, Mr. K.C., 474
-
- Churchill, Major, 395, 402
-
- Churchill, Mrs., 477
-
- City Imperial Volunteers, 130, 237, 357, 359
-
- Clark, Mr. Justice, 466
-
- Clarke, E.A.S., 361, 371, 434
-
- Clarke, Mr. L.A.G., 471
-
- Clarke, Rev. Mr., 403
-
- Clarke, Mrs. E., 474
-
- Clerk, F.V., 364, 432
-
- Clifford, Captain, 31, 33, 155, 159, 266, 276, 277, 278, 281, 282, 310,
- 344, 354, 355, 427, 457, 461
-
- Clifford, E.S., 231, 384, 430
-
- Clifford, F.M., 257, 364, 384, 431
-
- Clifford, M.W., 268, 433
-
- Coates, Mr. E.C., 478
-
- Cobb, H.P., 344, 346, 347, 349, 433
-
- Cobb, Mr. W.H., 469
-
- Cogan, Rev. Canon, 403
-
- Coghlan, Private (Victorian Rifles), 194
-
- Colesberg, 112, 315, 343
-
- Collen, Sir Edwin, 64, 402, 468, 476
-
- Collen, Lady, 477
-
- Collins, R.G., 268, 365, 367, 428, 455
-
- Colombo, 11
-
- Colvile, General, 99, 107
-
- Colville, Mr. G., 478
-
- Colvin, Mr. E.G., 469
-
- Comley, Mrs., 477
-
- Commando Nek, 281, 288, 292, 294, 296, 303, 304, 305, 306
-
- Compton’s Horse, 243, 244
-
- Conduit, Sergeant, 257, 364, 384, 432
-
- Constable, Mrs., 477
-
- Consterdine, A.E., 347, 357, 430
-
- Cooch-Behar, Maharani of, 477
-
- Cook, Dr. J.N., 395, 470, 480
-
- Cook & Co., 464, 467
-
- Cooke, Mr. F.J., 471
-
- Cooke, Kelvey & Co., 463
-
- Cooper, Major, 395
-
- Cooper, H., 267, 333, 364, 433
-
- Cooper, Mr. A.S., 474
-
- Cooper, Mr. W.E., 480
-
- Cooper, Allen, & Co., 462, 475
-
- Coorg Contingent, 19
-
- Corbett, P.T., 77, 183, 384, 431
-
- Cossipur Artillery Volunteers, 466
-
- Cotton, Sir Henry, 180, 395, 402
-
- Cotton, Mr. H.E.A., 480
-
- Cotton, Mr. H.J.S., 462
-
- Cotton, Mr. W.J., 472
-
- Cotton, Mrs., 477
-
- Coulter, Dr. W., 480
-
- Coulter, Mrs., 477
-
- Courtenay, A.P., 345, 379, 384, 431
-
- Cowan, Colonel, 119, 366
-
- Cowen, J.S., 136, 243, 275, 297, 329, 382, 384, 431
-
- Cowley, Mr. H.P., 473
-
- Cox, Captain, (N.S.W. Lancers), 264
-
- Cox, Lance-Corporal, 433
-
- Craddock, Colonel, 338
-
- Craig, Mr. W. Ross, 478
-
- Crane, Lieutenant, 31, 33, 72, 155, 156, 160, 161, 162, 168, 172, 174,
- 183, 190, 194, 205, 207, 258, 268, 427, 457, 461
-
- Crawford, Mr. C.E., 471
-
- Crocodile Poort, 336
-
- Crocodile River, 276, 277, 278, 279, 281, 287, 290, 295, 304, 328, 337,
- 409
-
- Cronjé, General, 86, 315
-
- Crowe, Mr. Justice, 389
-
- Crown Brewery Co., 465
-
- Cruickshank, Mr., 478, 480
-
- Crum, Mr. A.S., 468
-
- Crux, R.M., 384, 385, 436
-
- Cubitt, L.H., 257, 365, 433
-
- Cubitt, Mr. J.E., 478
-
- Cullen, S.W., Lance-Corporal, 75, 235, 436, 455, 486, 487
-
- Cuningham, Sir W.J., 467, 480
-
- Cunningham, General, 333, 340
-
- Cunningham, F.H., 434
-
- Currie, Mr. W., 476
-
- Curry, Mr. W.E., 471
-
- Curzon, Lady, 29, 48, 59, 63, 397, 398, 402, 477
-
- Curzon, Lord, 9, 11, 22, 24, 29, 48, 52, 56, 59, 60, 61, 63, 64, 119,
- 356, 363, 371, 378, 381, 402, 422, 423, 424, 425, 462, 483
-
- Cuthbert, O.R., 384, 434, 460
-
- Cuthbertson & Harper, 464
-
- Cyferfontein, 237
-
-
- D’Costa, Mr. J.M., 474
-
- Dagge, R.G., 215, 240, 384, 435
-
- ‘Daily News,’ the, 97
-
- Dakshineswar Mallia, Kumar, 465
-
- Dale, Lance-Sergeant, 75, 77, 183, 229, 384, 404, 405, 431, 459
-
- Dalgetty, Mr. A.B., 473
-
- Dallas, Mr. W.L., 474
-
- Dalmanutha, 345
-
- Dalton, T.L., 371, 434
-
- Daly, Captain, 469
-
- Daly, D., 384, 435
-
- Dangerfield, Mrs., 477
-
- Daniell, Mr. Lindsay, 480
-
- Daniell, Mrs. L., 477
-
- Dard, Mr. C.E., 472
-
- Darjeeling Bench and Bar, 467
-
- Darrah, Mr. M.L., 469
-
- Dashwood, Mr., 478
-
- Datia, Rajah of, 465
-
- Daubney, R.J.C., 75, 90, 111, 159, 161, 173, 178, 194, 425, 429
-
- Davenport & Co., 464
-
- David & Co., 463
-
- Davidson & Co., 464
-
- Davies, Colonel, 416
-
- Davies, H., 347, 432
-
- Davies, Leo, 235, 435
-
- Davies, Mr. W.J., 480
-
- Davis, Mr. A.W., 468
-
- Davis, Leech, & Co., 467
-
- Dawkins, Mr. C., 466, 478
-
- Dawkins, Mrs., 477
-
- Dawson, Sergeant, 267, 269, 364, 434
-
- Dawson, H.K.F.A. H., Bugler, 431
-
- De Aar, 112, 113, 117
-
- De Kaap Goldfields, 327
-
- De Kaap Mountains, 320, 331, 349
-
- De Kaap Valley, 324
-
- De la Rey, General, 176, 178, 189, 208, 286, 288, 289, 300, 302, 315,
- 360
-
- De la Rey, Mrs., 340
-
- De Lisle, Colonel, 248
-
- De Wet, General, 97, 98, 100, 118, 150, 178, 234, 235, 236, 240, 270,
- 294, 295, 299, 300, 301, 302, 303, 306, 309, 313, 338, 360, 488
-
- Deane, Lieutenant, 389
-
- Deas, Mr. Cairns, 467, 478, 480
-
- Deel’s Farm, 128, 129, 131, 487
-
- Delagoa Bay Railway, 314
-
- Delhi, 180
-
- Derby Militia, 125, 267
-
- Devenish, Mr. J.A., 467
-
- Deverill, Captain, 395
-
- Devil’s Kantoor, 315, 323
-
- Dewetsdorp, 177
-
- Dexter, W.E., 229, 243, 384, 409, 435, 458
-
- Diack, Mr. A.H., 473
-
- Diamond Hill, 260, 270, 289, 343
-
- Dickens, C.V.S., 77, 183, 384, 431
-
- Dickson, General, 337, 349, 350, 351, 352, 355
-
- Dickson, Mr. J.G., 480
-
- Disit, Zinzbur, 465
-
- Distinguished Conduct Medal, 279
-
- Dods, Mr. W., 469, 478
-
- Dolby, Major, 64, 478
-
- Donald, Sergeant, 379, 384, 431
-
- Donker Hoek, 343
-
- Doorn Spruit, 208
-
- Dorrien, Smith-, General, 107, 117, 300, 302, 345
-
- Dorset Yeomanry, 327
-
- Dott, Mr. A.S., 468
-
- Douglas, Mr. A., 469
-
- Dover, Mr. F.W.C., 472
-
- Dowd, I.V.G., 183, 384, 431
-
- Doyle, Sir A. Conan, quoted, 173, 389
-
- Doyle, J.C., 90, 111, 384, 435
-
- Dragoon Guards (7th), 350, 352
-
- Drake-Brockman, Captain, 64
-
- Driefontein, 315, 343
-
- Dring, Mr., 395, 478
-
- Dring, Mrs., 477
-
- Drury, Mr. E.N., 471
-
- Dublin Fusiliers, 180
-
- Ducat, S., 164, 165, 166, 215, 432
-
- Duke, Mr. F.F., 470
-
- Duke, Mrs., 477
-
- Duke of Cornwall’s Light Infantry, 283
-
- Dunbar, Lieutenant, 480
-
- Duncan Brothers & Co., 463
-
- Dundonald, Lord, 314
-
- Dunne, Mr. A.M., 468
-
- Dunne, Mrs., 477
-
- Dunsterville, Captain, 474
-
- Durban, 85, 87, 371, 382
-
- Durbunga, Maharajah Bahadur of, 465
-
- Durham, Mr. F.E., 471
-
- Durham Light Infantry, 104
-
- Durrung Mounted Rifles, 4
-
- Dutt, Babu Davendro Nath, 473
-
- Dyce, General, 402
-
- Dyer, Mr. E.J.R., 472
-
- Dyer & Co., 463
-
- Dykes & Co., 464
-
- Dykes (J.A.) & Co., 465
-
-
- East India Railway, 25
-
- East India Railway Volunteer Rifles, 182
-
- East Lancashire Mounted Infantry, 136
-
- East London, 85, 86, 88, 91, 92, 93, 120, 121
-
- East Surrey Regiment, 311
-
- Eastern Bengal State Railway, 25
-
- Eastern Insurance Company, 463
-
- Eck, Mr. Otto, 469
-
- Eddis, Major, 26, 27, 64
-
- Eddis, Mr. W.K., 478
-
- Eden, Mr. E.B., 480
-
- Edenburg, 123, 124, 125
-
- Edwardes, Captain, 389
-
- Edwards, Farrier-Sergeant, 379, 384, 432
-
- Edwards, Mr. W.H., 478
-
- Egerton Woollen Mills, Cawnpore, 25
-
- Eggar, Mrs., 477
-
- Eikenhof Drift, 239, 240
-
- Eland’s River, 288, 293, 302
-
- Elandsfontein, 241, 242, 243, 260, 270, 273, 316, 332
-
- Elandslaagte, Battle of, incidents at, 147, 148
-
- Elgin Cotton Mills, Cawnpore, 25
-
- Elles, General, 23, 64, 393, 402, 468, 476, 483
-
- Elliott, Lance-Sergeant, 75, 157, 161, 162, 166, 267, 364, 365, 429
-
- Ellis, Mrs., 477
-
- Elsburg, 242
-
- Elsee, C., 371, 434
-
- Elwes, W.B., 244, 371, 433
-
- Elworthy, Mr., 402, 408
-
- Elworthy, Mrs., 477
-
- Emery, Mr. S.W., 473
-
- Engelbrecht’s Drift, 230, 233
-
- ‘Englishman,’ the, 14, 63, 69, 87, 111, 136, 163, 253, 272, 279, 394,
- 402, 404
-
- Erasmus, Commandant, 256, 414, 416
-
- Ermelo, 350
-
- Estabrooke, R.P., Lance-Corporal, 75, 321#, 435, 486, 489
-
- Evans, Sir G.P., 466, 478, 480
-
- Evans, Lieutenant, 413
-
- Evans, Mr. H.F., 469, 480
-
- Everard, Dr., 189
-
- Evetts, H., 361, 364, 434
-
- Ewing & Co., 463
-
- Executive Committee, the, 25, 26, 52, 266, 382, 405
-
-
- Fanshawe, Mr. A.U., 469, 476, 478, 480
-
- Ferreira (Boer emissary), 236
-
- Ferris, Mr. G.A., 469
-
- Ferror, Major, 402
-
- Field, Mr. F., 473
-
- Finlay, Mr. J., 480
-
- Finlay, Miar, & Co., 463
-
- Finney, Mr. S., 471
-
- Finucane, Mr. M., 480
-
- Firth, Lance-Corporal, 75, 160, 162, 173, 178, 192, 194, 207, 257, 364,
- 428
-
- Fischer, Mr. F., 474
-
- Fitzgerald, O.E., 364, 418, 436, 455
-
- Fitzgibbon, Mr. M.C., 473
-
- Fletcher, C.W., 365, 429, 455
-
- Foley, Mr. B., 471
-
- Follett, F.B., 266, 364, 433
-
- Follett, M.B., 266, 311, 332, 364, 425, 433
-
- Forbes, C.A., 364, 431, 455
-
- Forbes, Mr. A.W., 468
-
- Forbes, Mrs. Trevor, 477
-
- Fort William, 52, 394
-
- Foster, Mr. G., 467
-
- Fowle, Major, 389
-
- Fox, Sergeant, 75, 379, 384, 427
-
- Francis, Prince, of Teck, 126
-
- Francis, A.H., 219, 267, 364, 433, 455
-
- Franklin, Colonel, 473
-
- Franks, A.F., 155, 157, 160, 161, 166, 167, 168, 169, 171, 189, 194,
- 425, 433
-
- Franks, Mrs., 190
-
- Fraser, Sergeant, 75, 161, 169, 193, 205, 207, 222, 257, 384, 406, 423,
- 429, 459
-
- Fraser, J.A., 268, 364, 365, 428, 455
-
- Fraser, Mr. J.S., 480
-
- Freemantle, Mr. S.H., 469
-
- French, General, 100, 135, 136, 150, 190, 229, 230, 233, 234, 235, 236,
- 237, 240, 252, 313, 314, 315, 318, 324, 337, 343, 349, 350, 352,
- 353, 357
-
- Fuller, H.W., 364, 436
-
-
- Gage, Lieutenant, 474
-
- Gales, Mr. R.R., 478
-
- Galle, 371
-
- Garth, Mr. W., 467
-
- Gaselee, General, 23, 29, 468, 476, 483
-
- Gatsrand, 234
-
- Gayer, Mrs., 477
-
- Gee, Rev. Mr., 403
-
- Gemmell, Mr. J., 478, 480
-
- Gemmell, Mrs., 477
-
- Germiston, 242, 243, 244
-
- Ghilardi, Mr. O., 472
-
- Ghose, Mr. Justice, 466, 480
-
- Gibbs (Somerset Yeomanry), 264
-
- Gibbs, Mrs., 477
-
- Gidhour, Maharajah Bahadur of, 465
-
- Gillanders, Arbuthnot, & Co., 462
-
- Girard, Mr. G., 469, 478
-
- Girouard, Colonel, quoted, 117
-
- Gladstone, Mrs. A.S., 477
-
- Gladstone, Wyllie, & Co., 463
-
- Glascock, D.R.G., 364, 430
-
- Glasgow, 182
-
- Glen, 126, 135, 136, 141, 142
-
- Gloucester Yeomanry, 141
-
- Gloucestershire Regiment, 50
-
- Goad, Mr. L.B., 471
-
- Godden, Lance-Corporal, 379, 384, 430
-
- Goenka, Babu Baij Nath, 472
-
- Goldspink & Thompson, 464
-
- Goodeve, Mr. A., 469
-
- Goodliffe, Lance-Sergeant, 418, 436, 455
-
- Goodridge, Captain, 55, 476
-
- Goozree, Syed Bahadur Nawab, Patna, 465
-
- Gordon, General, 233, 350, 351
-
- Gordon, S.C., 379, 384, 429
-
- Gordon Highlanders, 237
-
- Gough, E.H., 231, 267, 364, 428
-
- Gowenlock, G.A., 267, 433
-
- Graham, J.A., 278, 279, 280, 281, 365, 409, 434, 458
-
- Grant, Mr. W.M., 466
-
- Graves, Corporal, 222, 354, 355, 384, 423, 433, 459
-
- Grazebrook, Mr. W.O., 470, 478
-
- Greaves, Lieutenant, 389
-
- Greaves, Mr., 389
-
- Green, Mr. R.J., 478
-
- Greenberg Brothers, 464
-
- Greenway, Mr. C., 469, 481
-
- Greer, Mr. R.T., 395, 402, 481
-
- Greig, Captain, 389
-
- Grenville, R.A., 413, 414, 416, 418, 435, 455
-
- Grice, W.T., 472
-
- Griffiths, Captain, 481
-
- Grimston, Captain, 478
-
- Grindlay & Co., 463
-
- Grobler, Commandant, 100, 306, 309, 310
-
- Guards, Foot, 221, 251
-
- Guise, Mr. J.D., 478
-
- Gun Kopje, 154, 209
-
- Guzdar, Mr. P.E., 470
-
- Gwyn, Captain, 55, 64, 476
-
- Gwyther, Mrs. Banks, 477
-
-
- Haaman’s Kraal, 306, 309, 310
-
- Haartebeestefontein Farm, 237
-
- Hacking, Mr. C.H., 473
-
- Hadenfelt, Mr. Otto, 470
-
- Haggard, Mrs., 477
-
- Haines, R.P., 249, 267, 364, 384, 428
-
- Halford, Smith, & Co., 463
-
- Hall, Mr. H.B., 481
-
- Hall & Anderson, 464
-
- Halliwell, Mr. S., 472
-
- Hamilton, Lord George, 421
-
- Hamilton, Bruce, General, 284
-
- Hamilton, Ian, General, 120, 135, 149, 150, 176, 177, 208, 217, 219,
- 227, 230, 233, 234, 236, 237, 240, 257, 268, 284, 288, 289, 290,
- 291, 292, 293, 294, 295, 296, 300, 301, 302, 304, 305, 306, 309,
- 310, 312, 316, 345, 460
-
- Hamilton, Mr. D.M., 481
-
- Hamilton, Mr. F.S., 468
-
- Hamilton & Co., 408, 463
-
- Handley, Mr. F.F., 469, 478
-
- Harding, Mr. J., 474
-
- Hare, Mr. L., 468
-
- Harington, Major, 395, 481
-
- Harington, Mr. Justice, 402, 466, 478
-
- Harington, Mrs., 477
-
- Harman & Co., 475
-
- Harold & Co., 464
-
- Harper, Mr. John, 481
-
- Harrington, Mrs., 402
-
- Harris, Captain, 244
-
- Harris, W.E., 414, 416, 418, 436, 455
-
- Harris, Mr. Justice, 466
-
- Harris, Mr. F.J., 468
-
- Harris, Mr. H.N., 470
-
- Harris, Mr. J.S., 472
-
- Harrismith, 223
-
- Harrison, A.W., 432
-
- Harrison, G.W., 435
-
- Harrison, Mr. B., 471
-
- Harrison, Mrs. A.C.M., 470
-
- Harrison, Hathaway, & Co., 464
-
- Hart, General, 300, 302
-
- Hart Brothers, 475
-
- Harvey, Surgeon-General, 23, 29, 64, 402, 468, 476, 478, 481, 483
-
- Harvey, C.C., 267, 364, 433
-
- Harwood, Major, 473
-
- Hashim Ariff, Golam, 466
-
- Hassan, Nawab Mehdi, 473
-
- Haswar, Talukdar of, 466
-
- Hathaway & Co., 465
-
- Hatton, Rev. J., 402
-
- Haumann, Mr. E.E., 334
-
- Havell, Mrs., 477
-
- Hayat Khan, Nawab Mahomed, 466
-
- Hayes, C.F., 430
-
- Hayward, A.T., 364, 384, 429, 460
-
- Healy, Sergeant-Major (Victorian Rifles), 194
-
- Heidelberg, 230, 233, 350, 353, 356
-
- Heilbron, 230, 256, 257, 268, 311
-
- Heilgers & Co., 463
-
- Hekpoort, 300
-
- Helvetia, 345
-
- Hemingway, Mr. W.G., 472
-
- Henderson, Mr. G.S., 468, 481
-
- Henderson & Co., 463
-
- Hendley, Mr. G.L., 472
-
- Hennesy, Mr. P., 472
-
- Henry, Colonel, 106, 150, 154, 161, 177, 209, 227, 230, 240, 243, 251,
- 271
-
- Henry, Captain, 481
-
- Henry, E.R. (Commanding Rand M.R.), 413, 416, 418
-
- Henry, J., 267, 384, 428, 490
-
- Hensman, Mr. H., 470, 478, 481
-
- Herlihy, Mr. F., 468
-
- Herron, Mr. H.W.G., 472
-
- Hewett, Mr. J.P., 481
-
- Hewitt, Sergeant-Major, 166, 384, 404, 405, 432, 459
-
- Hewitt, Mr. J.C., 472
-
- Hex River Mountains, 114
-
- Hickley, H.H.J., 75, 90, 111, 345, 429
-
- Hickman, General, 283, 284, 287, 288, 289
-
- Higham, Mr. T., 469
-
- Highland Brigade, 107
-
- Hight, W.W., 371, 435
-
- Hill, General, 381
-
- Hill, Mr. Justice, 466, 481
-
- Hill, Mr. C.P., 470
-
- Hill, Mrs., 477
-
- Hilliard, Mr. R.W., 471
-
- Hills, Mr. C.R., 478
-
- Hoare, Miller, & Co., 463
-
- Hobday, General, 29, 470, 476
-
- Holderness, Mr. T.W., 481
-
- Holme, W.H., 267, 345, 431, 455
-
- Holmes, Captain, 21, 33, 34, 76, 77, 159, 182, 184, 244, 246, 252, 369,
- 384, 402, 427, 457, 461
-
- Holmes, J.D.W., 418, 430, 455
-
- Holmes, Mr. W.H., 470
-
- Homolomo, 324
-
- Hong-Kong and Shanghai Banking Corporation, Ltd., 464, 466
-
- Hookey, Mr. H., 478
-
- Hoore, Major, 402
-
- Hore, Colonel, 288, 293, 302
-
- Horn, Mr. D.B., 469
-
- Hornby, Major, R.H.A., 103, 104, 105, 106
-
- Horne, Lance-Corporal, 371, 433
-
- Horse Artillery, _see_ Royal
-
- Hossein Ali Mirza, Nawab Walakader Syed, 465
-
- Hossein, Nawab Syed Ameer, 466, 481
-
- Household Cavalry, 107
-
- Houtnek, 145, 150, 175, 176, 177, 181, 190, 208, 311, 425, _see also_
- Ospruit
-
- Howes, H., 249, 364, 432
-
- Howrah, 183, 396
-
- Huddleston, Lieutenant, 474
-
- Huddleston, C.G., 256, 257, 268, 364, 433, 454
-
- Huddleston, Mr. G., 473, 478
-
- Huddleston, Mrs., 477
-
- Hughes, J.F., 384, 430
-
- Hughes, Mr. J.F., 468
-
- Hugli, 67, 69, 85
-
- Hunter, General, 284
-
- Hussain, Mirza Habib, 474
-
- Hussars (14th), 350
-
- Hussars (18th), 203, 289, 319, 328, 349
-
- Hutton, General, 208, 220, 229, 271, 283, 285, 344
-
- Hyde, R.W., 436, 485
-
-
- Iggulden, Captain, 395
-
- Iggulden, Mrs., 477
-
- Imperial Light Horse, 147, 289, 291, 296, 301, 302, 304, 312, 314, 320,
- 323, 324, 334, 337, 338, 349
-
- Imperial Yeomanry, 251, 289, 296, 314, 320
-
- India General Steam Navigation Co., 25, 64
-
- ‘Indian Daily News,’ 39, 83, 120, 168, 254, 257, 271, 483
-
- Ingram, Mr. A.D., 478
-
- Innes, R.T., 267, 384, 432
-
- Innes, S., _see_ Long-Innes
-
- Irene, 117, 247, 252, 253, 254, 255, 257, 258, 259, 266, 271, 278, 279,
- 282, 283, 286, 287, 338, 370, 381, 488
-
- Irish Brigade, 312
-
- Irving, Mr. G., 470
-
- Irwin, J.A., 418, 428
-
- Isabellafontein, 117, 208
-
- Ismay, Mr. P., 478
-
-
- Jack, Lance-Corporal, 432
-
- Jack, Mr. C.M., 478
-
- Jackman, Lance-Corporal, 267, 384, 434
-
- Jackson, Rev. Mr., 395
-
- Jagersfontein, 123, 141
-
- Jamalpur, 183
-
- Jamasji & Sons, 465
-
- Jameson, J.V., 249, 267, 364, 429
-
- Jameson, Mr. J., 473
-
- Jardine, Skinner, & Co., 462
-
- Jeffries, F.J., 469
-
- Jelliott, H.H., 469
-
- Jenkins, Lady, 398
-
- Jennings, Mr. J.G., 471
-
- Jessop & Co., 463
-
- Jhainpur Concern, 467
-
- Jodhpur, Maharajah of, 462
-
- Johannesburg, 233, 234, 236, 238, 239, 240, 244, 245, 246, 247, 248,
- 252, 257, 266, 270, 272, 277, 282, 283, 311, 312, 315, 317, 332,
- 340, 416, 425
-
- John, C.W., 384, 429
-
- Johnson, W.E.C., 431
-
- Johnston, J.B., 364, 435
-
- Johnston, Mr. A.L., 468
-
- Johnston, Mr. J.R., 478
-
- Johnstone, C.H.M., 384, 385, 431
-
- Johnstone, Mr. L., 475, 478
-
- Jones, Corporal, 75, 228, 409, 427, 458
-
- Jones, B.E., 361, 365, 430
-
- Jones, B.R. Lloyd, 346, 413, 414, 416, 417, 418, 430, 455
-
- Jones, W. Douglas, 141, 268, 311, 365, 367, 433, 455
-
- Jones, Mr. A.E., 474
-
- Jones, Mr. C.H., 474
-
- Joubert, Lieutenant-Colonel, 469
-
- Joubert, Mrs., 477
-
- Jourdain, Mr. C.B., 478
-
- Jubbulpur, 183
-
- Judge, Mr. A.S., 478
-
- Judge, Mrs., 477
-
- Jumna Prosad, Babu, 466
-
- Jurret, Mr., 478
-
-
- Kaalspruit, 125
-
- Kaapmuiden, 335, 336
-
- Kaffir River, 124
-
- Kalfontein, 117, 254, 255, 257, 258, 259, 271, 273, 283
-
- Karree Siding, 126, 136, 141, 142, 161, 174, 208
-
- Karroo, Great, 114, 117
-
- Kashmir, 25, 475
-
- Katalguri, 180
-
- Kearsey, S.H., 414, 416, 436, 455
-
- Keating, Lance-Corporal, 75, 267, 364, 429
-
- Kekewich, Colonel, 303
-
- Kellner & Co., 475
-
- Kelly, H.R., 413, 414, 416, 417, 418, 428, 455
-
- Kenna, Major, 264, 265, 352
-
- Kennedy, Captain, 473
-
- Kennedy, J.P., 384, 429
-
- Kenny, G.E., 364, 430
-
- Ker, Mr. A.J., 481
-
- Ker, Mrs., 477
-
- Kerr, Mr., 402
-
- Kettlewell, Bullen, & Co., 463
-
- Keyser, Misses, 418, 421
-
- Khulsor State, 462
-
- Kidderpore Docks, 50, 55, 56, 57, 76
-
- Kimberley, 98, 201
-
- King, Sir Seymour, 24, 462
-
- King, Mr. D., 481
-
- King & Co., 464
-
- King Edward’s Convalescent Home, 421
-
- Kingchurch, L., 344, 346, 347, 349, 350, 433
-
- Kingsley, Mr. G., 472
-
- Kirk, Mr. H.A., 481
-
- Kirwan, Colonel, 181, 467
-
- Kirwan, Corporal, 221, 231, 345, 433
-
- Kisch, Mr. H.M., 481
-
- Kitchen, Rev. Mr., 403
-
- Kitchener, Lord, 89, 228, 241, 245, 284, 300, 302, 345, 357, 414, 416
-
- Klip Drift, 241
-
- Klip River, 234
-
- Klipriviersberg, 234, 236, 237, 238, 315
-
- Klipsteple, 352
-
- Klugh, Mr. H.R., 473
-
- Knight, Mr. Paul, 478, 481
-
- Knight, Mrs., 477
-
- Knight & Sons, 464
-
- Knox, Captain, 478
-
- Koch, Commandant, 315
-
- ‘Koladyne,’ the, 408
-
- Komati Poort, 324, 335, 336
-
- Komati River, 320
-
- Kooch-Behar, Maharajah of, 462
-
- Koorn Spruit, 98, 99, 100, 101, 102
-
- Kraaipan, 286, 287
-
- Krantzpan, 352
-
- Kranz Kraal, 143
-
- Kroonstad, 86, 139, 161, 201, 220, 221, 222, 223, 225, 227, 229, 230,
- 256, 257, 268, 269, 311, 332, 343
-
- Kruger, Paul, President, 130, 200, 218, 233, 253, 314
-
- Kruger, Piet, 295
-
- Kruger Siding, 141
-
- Kuma Radha Prosad Roy, 462
-
-
- Lackersteen, Mr. J., 471
-
- Ladybrand, 98, 100
-
- Ladysmith, 5, 85, 96, 98, 180, 201
-
- Laha, Babu B.M., 474
-
- Lall, Babu Jowhary, 472
-
- Lall, Babu Nand Kumar, 472
-
- Lancashire Mounted Infantry, 139
-
- Lance, R.J., Saddler, 428
-
- Lang, Mr. J., 469
-
- Laurence, Mrs., 402
-
- Law, Sir Edward, 402, 481
-
- Law, Miss, 402
-
- Lawrie, Corporal, 75, 345, 347, 430
-
- Lawrie, F.W.C., 418, 428, 455
-
- Lawrie, Mr. G.C., 471
-
- Lawson, T.E.M., 433
-
- Lazarus & Co., 464
-
- Le Gallais, Colonel, 118
-
- Le Maistre, Mr. G.H., 472
-
- Leach, General, 52, 64, 394, 395, 398, 476, 478, 481
-
- Leash, Captain, 389
-
- Lee, Lance-Corporal, 364, 384, 460
-
- Lee, Mr. J.B., 468
-
- Leighton, Lord, 369
-
- Lemon, W.S., Lance-Corporal, 75, 267, 384, 430
-
- Leslie, Major, 389
-
- Leslie, Mr. J., 472
-
- Leslie, Mr. W., 481
-
- Leslie & Co., 475
-
- Lichtenburg, 288
-
- Life Guards, 180
-
- Lilley, Lieutenant (Victorian M.R.), 193
-
- Lincoln Regiment, 281
-
- Lindsay, Mr. A.M., 478, 481
-
- ‘Lindula’ transport, 52, 56, 63, 69, 85, 88, 89
-
- ‘Linesman’ quoted, 170
-
- Lipton, Ltd., 475
-
- Little Modder River, 132
-
- Livingstone, D.L., 435
-
- Llewhellin, Corporal, 75, 229, 384, 428, 459
-
- Lloyd, Mr. A.J., 473
-
- Lloyd, Mr. J.B., 473
-
- Lloyd, Mr. Trevor, 472
-
- Lloyd-Jones, _see_ Jones, B.
-
- Lloyd’s Patriotic Fund, 382
-
- Loch’s Horse, 120, 136, 139, 141, 219, 220, 230, 357
-
- Locke & Co., 464
-
- Lockhart, General, 11, 24, 52, 64, 462, 476
-
- Lockhart, Lady, 477
-
- Lockhart, E.I., 413, 414, 417, 418, 433, 455
-
- Logan, M.H., 249, 267, 364, 432
-
- Long-Innes, S., 367, 429, 455
-
- Longman, Sergeant, 364, 384, 434, 460
-
- Lourenço Marques, 324
-
- Lovegrove, C.W., 235, 384, 436
-
- Lovelock, Mr. A.S., 481
-
- Lovelock & Lewes, 423, 463
-
- Lowe, W., Signaller, 364, 384, 434, 460
-
- Lowther, F.L., 436, 487
-
- Luard, Sergeant, 345, 347, 430
-
- Lucas, S.W.C., 371, 435
-
- Luck, Sir George, 180, 402
-
- Luckman, Rev. Canon, 403, 423, 476, 481
-
- Lumsden, Colonel, 4, 5, 6, 7, 11, 12, 17, 18, 22, 23, 25, 26, 27, 29,
- 30, 31, 33, 37, 44, 47, 48, 49, 52, 55, 59, 63, 64, 67, 72, 75, 86,
- 91, 110, 111, 117, 118, 119, 120, 125, 132, 135, 142, 154, 161, 166,
- 167, 168, 171, 172, 176, 180, 182, 189, 205, 206, 207, 209, 213,
- 218, 219, 227, 228, 233, 240, 242, 243, 245, 246, 252, 256, 257,
- 259, 265, 278, 279, 283, 284, 289, 293, 316, 332, 333, 337, 343,
- 344, 349, 357, 363, 366, 369, 370, 372, 375, 377, 382, 384, 388,
- 389, 390, 395, 398, 400, 404, 405, 406, 408, 409, 410, 415, 418,
- 419, 421, 422, 424, 427, 451, 454, 456, 461, 462, 483, 489, 490
-
- Lumsden, H.C., 159, 160, 161, 173, 178, 194, 425, 429, 487
-
- Lungley, R.B., 384, 432
-
- Luson, Mr. H., 469
-
- Luson, Mrs., 477
-
- Lyall, Mr. A.A., 481
-
- Lyall, Mr. Frank, 470
-
- Lyall, Mr. H., 472
-
- Lyall, Marshall, & Co., 463
-
- Lydenburg, 345
-
- Lytle, A., 257, 384, 432
-
-
- Macalister, Mrs. L., 474
-
- McCaw, Mr. W.J.M., 481
-
- MacDonald, General, 107
-
- Macdonald, C.R., 365, 428
-
- Macdonald, R.N., 157, 160, 162, 173, 178, 194, 207, 384, 429
-
- Macdonald, Mr. P.J., 472
-
- MacDonnell, Sir A.P., 24, 462
-
- McDowell & Co., 464
-
- McElhinny, Captain, 472
-
- Macgillivray, Lance-Corporal, 75, 157, 160, 173, 190, 194, 207, 354,
- 364, 384, 428
-
- McGregor, General, 468
-
- McGregor, H., 435
-
- Macgregor, H., 436
-
- Machadodorp, 314, 316, 333, 334, 335, 336, 337, 345, 349, 356, 357,
- 366, 450, 451
-
- Macintosh, Burn, & Co., 463
-
- Mackay, Mr. L., 466
-
- McKenzie, Colonel, 416
-
- Mackenzie, Bugler, 162, 186, 187, 430
-
- Mackenzie, Mr. G.H.L., 471
-
- Mackenzie, Mr. R.H., 468
-
- Mackenzie, Lyall, & Co., 464
-
- McKewan, Mr. W.H., 470
-
- Mackinnon, Mr. Allan, 478
-
- Mackinnon, Miss, 467
-
- Mackinnon, Mackenzie, & Co., 463
-
- Maclaine, Lance-Corporal, 332, 364, 365, 425, 431
-
- MacLaughlin, Colonel, 181, 402, 404, 481
-
- Maclean, Sir F., 398, 402, 466, 478
-
- Maclean, Lady, 477
-
- Maclean, Mr. F.G., 481
-
- Macleod, Mr. H.H., 472
-
- McLeod, Mr. Norman, 481
-
- McLeod & Co., 463
-
- McMinn, C.H., 219, 267, 364, 433, 455
-
- McMinn, Mr. C.W., 466
-
- McNamara, Sergeant, 75, 157, 161, 173, 244, 268, 428, 461
-
- McNeil, Captain, 264
-
- Macniell & Co., 180
-
- McNiven, Mr. A., 478
-
- Maconochie, Mrs., 477
-
- Macpherson, Sir W., 466, 478
-
- Macpherson, Mr. A.G.H., 478
-
- Macpherson, Mr. D.J., 468, 481
-
- McVicar, Smith, & Co., 464
-
- Madagascar, 85
-
- Madan, Mr. J.F., 475
-
- Madan, Mr. S.E., 473
-
- Maddox, Mr. J.L., 470
-
- Madras, Archdeacon of, 244
-
- ‘Madras Daily Mail,’ 273, 283
-
- Madrasis (2nd), 395
-
- Mafeking, 175, 286, 287, 288, 289, 315, 343
-
- Magaliesberg, 205, 288, 289, 290, 300, 311
-
- Magersfontein, 5, 140, 343
-
- Maguire, Mr. H.F., 469
-
- Mahomed Khan, Malik, 474
-
- Mahon, General, 175, 190, 284, 286, 287, 289, 290, 291, 292, 294, 296,
- 300, 303, 304, 305, 312, 314, 316, 317, 320, 324, 333, 334, 337,
- 338, 339, 340, 343, 344, 350, 351, 352, 353
-
- Maidan, the, 17, 30, 40, 43, 48, 55, 56, 64, 394, 396, 397, 409
-
- Main & Co., 464
-
- ‘Maine’ hospital ship, 87
-
- Mair, Mrs., 477
-
- Maitland, General, 8, 11, 22, 64, 402, 476, 478, 481
-
- Maitland, Mrs., 477
-
- Maitland Camp, 89, 96, 108, 109, 486
-
- Major, Mr. T., 473
-
- Manindra Chandra Nundy, Maharajah of Cossimbazar, 465
-
- Manipur, 44
-
- Manjhla, Nawab Syed, 473
-
- Mansfield, Colonel, 64, 476
-
- Mansfield, Sergeant-Major, 75, 267, 384, 430
-
- Mansfield, C.B.H., 429, 455
-
- Mansfield, Mrs., 477
-
- Manton & Co., 464
-
- Manville, F.C., 235, 384, 435
-
- Maples, Mr. J.R., 478, 481
-
- Mardan, Nawab Mahomed Khan, Chief of, 475
-
- Mardan, Kwajah Mahomed Khan of, 462
-
- Marrison, Cottle, & Co., 464
-
- Marshall, Sergeant, 384, 427, 460
-
- Marshall, Mr. E.J., 478, 481
-
- Marshall, Sons, & Co., 463
-
- Marsham, Sergeant-Major, 75, 161, 162, 173, 267, 311, 409, 428, 455,
- 458, 459
-
- Marsham, Corporal, 75, 427
-
- Martin, Captain, 79
-
- Martin, Sergeant-Major (R.A.), 103
-
- Martin, A., 267, 332, 364, 436, 455
-
- Martin, C.K., 249, 364, 384, 434
-
- Martin, Mr. E.S., 47
-
- Martin, Mr. H., 478
-
- Martyr, Colonel, 99, 106
-
- Masson, Lieutenant-Colonel, 466
-
- Masson, Mr. W.M., 473
-
- Masters, Colonel, 395, 402, 481
-
- Matheson, Mr. F., 481
-
- Mathewson, Mr. F., 470, 478
-
- Mawdsley, Mrs., 477
-
- Maxim-gun Contingent, 33, 34, 55, 77, 431
-
- Maxwell, General, 151, 154, 159, 176, 207, 209, 251
-
- Maxwell, Lieutenant-Colonel, 469
-
- Maxwell, C.W., 354, 384, 435
-
- Maxwell, Mr. R.W., 468
-
- Mayne, Mr. F.G., 471
-
- Mazamullah Khan, Mohammed, 25
-
- Meade, Lieutenant-Colonel, 395, 402, 481
-
- Meakin & Co., 463
-
- Meares, A.K., 214, 215, 217, 425, 435
-
- Meares, W.K., 215, 217, 364, 384, 435
-
- Mearsa, Rajah of, 25
-
- Mehomed Bukhtyar Shah, Prince, 466
-
- Mehta, Mr. R.D., 470, 481
-
- Melville, Mrs., 477
-
- Menasseh & Sons, 463
-
- Mercer, F.C.W., 183, 431
-
- Methuen, Lord, 230, 300, 301, 302
-
- Meyer, Mr. W.S., 470
-
- Meyer, Alma, Sister, 334
-
- Meyer, Messrs., 463
-
- Meyers (Boer), 190, 331
-
- Middelburg, 310, 311, 317
-
- Miley, Colonel, 481
-
- Miller, Mrs., 477
-
- Milne, Colonel, 180
-
- Milner, Sir Alfred, 416
-
- Mirzapore Volunteers, 467
-
- Mitchell, Sergeant, 277, 364, 434
-
- Modder River, 99, 107, 126, 128, 135, 139, 140, 229, 315
-
- Modder Valley, 150
-
- Moens, Lieutenant, 389
-
- Moir, Lieutenant, 389
-
- Moir-Byres, E.B., 257, 359, 361, 432
-
- Molony, Mr. E., 469
-
- Money, Colonel, 26, 27, 64, 476, 478
-
- Monteith & Co., 464
-
- Montmorency’s Scouts, 296
-
- Mookerjee & Sons, 475
-
- Mookim Bahadur, Rai Budri Dass, 465
-
- Moore, J., 371, 435
-
- Moore, Mr. C.H., 467
-
- Moore & Co., 464, 467
-
- Moorhouse, H.J., 3, 215, 384, 434
-
- Morgan, Mrs., 477
-
- Morison, D., 354, 355, 371, 410, 415, 435
-
- Morley, J.F.E., 436
-
- Morris, Corporal, 364, 384, 436, 455
-
- Morris, Mr. C., 481
-
- Morris, Mrs., 477
-
- Morrison, Mr. D. McL., 471, 478
-
- Morrison, Mrs. McL., 477
-
- Morton, Mr. E.S.L., 474
-
- Morton Institution, 467
-
- Moses, Mr. S.M., 389
-
- Moulvi Syed Ali Ahmed Khan, Khan Bahadur, 465
-
- Mozufferpore, 172, 173
-
- Muir, Mr. A.K., 479, 481
-
- Muir Mills, Cawnpore, 475
-
- Mukerji, Babu Behary Lall, 474
-
- Mumtaz Ali Khan, Rajah, 465
-
- Mumtaz-ud-Dowla Mahomed Fairaz Ali Khan, Nawab, 465
-
- Murdoch, _see_ Burn-Murdoch
-
- Mure, Mr. J.F., 473
-
- Murray, Captain, 470
-
- Murray, Mr. A.C., 479
-
- Murray, Mr. R., 481
-
- Murray, Mr. V., 470
-
- Murray, Mrs., 477
-
- Murray & Co., 475
-
- Mursan, Rajah of, 474
-
- Murshidabad, Nawab Bahadur of, 462
-
- Muskett, R.G.H., 267, 364, 432
-
- Mustafa Khan, H., 465
-
- Mysore and Coorg Contingent, 19, 38, 332
-
- Mysore, Maharani Regent of, 25, 474
-
- Mysore Volunteers, 12
-
-
- Naauwpoort, 112
-
- Naini Tal Brewery Co., 465
-
- Naldanga, Rajah of, 465
-
- Nansen, Rev. Mr., 403
-
- Narendra Krishna, Bahadur, Maharajah Sir, 465, 481
-
- Natal, 86, 96, 180, 204
-
- Natal Carbineers, 85
-
- Natal Railway, 241
-
- Natal Spruit, 240, 241
-
- Nathan, Mr. R., 468
-
- Naval Brigade, 112
-
- Needham, Mr. J., 479
-
- Nelson, Lord, quoted, 51
-
- Nelspruit, 318
-
- Nepos, Mr. V.E., 474
-
- Neville, Lieutenant, 31, 33, 160, 234, 364, 369, 427, 461
-
- New Egerton Mills, 475
-
- New South Wales Mounted Rifles, 135
-
- New Zealand Mounted Infantry, 104, 289, 296, 304, 305, 314, 334, 360,
- 363
-
- Newman & Co., 464
-
- Newton, H.G., 384, 428
-
- Nibaron Chunder Dutt, Babu, 465
-
- Nicholson, A.J.H., 414, 416, 418, 428
-
- Nicholson, T.B., 268, 367, 433, 455
-
- Nicholson, Mr. F.A., 481
-
- Nicolay, G.D., 416, 418, 429, 455
-
- Nicolay, W.H., 384, 385, 433
-
- Nicoll, Mr. John, 479, 481
-
- Nigel, 356
-
- Nightingale, S.G., 364, 435
-
- Nimmo, Mr. J.D., 469
-
- Niven, Mr. D. Coats, 468
-
- Noblett, Captain, 31, 33, 142, 155, 156, 166, 301, 317, 364, 369, 384,
- 402, 427, 456, 479
-
- Nolan, R.C., 215, 267, 384, 435
-
- Nolin Behary Sircat, Babu, 465
-
- Nooitgedacht, 205, 207, 327
-
- Norman, Mr. A.F., 481
-
- Norman, Mrs. Goodwin, 477
-
- Norman Brothers, 464
-
- Northcote, Lord, 389, 391
-
- Northumberland Fusiliers, 311
-
- Norton, A.E., 365, 367, 433, 455
-
- Norton & Sons, 465
-
- Norval’s Pont, 112, 117
-
-
- O’Donoghue, Colonel, 402
-
- O’Reilly, Mr., Mayor of Cape Town, 371, 372, 373, 375
-
- Oakley, Sergeant, 39, 371, 434
-
- Oakley, Mrs., 477
-
- Odling, Mr. C.W., 481
-
- Oldfield, Captain, 389
-
- Oldham, H.B., 249, 267, 364, 433
-
- Oldham, Mr. W.B., 469
-
- Oliphantfontein, 254
-
- Oliphant’s Nek, 294, 300, 301, 302
-
- Oorcha, Maharajah Bahadur of, 465
-
- Orange River, 117, 122
-
- Ormerod, Major, 479
-
- Ormiston, Mr. G.A., 481
-
- Ormiston, Mr. J.A., 479
-
- Ormond, Mr. E.W., 479
-
- Ormond, Mrs., 477
-
- Orr, Mr. C.R., 481
-
- Orr, Mr. J.C., 479
-
- Orr, Mr. J.W., 479
-
- Orr, Mrs., 477
-
- Orrell, Mr. W., 479
-
- Osgood, Mr. E.R., 472
-
- Osler F. & C., 464
-
- Ospruit, 118, 171, 175, 210, 252, 331, 354, 487, _see also_ Houtnek
-
- Oswell, Mr. G.D., 472
-
- Otley, Rev. Mr., 403
-
- Oudh Light Horse, 311
-
- Overend, Mr. T.B.G., 470, 481
-
- Owen, Colonel, 389
-
- Oxford L.I. Mounted Infantry, 143, 220, 230, 267, 276, 283, 284
-
-
- Paardeberg, 97, 98
-
- Page, Mr. J.J., 479
-
- Paget, General, 306, 309, 310
-
- Paget, Mr. H., 470
-
- Paget, Mrs., 477
-
- Palmer, Sir Power, 402
-
- Palmer, Lady, 402
-
- Palmer, Lance-Corporal, 75, 384, 436, 455, 486
-
- Pan, 317, 343
-
- Parkes, E.B.H., 187, 267, 430
-
- Parkinson, Lieutenant-Colonel, 473
-
- Parks, H.R., 229, 240, 354, 355, 435, 459
-
- Parsons, Mr. W., 472, 481
-
- Partridge, P., 311, 365, 432, 455
-
- Parys, 230
-
- Paterson, Mr. C.A., 472
-
- Patterson, General (U.S.A.), 8
-
- Patton, Mrs. L.P., 474
-
- Paxton, P.H., 384, 435
-
- Peace, Siddons, & Gough, 464
-
- Pearson, Mrs. 477
-
- Peddie, Lance-Corporal, 228, 229, 432, 458
-
- Pedler, Mr. A., 470, 481
-
- Peninsula and Oriental Steam Navigation Co., Ltd., 463
-
- Pepys, Samuel, alluded to, 44, 48
-
- Peters, Mr., 182
-
- Petersen, J.G., 194, 207, 215, 414, 416, 418, 430, 455
-
- Petersen, Mrs., 477
-
- Petley, Captain, 402, 408, 481
-
- Phelps, Mr. W.H., 481
-
- Phelps, Mrs., 477
-
- Phelps & Co., 464
-
- Philipps, Captain, 64
-
- Phillimore, Mr. J.E., 472
-
- Phillips, Captain, 29, 476, 479
-
- Phillips, Lance-Corporal, 371, 435
-
- Phillips, H.G., 321#, 435
-
- Pickford, Mr. A., 479
-
- Pickford, Mr. G., 479
-
- Pienaar’s River, 310
-
- Piggott, Chapman, & Co., 463
-
- Pilcher, Colonel, 98, 302
-
- Pilgrim, Major, 471, 481
-
- Pilkington, Major, 239, 240
-
- Pitman, Mr. C.E., 470, 476
-
- Pittar, Mr. C.E., 469
-
- Playfair, Sir Patrick, 5, 7, 8, 11, 23, 24, 26, 27, 29, 63, 64, 67, 75,
- 119, 171, 337, 381, 384, 388, 395, 402, 404, 405, 406, 416, 417,
- 422, 476, 479, 481
-
- Plumer, Colonel, 293
-
- Pole-Carew, General, 150, 208, 240, 251, 313
-
- Poppe, Mrs., 477
-
- Port Natal, 85
-
- Potchefstroom, 230
-
- Powell, Captain, 33, 156, 160, 179, 181, 189, 246, 268, 333, 384, 402,
- 427, 458, 461
-
- Power, Sergeant, 75, 323, 384, 435
-
- Power, Mr. F., 479
-
- Powis, H.B., 166, 384, 433
-
- Prain, Major, 472, 481
-
- Pratt, Sergeant, 327, 371, 434
-
- Pratt, Mr. Justice, 481
-
- Pratt, Mrs., 477
-
- Prawn, Kissen, Law, & Co., 462
-
- Preston, P.C., 166, 189, 229, 244, 245, 409, 433, 458
-
- Pretoria, 87, 111, 117, 173, 190, 195, 196, 200, 202-207, 221, 223,
- 230, 233, 246, 247, 248, 251, 252, 253, 254, 257-266, 270, 276, 278,
- 283, 287, 288, 289, 295, 303, 309, 310, 311, 316, 319, 327, 328,
- 331, 332, 333, 335, 336, 337, 343, 349, 356, 357, 358, 365, 366,
- 369, 370, 425, 451, 488, 489
-
- Pretorius’s Farm, 100, 101
-
- Pringle, R., 321#, 364, 436
-
- Pringle, Mr. R.B., 468
-
- Prinsep, Sir Harry, 402, 466, 481
-
- Prinsloo, 311
-
- Prophit, Mr. J.M.G., 468, 481
-
- Pryce, P.W., 267, 365, 435, 455
-
- Puckridge, H.W., 215, 267, 364, 430
-
- Pugh, Lieutenant, 31, 33, 155, 167, 168, 189, 214, 217, 228, 240, 241,
- 242, 243, 244, 256, 257, 268, 364, 409, 427, 454, 456, 461
-
- Pugh, Mr. A.J., 479
-
- Pugh, Mr. L.P., 479, 481
-
- Pugh, Mr. R.A.C., 479
-
- Pugh, Mrs., 38, 63, 64, 72, 477
-
- Pugh, Misses, 29, 477
-
- Punjab Banking Co., 467
-
- Punjab Volunteers, 12
-
-
- Queen’s Town, 91, 94, 96, 108, 120, 224
-
- Queensland Mounted Infantry, 95, 106, 289, 299, 314
-
-
- Radcliffe, Mr. C., 479
-
- Radford, A.D., 162, 244, 430
-
- Radhanpore, Nawab of, 389
-
- Railway Pioneers, 117, 413, 415
-
- Rainier, Captain, 472
-
- Raleigh, Mr. T., 402, 481
-
- Ralli Brothers, 463
-
- Rampini, Mr. Justice, 466, 481
-
- Ramsden, Major, 423
-
- Ranajit Sinha Bahadur, Rajah of Nashipur, 465
-
- Rangoon Examiner of Accounts, 470
-
- Rangoon Volunteers, 12, 467
-
- Ranken & Co., 475
-
- Rankin, Colonel, 481
-
- Rawlins, Captain, 473
-
- Rawlinson, Mr. A., 479
-
- Red House Farm, 142
-
- Rees, Mr. J.D., 468, 479
-
- Reid, Major, 473
-
- Reid, N.J.V., 267, 384, 385, 429
-
- Reid, W., 431
-
- Reid, Mr. Justice, 466
-
- Reid, Mr. J., 471
-
- Reid, Mr. R.J., 468
-
- Reitfontein, _see_ Diamond Hill
-
- Reitpan, 317
-
- Reitspruit, 317
-
- Reitzburg, 230
-
- Remington’s Scouts, 103
-
- Rendell, Colonel, 182
-
- Renny, H.J., 384, 415, 418, 435, 455
-
- Renny, Mrs., 477
-
- Rensburg, 112
-
- Rhenoster River, 311
-
- Rhodes, Colonel, 287
-
- Rhodes, Major, 290
-
- Rhodesian Regiment, 288, 296
-
- Rhodesian Volunteers, 288, 293
-
- Rice, H.R., 364, 384
-
- Richardson, J.H.S., 431
-
- Richardson, Mr. E.C., 474
-
- Richardson, Mr. H., 472
-
- Richardson, Mr. J.H.S., 468
-
- Richardson, Mr. T.F., 474
-
- Richey, J.F., 364, 384, 436
-
- Richmond, Mr. D.S., 474
-
- Riddell, Colonel, 389
-
- Ridley, Colonel, 120
-
- Rietfontein, 127, 128
-
- Ritchie, Mr. J.S., 468
-
- Rivaz, Mr. C.M., 402, 481
-
- River Steam Navigation Company, 25, 64
-
- Rivett-Carnac, Mr. G., 468
-
- Riviersberg, _see_ Klipriviersberg
-
- Roberts, Lord, 86, 90, 94, 96, 97, 101, 110, 119, 177, 201, 208, 219,
- 221, 223, 227, 229, 230, 233, 240, 248, 251, 253, 260, 262, 268,
- 284, 287, 288, 313, 337, 338, 344, 356, 359, 360, 363, 365, 370,
- 371, 378, 381, 422, 425
-
- Roberts, Lady, 256, 265
-
- Roberts, Mr. F.W., 471
-
- Roberts’s Horse, 103, 107
-
- Robertson, Lieutenant, 389
-
- Robertson, D., 345, 346, 347, 434
-
- Robertson, Mr. W.T.M., 481
-
- Robinson, Mr. F., 468
-
- Robinson, Mr. H., 470
-
- Robinson, Mr. S.M., 473
-
- Robinson, Morrison, & Co., 475
-
- Rodachanachi, Mr. A., 479, 481
-
- Rodewal, 235, 236, 270
-
- Roe, Dr., 258
-
- Roe, Mr. C., 473
-
- Roe, Mr. F.R., 468
-
- Rogers, Captain, 389
-
- Romanath Ghose, Babu, 465
-
- Roode Kopje, 289, 294
-
- Rose, Mr. L.E.D., 479
-
- Ross, Colonel, 116, 117, 118, 120, 135, 143, 151, 154, 155, 161, 172,
- 183, 190, 219, 230, 240, 242, 243, 252, 266, 268, 271, 274, 276,
- 277, 278, 284, 285, 287
-
- Ross, Mr. H.M., 481
-
- Rotton, Captain, 185
-
- Royal Engineers, 254
-
- Royal Horse Artillery, 102, 103, 104, 105, 107, 289, 314, 319, 350, 352
-
- Royal Irish Rifles, 48, 395
-
- Rundle, General, 135, 149, 150
-
- Russell, Mr. C.L.S., 479
-
- Russell, Mr. E.L.S., 471
-
- Russell, Mr. W.H., 474
-
- Russell of Dinapore, 475
-
- Rust, W., 384, 436
-
- Rustenburg, 288, 289, 292, 293, 294, 295, 302, 303, 311, 488
-
- Rustfontein, 117
-
- Rustomji, Mr. H.M., 395, 481
-
- Rutherfoord, Captain, 31, 33, 155, 243, 258, 259, 262, 263, 264, 265,
- 268, 409, 427, 454, 456, 461
-
- Rutherfoord, Sergeant, 379, 384, 429
-
-
- Sahai, Babu Gobind, 473
-
- Saheb Bahadur Singh, Rao, 465
-
- Sale, Mr. Justice, 466
-
- Samat-singji, Prince, 389
-
- Sandeman, Fort, 467
-
- Sanders, E.P., 430
-
- Sandhurst, 180
-
- Sandhurst, Lord, 24, 462
-
- Sanna’s Post, 98, 99, 102, 108, 111
-
- Saran Dass, Lalla Ram, 466
-
- Sassoon & Co., 464
-
- Saunders, J.S., 157, 187, 188, 193, 194, 258, 267, 364, 365, 430
-
- Saunders, Mr. J. O’B., 481
-
- Savage, Captain, 389
-
- Schiller, Mr. F.N., 481
-
- Schreiner, Olive, 136
-
- Schwartz Kopje, 289
-
- Scots Greys, 281, 320, 350, 352
-
- Scott, Lieutenant-Colonel, 469
-
- Scott, T.H., 321#, 384, 435
-
- Scott, Dr., 473
-
- Scott, Mr. Ross, 469
-
- Scott, Thomson, & Co., 464
-
- Seymour, Major (Railway Pioneers), 117
-
- Seymour, Mrs., 477
-
- Shadwell, Captain, 471
-
- Sharp, Lieutenant, 389
-
- Shaw, G.J., 435
-
- Shaw, H.N., 361, 364, 431
-
- Shaw, Mr. F.M., 470
-
- Shaw, Wallace, & Co., 463
-
- Shorrock, Mr. J.C., 481
-
- Short, Mr. A., 479
-
- Short, Mr. E.A., 468
-
- Showers, General, 180
-
- Showers, Major, 31, 33, 55, 64, 67, 83, 84, 85, 95, 120, 123, 126, 152,
- 153, 155, 156, 160, 161, 164, 170, 175, 178, 179, 180, 181, 182,
- 183, 194, 209, 425, 427, 487
-
- Siddons, Rev. J.H., 410
-
- Sidey, Lieutenant, 31, 33, 155, 156, 277, 352, 354, 427
-
- Silchar, 178
-
- Silk, Mrs., 477
-
- Simmons, Private (Duke of Cornwall’s Regiment), 194
-
- Simon’s Bay, 88
-
- Simpson, Mr. F.C., 472
-
- Simpson, Mr. F.D., 469
-
- Simpson, Mr. J.A., 479
-
- Simpson, Mr. J. H, 471
-
- Simson, Mr. A.F., 470
-
- Sinclair, I.G., 346, 347, 431
-
- ‘Sinclair’ steamship, 371
-
- Singh, Sir Harnam, 481
-
- Singh, Babu Ram Dhari, 473
-
- Singh Bahadur, Rai Cameleshwari Prosad, of Monghyr, 465
-
- Singh Bahadur, Rai Medni Prosad, 474
-
- Singh, Kanwar Rani Lady Harnam, 477
-
- Six Mile Spruit, 246, 251, 277, 279
-
- Skelton, Lance-Corporal, 71, 75, 249, 267, 364, 430
-
- Skinner, Mr. W., 469
-
- Skinner, Mrs. J.A.C., 470
-
- Sladden, S., 91, 267, 365, 434
-
- Smaldeel, 199, 200, 218, 258
-
- Smeaton, Mr. D.M., 479, 481
-
- Smith, Sergeant, 384, 436
-
- Smith, D.C. Percy, 118, 167, 168, 171, 256, 267, (Lieutenant) 276, 365,
- 428, 455
-
- Smith, G.M., 384, 385, 428
-
- Smith, R.J., 434, 455
-
- Smith, W.T., 359, 361, 431
-
- Smith, Mrs. Assheton, 477
-
- Smith, Stanistreet, & Co., 464
-
- Smith-Dorrien, _see_ Dorrien
-
- Smyth, Mr. C.E., 479, 481
-
- Smyth & Co., 465
-
- Sotish Chunder-Chowdhari, Babu, Zemindar of Bhowanipur, 465
-
- Soubarsa, Maharajah Bahadur of, 25, 474
-
- Soundy, Major, 389
-
- South African Republic Police, 203
-
- South Australian Rifles, 219
-
- South British Fire and Marine Insurance Co., 464
-
- Spankie, Mr. G.T., 466
-
- Sparkes, Mrs., 477
-
- Spenser, Colonel, 64
-
- Spicer, C.W., 384, 431
-
- Spink, Mr. T.W., 481
-
- Springfield, G.P.O., 365, 428, 455
-
- Springfontein, 123
-
- Springs, 241, 243, 254, 266, 270, 271, 272, 273, 283, 356, 357, 414,
- 415
-
- Spytfontein, 122, 123, 126, 136, 142, 143, 161, 182, 189, 331, 365
-
- Sri Ram Bahadur, Rai, 481
-
- Staff Corps, Indian, 22
-
- Stainforth, Mr. G.F., 471
-
- Standard Bank of South Africa, 206
-
- Stanley, P., 307, 309, 429
-
- Stanley, Mr. Justice, 481
-
- Stanley, Mrs., 477
-
- Staples, Mr. E., 472
-
- Stavridi, Mr. A.J., 474
-
- Steel (Octavius) & Co., 180, 463
-
- Stel, Van der, Commandant, 113
-
- Stellenbosch, 113, 334
-
- Stephens, T., Sergeant, 135, 160, 265, 384, 408, 485, 485-489
-
- Stephens, Mr. St. John, 471
-
- Sterkstroom, 121, 125, 294, 303
-
- Steuart, Captain, 71, 76
-
- Steuart, B.C.A., 267, 365, 432, 455
-
- Stevens, Mr. Justice, 466
-
- Stevens, Mrs. Foster, 477
-
- Stevenson, Captain, 31, 33, 76, 268, 311, 369, 427
-
- Stevenson, J.W., 164, 165, 166, 432
-
- Stevenson, Mr. A., 474
-
- Stevenson, Mr. F., 473
-
- Stevenson-Hamilton, O.C.J., 432
-
- Stewart, Lance-Sergeant, 75, 76, 90, 111, 142, 361, 371, 429
-
- Stewart, Mr. C.D., 479
-
- Stewart, Mr. J.R., 475
-
- Stewart & Co., 464
-
- Stikeman, Mr. W.R., 481
-
- Stinkwater, 306
-
- Stockwell & Co., 464
-
- Stoddart, Captain, 389
-
- Stokes, Mr. H., 479
-
- Stone, Mrs., 477
-
- Stormberg, 5
-
- Stowell, Sergeant, 75, 379, 384, 430
-
- Strachey, Major, 481
-
- Strahan, P., 365, 429, 455
-
- Stuart, C.E., 231, 247, 267, 364, 365, 430
-
- Stuart, Mr. Harry, 26, 27, 64, 395, 402, 404, 467, 479, 481
-
- Stuart, Mr. John (‘Morning Post’), 148
-
- Suffolk and Berks, Earl of, 479
-
- Suffolk Regiment, 318, 319
-
- Surma Valley Light Horse, 12, 44, 81, 91, 156, 179, 180, 181, 182, 332
-
- Sutcliffe, Mr. H.W., 471, 479
-
- Sutherland, Mr., 402, 469, 479, 481
-
- Swaine, Colonel, 402
-
- Swartzkop, 278, 306
-
- Swaziland, 323
-
- Sykes, Mr. R., 471
-
-
- Table Bay, 88
-
- Tagore, Maharajah Sir Jotendro Mohun, 25, 462, 481
-
- Tagore, Maharaj Kumar Prodyat Coomar, 474, 482
-
- Tagore, Sir Sourindro Mohun, 462, 481
-
- Tagore, Babu Kally Kissen, 462
-
- Talana, 289
-
- Talbot, Sir A.C., 468
-
- Tancred, F., 345, 384, 430
-
- Tasmanian Volunteers, 219, 296, 360
-
- Taylor, Captain, 31, 33, 56, 145, 155, 156, 159, 168, 169, 276, 305,
- 335, 346, 354, 355, 382, 384, 391, 402, 409, 427, 446-453
-
- Taylor, Mr. J., 469
-
- Tellery & Co., 465
-
- ‘Terrible,’ H.M.S., 87
-
- Thaba ’Nchu, 98, 100, 101, 102, 107, 135, 150, 177, 208
-
- Thacker, Spink, & Co., 464
-
- Thelwall, E.A., 379, 384, 432
-
- Thelwall, H.W., 151, 164, 249, 257, 267, 364, 432
-
- Thesiger, Sergeant, 257, 359, 361, 431
-
- Thomas, Mr. A.W., 473
-
- Thomas, Mr. R.G.D., 479
-
- Thomas, Mr. W.L., 479, 482
-
- Thomas & Co., 463
-
- Thompson, Captain, 473
-
- Thompson, F.C., 267, 235, 364, 436
-
- Thomson, Mr. J.H., 467
-
- Thomson & Co., 464
-
- Thornton, A.R., 257, 432
-
- Tickell, Mr. R.H., 470
-
- ‘Times of India,’ 290, 389
-
- Tin Cowry Rai, Babu, 474
-
- Todd, Mr. R., 471
-
- Todd, Trooper (Roberts’s Horse), 105
-
- Tolly’s Nullah, 38
-
- Tooley, Trooper (Johannesburg Police), 413, 414, 416, 417
-
- Touch, Mr. W., 471
-
- Toynbee, Mr. G., 469
-
- Tozer, Mr. H.S., 471
-
- Traill, Mr. T., 482
-
- Traill & Co., 465
-
- Transvaal Mounted Police, 268
-
- Tremearne, Mr. Shirley, 26, 402, 468, 476, 479, 482
-
- Trevor, Sir Arthur, 402, 467, 482
-
- Trevor, Miss, 402
-
- Triton Insurance Co., 463
-
- Tucker, General, 135, 136, 150, 154, 161, 172, 208
-
- Tugela, 87
-
- Turnbull, W., 364, 432
-
- Turner, Corporal, 229, 231, 240, 384, 404, 436, 459
-
- Turner, Mr., 402
-
- Turner, Mr. C.E., 468
-
- Turner, Mr. J.M., 479
-
- Turner, Mr. L.C., 469
-
- Turner, Mr. M.C., 482
-
- Tyler, General, 469
-
- Tyler, Mrs., 402
-
- Tyrrell, Captain, 479
-
-
- Uitval Nek, 290, 296
-
- ‘Ujina’ transport, 67, 76, 83, 84, 85, 92
-
- Upcott, Mr. F.A., 469
-
- Upcott, Mr. F.R., 482
-
- Urs, Colonel Desraj, 474
-
-
- Vaal River, 177, 202, 227, 228, 229, 230, 233, 235, 343
-
- Ventris, General, 383, 389
-
- Vereeniging, 202, 228, 229, 233, 235, 289
-
- Verner, Mr. F., 25, 462
-
- Verschoyle, Major, 479
-
- Verschoyle, Mr. S., 479
-
- Vet, 218
-
- Vet River, 213, 425
-
- Victoria, Queen-Empress, 50, 409
-
- Victoria Cross, 147, 163, 171, 279
-
- Victoria Mills Co., 475
-
- Victorian Mounted Rifles, 139
-
- Viljoen, Commandant, 414, 416
-
- Viljoen’s Drift, 227, 228, 229, 230, 233
-
- Virginia Siding, 219
-
- Voltaire referred to, 91
-
- Vredefort Road Station, 235
-
-
- Wace, General, 23, 26, 64, 76, 402, 476, 482, 483
-
- Waggon Bridge, 140, 142
-
- Walker, Lieutenant-Colonel, 178, 466
-
- Walker, Sergeant, 75, 160, 162, 186, 413, 414, 415, 416, 417, 418, 425,
- 429
-
- Walker, Lance-Corporal, 75, 267, 365, 429
-
- Walker, Mr. C.R.S., 466
-
- Walker, Mr. E., 473
-
- Walker, Mr. G.H.D., 470
-
- Wallace, Captain (‘Atlantian’), 382
-
- Wallace, Mr. C.L.W., 479
-
- Waller, Major, 472
-
- Waller, E.H., 364, 436
-
- Wallis, Mr. A.H., 482
-
- Walsh, Mr. C.A., 472
-
- Walton, C.A., 157, 160, 257, 267, 364, 365, 430
-
- Walton, C.F., 266, 267, 272, 274, 365, 418, 434, 455
-
- Warburton, Lance-Sergeant, 257, 364, 384, 432
-
- Ward, Sir Edward, 223
-
- Ward, Artemus, quoted, 8
-
- Ware, Mr. F.H., 472
-
- Ware, Mr. H., 471
-
- Warmbaths, 295, 309
-
- Warner, Mr. H.B., 471
-
- Waterfield, Mr. S., 473
-
- Waters, Captain, 379
-
- Waterval, 192, 205, 257, 295, 310
-
- Waterval Boven, 314, 336, 337
-
- Waterval Drift, 96
-
- Waterval Onder, 336, 337
-
- Watkins, Mrs., 477
-
- Watson, Major, 345
-
- Watson, G.I., 231, 246, 364, 384, 429
-
- Watson, W.G., 429
-
- Watson, Mr. T., 472
-
- Watts & Co., 464
-
- Webbe. I.C., 384, 431
-
- Welldon, Bishop, 49, 67, 79, 394, 395, 402, 403, 469, 476
-
- Wellington, Duke of, quoted, 51
-
- Wellington College, 180
-
- Wells, Mr. Martyn, 479
-
- Wells, Mr. W.F., 469
-
- Wense Tannery, 475
-
- Wepener, 108, 135, 150, 177
-
- Were, H.D., 166, 169, 240, 433
-
- West Riding Mounted Infantry, 143, 220, 230, 244, 245
-
- Westmacott, Mr. D., 479
-
- Westmacott, Mr. T., 479
-
- Westminster, Duke of, 344
-
- Wheeler, W.H., 384, 436
-
- Whiddett, Mrs. Wallis, 477
-
- White, Sir George, 87, 312
-
- Whiteaway, Laidlaw, & Co., 463, 475
-
- Wickens, Rev. Mr., 403
-
- Wicks, Mr. H., 468
-
- Wicks, Mrs., 477
-
- Wigram, Rev. E.F.C., 473
-
- Wilkie, Mr. C.H., 482
-
- Wilkins, Mr. Justice, 466, 479
-
- Wilkins, Mrs., 477
-
- Wilkinson, Captain, 479
-
- Wilkinson, Lieutenant, 389, 473
-
- Wilkinson, G.E., 364, 435, 455
-
- Williams, Captain, 118, 172
-
- Williams, Lieutenant, 331
-
- Williams, L.G., 157, 160, 162, 173, 178, 194, 207, 268, 429, 455
-
- Williams, R.P., 215, 384, 435
-
- Williams, Mr. F., 473
-
- Williams, Mr. H.C., 469
-
- Williamson, Mr. G., 467, 482
-
- Williamson, Mr. H.C., 492
-
- Williamson, Mr. N., 472
-
- Willis, L., 365, 436
-
- Wilson, Captain, 402
-
- Wilson, Mr. J., 482
-
- Winburg, 217, 218
-
- Winder, W.R., 345, 384, 385, 432
-
- Wolve Hoek, 289
-
- Wonderfontein, 317
-
- Wood, H.C., 371, 434
-
- Woodburn, Sir John, 24, 48, 49, 52, 59, 64, 67, 79, 394, 402, 462, 477
-
- Woodburn, Lady, 477
-
- Woodman, Mr. H.C., 471
-
- Woodroffe, Mr. J.T., 402, 466, 482
-
- Woods, A.N., 71, 267, 364, 430, 455
-
- Woollright, A.P., 3, 91, 364, 432, 455
-
- Woolls-Sampson, Colonel, 337, 339
-
- Worcester, 114
-
- Wright, F.W., 267, 365, 367, 431, 455
-
- Wright, H.S.N., 365, 367, 431, 455
-
- Wynne, Colonel, 402, 482
-
- Wynne, Mr. T.R., 392
-
- Wynne, Mrs., 477
-
-
- Yeomanry, Imperial, 251
-
- Young, Sir W. Mackworth, 24, 462
-
- Younghusband, Mr. J.R.E., 471
-
- Yule & Co., 463
-
-
- Z.A.R.P., 203
-
- Zain-ul-Abidin, Nawab Syed Mahomed Murshidabad, 465
-
- Zand River, 219, 220, 225
-
- Zeerust, 288, 293
-
- Zilikat’s Nek, 289
-
- Zorab, L.K., 267, 384, 385, 428
-
- Zoutpans, 295, 306
-
- Zurfontein, 254, 266, 271
-
- PRINTED BY
-
- SPOTTISWOODE AND CO. LTD., NEW-STREET SQUARE
-
- LONDON
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-[Illustration:
-
- PART OF
- SOUTH AFRICA
- showing
- the routes taken by
- LUMSDEN'S HORSE.
-]
-
- * * * * *
-
- Reference
- to the Figures (in Red) on Map.
-
- 1. Bloemfontein April 3 to 21
- 2. Glen April 21
- 3. Spytfontein ” 22
- 4. Krang Kraal (Houtnek) ” 29
- 5. Spytfontein ” 30
- 6. Brandfort Rand May 4
- 7. Vet River Station ” 5
- 8. Smaldeel ” 6
- 9. Near Zand River Station ” 8
- 10. Near Ventersburg Road Station ” 9
- 11. Valsch River ” 10
- 12. Kroonstad W. Hills ” 11
- 13. Kroonstad Camp ” 12
- 14. Amerika Siding ” 22
- 15. Honing Spruit ” 22
- 16. Rhenoster Spruit ” 23
- 17. Wolvehoek Station ” 25
- 18. Vereeniging ” 26
- 19. Klip River ” 27
- 20. Natal Spruit ” 28
- 21. Germiston (Elandsfontein Junction) ” 29
- 22. Orange Grove (Johannesburg) ” 31
- 23. Strydom June 3
- 24. Six Mile Spruit ” 4
- 25. Irene (_viâ_ Pretoria) ” 5
- 26. Pretoria July 22
- 27. Crocodile River ” 27
- 28. Wonderboom ” 27
- 29. Dasport Camp ” 28
- 30. Vasser’s Hoek Aug. 1
- 31. Commando Poort (Uitval’s Nek) ” 3
- 32. Sterkstroom ” 4
- 33. Rustenburg ” 5
- 34. Eland’s River ” 6
- 35. Rustenburg ” 6
- 36. Commando Poort ” 8
- 37. Grobelar’s ” 11
- 38. Heck Poort ” 12
- 39. Kaulfontein ” 13
- 40. Buffel’s Hoek ” 16
- 41. Olphant’s Nek ” 17
- 42. Rustenburg ” 17
- 43. Sterkstroom ” 18
- 44. Roode Kopjes ” 19
- 45. Zoutpans ” 21
- 46. Near Haman’s Kraal ” 22
- 47. Zwart Boys’ Location ” 22
- 48. Botha’s Vley ” 23
- 49. Warmbads ” 24
- 50. Outposts on Buis Kop ” 25
- 51. Pienaar’s River Station ” 26
- 52. Waterval (Prisoner’s Camp) ” 27
- 53. Pretoria Racecourse ” 28
- 54. Erstefabriken ” 30
- 55. Mors Kop ” 31
- 56. Bronkhorst Spruit ” 31
- 57. Balmoral Sept. 1
- 58. Elandsfontein (Brug Spruit) ” 1
- 59. Oliphant’s River ” 2
- 60. Middelburg ” 3
- 61. Pan or Reetpan ” 3
- 62. Wonderfontein ” 1
- 63. ” ” (5 mile south of) ” 5
- 64. Carolina ” 8
- 65. Buffel’s Spruit ” 9
- 66. Rendsburg ” 10
- 67. Tafel’s Kop ” 11
- 68. Devil’s Kantor ” 12
- 69. Barberton ” 15
- 70. Machadodorp Oct. 3
- 71. Doorn Kop ” 11
- 72. Carolina ” 13
- 73. Kranspan ” 15
- 74. Klipstepel ” 15
- 75. Bethal ” 19
- 76. Trickardsfontein ” 22
- 77. Wilbank ” 25
- 78. Bultfontein ” 26
- 79. Heidelburg ” 26
- 80. Springs ” 31
- 81. Tweefontein Nov. 1
- 82. Erasmus Dam ” 2
- 83. Pretoria Racecourse ” 3
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Footnotes
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Transcriber’s Note
-
-Errors in the text have been corrected where they can be reasonably
-attributed to the printer or editor, or where the same word appears as
-expected elsewhere. Inconsistencies in punctuation, particularly in the
-Index, have been resolved.
-
-In the very long table of cash contributions in Appendix VII, the
-‘Carried Forward’ subtotals at the foot and head of each page have been
-removed.
-
-In Appendices II and X, wide tables have been divided into rearranged in
-order to be more readily viewable in this media.
-
-The book was bound with a short errata slip inserted prior to p. 1,
-which has been moved to the end of the text, prior to the Index. The
-changes have _not_ been made. The error noted on p. 384, line 13, for
-‘E.J. Johnstone’ apparently had already been corrected, but shows as
-‘C.H.M. Johnstone’ rather than 'Johnstone, C.H.'. The text is given as
-printed.
-
-Footnotes in the text have been renumbered consecutively for
-consecutively. They have been gathered at the end of each chapter.
-Footnotes in the tabular matter in the Appendices have been sequenced as
-letters A through G, and follow the table to which they pertain.
-
-In the list of men gazetted to the Regular Army on p. 365, 'Norton'
-would seem to be A.E. Norton, of the West India Regiment.
-
-The Index reference for Captain Chamney, indicating p. 379, is
-incorrect. This probably refers to p. 349, where the Captain is
-mentioned.
-
-The details of each correction are noted below.
-
- 8.37 P.[T/J]. Maitland Corrected.
-
- 12.3 'Her Majesty’s[’]' Government Added.
-
- 99.1 by the slow prog[r]ess of a convoy. Added.
-
- 189.15 my scouts, while reconnoit[i]ring under Removed.
- Lieutenant Pugh,
-
- 192.13 he had thought for a mo[n/m]ent of the Corrected.
- bitterness
-
- 273.17 he attemp[t]ed> to return Added.
-
- 288.24 in the centre, and Brigad[i]er-General Added.
- Mahon’s on the right,
-
- 296.32 for the sake of some amusing incidents Transposed.
- and an[ce/ce]dotes
-
- 301.39 some dozen Australian[s] Added.
-
- 313.12 Ragged and out at heels from [being _sic_
- having] marched]
-
- 435.7 Peak Es[s]tate,Yercand, Salem Removed.
-
- 428.9 Charles Reginald Macdonald ... Removed.
- Dowlutpore Concern, Durb[h]unga
-
- 428.17 Osborne Aldis ... Dulsing S[e/a]rai, Corrected.
- Durbunga
-
- 444.13 Chin, [strappers], helmet, leather _sic_ straps?
-
- 492.5 Barrackpur, 3[9]6 Restored.
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The History of Lumsden's Horse, by
-Henry H. S. Pearse
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