(Blandford) Heroes of The Crimea
(Blandford) Heroes of The Crimea
(Blandford) Heroes of The Crimea
--
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BLANDFORD
Blandford
An imprint of Cassell
Villiers House, 41147 Strand, London WC2N 5JE
Contents
,
List of Maps
Preface 7
PART I:
PART II:
The Bear Strikes Back
3 The Trumpet, the Gallop, the Charge
4 The Minie's Murderous Effect 57
5 The English Shall Be Attacked 70
PART III:
The Soldiers' Battle
6 Facing Fearful Odds 80
7 Load, Fire and Charge ! 93
8 A Hell of a Towelling 109
PART IV:
Aftermath
9 The Reckoning 122
10 Noble Exertions 135
38
148
Listo Maps
34
60
83
94
111
Pre ace
MJB
Jersey, CI
PART
GRENADIER GUARDS
10
II
So, from the home garrisons and the Mediterranean, the regiments assembled to form the 'Army
of the East', as it was grandly known. It included
ten cavalry regiments, two horse artillery troops,
eight field batteries and a siege train, 300 sappers,
and 30 infantry battalions (including three of
Guards and two of Rifles).t Yet it was an army in
name only, for the British Army of the day was not
a cohesive whole, but rather a collection of very
individualistic regiments. Certainly when they
moved on from Malta to Turkey, their ultimate
destination, they would be grouped into brigades
t See Appendix A.
13
III
The upper echelons of political power in the 1850s
were still largely the preserve of the aristocracy, but
increasingly it was the influence and prosperity of
an ever-growing middle class which set the tone of
the age. Powerful though this class was in the
country, particularly its mercantile element, it was
little represented in the Army, whose regiments
were manned by 'the horny-handed sons of toil'
and commanded by 'the children of luxury'. 16 The
middle class tended to despise the former and
disapprove of, but also to envy and ape, the latter.
Taking one infantry battalion in 1854 as an
example: its men before enlistment had been 76 per
cent agricultural labourers, a type preferred by
officers and NCOs for their fitness and docility; 11
per cent from manufacturing industries; 9 per cent
15
16
Fitzroy James Henry Somerset, 1st Baron Raglan, Commanderin-Chief, the Army of the East . 'A good red-tapist but no
General'. A painting by Sir Francis Grant.
19
20
21
IV
And so, under their gentlemanly officers, the
regiments of 'strong, hardy, well-intentioned fellows whom no nation on earth could match' 31
marched or rode away to the waiting transports.
Little did the crowds who cheered their departure
realize they were seeing the last of the old Army,
the like of which would not come again. A decade
later, when the Army was no longer recrUited
chiefly from the rural areas, but from the slums of
the big cities, a romantically minded Irish officer
mourned the passing of the pre-Crimean soldier,
'men of splendid physique and well-chiselled feature, keen, steady eyes, resolute jaws ... those old
Greek gods, gone as the buffalo are gone from the
prairies'. 32
As events would prove, they were a remarkable
breed and it was fitting that the people of England
should rise early from their beds to shout farewell
above the thudding drums and shrilling fifes. It had
not been ever thus. The England they were leaving
- the country and people described by Dickens and
Thackeray, Trollope and Surtees, painted by Frith
or caricatured by John Leach - that England had
little regard for; and considerable prejudice
against, her soldiers. Much was held against the
Army, chiefly by the middle and 'respectable'
working classes: its closed nature, its role in aid of
the Civil Power as in the Chartist riots, the social
exclusiveness of its officers and incidents like the
Perry case, its savage discipline. To most civilians
it offered poor material prospects as a career, while
for many families a son who became a soldier
seemed likely to be lost to them forever.
Aspects of all these criticisms were undeniable
but, until the troops were seen en masse marching
away in their glory in the spring of 1854, many
civilians had scarcely seen a soldier. Much of
Hampshire and Surrey had seen the troops at
Chobham, the Guards were evident in London, but
the rest of the Army, hidden away in widely
dispersed small garrisons and much of it overseas in
India and elsewhere, was almost invisible. The
Duke of Wellington had done his best to keep the
Army out of the public domain, but what is
unknown is distrusted and consequently disliked.
In 1854, however, the English people, proud,
self-confident, and with nearly 40 years of peace
behind them, felt the time had come to settle with
the Tsar. Thus they were willing to turn out and
Cavalry officers. From the left: 1st Royal Dragoons, 13th Light
Dragoons (mounted), 6th Inniskilling Dragoons, 11th Hussars.
MterG.H. Thomas.
22
A Blow at Sebastopol
I
For most of the nineteenth century the Great
Powers were preoccupied with the 'Eastern Question'. This concerned the potential for disintegration of the vast Ottoman (or Turkish) Empire
which sprawled across the junction of Europe, Asia
and Mrica. From its centre of authority at the
Sublime Porte, at Constantinople, its possessions
reached north-westwards through the Balkans to
the Danube, eastwards to the Caucasus, the Persian
Gulf and Arabia, southwards through the Levant to
Egypt, and westwards across North Mrica to
Tunis. Its position astride the lands between the
eastern Mediterranean and the Indian Ocean made
it strategically important, but its dominion over its
many races owing allegiance to Islam, Christianity
and Judaism was, inevitably, unpredictable.
To its north lay the Tsar's great empire. Despite
its huge land mass, Russia's only outlets to the seas
were in the Far East, through the narrow, often
frozen Baltic, and the even more frozen White Sea,
and from the Black Sea, through the narrows of the
Dardenelles under the Turkish guns at Constantinople, to the Mediterranean. Consequently, Russian eyes were fixed enviously on those straits,
while Turkish eyes looked apprehensively to their
Balkan frontier and eastwards to where Russia was
expanding through the Caucasus into Persia. The
Russian bear seemed in danger of encircling the
Sultan's ramshackle empire within its embrace.
Not only did Tsar Nicholas I look longingly at the
distant Mediterranean, but he also saw himself as
the protector, and eventual liberator, of the Sultan's 13 million Greek Orthodox subjects. Living
mostly in the Balkans, they had grown increasingly
23
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By May the Russians, who had remained on the
defensive all winter, had concentrated sufficient
forces in the Danube principalities to take the
offensive by besieging the Turkish frontier fortresses of Silistria on the Danube and Shumla. By now
the British and French forces had landed in
Turkey, many at a place where, 61 years later, their
descendants would land, in alliance with Russia, to
fight the Turks - Gallipoli. From there a further
move was made in June to Varna in Bulgaria, the
better to support the Turks now fighting successfully on the Danube.
Meanwhile, to the T sar's astonishment, the
Austrian Emperor, alarmed for his Danubian
27
' I must let him go'. Lord Aberdeen's inability to restrain the
British lion's pursuit of the Russian bear. Punch , vol. XXVI,
1854.
28
III
On 14 September the Allied armies landed unopposed on the western shore of the Crimea at the
depressingly named Calamita Bay. As the captain
of the Pyrenees watched the fine men of the 95th's
Grenadier Company going over the side, he wept to
think how few of them would survive. Private
Edward Hyde of the 49th thought 'the scene a very
lively one, the weather mild and fine, but at night
we had rain till morning', 10 which drenched
generals and privates alike. After time for the
British to requisition some local transport, the two
armies advanced on 19 September, with the French
on the right nearest the sea, the British alongside
inland. Sebastopol lay some 35 miles (56 km)
southwards along the coast, with three rivers
.
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mtervemng.
First to encounter the Russians was the Light
* Or seven
30
Battle of the Alma. General view of the British attack from the
left of the 1st Division. After W. Simpson.
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Panoramic view of the area round Sebastopol, looking northwest. Balaclava is in the left foreground. Compare this with Map
2. The foreground terrain is somewhat distorted and some
features - for example the Balaclava railway - did not exist in
1854.
35
'
36
PART
I
In peacetime Balaclava had been no more than a
fishing village at the head of a deep but narrow inlet,
three-quarters of a mile (1 km) long, which twisted in
from the sea between steep, dark-red cliffs, one
crowned by an old fort. By late October the harbour
was a tangle of masts, rigging and wooden hulls, its
muddy quayside alive with curious Tartars, harassed
commissaries, busy sailors and sick soldiers, picking
their way between the piles of stores overflowing from
a few requisitioned sheds. Away from the green-tiled
cottages, the one road meandered uphill for a mile
(1.6 km) between hills to the little village of Kadikioi.
Just short of it, a track bore off westwards to ascend
the escarpment by what was known as the Col. A
little way to the north-east rose an isolated low ridge.
Two miles (3 km) further north lay the Fedioukine
Hills, on the south bank of the Tchemaya, but the
open ground between was enclosed by hills to the
east, from which a ridge ran westwards for 4 miles (6
km) to the Sapoune escarpment, known as the
Causeway Heights. Along it ran the Woronzoff road,
linking Sebastopol with Baidar and Yalta. The open
ground bisected by the Causeway Heights became
known as the North and South Valleys.
All this was visible to General Bosquet' s divisions up on the Sapoune Ridge, but the entrance to
the Balaclava gorge was out of his guns' range. In
any case, his task was the rearwards protection of
the siege lines, not Balaclava, which was a British
responsibility; in particular that of Sir Colin
Campbell, temporarily detached from his command of the Highland Brigade. Aged 62, he was
probably the most experienced and capable formation commander in the Army of the East, having
40
41
II
The red speck 2 miles (3 km) from Raglan's eyrie
was of course the 93rd Highlanders, ordered into
position by Campbell. Only 550 strong, they had
been joined by 40 convalescent Guardsmen and 60
sick of other regiments from Balaclava. In two
ranks, their line covered a frontage of some 150
42
III
By now Raglan's second order had reached Lucan.
He had ordered Cardigan, who had at last joined
his brigade, to remain where he was just north of
No. 6 Redoubt, defending that position and
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45
*After the Victoria Cross was instituted on S February 1856, Grieve and
Ramage were among the recipients.
46
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48
IV
The Russian cavalry had retired to reform at the
eastern end of the North Valley behind a 140-yardlong (130m) screen of eight 6-pounders of the 3rd
Don Cossack Battery, providing a link between
Jabokritsky's troops with ten guns on the
Fedioukine Hills, and the infantry with six guns
then occupying Nos. 1 to 3 Redoubts and a spur
which projected north-eastwards into the North
Valley from No. 3. This was a defensive deployment, designed by Liprandi to cover the consolidation of the most easterly redoubts while abandoning No. 3, which the four battalions of the Odessa
Regiment were ordered to demolish and dismount
the captured 12-pounders.
By now two French infantry brigades of Bosquet's division had been sent down by Canrobert to
the plain and the 4eme Chasseurs d'Afrique were
ready to support the Cavalry Division. Raglan, still
up on the Sapoune Ridge, having seen that
Balaclava had been saved, was now preoccupied by
the need to recapture its outer line of defence on
the Causeway Heights and, with his mind harking
back to another Wellingtonian precept, regain the
lost guns. For this he looked to Cathcart's 4th
Division, supported by Cambridge's 1st. The latter
had reached the plain near No. 6 Redoubt, but
Cathcart, still smarting at having been turned out,
* Out of sight to the Odessa's right rear were the Azov, Dneiper and
Ukraine Regiments ( 12 battalions).
49
guns. Raglan spoke urgently to Airey who scribbled down another order, the fourth: 'Lord Raglan
wishes the cavalry to advance rapidly to the frontfollow the enemy and try to prevent the enemy
carrying away the guns. Troop Horse Artillery may
accompany. French cavalry is on your left. Immediate'. It was handed to the best horseman of the
staff, the so-called 'cavalry maniac',, Captain Lewis
Nolan. As he rode straight down the escarpment,
Raglan called, 'Tell Lord Lucan the cavalry is to
attack immediately'. 23
And so began the muddle which led to the most
famous - or infamous - episode of the Crimean
War. This story is more concerned with the lower
ranks, and since the altercation between Lucan and
Nolan which sealed the Light Brigade's doom has
been so often described, it is superfluous to detail it
yet again.* What ensued will be presented here
through the words of the soldiers concerned, but
what determined their fate can be summarized as
resulting from a hasty order issued by a commander at an all-seeing viewpoint . (Raglan), to an
inflexible and irascible subordinate at a much more
limited viewpoint (Lucan) - something seemingly
not appreciated by the commander -leading to lack
of clarity of purpose, and all aggravated by its
bearer, an impatient and junior staff officer,
intolerant of his seniors and convinced of his own
expertise (Nolan); puzzlement, temper, insubordination, wild gestures- and the Light Brigade
was launched, not at the redoubts' captured guns,
but down that fine turf for a gallop, the North
Valley, through a corridor of fire to the guns at its
end.
With Cardigan leading, the Light Brigade moved
off as his trumpeter, Billy Brittain of the 17th,
sounded, 'Walk, March - Trot'. In the first line
were the 17th Lancers with the 13th Light Dragoons on their right; behind the 17th, the 11th
Hussars; 200 yards (180 m) in rear, under Lord
George Paget, the 4th Light Dragoons with the 8th
Hussars on their right; all with both squadrons in
two-deep line; the first line covering about 145
yards ( 130 m) - almost exactly the frontage of the
distant Russian battery. To the right rear rode the
Heavy Brigade, to the left waited the Chasseurs
d' Afrique. Despite the quantity of Russian artillery, no orders were issued to the division's own I
50
.
-
__--- - ,.- -
'
The Light Brigade charging the 3rd Don Cossack Battery: the
first line, 17th and 13th, suffering casualties, the 11th behind
the 17th, followed by the 4th and 8th; top right, the Heavy
Brigade. Anonymous watercolour.
51
52
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53
54
Douglas'~
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55
56
4
The Minie 's Murderous E ect
57
The view from Home Ridge looking north towards Shell Hill. A
photograph dated 1904.
58
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Conolly and Owens (see page 136) both subsequently received the
Victoria Cross.
63
Barrier, where the three companies collected and continued to keep up a fire. 11
64
G \
was m
reserve:
It was splendid to see our gunners at work. One, a
red-haired man, was greatly excited, and used very
strong language when he found one of the ammunition
boxes could not be opened; he soon knocked the hasp off
with a stone. 16
66
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An eyewitness sketch by J.A. Crowe, correspondent of The
/ Uustrat.ed London News, of the action on 26 October. The
nearest infantry must be the companies sent forward by Evans,
not the picquets who were in greatcoats.
. ..
67
the gun did her duty nobly as well as the little Middy
who, when they [the Russians] were going through a
gulley and over a bridge into Sebastopol, in a mass of
columns, swept them away by hundreds. It was really
awful to see the havoc she made among them. 19*
68
flank.
However, as the perceptive Lieutenant Morgan
of the 95th noted: 'I do not think [the enemy]
intended anything more than a reconnaissance in
force; they only came to see the nakedness of the
land and, as their subsequent moves showed, they
attained their object'. 24
* Kvass = rye-beer. .
69
--
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John Leach's interpretation for Punch of how ' the sluggish soul
of the Muscovite serf was stimulated by ' religious artifice' and
alcohol.
71
expertise.
The inadequacies already noted in some British
generals could be matched by those of the Russian
Army. If the British military system had suffered
too long from the ageing influence of the Duke of
Wellington, so had the Russian from the rigid
despotism of Nicholas I which discouraged ideas
and initiative. Menshikoff in his time had been a
general, an admiral, an administrator and a diplomat, but was master of none of these professions .
Rich, ambitious and arrogant, he had enjoyed the
Tsar's confidence but was distrustful and contemptuous of his subordinates and his troops, secretive
about his intentions, and had few powers of
leadership. Liprandi, one of the more capable
generals, he considered 'a Greek intriguer'. 12 Towards Todleben, only a colonel and of German
origin but perhaps the most competent senior
officer in the Crimea, who had reorganized Sebastopol's defences, Menshikoff was dismissive and
irritable. Among his subordinates at the Alma,
72
join up with Soimonoff, prior to attacking southwards together under Dannenberg's joint command.*
The force to operate against the Sapoune Ridge
was under Gortchakoff's command and consisted
of troops who had fought at Balaclava: Liprandi's
12th Division, 7,000 cavalry, and 88 guns; some
22,000 men strong. Gortchakoff was ordered to
draw the Sapoune Ridge defenders (the Guards
Brigade and Bosquet's corps) upon himself, to try
and seize one of the routes up to the ridge, and to
hold his cavalry in readiness to ascend the heights
as soon as practicable.
Soimonoff, who had proved competent against
the Turks, received these orders, not from Dannenberg, hitherto his superior, but direct from
Menshikoffs headquarters at about S pm on 4
November; he was thus given no time to reconnoitre ground he had never seen, and which he
would have to traverse in the dark. However, one
of Menshikoffs staff explained that he was to
advance up the eastern side of the Careenage ravine
towards Shell Hill, so as to protect Pauloff's right,
prior to linking up with that corps near the head of
St George's ravine. Soimonoff later received written instructions from Dannenberg to attack at 5
am, instead of 6 am, and up the Victoria Ridge
(that is, on the western bank of the Careenage
ravine). This put Soimonoff in a quandary, which
* Kinglake, quoting Todleben, gives Soimonoff 18,929 and Pauloff
15,806, both excluding gunners. Another Russian account gives Soimonoff 16,200 and PauJoff 13,500 infantry.
73
74
wound.* He had both command and staff experience and, as commander of the 1st Brigade, Hume
of the 55th recorded that 'officers and men liked
him, he was always so cheery and ready for any
amount of fighting'. 17
He had not been summoned to the Council of
War, so he spent that Saturday afternoon riding
through the heavy rain which had been falling most
of the day, visiting his picquets to glean any new
information about the enemy dispositions while
daylight lasted, as was his daily custom. The right
picquets that day were all provided by the 95th, but
commanded by Major Grant of the 49th, who was
at the usual field officer's post at the Barrier, with
Lieutenant Carmichael and his men. When Pennefather reached them, they drew his attention to the
heights across the Tchernaya whereon, according
to Carmichael, 'the enemy was showing in great
force . There had been a review in the course of the
day and it was remarked to him that the enemy,
76
\
\
77
78
PART
'
Remember, remember
The fifth of November,
Sebastopol, powder and shot;
When General Liprandi
Charged John, Pat and Sandy
And a jolly good licking he got!
PUNCH, VOL. XX.VIl , 216
80
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The 95th was being held in reserve by Pennefather, who had quickly decided how to fight his
battle. Realizing he was facing a major attack, far
Splflt.
'
Lieutenant-Colonel Mauleverer went to the Barrier. A wing from each of the 47th and 49th,
respectively under Majors Fordyce and Grant, who
had been up all night with the right picquets,
advanced to the head of the Mikriakoff glen as a
fall-back for the left picquets. The right picquets,
all 55th, had not yet been attacked, except for
Hume's. However, mindful of the great host he
had seen across the Tchernaya the previous afternoon, Pennefather sent towards Fore Ridge Brigadier Adams with the rest of the 41st, to be
supported by Bellairs' wing of the 49th from the
east end of Home Ridge. All, sooner or later, would
be heavily engaged.
This was the way the Battle of Inkerman began
for the British, and so it would continue: not
fought like the Alma in the formations of the
Manual- brigades and divisions with all battalions
in two-deep line- but by bodies seldom larger than
a wing and often as small as a half-company or
85
. ,
86
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..
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sounded by a bugler with their other two companies, which had retreated to the head of the glen ,
where eventually all four were reunited.
The Light and No. 7 Companies owed their
escape in part to Lieutenant Miller and the crews of
three guns of P Battery on the southern spur above
the glen. Some of the 88th ran back through them ,
but when two Katherinburg battalions came up
over the lip through the mist, they only had time to
fire one round of case-shot* before the enemy was
on them. Miller immediately spurred his horse into
them, slashing with his sword, followed by his
gunners laying about them with rammers and short
swords, ' finding vent for their rage in curses and
shouts of defiance' . 13 The leading K atherinburgers
halted as though frozen into disbelief at the
gunners' foolhardiness, but then the momentum of
the mass inexorably pushed them on, over the
20-odd battling artillerymen, until the guns were in
their hands.t
Their way forward now seemed clear, but
somehow the capture of such prestigious trophies
struck these battalions as an end in itself, and there
87
88
Mark Walker (seated), Adjutant of the 30th, with, from the left,
a private, sergeant of the Light Company and the sergeantmajor. Walker was gazetted VC on 4 June 1858.
'
90
Th~
wa~
un~dtish rc.:~:ommc.:nJation .
Cross on Mauleverer's
Gortchakoffs host was spreading across the Balaclava plain towards the heights. Dannenburg had
at last assumed command, nearly 90 guns
were emplaced between W est and East Juts,
and Pauloffs 12 new battalions were already
advancing.
With the fog lifting to reveal these fresh forces,
the 2nd and Light Division men, reduced by
casualties, hungry, and tired by their exertions,
must have looked anxiously round for reinforcements . Someone said the Guards were coming. 'All
right,' said the sardonic Private Williams of the
41st, as contemptuous of the Household troops as
he had been of the Cavalry in September, ' let them
do some fighting for a change!" 9
Q)
~ -
7
Load, Fire and Charge!
7.30 to 8.30 am
The Guards were indeed approaching, preceded by
their batteries, Paynter's and Woodhouse's, but
their advance had been delayed by uncertainties
about Gortchakoffs intentions on the plain below.
Cathcart too was approaching with elements of his
4th Division. On the way he met Sir George Brown
and together they encountered Bosquet. The experienced French general, a veteran of North
African campaigns, had by now assessed that
Gortchakoffs manoeuvrings were no m ore than a
feint; already he had ordered two battalions to
march northwards. M eeting the two British generals he offered assistance but they, both veterans of
the Napoleonic War, loftily denied any need,
suggesting he would be best employed guarding the
British rear. Assuming this rebuff was founded on
better knowledge of the situation than he possessed
- which was not so - Bosquet reversed his
battalions' march. Later, beckoned by the crescendo of battle to his north, and with his tactical
judgement reinforced by a pleading message from
Raglan, he again sent off the two battalions,
followed by five more with 24 guns. Nevertheless ,
the arrogance of two British generals had ensured
that Pennefather's hard-pressed men would have to
hold the line alone, at least until the Guards could
arnve.
Just under half of Pennefather's 2,900 men
consisted of the 47th and 49th wings which were
guarding the left and rear approaches to Home
Ridge, reinforced by the 600-strong 77th and 88th
companies, and the original 2nd Brigade picquets
plus elements of the 30th and 55th , which had
supported them, all somewhat disorganized and
0
93
weakened by casualties, many without ammunition, and now rallying between the camp and the
Ridge. The remainder were Mauleverer's 30th
wing at the Barrier; three batteries on the ridge and
behind it the 95th, three 47th companies, and some
hundred 55th ; to their right front, the 41st and
Bellairs' portion of the 49th; some 1,600 in all. As
Williams of the 41st looked angrily round for sight
of the despised bearskins, and then to his front, it
was clear to him - indeed to them all - that
Pauloffs 10,000 would reach them first.
Covered by 90 guns emplaced between Shell Hill
and East Jut, four Okhotsk battalions, with one of
Sappers, followed by eight of the Selenghinsk and
Iakoutsk, were advancing south-eastwards, in the
same formations used previously , with the clear
intention of turning the British right around the
Sandbag Battery. Despite the uselessness of that
structure, much blood of both sides was about to be
spilled in a ferocious struggle for its possession.
Though hoping for a respite after their recent
dispatch of the Taroutine, the 700 men of the 41 st
and 49th again formed line under their brigadier,
Henry Adams, a huge man on a huge horse and a
veteran of the China War, to face the 4,000
Okhotsk and Sappers clambering up the Kitspur.
Out went Nos. 3 and 4 Companies of the 41st as
skirmishers. Opening fire , they drove in the
Russian skirmishers, then charged down at the
leading companies. But the Okhotsk, unlike the
Taroutine, were unaccustomed to British soldiers
and, seeing how few they were, met them with fire
and bayonets .
Skirmishing line and company columns dis-
200 Yds
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96
Fizz! Fizz! fly the bullets about us, but we could not see
where they were coming from. Whack! comes a round
shot close to u~, then a shell which bursts and huge
lumps of iron go whizzing through the air like horrid
demons to enter their victims. We come to some bushes;
we discern figures groping about , hardly knowing which
way to turn, so it appeared to us. We are in skirmishing
order. Pop, pop , bang, we are engaging them. We soon
make them retire on their main supports. We lay down
under the bushes. The enemy come blundering towards
us again. Our men seemed to have lost all patience . I had
a feeling allied to madness creeping over me and jumping
up , said, 'Come on, let's get at them! ' But I was not
aware that Major [Horsford] was so near, who told me to
lie down until I got the order. At last we made another
move towards them , making them retire into a hollow. 14
The rest of the 68th were in the trenches and most of the 46th had not
\'et disembarked at Balaclava.
98
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Two sketches by Captain Henry Torrens of Cathcart's counterattack down the eastern side of the Kitspur: 1 and 2 = 68th and
46th, led by Brigadier-General T orrens; 3 = Russians attacking~
4 and 5 = Guards at Sand bag Battery, attacked by Russians (6) ;
7 = Russians on East j ut.
99
-..
Airey's 'quick, inconsiderate manner', 16 and unwilling to concede that Raglan's tactical judgement
was superior to his own , he turned away and
ordered Torrens to advance against the Selen ghinsk .
Down th e slope obliquely went the six companies in line, 68th on the right. H aving earlier
discarded their greatcoats, they were the only
regiment fighting in red , which showed clearly
amid the scrub to the Russian gunners on East Jut ,
who opened fire. Captain T orrens, acting as ADC
to his father, wrote:
It was only as the smoke occasionally cleared away that
we could discern the dark mass of long greatcoats, flat
caps and cold blue steel approaching us. We charged and
drove them back before they reached the top of the hill,
taking them partially in flank. 17
T he Selenghinsk would not stand but then, proving the wisdom of the restraint hitherto imposed
on the Guards, the 46th and 68th pressed on in
pursuit, their excited ranks becoming increasingly
disordered by the undergrowth, until they reached
the bottom of the Kits pur .
Seeing his divisional commander's action , Crofton urged his 20th wing forward from the Coldstream . H e had intended only a volley and a
controlled charge, but he fell wounded and his men
too went on down the hill. Killed in this rush was
"Lieutenant Dowling. H e should have been safely
on camp guard that morning, but when his men
asked to fight, rather than mount guard , he told his
captain: 'The men request to be led to the front and
I would rather go too'. 18
Wilson 's Coldstream company next to them
followed, pursued by him yelling for them to
return, but to no avail. Alerted by Wilson's pligh t,
the other captains were able, for the moment, to
hold back their men .
T he Grenadiers were still hard pressed by the
Okhotsk around the Battery. L oath to abandon it,
yet hampered by its height, the men's frustration
fou~d expression in one Guardsmen who shouted ,
'If any officer will lead us, we will charge'. Sir
Charles Russell felt he
could not refuse such an appeal. I jumped into the
embrasure and said, 'Come on, my lads; who will follow
me?' I rushed on, fi red my revolver at a fellow close to me
but it missed fi re. I pulled again and think I killed him.
100
102
103
..
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104
'
'
pt:n:u~~ion
pauern.
8.30 to 9.15 am
Dannenberg's first offensive with Pauloffs corps
had cost the lakoutsk, Okhotsk and Selenghinsk
some 1,000 casualties, perhaps more, but they were
by no means demoralized, like those of Soimonoffs
first attack had been. The 9,000-strong reserve of
16 battalions still remained untouched on Shell Hill
with 100 guns. If Dannenberg could break through
to the plateau behind Home Ridge, then Gortchakoffs unused 22,000 might be induced to ascend
the escarpm ent.
Using the Barrier as his start-line, Dannenberg
now planned to smash through Home Ridge along
the line of the road , using the four Iakoutsk
Battalions, one behind the other in a solid column ,
but screened by strong advance and flank guards.
Who provided these is unclear. The Selenghinsk
were not available as they were still recovering from
the Kitspur battle below St Clement's ravine. Some
may have been from the Okhotsk, but one officer
mentions 'the Chasseurs of the lOth Division'
(Soimonoffs) 35 - that is, the Tomsk and Kolivansk
who were so designated. t If so, they must have
been reorganized after Soimonoffs repulse and
brought up from the rear. Their eight battalions,
added to the Iakoutsk's four , would account for the
t
105
but their undoing. A company of Zouaves surprised them from the scrub and drove them from
the guns.t
Behind these Zouaves came the 300 files of the
21 st and 63rd. Having carefully observed the rest
of the Russian right-flank guard, Ainslie and
Swyny waited until it wheeled left towards the
ridge, then advanced firing in one line, the 21st on
the left, against its right rear. Private George Evans
of the 63rd wrote later: 'As fast as we could run and
load our pieces, so fast they fell , for we could not
miss them, they were so thick'. 36 This attack
cleared the west end of Home Ridge but, having
advanced some 200 yards (180 m) beyond the
recaptured guns, the line came under artillery fire .
The two colonels jointly halted, facing north-east,
and made their men take cover in the scrub.
Further east along the ridge it had been touch
and go. Under cover of the gun smoke part of the
enem y vanguard broke through the 55th, taking
prisoners, but were then hit by their own artillery.
Turner's other three guns fired case until the last
t
106
107
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108
8
A Hell o a Towelling
9.15 to 11.00 am
From around 9.15 am Haines began an epic
defence at the Barrier, but as this was to last nearly
six hours it will be returned to later. On the right,
where British and Russians had been reorganizing
since 8.30, fighting flared up again with a Russian
assault on the 6eme Ligne holding the spur
between Quarry and St Clement's ravines. In due
course this would involve the main French effort in
the battle, including the removal of the 7eme Leger
from Home Ridge. First, however, a new element
entered the fight which was greatly to influence the
future course of the struggle.
When Raglan had first arrived on the scene at
about 7 am, he had ordered up two 18-pounders
from the siege train to supplement the outgunned
and outranged field batteries in their uneven duel
with the superior numbers of 12-pounders and
32-pounder howitzers on Shell Hill . These should
have materialized by 8 am but, owing to a
misunderstanding, the staff officer who carried the
message applied first to the wrong officer. By the
time this mistake was rectified and the message
reached Colonel Gambier, commanding the siege
train, valuable time had been lost. Gambier had
been keeping two guns, with loaded ammunition
wagons, ready for such an eventuality since the 26
October sortie. Now, however, he had no draught
horses to pull them. Accordingly, some ISO men of
the 6th and 7th Companies , 11th Battalion Royal
Artillery, set to with drag ropes to haul them 'over
one and a half miles over rough ground and up a
steep hill to the scene of the action.' 1
As they neared the battle, they came under
artillery fire and Gambier was wounded. Lieute-
109
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Dickson's men had achieved complete fire superiority over the enemy gun line.
The 18-pounders' fire was soon joined by Boussiniere's 12 French 12-pounders from the north end
of Fore Ridge. The first six of these had gone into
action following the Russian attack from Quarry
ravine on the 6eme Ligne, and the appearance of
another column once more ascending to the Sandbag Battery. Despite bringing across the 7eme
Leger and the guns' effective fire, Bourbaki sent
back word to Bosquet that more reinforcements
were vi tal if further retreat was to be a voided.
Bosquet was approaching with 4,600 infantry
and, on receiving Bourbaki's plea, sent on 450
Chasseurs a Pied at the double, following with five
battalions: one of Tirailleurs Algeriens, and both of
the 3eme Zouaves and SOeme Ligne. In the rear
rode the Chasseurs d ' Afrique and the 200-strong
110
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they tore into the Selenghinsk , the Zouaves received a small reinforcement. From the slopes
below emerged Wilson with his Coldstream com pany to join the attack alongside the Zouaves, with
whom they had an affinity forged long ago at
Varna. Out went the Selenghinsk and down the
slopes charged the Zouaves and Algerians, driving
them not only to the bottom of St Clement's ravine,
but out of the battle. Seeing their line of retreat at
last opened by the French , Sargent's trapped 95th
company arose from hiding to greet their rescuers.
This flank was now clear and, unlike Wilson and
Sargent, the two victorious French battalions could
reascend the ravine unhindered to rejoin Bosquet.
H e reported to Canrobert who, with the arrival of
three more battalions at 11 am , then disposed of
8,000 infantry, which he deployed along Fore
Ridge and down to the Kitspur.
Another factor influencing these events had been
the continued defence, from 9.15, of the Barrier by
Haines's m en , supported on either flank from time
to time, when ammunition permitted , by small
skirmishing parties from the 20th , Rifles, and
mixed groups from regiments earlier engaged and
collected together under whatever officers could be
found. Their ac tion served to fix the attention of
the Iakoutsk and Okhotsk columns in Quarry
ravine, who continued to make periodic attempts to
force the Barrier or outflank it .
11 2
113
'
The defence of the Barrier by H aines and the 2 1st's right wing .
A painting by Marjory Wetherstone.
114
11.00 am to 1.00 pm
Near to Haines in the ravine were the Iakoutsk and
Okhotsk, still unbroken but greatly reduced and,
having been in action with little respite for nearly
four hours and with nothing to show for it, might
yield to a strong push. However, aligned between
West Jut and Shell Hill still stood the unused 16
battalions of the Vladimir, Sousdal, Ouglitch and
Boutirsk, as well as the Russian artillery . The
latter, though much battered by the 18-pounders,
were about to have a new lease of life as Dickson's
gunners had fired off all their ammunition. Such a
force could hardly be attacked by the few companies and odd detachments of different regiments
at Haines's disposal.
Since daybreak some 7,000 British infantry,
from 18 battalions or parts thereof, had come into
action between the Careenage ravine and the
Sandbag Battery. By 11.00 a third of them were
casualties, but the survivors by no means formed a
cohesive whole. Because of the makeshift method
of resisting successive a ttacks, because seven diand 18 battalion
visional and brigade commanders
.
or wing commanders had been killed or wounded,
11 5
116
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11 7
1.00 to 4.00 pm
Three-quarters of a mile (1.2 km) off in another
direction, on Victoria Ridge, Brigadier-General
Codrington of the Light Division saw the Russian
guns pulled away. Looking at his watch, he noticed
it was 12.45 and sent a galloper off to Raglan.
Since day-break he had kept 1,200 of his
brigadet guarding the east side of Victoria Ridge
from any attack up the Careenage ravine, and
giving whatever fire support they could across the
ravine against West Jut which, when the fog
cleared, was within Minie range. One small infantry attack against Hewett's Lancaster gun had been
quickly driven away by a company of 2nd Rifle
Brigade, but the gun position endured heavy
enfilade gunfire from West Jut. Because the parapet had been rebuilt since 26 October, the Lancaster could only fire forward so that the enemy guns
had to be engaged with rifle fire alone.
Private Oliver's company of the 7th was in
skirmishing order. He took cover from the fire,
'like hailstones', but found 'I could not make my
rifle tell upon them'. He and his corporal decided
to make for the Lancaster battery,
still, captured by the infantry, the battery commander called up his teams. Though men and horses
were blown to pieces, his gunners worked like
demons to limber up and get away. Their determination was rewarded. When Acton's breathless
men finally reached the abandoned position, the
only recompense for their gallant attack was one
shattered gun carriage and two limbers. Astley and
Horsford, coming in on the right, captured eight
wagons.
As the 18-pounders switched to other parts of the
Russian gunline, Acton, Horsford and Astley were
joined by the 21 st's No. 1 Company. Thus some
300 British infantrymen stood again on Shell Hill,
nearly seven hours after it had been abandoned.
Their position, however, was precarious. To their
left, on West Jut, and to their right front were the
four regiments of the Russian reserve, the nearest
little more than 200 yards (180 m) away. Apart
from the 18-pounder fire, the closest support of any
Elements of 7th Royal F usiliers, 23rd Royal Welch Fusiliers, 33rd, 2nd
Rifle Brigade; later joined by part of the 19th and five guns.
118
dreadful sight. Our poor Major stood his post bravely he only gave a groan. They wanted to take him home.
'No, men', he said, 'I command you still' . As long as I
live I shall never forget that man. 23
Sir Thomas Troubridge Bt, 7th Royal Fusiliers, 'the best soldier
and calmest man in danger' . An engraving from a photograph.
119
' The 18-pounders in action from Home Ridge. French troops are
on the right. After A. Maclure.
PART
7TH ROYALFUSILIERS
The Reckoning
122
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123
125
126
.' ':
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II
The day after the battle, the combatants began to
take stock. Despite having amassed, for the first
time in the Crimea, a decisive superiority in men
and guns, the Russians had failed to achieve the
aim set out by Menshikoff of seizing and occupying
the heights on which the English troops were.
established. To placate the Tsar, rather than
implementing any strongly held views of his own
on the need to attack - which he lacked Menshikoff had devised a plan_, complex but
basically sound and feasible. However, he had
promulgated it without clarity, and executed it
without the essential overall command and coordination. Despite his numerical superiority, only
about a th.ird of his total force was committed to the
main thrust. His subordinate commanders, who
had only just arrived, were given no time for
reconnaissance of difficult ground unfamiliar to
them, which would have to be traversed in the dark
127
128
129
..
>
.'
130
unue.
III
While not detracting from Pennefather's achievement, the fighting conditions - poor visibility
caused by fog and subsequent battle smoke, plus
the brush-covered terrain with its gullies and
ravines - made it impossible for even such an
energetic commander as he to exercise control over
events other than those occurring wherever he
happened to be at any one time. Thus it was that so
much of the outcome depended on the regimental
officers and their ability to judge what needed to be
done to stem the flood, and to carry their men with
them in furtherance of their resolve. Though
always outnumbered, they were quick to appreciate
how the solid, ponderous Russian masses could
first be confused, then halted, and finally turned
back by their own supple, and agile, but thin,
formations. These could make best use of their
superior musketry, on the principle that the way to
stop a steamroller was not by opposing mass with
mass, but by the irruption of small missiles into its
working parts from many directions.
Battle obviously induces fear into all men, and
British officers and men were no braver than their
Russian counterparts. But the latter's reliance on
mass bred a sheep-like mentality; the more open
British methods encouraged enterprise and initiative, not merely among the officers, but in the men
as well. One officer observed admiringly 'how
quick of invention and rich in resource were the
non-commissioned-officers and privates, despite a
military education shallow and imperfect' .2 1 In
peacetime the British infantryman had been drilled
and drilled, as had the Russian. This had incul.
cated the necessary discipline but, having learned
how to survive on the battlefield at the Alma, Little
lnkerman and during the constant picquetting
duties, the British soldier's more independent
character had asserted itself, without losing the
engrained obedience which is a prerequisite for
military success.
That men, most of whom were tired and hungry
131
132
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I
rr..
to fall in with his company. Other officers' recollections mention the deeds of individual soldiers,
sometimes giving their Christian names and almost
always their ranks. There are countless references
in Captain Wilson's book which reveal the admiration and respect he had for the ordinary Crimean
soldier, not just his own Coldstreamers, but of the
Line as well. 26 Strange Jocelyn of the Fusilier
Guards wrote movingly of his sergeant, mortally
wounded in the battle, whose widow he had
confided to his sister-in-law's interest, and who was
'one of the noblest and finest fellows that ever
breathed ... his loss to me was as great almost as a
brother's. I had great affection for that man and
would do anything for his widow and children'. 27
In an otherwise highly critical 1855 report on
Crimean operations, its authors singled out for
praise the way officers 'had not only shared all the
danger and exposure and most of the privations
which the men had to undergo, but the evidence is
full of incidental indications of their solicitude for
28
their
command'.
the welfare of those under
.
That their officers' regard was reciprocated by
the men has been quoted in several soldiers'
accounts: Private Evans for 'poor Mr Clutterbuck'
of the 63rd; Sergeant Connor for Captain Nichol-
--
133
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134
10
Noble Exertions
mentioned no less than three times and 'particularly distinguished himself. The only regiments,
other than the Guards Brigade, specifically mentioned were the 20th, 68th, 77th and 88th, and
those little more than in passing; for the 21st,
which had held the vital Barrier for so long, not a
word. The ordinary soldiers, it almost goes without
saying, featured merely as 'the troops', and not
very often. But then Raglan neither knew them,
nor they him.
When the officers of the Grenadiers first read it
in the Crimea, Higginson recorded 'we are all
frantic', while as for the custom of reading it out to
the troops: 'I could not bring myself to do it, so
shamefully are we treated'. 2 It was accompanied by
news of Raglan's promotion to field-marshal.
Calthorpe, Raglan's nephew and ADC, wrote:
'This, I need hardly say, gives general
satisfaction'. 3 Captain Clifford's more jaundiced
view of Raglan's new baton - 'He has more to
thank the Army for, than it has him' - was mild
compared with another's 'The Queen ought to
break it over his head!' 4 Such sentiments were
more common than Calthorpe's.
Raglan was not an inconsiderate man nor was he
contemptuous of his juniors, like Menshikoff. He
was indeed both kindly and courteous - some
thought excessively so for his task - but he was
remote, intensely undemonstrative, an aristocrat
formed in an earlier age with an uncritical sense of
hierarchy. After the Light Brigade's charge he had
ridden through its camp without a word of
sympathy or praise, not from indifference, but
because he himself found dispensing commenda-
135
136
The Russian climate gave that unfortunate official six days' grace; then, as though in mockery of
such belated planning, showed the teeth the Tsar's
army had lacked. From six o'clock on the morning
of 14 November a hurricane accompanied by
deluging rain struck the camps. Tents, stores and
equipment flew in all directions, along with the
meagre scrub which provided the only fuel. The
Guards' bearskin caps, which normally stood on
short pegs outside their tents, were later found in a
ravine a quarter of a mile away. Where the
hospitals had been, the sick and wounded lay
helpless and dying in the mud under torrents of
rain. The trenches were flooded ; men and horses
blown over; officers' camp kit whirled through the
air; wagons were overturned. Around midday it
grew colder, the rain turned to sleet, followed by a
snowstorm until soon all the mud and wreckage
were covered by a layer of white. Late in the
137
The road from Balaclava (left rear) to the heights in the wet.
Kadikioi church is beyond it. After W. Simpson.
138
action.
That something was eventually done was owed
not so much to officers' lobbying but very largely to
one man whom some officers regarded as 'a vulgar,
low Irishman': The Times correspondent, William
Howard Russell. He had covered the campaign
from the start and from his descriptions of the
battles people at home had acquired a pride and
interest in their army which they had never
displayed before. He had ruffled many feathers in
the upper and staff ranks and been denied access to
Raglan's headquarters. Clifford, who coined the
above description, qualified it by saying Russell
was 'looked upon by most in camp as a "Jolly Good
Fellow'", and that he was 'rather an awkward
Gentleman to be on bad terms with' . 16 Russell was
aware that Raglan had accused him of providing
the enemy with useful information through his
dispatches (though actual publication of them was
the responsibility of his powerful editor, J .P.
Delane), but he maintained that the people of
England had a right to know that 'the wretched
139
. ..........
8 ltut
141
Three of the 95th, typifying the men 'who held the ground they
stood on as long as life was in them', in their new uniforms after
returning home in 1856, their medals bearing clasps for ' Alma',
'Inkerman' and 'Sebastopol'.
142
143
144
Appendix A
Order o Battle, the Army o the East,
up to 5 November 1854, with later titles o regiments
Artillery
Maude's I Troop,
Royal Horse Artillery
(0 Battery [Rocket
Artillery
Paynter's A Battery,
Royal Artillery
Wodehouse's H
Battery, Royal
Artillery
145
(-)
Artillery
Franklin's B Battery,
Royal Artillery
Turner's G Battery,
Royal Artillery
Artillery
Swinton's F Battery,
Royal Artillery
Baker's W Battery,
Royal Artillery
(- )
Artillery
Townshend's P
Battery, Royal
Artillery
Artillery
Brandling's C Troop,
Royal Horse Artillery
Anderson 's E Battery,
Royal Artillery
147
(- )
( 156 [Inkerman] Battery,
Royal Artillery)
AppendixB
British Casualties- Inkerman
(Ad].utant-General's Return, 22 November 1854)
Regiment
Staff: (5); (1 1);4th Light Dragoons: 2; 1;11th Hussars: 1; 2; 17th Lancers: 2(1); 2; Royal Artillery: 18(2); 83(4);3rd Grenadier Guards: 79(3);
151(6); 2
1st Coldstream Guards: 70(8);
121(5);1st Scots Fusilier Guards: 50(1);
123(8); 4
1st:1 ; - ; 7th: 8; 54(5); 6
19th: 2(1); 3;20th: 31(1); 137(8); 6
21st: 15(1); 97(6); 6
23rd: 7; 22(1); 13(1)
30th: 27(2); 100(5);33rd: 11(1); 52(2); 1
Total % of actual
strength
16
3
3
4
101
8
232
46
191
41
177
1
68
5
174
118
42
127
64
45
0.2
18
3
51
29
13
31
26
136
40
70
150
31
91
91
112
56
59
121
141
112
36
1
23
30
12
31
7
21
26
24
21
23
31
32
40
25
Breakdown by ranks:
Killed Wounded
Officers
43
100
Sergeants
37
112
Drummers
4
21
Rank & File 548 1645
Totals
148
632
1878
Missing
58
Total
144
153
25
2251
63
2573
1
4
Sources
Published Books
Airlie, Mabel, Countess of, With the Guards We
Shall Go (Letters of Col. Strange Jocelyn, 185455) (Hodder & Stoughton, London, 1933)
Allan, William, My Early Soldiering Days (The
Edinburgh Press, Edinburgh, 1897)
Anglesey, Marquess of, A History of the British
Cavalry, Vol. II, 1851-71 (Leo Cooper, London,
1975)
149
1878)
Strachan, Hew, Wellington's Legacy: Reform of the
British Army, 1830-54 (Manchester University
Press, Manchester, 1984)
-From Waterloo to Balaclava: Tactics, Technology
and the British Army, 1815-54 (Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1985)
Taylor, G. Cavendish, Journal of Adventures with
the British Army in the Crimea (Hurst & Blackett,
London, 1856)
Warner, Philip, The Crimean War: A Reappraisal
(Arthur Barker, London, 1972)
- (ed.), The Fields of War (letters of Capt. Temple
Godman) (John Murray, London, 1977)
Whinyates, Col. F.A., From Corunna to Sevastopol:
History of C Battery RHA (W.H. Allen, London,
1884)
Ward, S.G.P., Faithful: History of the Durham
Light Infantry (Nelson, Edinburgh & London,
1963)
Wilkinson-Latham, Robert, Crimean Uniforms British Artillery (Historical Research Unit, London,
1973)
Windham, Lt.-Gen. Sir Charles Ash, Crimean
Diary and Letters (ed. Maj. Hugh Pearse) (Kegan
Paul, London, 1897)
Wood, FM Sir Evelyn, The Crimea in 1854 and
1894 (Chapman & Hall, London, 1896)
From Midshipman to Field-Marshal, Vol. I
(Methuen, London, 1906)
Woodham-Smith, C., The Reason Why (Constable,
London, 1954)
Woods, N .A., The Past Campaign (two volumes)
(Longman, London, 1855)
Privately Printed
Bannatyne, Lt.-Col. N., History of the 30th Regiment (Liverpool, 1923)
Cavendish, Brig. A.E.J ., The 93rd (Sutherland)
Highlanders (1928)
Champion, Maj . J .G. (95th), Sketch of the Life and
Letters (ed. anon) ( 1856)
Franks, Sgt.-Maj. Henry (Sth DG), Leaves from a
Soldier's Notebook (n.d.)
150
Hume, Maj .-Gen. J.R. , Reminiscences of the Crimean Campaign with the 55th Regiment (1894)
Lomax, D.A.N. , History of the Services of the 41 st
R egiment (Devonport, 1899)
Moore, Geoffrey, Vincent of the 41st (1979)
Neville, Hon . Henry & Hon. Grey, Letters from
Turkey and the Crimea (1870)
Petre, F. Loraine, History of the Royal Berkshire
Regiment, vol. I (Reading, 1925)
Slack, J. , History of the 63rd Regiment (London,
1884)
Whitehorne, Maj . C.A., The Welch Regiment,
1719-1914 (Cardiff, 1932)
Woollright, H., History of the 57th Regiment (1893)
-Records of the 77th R egiment (1909)
Wylly, Maj . H .C., The 95th (Derbyshire) Regiment
in the Crimea (London, 1899)
Periodicals
Durham Light Infantry Journal
Torrens, Capt. H.D. (23rd), Letter, 3 April 1856
(Vol. I , 150)
151
Picture Credits
Argyll & Sutherland Highlanders: 42. Army
Museums Ogilby Trust: 41, 48, 84-5. Author: 107.
Captain J. Clover: 144. Coldstream Guards: 65.
Duke of Edinburgh's Royal Regiment: 64.
Durham Light Infantry: 99. N .] . Fitzherbert: 30,
72, 124 (top), 140 (top). Grenadier Guards: 92,
101. R.G. Harris: 52 Illustrated London News: 22.
Imperial War Museum: 29, SO, 81, 126, 130, 131,
136 (left), 142. Manchester City Art Gallery: 55.
Major P.J. Mercer: 21 (bottom, right), 59, 78.
John Mollo: 25, 58, 73, 74, 86, 102, 117. Middlesex Regiment Museum: 89, 118. National Army
Museum: 12, 17, 18, 21 (bottom left), 28 (bottom),
31, 33, 35, 36, 39 (both), 40, 43, 47, 51, 53, 61, 62,
66, 67, 68, 76, 77 (both), 82, 87, 90, 91, 104, 105,
110, 112 (both), 113 (right), 119, 120, 123, 125,
127, 129, 136 (centre, right), 137, 138, 140
(bottom), 143. Naval & Military Magazine (1884):
133. Parker Gallery: 11. P!"ivate collection: 97.
Punch: 27, 71. Queen's Royal Irish Hussars: 20,
132. Royal Artillery Institution: 106. Royal Green
Jackets: 28 (top). Royal Highland Fusiliers: 108,
113 (left), 114. Royal Hussars: 15 . Royal Regiment
of Wales: 95. Royal Scots Dragoon Guards: 46.
Science Museum: 19, 21 (top). Staff College: 54.
Worcestershire & Sherwood Foresters Regiment:
124 (bottom).
152
Re erences
2 A Blow at Sebastopol
I Maud, written in I854.
2 Quoted Spiers, p . 98.
3 Higginson, p. I26.
4 Regimental Officer, p. 8I.
5 Franks, pp. 56-60; Anglesey, British Cavalry, II,
p . 4I; Warner, Fields of War , p. SO.
6 Lysons, p . 6I .
7 Quoted Palmer, p . 6I.
8 See Hibbert, pp. 33-34; Kinglake, II, pp.
I07-I25.
9 K.inglake, II, p. I39.
IO Quoted Small, p. 26.
II Letter, quoted Hibbert, p . 5 I .
12 Quoted ibid., p. 93.
I3 Gowing, p. 53.
I4 K.inglake, II, p. 455.
IS Quoted Seaton, p. IOl.
I6 Kinglake, II, p. 337.
I7 Clifford, p. 51.
18 Hon. H.A. Neville to his sister, 2I September
I854, Neville, p. I24.
I9 Quoted Small, p. 29.
20 Letter, 'Heights above River Alma, Septr I854' .
2I Diary, published Gtiards Magazine I987, 6.
22 Calthorpe, p. 46.
23 Regimental Officer, p. 201.
24 Ibid. , p. 2I2.
25 C. Cattley, fermer British Consul, Crimea,
quoted Hibbert, p. I28.
26 Hibbert, p. I31.
3 The Trumpet, the Gallop, the Charge
I Tennyson, The Charge of the Heavy Brigade.
2 Recollections, Mollo MSS notes.
3 Diary, quoted Pemberton, p . 77.
4 Letter, Mollo MSS notes.
153
8 A H ell of a Towelling
11 Haines MSS, p . 8.
12 Carmichael M SS, pp. 17-20 .
13 Lawson, p . 99.
14 Quoted Bannatyne, p . 419.
15 Regimental Officer, p. 291.
16 Calthorpe, p. 100.
17 Ibid.
18 Fisher MSS, pp. 66, 67.
19 Quoted Small, p. 144.
20 Haines MSS, p. 8.
21 Kinglake, V, p. 425.
22 Letter, 20 November 1854,]oumal of the Society
for Amiy Historical R esearch, vol. XLVI , pp.
117-18.
23 Ibid.
24 Capt. Hugh Hibbert, quoted Pemberton, p .
162.
25 Quoted Seaton, p . 176.
26 Quoted ibid., p . 82 .
27 Quoted Ray, p. 105 .
28 Quoted Pemberton, p. 160.
29 Regimental Officer, pp. 300, 308.
30 Patullo, quoted Pemberton, p . 163.
31 Quoted ibid. , p . 164.
9 The Reckoning
1 Bell, p . 248.
10 Noble Exertions
1 Lord Raglan to the Duke of Newcastle, 8
November 1854.
2 Higginson , p . 215.
3 Calthorpe, p. 123.
4 Clifford, p. 120; quoted Hibbert, p. 199.
5 Quoted Gowing, pp. 88-89.
6 Royal Warrant, 5 February 1856.
7 Hamley, p. 157.
8 Dowie, Charles, The Weary Road (1929,
reprinted 1988), p. 16.
9 MSS Journal, November 1854.
10 Hamley, p . 167.
11 Higginson , pp. 211 , 212, 215 .
12 Quoted Airlie, p . 147.
13 Windham, pp. 85, 101, 87, 71.
14 Ibid. , p. 88.
15 Punch, vol. XXVII, p. 64.
16 Clifford, p. 146.
17 Russell, p. 150.
18 Hamley, p. 174.
19 Clifford, p. 155.
20 Quoted Hibbert, p. 296.
21 Gowing, p. 139.
22 MSS Journal, November 1854.
23 Russell, p. 140.
156
Index
Figures in italic refer to page numbers of
illustratt~ns.
157
158
159
Varna, 27,45
Vaughan, Ens. , 20th, 107
160
'
...
Heroes ofthe Crimea tells the exciting story of the Battles ofBalaclava
and Inkerman, and is illustrated with over 100 photographs,
paintings and engravings.
. .