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AN AWKWARD
MOMENT: THE ENEMY CHARGING THE Q BATTERY
OF ROYAL HORSE ARTILLERY
From: H. W. Wilson, With the Flag to Pretoria, 1902 |
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Arthur Conan
Doyle,
The Great Boer War
London, Smith, Elder &
Co., 1902
CHAPTER XXVI
Diamond Hill - Rundle's Operations
THE military
situation at the time of the occupation of Pretoria was roughly as follows.
Lord Roberts with some thirty thousand men was in possession of the capital,
but had left his long line of communications very imperfectly guarded behind
him. On the flank of this line of communications, in the eastern and
northeastern corner of the Free State, was an energetic force of unconquered
Freestaters who had rallied round President Steyn. They were some eight or
ten thousand in number, well horsed, with a fair number of guns, under the
able leadership of De Wet, Prinsloo, and Olivier. Above all, they had a
splendid position, mountainous and broken, from which, as from a fortress,
they could make excursions to the south or west. This army included the
commandos of Ficksburg, Senekal, and Harrismith, with all the broken and
desperate men from other districts who had left their farms and fled to the
mountains. It was held in check as a united force by Rundle's Division and
the Colonial Division on the south, while Colvile, and afterwards Methuen,
endeavoured to pen them in on the west. The task was a hard one, however,
and though Rundle succeeded in holding his line intact, it appeared to be
impossible in that wide country to coop up altogether an enemy so mobile. A
strange game of hide-and-seek ensued, in which De Wet, who led the Boer
raids, was able again and again to strike our line of rails and to get back
without serious loss. The story of these instructive and humiliating
episodes will be told in their order. The energy and skill of the guerilla
chief challenge our admiration, and the score of his successes would be
amusing were it not that the points of the game are marked by the lives of
British soldiers.
General Buller had spent the latter half of May in making his way from
Ladysmith to Laing's Nek, and the beginning of June found him with twenty
thousand men in front of that difficult position. Some talk of a surrender
had arisen, and Christian Botha, who commanded the Boers, succeeded in
gaining several days' armistice, which ended in nothing. The Transvaal
forces at this point were not more than a few thousand in number, but their
position was so formidable that it was a serious task to turn them out. Van
Wyk's Hill, however, had been left unguarded, and as its possession would
give the British the command of Botha's Pass, its unopposed capture by the
South African Light Horse was an event of great importance. With guns upon
this eminence the infantry were able, on June 8th, to attack and to carry
with little loss the rest of the high ground, and so to get the Pass into
their complete possession. Botha fired the grass behind him, and withdrew
sullenly to the north. On the 9th and 10th the convoys were passed over the
Pass, and on the 11th the main body of the army followed them.
The operations were now being conducted in that extremely acute angle of
Natal which runs up between the Transvaal and the Orange Free State. In
crossing Botha's Pass the army had really entered what was now the Orange
River Colony. But it was only for a very short time, as the object of the
movement was to turn the Laing's Nek position, and then come back into the
Transvaal through Alleman's Pass. The gallant South African Light Horse led
the way, and fought hard at one point to clear a path for the army, losing
six killed and eight wounded in a sharp skirmish. On the morning of the 12th
the flanking movement was far advanced, and it only remained for the army to
force Alleman's Nek, which would place it to the rear of Laing's Nek, and
close to the Transvaal town of Volksrust.
Had the Boers been the men of Colenso and of Spion Kop, this stonuing of
Alleman's Nek would have been a bloody business. The position was strong,
the cover was slight, and there was no way round. But the infantry came on
with the old dash without the old stubborn resolution being opposed to them.
The guns prepared the way, and then the Dorsets, the Dublins, the Middlesex,
the Queen's, and the East Surrey did the rest. The door was open and the
Transvaal lay before us. The next day Volksrust was in our hands.
The whole series of operations were excellently conceived and carried out.
Putting Colenso on one side, it cannot be denied that General Buller showed
considerable power of manoeuvring large bodies of troops. The withdrawal of
the compromised army after Spion Kop, the change of the line of attack at
Pieter's Hill, and the flanking marches in this campaign of Northern Natal,
were all very workmanlike achievements. In this case a position which the
Boers had been preparing for months, scored with trenches and topped by
heavy artillery, had been rendered untenable by a clever flank movement, the
total casualties in the whole affair being less than two hundred killed and
wounded. Natal was cleared of the invader, Buller's foot was on the high
plateau of the Transvaal, and Roberts could count on twenty thousand good
men coming up to him from the south-east. More important than all, the Natal
railway was being brought up, and soon the central British Army would depend
upon Durban instead of Cape Town for its supplies - a saving of nearly
two-thirds of the distance. The fugitive Boers made northwards in the
Middelburg direction, while Buller advanced to Standerton, which town he
continued to occupy until Lord Roberts could send a force down through
Heidelberg to join hands with him. Such was the position of the Natal Field
Force at the end of June. From the west and the south-west British forces
were also converging upon the capital. The indomitable Baden-Powell sought
for rest and change of scene after his prolonged trial by harrying the Boers
out of Zeerust and Rustenburg. The forces of Hunter and of Mahon converged
upon Potchefstroom, from which, after settling that district, they could be
conveyed by rail to Krugersdorp and Johannesburg.
Before briefly recounting the series of events which took place upon the
line of communications, the narrative must return to Lord Roberts at
Pretoria, and describe the operations which followed his occupation of that
city. In leaving the undefeated forces of the Free State behind him, the
British General had unquestionably run a grave risk, and was well aware that
his railway communication was in danger of being cut. By the rapidity of his
movements he succeeded in gaining the enemy's capital before that which he
had foreseen came to pass; but if Botha had held him at Pretoria while De
Wet struck at him behind, the situation would have been a serious one.
Having once attained his main object, Roberts could receive with equanimity
the expected news that De Wet with a mobile force of less than two thousand
men had, on June 7th, cut the line at Roodeval to the north of Kroonstad.
Both rail and telegraph were destroyed, and for a few days the army was
isolated. Fortunately there were enough supplies to go on with, and
immediate steps were taken to drive away the intruder, though, like a
mosquito, he was brushed from one place only to settle upon another.
Leaving others to restore his broken communications, Lord Roberts turned his
attention once more to Botha, who still retained ten or fifteen thousand men
under his command. The President had fled from Pretoria with a large sum of
money, estimated at over two millions sterling, and was known to be living
in a saloon railway carriage, which had been transformed into a seat of
government even more mobile than that of President Steyn. From
Waterval-Boven, a point beyond Middelburg, he was in a position either to
continue his journey to Delagoa Bay, and so escape out of the country, or to
trave] north into that wild Lydenburg country which had always been
proclaimed as the last ditch of the defence. Here he remained with his
gold-bags waiting the turn of events.
Botha and his stalwarts had not gone far from the capital. Fifteen miles out
to the east the railway line runs through a gap in the hills called Pienaars
Poort, and here was such a position as the Boer loves to hold. It was very
strong in front, and it had widely spread formidable flanking hills to
hamper those turning movements which had so often been fatal to the Boer
generals. Behind was the uncut railway line along which the guns could in
case of need be removed. The whole position was over fifteen miles from wing
to wing, and it was well known to the Boer general that Lord Roberts had no
longer that preponderance of force which would enable him to execute wide
turning movements, as he had done in his advance from the south. His army
had decreased seriously in numbers. The mounted men, the most essential
branch of all, were so ill horsed that brigades were not larger than
regiments. One brigade of infantry (the 14th) had been left to garrison
Johannesburg, and another (the 18th) had been chosen for special duty in
Pretoria. Smith-Dorrien's Brigade had been detached for duty upon the line
of communications. With all these deductions and the wastage caused by
wounds and disease, the force was in no state to assume a vigorous
offensive. So hard pressed were they for men that the three thousand
released prisoners from Waterval were hurriedly armed with Boer weapons and
sent down the line to help to guard the more vital points.
Had Botha withdrawn to a safe distance, Lord Roberts would certainly have
halted, as he had done at Bloemfontein, and waited for remounts and
reinforcements. But the war could not be allowed to languish when an active
enemy lay only fifteen miles off, within striking distance of two cities and
of the line of rail. Taking all the troops that he could muster, the British
General moved out once more on Monday, June 11th, to drive Botha from his
position. He had with him Pole-Carew's 11th Division, which numbered about
six thousand men with twenty guns, Ian Hamilton's force, which included one
infantry brigade (Bruce Hamilton's), one cavalry brigade, and a corps of
mounted infantry, say, six thousand in all, with thirty guns. There remained
French's Cavalry Division, with Hutton's Mounted Infantry, which could not
have exceeded two thousand sabres and rifles. The total force was,
therefore, not more than sixteen or seventeen thousand men, with about
seventy guns. Their task was to carry a carefully prepared position held by
at least ten thousand burghers with a strong artillery. Had the Boer of June
been the Boer of December, the odds would have been against the British.
There had been some negotiations for peace between Lord Roberts and Botha,
but the news of De Wet's success from the south had hardened the Boer
general's heart, and on June 9th the cavalry had their orders to advance.
Hamilton was to work round the left wing of the Boers, and French round
their right, while the infantry came up in the centre. So wide was the scene
of action that the attack and the resistance in each flank and in the centre
constituted, on June 11th, three separate actions. Of these the latter was
of least importance, as it merely entailed the advance of the infantry to a
spot whence they could take advantage of the success of the flanking forces
when they had made their presence felt. The centre did not on this as on
several other occasions in the campaign make the mistake of advancing before
the way had been prepared for it.
French with his attenuated force found so vigorous a resistance on Monday
and Tuesday that he was hard put to it to hold his own. Fortunately he had
with him three excellent Horse Artillery batteries, G, 0, and T, who worked
until, at the end of the engagement, they had only twenty rounds in their
limbers. The country was an impossible one for cavalry, and the troopers
fought dismounted, with intervals of twenty or thirty paces between the men.
Exposed all day to rifle and shell fire, unable to advance and unwilling to
retreat, it was only owing to their open formation that they escaped with
about thirty casualties. With Boers on his front, his flank, and even on his
rear, French held grimly on, realising that a retreat upon his part would
mean a greater pressure at all other points of the British advance. At night
his weary men slept upon the ground which they had held. All Monday and all
Tuesday French kept his grip at Kameelsdrift, stolidly indifferent to the
attempt of the enemy to cut his line of communications. On Wednesday,
Hamilton, upon the other flank, had gained the upper hand, and the pressure
was relaxed. French then pushed forward, but the horses were so utterly
beaten that no effective pursuit was possible.
During the two days that French had been held up by the Boer right wing
Hamilton had also been seriously engaged upon the left - so seriously that
at one time the action appeared to have gone against him. The fight
presented some distinctive features, which made it welcome to soldiers who
were weary of the invisible man with his smokeless gun upon the eternal
kopje. It is true that man, gun, and kopje were all present upon this
occasion, but in the endeavours to drive him off some new developments took
place, which formed for one brisk hour a reversion to picturesque warfare.
Perceiving a gap in the enemy's line, Hamilton pushed up the famous Q
battery - the guns which had plucked glory out of disaster at Sanna's Post.
For the second time in one campaign they were exposed and in imminent danger
of capture. A body of mounted Boers with great dash and hardihood galloped
down within close range and opened fire. Instantly the 12th Lancers were let
loose upon them. How they must have longed for their big-boned long-striding
English troop horses as they strove to raise a gallop out of their
spiritless overworked Argentines! For once, however, the lance meant more
than five pounds dead weight and an encumbrance to the rider. The guns were
saved, the Boers fled, and a dozen were left upon the ground. But a cavalry
charge has to end in a re-formation, and that is the instant of danger if
any unbroken enemy remains within range. Now a sleet of bullets hissed
through their ranks as they retired, and the gallant Lord Airlie, as modest
and brave a soldier as ever drew sword, was struck through the heart. 'Pray
moderate your language!' was his last characteristic remark, made to a
battle-drunken sergeant. Two officers, seventeen men, and thirty horses went
down with their Colonel, the great majority only slightly injured. In the
meantime the increasing pressure upon his right caused Broadwood to order a
second charge, of the Life Guards this time, to drive off the assailants.
The appearance rather than the swords of the Guards prevailed, and cavalry
as cavalry had vindicated their existence more than they had ever done
during the campaign. The guns were saved, the flank attack was rolled back,
but one other danger had still to be met, for the Heidelberg commando - a
corps D'ELITE of the Boers - had made its way outside Hamilton's flank and
threatened to get past him. With cool judgment the British General detached
a battalion and a section of a battery, which pushed the Boers back into a
less menacing position. The rest of Bruce Hamilton's Brigade were ordered to
advance upon the hills in front, and, aided by a heavy artillery fire, they
had succeeded, before the closing in of the winter night, in getting
possession of this first line of the enemy's defences. Night fell upon an
undecided fight, which, after swaying this way and that, had finally
inclined to the side of the British. The Sussex and the City Imperial
Volunteers were clinging to the enemy's left flank, while the 11th Division
were holding them in front. All promised well for the morrow.
By order of Lord Roberts the Guards were sent round early on Tuesday, the
12th, to support the flank attack of Bruce Hamilton's infantry. It was
afternoon before all was ready for the advance, and then the Sussex, the
London Volunteers, and the Derbyshires won a position upon the ridge,
followed later by the three regiments of Guards. But the ridge was the edge
of a considerable plateau, swept by Boer fire, and no advance could be made
over its bare expanse save at a considerable loss. The infantry clung in a
long fringe to the edge of the position, but for two hours no guns could be
brought up to their support, as the steepness of the slope was
insurmountable. It was all that the stormers could do to hold their ground,
as they were enfiladed by a Vickers-Maxim, and exposed to showers of
shrapnel as well as to an incessant rifle fire. Never were guns so welcome
as those of the 82nd battery, brought by Major Connolly into the firing
line. The enemy's riflemen were only a thousand yards away, and the action
of the artillery might have seemed as foolhardy as that of Long at Colenso.
Ten horses went down on the instant, and a quarter of the gunners were hit;
but the guns roared one by one into action, and their shrapnel soon decided
the day. Undoubtedly it is with Connolly and his men that the honours lie.
At four o'clock, as the sun sank towards the west, the tide of fight had set
in favour of the attack. Two more batteries had come up, every rifle was
thrown into the firing line, and the Boer reply was decreasing in volume.
The temptation to an assault was great, but even now it might mean heavy
loss of life, and Hamilton shrank from the sacrifice. In the morning his
judgment was justified, for Botha had abandoned the position, and his army
was in full retreat. The mounted men followed as far as Elands River
Station, which is twenty-five miles from Pretoria, but the enemy was not
overtaken, save by a small party of De Lisle's Australians and Regular
Mounted Infantry. This force, less than a hundred in number, gained a kopje
which overlooked a portion of the Boer army. Had they been more numerous,
the effect would have been incalculable. As it was, the Australians fired
every cartridge which they possessed into the throng, and killed many horses
and men. It would bear examination why it was that only this small corps was
present at so vital a point, and why, if they could push the pursuit to such
purpose, others should not be able to do the same. Time was bringing some
curious revenges. Already Paardeberg had come upon Majuba Day. Buller's
vietorious soldiers had taken Laing's Nek. Now, the Spruit at which the
retreating Boers were so mishandled by the Australians was that same
Bronkers Spruit at which, nineteen years before, a regiment had been shot
down. Many might have prophesied that the deed would be avenged; but who
could ever have guessed the men who would avenge it?
Such was the battle of Diamond Hill, as it was called from the name of the
ridge which was opposite to Hamilton's attack. The prolonged two days'
struggle showed that there was still plenty of fight in the burghers. Lord
Roberts had not routed them, nor had he captured their guns; but he had
cleared the vicinity of the capital, he had inflicted a loss upon them which
was certainly as great as his own, and he had again proved to them that it
was vain for them to attempt to stand. A long pause followed at Pretoria,
broken by occasional small alarms and excursions, which served no end save
to keep the army from ENNUI. In spite of occasional breaks in his line of
communications, horses and supplies were coming up rapidly, and, by the
middle of July, Roberts was ready for the field again. At the same time
Hunter had come up from Potchefstroom, and Hamilton had taken Heidelberg,
and his force was about to join hands with Buller at Standerton. Sporadic
warfare broke out here and there in the west, and in the course of it Snyman
of Mafeking had reappeared, with two guns, which were promptly taken from
him by the Canadian Mounted Rifles. On all sides it was felt that if the
redoubtable De Wet could be captured there was every hope that the burghers
might discontinue a struggle which was disagreeable to the British and fatal
to themselves. As a point of honour it was impossible for Botha to give in
while his ally held out. We will turn, therefore, to this famous guerilla
chief, and give some account of his exploits. To understand them some
description must be given of the general military situation in the Free
State.
When Lord Roberts had swept past to the north he had brushed aside the
flower of the Orange Free State army, who occupied the considerable
quadrilateral which is formed by the north-east of that State. The function
of Rundle's 8th Division and of Brabant's Colonial Division was to separate
the sheep from the goats by preventing the fighting burghers from coming
south and disturbing those districts which had been settled. For this
purpose Rundle formed a long line which should serve as a cordon. Moving up
through Trommel and Clocolan, Ficksburg was occupied on May 25th by the
Colonial Division, while Rundle seized Senekal, forty miles to the
north-west. A small force of forty Yeomanry, who entered the town some time
in advance of the main body, was suddenly attacked by the Boers, and the
gallant Dalbiac, famous rider and sportsman, was killed, with four of his
men. He was a victim, as so many have been in this campaign, to his own
proud disregard of danger.
The Boers were in full retreat, but now, as always, they were dangerous. One
cannot take them for granted, for the very moment of defeat is that at which
they are capable of some surprising effort. Rundle, following them up from
Senekal, found them in strong possession of the kopjes at Biddulphsberg, and
received a check in his endeavour to drive them off. It was an action fought
amid great grass fires, where the possible fate of the wounded was horrible
to contemplate. The 2nd Grenadiers, the Scots Guards, the East Yorkshires,
and the West Kents were all engaged, with the 2nd and 79th Field Batteries
and a force of Yeomanry. Our losses incurred in the open from unseen rifles
were thirty killed and 130 wounded, including Colonel Lloyd of the
Grenadiers. Two days later Rundle, from Seneka], joined hands with Brabant
from Ficksburg, and a defensive line was formed between those two places,
which was held unbroken for two months, when the operations ended in the
capture of the greater part of the force opposed to him. Clements's Brigade,
consisting of the 1st Royal Irish, the 2nd Bedfords, the 2nd Worcesters, and
the 2nd Wiltshires, had come to strengthen Rundle, and altogether he may
have had as many as twelve thousand men under his orders. It was not a large
force with which to hold a mobile adversary at least eight thousand strong,
who might attack him at any point of his extended line. So well, however,
did he select his positions that every attempt of the enemy, and there were
many, ended in failure. Badly supplied with food, he and his half-starved
men held bravely to their task, and no soldiers in all that great host
deserve better of their country.
At the end of May, then, the Colonial Division, Rundle's Division, and
Clements's Brigade held the Boers from Ficksburg on the Basuto border to
Senekal. This prevented them from coming south. But what was there to
prevent them from coming west, and falling upon the railway line? There was
the weak point of the British position. Lord Methuen had been brought across
from Boshof, and was available with six thousand men. Colvile was on that
side also, with the Highland Brigade. A few details were scattered up and
down the line, waiting to be gathered up by an enterprising enemy. Kroonstad
was held by a single militia battalion; each separate force had to be
nourished by convoys with weak escorts. Never was there such a field for a
mobile and competent guerilla leader. And, as luck would have it, such a man
was at hand, ready to take full advantage of his opportunities.
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