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2nd Battalion
Officers |
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The 2nd Battalion sailed on the Gaika on 22nd December 1899, and arrived
at the Cape on 13th January. Along with the 2nd Gloucesters, 1st West
Riding-Regiment, and 1st Oxford Light Infantry, they formed part of the 13th
Brigade under Major General C E Knox, and part of the VIth Division under
General Kelly-Kenny.
In February, after a short sojourn in Cape Colony, the 13th Brigade
accompanied General Kelly-Kenny to Modder River. His other original brigade,
the 12th, was left in the Colesberg district, and one known as the 18th,
under Major - General T E Stephenson, was substituted in the VIth Division
for it.
The VIth Division and their commander played a prominent and
distinguished part in Lord Roberts' first great move, and the earlier part
of their doings is most clearly, yet modestly, set out in General
Kelly-Kenny's despatch of 20th February 1900. The division left Enslin on
12th February and moved southeast to Ramdan. On the 13th they started at
dawn, marching to Waterval Drift on the Riet. On the 14th they marched to
Wegdrai Drift, and again the same evening, starting at five o'clock, they
marched to Klip Drift on the Modder, where they arrived at 1 am on the 15th.
On the 16th Cronje's column was sighted, attacked, and harassed. On that day
the Buffs had some stiff fighting. On the 17th at 3 am the pursuit was
continued with only a short rest, till the vicinity of Paardeberg and
Cronje's camp was reached at 9 pm On the 18th another start at 3 AM, and
touch with the enemy's main body was had at 7 am According to unofficial
accounts this hour might be somewhat earlier. Cronje was laagered in the
hollow of the Modder. The 18th Brigade under Stephenson was thrown out to
the south-east of the Boer position, the 13th Brigade to the south, while
the Highland Brigade, part of General Colvile's IXth Division, which joined
the action early in the day, attacked from the south-west and west sides.
Across the river, roughly north-west of the Boer position, Colville's other
brigade, the 19th, under Smith-Dorrien, operated, while some of French's
cavalry were able to assist in containing the enemy on the north and
north-east. Indeed Broad-wood had headed Cronje on the 17th. The part of the
cavalry in heading Cronje is sketched under the Household Cavalry Regiment.
The battle on the 18th was a bloody one, which "continued the whole day, the
troops pressing the attack on both flanks, but meeting very stubborn
opposition". Although at nightfall the enemy still held on to his
intrenchments, he was completely hemmed in on all sides, with his laager,
waggons, and ammunition destroyed. In the course of the battle General Knox
was wounded, as was also General Macdonald. The Buffs' losses on the 18th
were not severe.
On the 20th the Buffs, acting in concert with the 1st Yorkshire Regiment,
captured 80 prisoners, a part of those bodies of Boers who came up to look
on at Cronje's plight; else they did not or could not do. Cronje surrendered
on the 27th, and the army moved eastward.
On 7th March was fought the battle of Poplars Grove, rather a
disappointing fight, except that the Boers fled incontinently,
notwithstanding the presence and objurgations of the two Presidents. The
VIth Division had again a principal part to play, but "made too wide a
detour to the south, result being that before it approached the seven kopjes
the enemy had been dislodged by the Horse Artillery fire in reverse, coupled
with the well-aimed shell-fire of the 4'7-inch naval guns in front".
On the 8th and 9th March the bulk of Lord Roberts' force halted at
Poplars Grove, but on the 9th the Vlth Division and the 1st Cavalry Brigade
moved eastward eight miles. On the 10th was fought the battle of Driefontein,
or Abraham's Kraal. In his despatch of 15th March Lord Roberts details the
instructions he issued for the advance of his army in three columns on
Driefontein. He then states:—
"On the 10th the movement was begun as ordered, and the right column
occupied Petrusburg without opposition. The left column found the enemy
holding several kopjes behind Abraham's Kraal, and endeavoured to turn their
left flank by moving to the south. The Boers, however, anticipated this
manoeuvre by a rapid march southward, and took up a fresh position on a
ridge about four miles long, running north and south across the road two
miles east of Driefontein. Lieutenant General French followed up the enemy
with the 1st Cavalry Brigade and the Vlth Division, and came into contact
with them at 11 AM.
"Meanwhile the 2nd Cavalry Brigade had reached Driefontein, and endeavoured,
in conjunction with the 1st Cavalry Brigade, to turn the rear of the Boers
by operating in the plain behind the ridge which they were holding. The
enemy's guns, however, had a longer range than our field-guns, which were
the only ones immediately available, and some time elapsed before the former
could be silenced, especially a creusot gun, which had been placed in a
commanding position on an isolated kopje two and a half miles east of the
northern end of the ridge. The infantry of the Vlth Division reached this
end of the ridge about 2 PM, having been under the enemy's shell-fire, which
did but little damage, for more than an hour. The Boers were gradually
pushed back towards the centre of the ridge, where they made an obstinate
stand.
"The IXth Division came up at 5 PM, and I at once ordered the Guards Brigade
and the 19th Brigade to the assistance of the Vlth Division; but before
these reinforcements could reach the ridge, the enemy's position was stormed
in the most gallant manner by the 1st Battalions of the Essex and Welsh
Regiments, supported by the 2nd Battalion of the Buffs. The bodies of 102
Boers were afterwards found along the ridge, mainly in the position which
they held to the last. Many of their horses were killed".
On the 10th the Buffs had 1 officer and 20 men killed; 2 officers,
including Colonel Hickson, and 70 men wounded.
For the operations prior to the occupation of Bloemfontein 4 officers, 1
sergeant, and 1 private of the Buffs were mentioned in Lord Roberts'
despatch of 31st March 1900.
On 13th March the Vlth Division, now war-worn veterans, marched into the
capital with the Field-Marshal. Since leaving Enslin they had done splendid
work. They had got their opportunity and had used it nobly. Their losses had
been very severe, and it was perhaps for that reason that Lord Roberts soon
broke up the division. The 13th Brigade were now to have an easier time.
Instead of accompanying the Commander-in-Chief in his next great advance,
they were told off to garrison Bloemfontein and the other towns on the
Central Railway. The commander of the division was left in command of the
troops in the Bloemfontein district when Lord Roberts went north on 3rd May.
In August 1900 the Buffs were taken to the Delagoa Railway line. In his
telegram of 20th November Lord Roberts says: "General Lyttelton reports that
on the 19th an outpost of Buffs south-west of Balmoral was surprised. Our
casualties, 6 killed, and 5 wounded; 1 officer and 30 men taken prisoners".
The Buffs formed part of Colonel Benson's column when it was attacked at
Baakenlaagte on 30th October 1901. The rear-guard, which was the object of
the enemy's main attack, "was composed of two companies Mounted Infantry,
two squadrons Scottish Horse, two guns 84th Battery, and one company 2nd
Buffs, the whole under the command of Major Anley, 3rd Mounted Infantry. The
guns, the company of Buffs, and 50 Mounted Infantry were posted on a ridge,
some Mounted Infantry and Scottish Horse being out as a screen. The screen
was ordered to close in, but at same time it was compelled by a strong force
of the enemy to retire. "The company of the Buffs which formed the original
escort, posted well to the front of the guns on the south side of the ridge,
was captured by the enemy, as he rode practically into our position almost
in touch with our men". l Colonel Benson had ordered up two additional
companies of the Buffs to reinforce the ridge, "but these did not succeed in
reaching any positions whence their fire could effectually be brought to
bear". Colonel Benson reached the guns, and there he and Colonel Guinness
fell. Only one end of the ridge, occupied by some of the Mounted Infantry,
remained in our hands when darkness set in. The two guns were captured and
removed after dusk. The behaviour of the Buffs that day has been reflected
on. They lost in killed 8. The Scottish Horse lost 26, the Yorkshire light
infantry company of Mounted Infantry 9, the King's Royal Rifle battalion of
Mounted Infantry 10. Taking these figures, and keeping in view that the East
Kent Regiment were the infantry of a mobile column, and therefore that part
of the force responsible for the safety of guns and baggage in any action of
unusual severity, it does seem that their conduct fell short of the heroic.
It is possible the battalion had suffered from several of its very best
officers being away elsewhere with Mounted Infantry, and from its drafts
being a bit raw. Their admirers cannot say that Baakenlaagte came up to the
standard displayed in the advance to Bloemfontein.
During the remainder of the campaign the battalion was chiefly on
garrison duty in the most eastern parts of the Transvaal.
The Mounted Infantry of the Vlth Division saw endless hard work and stiff
fighting, and the Buffs were represented at the very successful action at
Bothaville, 6th November 1900, where
Captain Englebach was killed.
Twelve officers and 16 non-commissioned officers and men were mentioned
in Lord Roberts' final despatch.
Two officers and 3 men were mentioned by Lord Kitchener during the latter
phase of the war, and in his final despatch 5 officers and 6
non-commissioned officers and men were mentioned.