This account of the battle is taken from Maurice's History of the War
in South Africa.
Major General Frederick Maurice’s account of the Boer
War contains an excellent account of the battle. An original and complete
set of the ‘History of the War in South Africa 1899 – 1902’, published in
1906, is difficult and expensive to obtain. Naval and Military Press have
recently republished the volumes and included all the maps, albeit the maps
are reduced in size compared to the original. Chapter IX and Appendix 6 are
reproduced below. References to other volumes and to maps have been
omitted.
Chapter IX – Elandslaagte
During the time (Oct. 12th - Oct. 26th,
1899) occupied by the episode of the Dundee detachment, including the action
of Rietfontein fought to assist it in retreat, much had happened elsewhere.
Sir G. White arrived in Ladysmith on the 11th
October. On the 12th telegraphic communication by Harrismith
entirely ceased, and the mail train from that town failed to arrive. Early
on the 12th a telegram from a post of observation of Natal
Carbineers at Acton Homes gave information that a strong column of Boers,
with four miles of train, was on the march through Tintwa Pass, the head of
it being already across the border; furthermore, that there seemed to be an
advance guard concealed in Van Reenen's Pass. Sir G. White prepared to
strike instantly; but a British detachment which reached Dewdrop next day
saw the Boer vanguard, halted in the mouth of Tintwa Pass, and as previously
described returned to Ladysmith. A cavalry reconnaissance
in the same direction on the 16th found that the commandos had
not stirred and, though Olivier's Hoek, Bezuidenhout's, Tintwa and Van
Reenen's Passes were all occupied,
the country east of them was as clear of the enemy as heretofore. There
appeared an unaccountable hesitation amongst the Free Staters. Rumours of
disagreement, and even of actual hostilities between the commandos, reached
the British camp. They were not altogether groundless, and Sir G. White,
utilising the respite, set himself to consider how his field force might be
turned into a garrison, and his place of rest into a fortress, should it be
necessary, as now seemed likely, to stand a siege in Ladysmith. A complete
scheme of defence was drawn up on the 16th, and a mobile column
organised for instant service in any quarter. But, whilst the real enemy
lay idle on the west, rumour, working in his favour far to the southward,
troubled the British general and robbed him of troops he could ill spare.
On the 17th a telegram from the Governor of Natal announced that
there was evidence of a contemplated Boer raid via Zululand upon
Pietermaritzburg and Durban,
and asked for reinforcements for the defenceless capital. They were
promptly sent,
and quitted Ladysmith just as the Free Staters in the mountains received
with much discussion the order to cross the frontier. Before dawn of the 18th
all the commandos were on the move down the defiles, the men of Bethlehem in
Olivier's Hoek Pass, of Heilbron in Bezuidenhout's, of Kroonstad in Tintwa,
of Winburg in Van Reenen's, of Harrismith in De Beer's, of Vrede in
Muller's. By 8 a.m. Acton Homes was in the hands of 3,000 Boers, and
shortly after, west of Bester's station, a piquet of the Natal Carbineers
was sharply attacked by the Harrismith commando, and forced to retire with
loss. The Boers then occupied Bester's station, where they halted for the
night. The news of this rapid development caused a great stir in Ladysmith.
As early as the 15th Sir George White had decided upon the
evacuation of the camp, which lay outside the town, but hitherto no orders
had been issued to this effect. All the 18th the work of
removing the troops and stores from the camp to the town defences previously
selected was pushed on with such despatch, that by 10 p.m. these were well
manned. The Pietermaritzburg column, which had reached Colenso, was ordered
back to Onderbrook. Next day the General rode around Ladysmith,
re-adjusting with great care the line of defence selected on the 16th.
Instructions were then sent to Wolseley-Jenkins to resume his march to
Pietermaritzburg, the Imperial Light Horse alone being taken from the column
and brought back into Ladysmith.
Meanwhile, the Boer General, Kock, having arrived on
the summit of the Biggarsberg on the 19th, promptly pushed
patrols down the southern slopes. Field Cornet Potgieter, the leader of one
of these, pressing on in company with a party of Viljoen's men, under Field
Cornet Pienaar, dashed into Elandslaagte station, some twenty miles
southward, and attacked and captured a supply train which was steaming
through the station on its way to Glencoe. Potgieter at once sent back word
to Kock, who, replying with the order: "Hold on to the trains at any cost,
I am following with the whole detachment," marched all night, and joined his
lieutenant near the looted train at break of day on the 20th.
News of the event was quickly received at Headquarters.
At 11 a.m. on the 20th Major-General J. D. P. French, who had
only arrived at 5 a.m. that morning, left Ladysmith with the 5th Lancers,
the Natal Mounted Rifles and Natal Carbineers, and a battery Royal Field
artillery, to ascertain the situation at Elandslaagte. An infantry brigade,
under Colonel Ian Hamilton, moved out in support. But whilst they were on
the march, the Free Staters at Bester's became so active that Sir George
White, fearing an attack whilst part of his force was absent, sent orders to
check the reconnaissance before it was half completed, and by sunset French
was back in Ladysmith, having seen nothing but the German commando, Kock's
screen.
By this time news of the victory at Talana
had come in. Its partial extent not fully understood at first, it not only
lifted a load from the General's mind, but showed him where he too could
strike a blow. The commandos at Elandslaagte, yesterday dangerous from
their position on Symons' line of retreat were to-day in peril themselves,
and he determined to give them no time to remove into safety. At 4 a.m. on
the 21st French was again on the move towards Elandslaagte
with five squadrons (338 men) Imperial Light Horse and the Natal Field
artillery. At 6 a.m. a half battalion (330 men) of the 1st Manchester
regiment, with Railway and Royal engineer detachments, followed by rail,
preceded by the armoured train manned by one company of the same battalion.
Moving along the Newcastle road, French made straight for the high ground
south-west of Elandslaagte station, and at 7 a.m. his advance and right
flank guards (Imperial Light Horse) came in touch with the enemy, the former
south of the collieries, the latter on the open veld some four miles south
of the railway. As the mist lifted, parties of Boers were seen all about
the station and colliery buildings, and over the undulating veld, and it was
observed that most of these, on sighting the British scouts, drew back upon
a group of kopjes situated about a mile south-east of the station. French
immediately ordered up the Natal battery on to a flat hillock which rose
between the railway and the Newcastle road, south-east of Woodcote farm, and
at 8 a.m. a shot from the 7-pounders, sighted at 1,900 yards, crashed into
the tin out-buildings of the station. A crowd of Boers swarmed out at the
explosion and with them some of the British captured in the train the day
before, the former galloping for the kopjes, the latter making for the
protection of their countrymen at the battery. At the same time a squadron
of the Imperial Light Horse galloped for the station in extended files,
captured the Boer guard, and released the station and colliery officials who
were there in durance. But in a few moments shells from the group of kopjes
beyond the station began to fall into the battery, one smashing an
ammunition wagon. The gunners attempted in vain to reply; their pieces were
outranged by over 500 yards, and at 8.15, on the arrival of the infantry
near at hand, they fell back leaving the wagon derelict. At 8.30 a.m.
French withdrew to a point four miles south of Woodcote farm, and from here
sent a report to Sir George White, informing him that about 400 Boers with
three guns were before him on a prepared position, and asking for support.
The enemy's artillery continued to shell the troops, and French,
after questioning the prisoners and the released Britons, and examining
more closely, came to the conclusion that there were from 800 to 1,000
Boers in front of him. When parties of the enemy began to appear also upon
Jonono's Kop to the north-west he judged it prudent to withdraw his weak
detachment still further, and by 11.30 a.m. was back nearly at the Modder
Spruit. On the way he fell in with a reinforcement from Ladysmith
consisting of one squadron 5th Lancers,
one squadron 5th Dragoon Guards, and the 42nd battery Field
artillery, all under Colonel Coxhead, R.A., and with these he retraced his
steps to the Modder Spruit siding, where a halt was called.
It was now evident to General French that an action of
great importance could be fought or avoided before nightfall. At noon,
therefore, he communicated with Sir George White, and, after informing him
of his own and the enemy's situations, and the best line of attack, stated
that in his opinion the numbers required would be three battalions of
infantry, two batteries, and more cavalry than he had at the moment. He
would await instructions. They came with promptitude; for Sir G. White had
determined to ruin this commando, and sweep it from Yule's communications,
before it could separate. "The enemy must be beaten, and driven off," he
wrote to French. "Time of great importance." Within a quarter of an hour
of the receipt of the above message, French had promulgated his orders;
within half an hour, at 1.30 p.m., before the arrival of the reinforcements,
the advance upon the kopjes had begun.
Running south-east, with its northern extremity about a
mile from the station, the ground held by the enemy covered some 4,000
yards from flank to flank, and consisted of four boulder-strewn kopjes.
That nearest the station was steep and rocky, its top 200 yards broad and
sloping rearwards; next and somewhat retired from the general line, 700
yards distant, on the far side of a deep cup scored with dongas, arose one
of those singular isosceles triangular eminences of which South Africa
almost alone possesses the mould. A Nek, carrying the road-way to a farm
behind, separated this from the main feature 500 yards away. This was a
bluff and precipitous hill, thatched here and there with long grasses on its
northern face, on its eastern sloping easily down to the veld which rolled
in rounded waves towards Ladysmith. Its summit was almost flat, a bouldered
plateau, 400 yards long by 200 wide, falling in rocky spurs to the river a
mile and a half in rear, and slanting at its southern extremity into a broad
and broken Nek. This climbed again 2,000 yards away up to the last kopje of
the position, whose top, also flat, swung first south, then sharply west, to
merge finally into the grassy rises which approached almost to Modder Spruit.
Though the general elevation was no more than some 300 feet from the ground
level, so bare was the terrain about its base, that the insignificant hills
presented a formidable face to the south-west. Across the railway, some six
miles to the north-west, Jonono's Kop looked over these low ridges, and
threw great spurs, dotted with Kaffir villages, down into the undulating
prairie which rolled between them. On one of these spurs, which came down
to the Newcastle road, 100 men of the German commando, under Schiel, had, on
the retirement of the British, taken post, supported on an under-feature
close to the eastward by Field Cornet Joubert's Johannesburgers, and Vrede
men (100) under De Jager. The rest of the commandos occupied the main
feature above described, the remainder of the Germans the kopje nearest the
station, strong skirmishing parties being thrown out, under Field Cornet
Pienaar, along the uplands which ran out southward in front of their left
flank. Slightly retired from the forward crest of the main hill were posted
the two guns, below and behind the right of which, beside the roadway
creeping between the bluff and the tall triangular kopje, the laager had
been pitched on a flat of sun-baked mud.
Major-General French moved forward quickly without
waiting for the reinforcements from Ladysmith. A squadron 5th
Dragoon Guards under Major St. J. C. Gore on the west of the railway, and
one of the 5th Lancers on the east, each covering two miles,
scouted in front of the batteries and Imperial Light Horse, the 1st
Manchester following slowly in the train. The Lancers were first in touch
with the enemy, their progress being checked at 2 p.m. by Pienaar's piquets
posted, as already described, on the low ridge running parallel to the
railway, the ridge, indeed, which General French had selected as the
springboard for his attack. A gun, opening from the hills behind, supported
the skirmishers: the Lancer squadron had to retire. But Colonel Scott
Chisholme quickly brought up four squadrons Imperial Light Horse, which,
pressing forward in squadron-column with extended files, with the 5th
Lancer squadron on the right, stormed the ridge and cleared it. The crest
thus secured, the Manchester detrained under its cover at 2.30 p.m. about
three miles south-west of Elandslaagte. Ten minutes later they were joined
by a half-battalion 2nd Gordon Highlanders and seven companies of
the 1st Devonshire regiment, who formed up on the veld in
brigade-line of quarter-columns, facing north-east, Devonshire on the right,
Manchester on the left. Before starting, the 7th brigade was
addressed in inspiriting terms by its commander, Colonel Ian Hamilton. The
Manchester led the way, heading for the ridge occupied by the Imperial Light
Horse, with two companies covering 500 yards in front line; the Devonshire
supported, and the Highlanders marched in reserve. As the brigade began to
move, a burst of musketry from across the railway to the north told that the
squadron of the 5th Dragoon Guards had run into the enemy on the
lower spurs of Jonono's Kop. So strong did the opposition there appear that
the 42nd and 21st batteries, with a squadron 5th
Lancers which had just escorted the guns from Ladysmith, were despatched to
the spot in support, A few shrapnel from the 42nd battery
sufficed to silence the Mausers, and the artillery recrossed the railway,
the 5th Dragoon Guards also receiving an order to come in. The
artillery were then ordered to go on at once and open against the main
position. On their way to the front they passed the marching infantry,
whose directions were now somewhat altered; for whilst the Manchester in the
van still pushed eastwards for Scott Chisholme's captured ridge, the
Devonshire, diverging half left from this line, now led upon the enemy's
right flank, and behind, in the ever increasing interval thus created
between the two battalions, the Gordon Highlanders were extending in
reserve.
Whilst the advance was in progress Sir G. White, who
had ridden fast from Ladysmith, arrived upon the field, escorted by a troop
of Natal Mounted Rifles. Recognising the excellence of General French's
plans and arrangements, he remained only as a spectator, leaving to his
subordinate complete control of the battle. A few moments later, at 4 p.m.,
the British guns came into action in front of the infantry at a range of
4,400 yards. The enemy replied, shells bursting in the 21st
battery. So rapid a bombardment was at once delivered against the hill
that, after firing twenty rounds, all of which fell among the guns, the Boer
gunners fled from their pieces. Then the artillery, changing their target
continually, searched all the top with shrapnel. The 1st
Devonshire regiment, pushing west of the rise to a point 800 yards north of
the batteries lay down on a front of 500 yards. At 3.30 p.m. this battalion
had received an order to move, when the artillery preparation should cease,
right across the open grass plain which separated them from the enemy, and
to hold him to his defences.
A thousand yards south-east of the Devonshire, beyond
the batteries, the Manchester had halted near the crest at the point of its
curve northward, and this curve they were ordered to follow until it brought
them upon the opposed left flank. A mile in rear, still, therefore, in the
plain below, the Gordon Highlanders halted, and orders came to them to
support the Manchester at the next stage. At 4.30 p.m. the infantry rose
and moved forward. On the left the Devonshire, with three companies
covering some 600 yards in front, and four companies in reserve, in column,
with 50 paces distance between the single ranks, steered upon the tall cone
which marked the right-centre of the Boers. Their march led them at first
downhill into the broad bowl which lay below the foot of the kopjes, a
hollow as smooth as a meadow but for the infrequent ant-hills. Shrapnel
began from the first to burst over the battalion, but the soldiers pressed
steadily onward until, at a point some 1,200 yards from the enemy, severe
rifle-fire began to play upon them, and they were halted to reply to it.
Their section volleys soon beat heavily about the Boer right, and pinned
the burghers to their sangars. A little later, the Devonshire firing line,
now stiffened by the supports, advanced again down the bullet-swept slope
and gained a shallow donga about 850 yards from the crest. Here Major C. W.
Park disposed his battalion for a musketry fight. He had carried out the
first part of his orders, and it was necessary now to await the development
of the attack in progress against the other flank. With some loss,
therefore, the Devonshire lay within close range of the hostile lines. So
briskly, however, did they engage them, that the attention of a great part
of the Boer force was drawn to that direction, and for a time the
simultaneous movement against the other flank proceeded almost unnoticed.
The Manchester, indeed, during the early portion of their advance, were not
easily to be seen from the Boers' left. Skilfully led, they made their way
with two companies extended in the firing line, over broken ground under the
crest of the ridge, and only some shells, aimed at the artillery, dropped
amongst them. Out of sight on the right the Imperial Light Horse and the
squadron 5th Lancers worked ahead on a parallel route, having
drawn towards the outer flank on the infantry coming up to them. In rear
the Gordon Highlanders, inclining to the right, followed in support of the
Manchester, in echelon of companies at 60 paces interval, the companies
marching in column of sections. A brisk shell fire assailed this battalion
as it crossed the rear of the batteries, but, like the Manchester, the
Highlanders for a time escaped the notice of the Boer riflemen, and they
pushed on with trifling loss.
Thus by 4.30 p.m. the whole British force, 3,500 men in
all, was in motion, and Coxhead, during the temporary silence of the enemy's
artillery, ordered his command to support more closely. As the batteries
limbered up, the Boers re-opened and followed them with shells. Only one
horse fell, however, and the British guns, moving swiftly between the
Devonshire and Manchester regiments, were shortly in action again three
quarters of a mile nearer to the front. Under their rapid rounds at 3,200
yards the hostile gunners relapsed immediately and finally into silence.
In approaching the occupied zone the cavalry on the
right were first closely engaged. A screen of skirmishers still lay out
before the Boer left, and these, as they fell back slowly, had an easy
target in the mounted men, who were working over ground of great difficulty.
Then the Manchester, emerging from their covered way, found themselves upon
the crest of a smooth and open plateau, which, sloping downwards for 200
yards from them almost imperceptibly, was traversed by a wire fence, beyond
which stony outcrops again gave promise of shelter. As the foremost
soldiers showed above the fringe of stones at the crest line, a sudden rush
of bullets drummed upon the sun-dried level in front of them, and the men,
in obedience to an order, dropped again behind the protecting stones to
reply. As they did so, some of the officers of the Manchester, leaving
their men in the security of the rocks, ran through the storm of lead and
severed the wires obstructing advance. But the line was as yet too weak for
a forward dash.
For a quarter of an hour the Manchester lay where they
were, with frequent casualties, but using their weapons so vigorously that
soon the Boers on their front, an advanced party of Lombard's commando, gave
back in spite of their leader's efforts to hold them, and at 5.20 p.m. the
Manchester poured from the stones after them. They were closely followed by
the Gordon, who, though under cover below them, had suffered somewhat from
the shots grazing the edge of the plateau. At their appearance heavy
musketry burst from the kopjes 1,200 yards ahead. The soldiers were in a
moment at the wire fence. This obstacle, only partially destroyed, had been
taken as a known range by the Boer marksmen, and so accurate therefore was
their shooting that soon there was scarce a strand unrent by the bullets.
In the crowding which ensued many men fell amongst the now dangling wires,
some pushed through, and some could find no gap. Though the front of the
brigade thus became broken and confused, the advance continued
uninterruptedly. Now Lieut.-Colonel W. H. Dick-Cunyngham sent the Gordon
Highlanders forward into the gaps opening in the lines of the Manchester,
some to the left, some to the right, some wherever they could find room.
The Imperial Light Horse, who had been contending every foot of their
progress with the cloud of skirmishers retiring slowly before them, here
joined on to the right of the Gordon. Once at the edge of the ridge, from
which, as the troops rushed forward, a detached party of Boers fell back,
still shooting bitterly, the brigade found itself facing due north, and the
Boer left flank lay exposed.
Meanwhile Gore, reinforced by a squadron 5th
Lancers, had moved out yet further to the left, cutting in between the Boer
main body and Schiel's Germans, so that the latter only saved themselves by
a circuitous gallop behind Woodcote farm, not drawing rein until they
arrived in rear of the left of the main position. Gore then gained a secure
foothold near the colliery 1,700 yards from the enemy's right rear. Here he
concealed his squadrons, and awaiting the development of the infantry
attack, watched the rear face of the enemy's kopjes for signs of a break
away.
Strengthened by the arrival of Schiel, the Boer left
poured their bullets chiefly upon that portion of the line occupied by the
right companies of the Gordon Highlanders and the Imperial Light Horse.
Below the fence the ground sloped gently downward to the foot of the
kopjes, where it again rose more steeply to the summit, some 350 yards
distant. Down the incline the firing line went rapidly, for the most part
by rushes of sections, carried out independently, yet with great dash and
unanimity.
But the slope was exposed throughout, and there were
many casualties. About 5.30 p.m. the line of battle had arrived at the foot
of the kopjes; then, swinging slightly towards the left, so as to envelop
still more the flank of the enemy above, all supports and reserves being now
absorbed, it began to make head upwards, still by short rushes. It was now
nearly dark; rain burst down on them in a torrent: the men, breathless from
their eager pace, began to slacken somewhat in their difficult progress up
the hill-sides. At this moment Colonel Hamilton, who had previously ridden
to where the Devonshire still held fast the Boer right with their volleys,
hurried back to the main attack. He at once ordered the "charge" to be
sounded. and running to the front, himself led the last onset. The
Devonshire simultaneously leaped from the donga where they had lain more
than an hour, and, advancing by companies from the right, reached the base
of the final kopje. For an instant they halted to gain breath and fix
bayonets, then, coming to the charge, assaulted the portion before them, and
carried it without a check, four companies swinging to the left against the
northern-most kopje, and three moving straight upon the main hill whereon
stood the enemy's artillery. Here, as occurred all along the Boer line,
though many fled at the sound of the charge, many stood and continued
shooting at the troops until the latter were within twenty yards of them.
Below the main crest a bitter contest was also maintained, for as at Talana,
many Boers, seeing the soldiers determined to win the summit, pressed
forward to oppose them, and lay firing behind the rocks until their
assailants were almost upon them. Some acting thus were made prisoners;
some escaped to the rear at the last moment; many were shot down as they
ran. The assault poured on unchecked, the two guns falling to the
converging Devonshire. At 5.55 p.m. the infantry held all the upper part of
the hill.
By that time the cavalry, lying in wait at
Elandslaagte, had already dealt their blow. A quarter of an hour before the
infantry gained the crest the majority of the defenders had begun to vacate
the summit, and, descending to the open ground behind, streamed raggedly
across the front, many within five hundred yards, of the concealed
troopers. The light was failing rapidly, and with it the chance of action.
Though the crowd in the loose disorder of retreat seemed to offer an
indefinite object for a charge, there was no likelihood of a better whilst
sufficient light remained. At 5.30 p.m. Gore gave the word and pushed out
eastwards with a squadron of the 5th Lancers on the right of his
line, and one of the 5th Dragoon Guards on the left, both in
extended files. The ground was difficult, boulders strewed the surface, and
a series of dongas, intersecting it at all angles, seriously impeded
progress. These obstacles once cleared, the cavalry moved on rapidly and,
topping a slight rise, came suddenly into full view of the foremost Boers,
some 300 in number, who were riding slowly northward away from the ridges
all but captured behind them. The charge was instantly delivered, and the
Boer retirement was dashed to pieces in all directions. Then, having
traversed completely the zone of retreat, the cavalry were rallied and
reformed into line. The gallop had carried the squadrons more than a mile
and a half from their starting-place, and the intervening space was again
covered by the enemy, now in full flight from the kopjes. Once more,
therefore, the troopers charged, and, scouring in loose order back over the
same ground, cleared it of the enemy, and drew rein with many prisoners near
Elandslaagte, just as the last gleam of light died and gave place to
darkness.
Meanwhile there had occurred an anxious moment for the
infantry, victorious along the summit of the kopjes. Pressing forward from
the captured crest in pursuit, and firing fast, the soldiers were some
distance down the gentle reverse slope when a white flag was seen to be
waving from the conical kopje above the laager, and Colonel Hamilton,
believing it to signify a general capitulation, ordered the "cease fire" to
be sounded. Suddenly a body of some fifty Boers charged boldly up-hill
against that section in which were the right company of the Gordon
Highlanders and the Imperial Light Horse, and, seizing a small spur within
twenty yards of the crest, turned their rifles upon the surprised troops.
For a moment there was some confusion. The soldiers were scattered; some
were continuing the pursuit, some were seeking their units; many were
resting; the cross fire which thus assailed them was severe and accurate.
But the effect of this counter-attack was but
momentary. Once more the "advance" was sounded, and that part of the line,
rallied by the voice and example of Colonel Hamilton himself, surged forward
again,
and tumbled the last remnant of the enemy down the reverse slopes. During
this incident some of the Imperial Light Horse on the extreme right,
swinging round the enemy's left, surrounded a farmhouse which had been the
rallying point of the above counter-attack, and, after a sharp encounter,
stormed it, capturing twenty-one prisoners.
Thus terminated an action of which there can be no
greater praise than that it was swiftly planned, carried out with
determination, and that its complete success was gained exactly as designed.
That success, moreover, was of more than local importance. Kock's hold
upon the communications of Dundee had been of the briefest. He himself was
a prisoner, mortally wounded, in British hands, and his force, rushing
headlong back to Newcastle from the battlefield, upon which it had left over
two hundred killed and wounded, nearly two hundred prisoners, two guns and a
complete laager, carried despondency into the Boer Headquarters, so recently
alarmed at the rebuff of Talana. Moreover, the battle did more than clear
Yule's rear; it also safeguarded his front, by persuading Erasmus, already
timorous upon Impati, to cling to his mountain, at a time when Yule's
exhausted battalions were in no condition to resist the attack of 5,000
fresh enemies.
It formed no part of Sir G. White's plan to keep the
ground that had been won. The position of Elandslaagte was useless alike
for observation, defence, or offence. Even had it been of value, the
presence of the Free State army upon its flank rendered the occupation of it
too hazardous in the view of a General already impressed by the dangers of
detachments.
Throughout the day, indeed, the Free Staters themselves
had been reminding him of these dangers. As early as 11 a.m. the piquets to
the west of Ladysmith had reported significant developments about Van
Reenen's Pass, and these, as the day wore on, became so threatening that at
5.30 p.m. General Hunter despatched a message to Sir G. White, who was at
that time still at Elandslaagte, informing him that there was a hostile
advance upon Ladysmith from Bester's station. It was necessary, therefore,
to recall French at once, and at 9 p.m. he was so instructed by telephone.
At 11 p.m. General French issued orders for the return
to Ladysmith on the morrow, and the troops bivouacked on the field, the
infantry upon the kopjes, the cavalry about the station. The day's losses
amounted to 263 officers and men killed and wounded.
At 3 a.m. on the 22nd the three batteries,
the 5th Lancers and the Natal Mounted Rifles
left by road for Ladysmith, the loaded ambulance train quitting the station
at the same time. From that hour onwards the trains, bearing the soldiers,
steamed away from the battlefield, the last to leave by rail being a portion
of the Manchester escorting forty prisoners. They were detained until 3.20
p.m. The 5th Dragoon Guards, who had reconnoitred northward,
followed last of all by road, and by evening the position was empty.
Appendix 6
APPROXIMATE STRENGTH OF TROOPS
ENGAGED
|
Arms. |
Officers. |
Warrant, N.C.O.s and men. |
Horses
(Riding and
Draught). |
Guns.
Field. Machine. |
|
Cavalry (includes Imperial Light Horse and Natal Carbineers)
Royal
Artillery (includes Natal Field
Artillery)
Infantry |
17
20
47 |
1,297
532
1,583 |
1,319
481
322
|
18 |
3
3 |
|
Total |
84 |
3,412 |
2,122 |
18 |
6 |
SUMMARY OF BRITISH CASUALTIES
|
Ranks. |
Killed. |
Wounded. |
Missing (Prisoners). |
Total
Casualties. |
|
Officers
N.C.O.s and men |
4
46 |
31
182 |
- |
35
228 |
|
|
|
|
|
263 |
Approximate Boer Losses
:—Killed, 67; wounded, 108; prisoners, 188 = 363.
AMMUNITION EXPENDED
|
|
Description of Weapons. |
|
|
15-pr. Field Guns. |
2.5-in. Natal F.A. |
.303 L.M. rifles. |
pistol. |
|
Number of rounds |
423 |
74 |
61,212 |
241 |
On the 15th the Intelligence estimate of the Free State forces in
the Drakensberg was as follows:—Olivier's Hoek, 3.000; Tintwa,
1,000; Van Reenen's, 1.200, with 15 guns; Nelson's Kop, 3,500, with
detachments in the passes to 016 north. Total, 11,000 men.
Telegram No. 30 of 18th October, 1899, Ladysmith. Sir G. White to
Secretary of State.
The whole of Wolseley-Jenkins’ column eventually returned to
Ladysmith during the night of 22nd - 23rd
October.