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THE  EGYPT & SUDAN CAMPAIGN 1882 to 1898

 

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The battle was celebrated by the Scottish doggerel poet McGonnal:

"Ye sons of Mars, come join with me, And sing in praise of Sir Herbert Stewart's little army, That made ten thousand Arabs flee At the charge of the bayonet at Abou Klea and so on for 19 stanzas"

 

THE EGYPT and SUDAN CAMPAIGN 1882

"Colonel Coetlogon has stated that Khartoum may be easily captured;
we know that General Gordon is surrounded by hostile tribes and cut off
from communications with Cairo and London; and under these circumstances
the House has a right to ask her Majesty's Government whether they are
going to do anything to relieve him. Are they going to remain indifferent
to the fate of the one man on whom they have counted to extricate them
from their dilemmas, to leave him to shift for himself, and not make a
single effort on his behalf? March 16, 1884."

Winston S. Churchill

 

Islam also has its "end of times" which is called Mahdism. It is in the Islamic religion the final times as we close in on the "Day of Judgment" when the Koran is widely accepted and its morality followed by everyone. But first there is a period of great decline much like the period of "Armageddon" spoken of by fundamentalist Christians. There will be terrible disasters, great wars and unimaginable suffering.

"During the terrible chaos of the final times, Allah will use a servant having superior morality known as the Mahdi (the guide to the truth), to invite humanity back to the right path. The Mahdi's first task will be to wage a war of ideas within the Islamic world and to turn those Muslims who have moved away from Islam's true essence back to true belief and morality."

 

In March 1885 [says the Archbishop of Canterbury] 'I was brought into vital touch with the springs of that extraordinary life of adventure and leadership which had closed in dark tragedy two months before. For I was entrusted with the interesting task of examining the little Bible which had been for so many long and dusty years General Gordon's daily companion and guide, and which has now an honoured resting-place in the corridor of Windsor Castle. It would not be easy to describe that little book-worn and thumbed from cover to cover and scored and annotated with different coloured inks and pencils in pursuance of separate lines of thought. But one trait throughout its pages he that runs might read. It is the thought of the man's steady, unswerving confidence in the daily guidance of his God, finding that guidance after his own fashion in proverb and story, in psalm and prophecy, in gospel and vision. That little book, carefully mended with fine whip-cord by his own hand, had been his all-sufficient solace and unerring guide on Chinese marches, in Danubian fields, amidst the solitudes of the African desert, and in the camps of the slave-traders.'

Strong in the sense of that Divine Indwelling he knew no fear-even at the last. The Mahdi sent him an Eastern costume. "Put it on," he said, "as a sign that you renounce your faith, and no harm shall come to you!" Gordon flung the clothes to the ground and trampled upon them in the sight of everybody. "Then, alone, he went up to the roof of his high palace and turned the telescope, almost mechanically, to the north! He looked-but looked in vain-for the relieving columns that never arrived. "I am quite happy," he says, in his last letter to his sister, "I am quite happy, thank God; and, like Lawrence, I have tried to do my duty!" A few hours later his head was fixed on a tree beside the public highway, and every passer-by threw stones at it. But what did that matter to him? With heroic fortitude he had presented his breast to the spears of his enemies; and his journals show that the Abiding Guest was with him to the end.

Muhammad Ahmad, the Mahdi, followed the example of the Prophet and described his followers as ansar, or 'helpers'. The British called them dervishes, a term normally applied to members of the Sufi orders, and frequently characterized them as fanatics inasmuch as they appeared excessively or unreasonably zealous in pursuit of the jihad, or holy war. The Mahdi, the 'Expected Guide', had summoned all true believers to forsake everything and join him in rebellion, promising to carry the jihad throughout the Sudan and on to Cairo and Alexandria, and thence to Arabia and the Mediterranean. He aimed to expel the Turks, crush all those who supported them, and thereafter worship in the mosques of Mecca and Constantinople. If these aims posed a challenge that the British, already ensconced in Egypt since the suppression of Arabi Pasha's revolt (1882), could hardly ignore, so too did the uncompromising manner of the Mahdi's pronouncements, the appeal of his religious teachings, and the depth of commitment he inspired, not least the willingness of the ansar to die in prosecuting the jihad. This commitment found reflection on the field of battle, whether in the storming of towns, in destroying Egyptian armies or in fearlessly challenging well-armed and disciplined British expeditionary forces. 'Dervish fanaticism' seemed to be one explanation for the tenacity and ferocity of the Mahdist revolt, especially when it appeared to be a declining force in the 1890s and the regime of Khalifa 'Abdallahi, the Mahdi's successor, seemed increasingly vulnerable. Nevertheless, the significance of fanaticism has been disputed, and its perceived impact in battle should not detract from the way in which the Mahdists were able to refine their military tactics and adapt their military organization.

RARE & SCARCE //

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1.

A C.B. GROUP OF SIX AWARDED TO MAJOR GENERAL J.W. SCOTT ROYAL MARINE LIGHT INFANTRY who commanded the Royal Marine Battalion at Tel-El-Kebir.

The Most Honorable Order of the Bath, C.B. (Military), breast badge in silver-gilt and enamels, complete with ribbon buckle; Jubilee 1887, silver with clasp 1897; China medal 1857-60, one clasp, Canton 1857, unnamed as issued; Egypt medal, Tel-El-Kebir (Major J. W. Scott, R.M.L.I.); Turkey Order of the Osmanieh, 4th class breast badge in silver gilt and enamels with ribbon rosette; Khedives Star 1882. Condition: GVF.

Major General J.W. Scott was born on 9 Sept., 1838 and joined the Royal Marines in August 1855. He served with the China Expedition of 1857-59 including the blockade of the Canton River, the landing before, and the capture of the City on 29 Dec. 1857; also present at the attack and capture of the bridge, batteries and village of Shek-Tsin on the 8th and 9th Jan. 1859.

J.W. Scott commanded a Guard of Royal Marines landed from H.M.S. Queen for the protection of the British Legation at Athens, during the revolution in July 1863, and received the thanks of the British Minister, the Honorable P. Campbell Scarlett.

As Senior Major with the Royal Marine Battalion, he served throughout the campaign in Egypt in 1882. He commanded the Royal Marines who in conjunction with the Royal Navy under Admiral Henry Fairfax, C.B., landed and occupied Port Said on 20 Aug. 1882 (Dispatches London Gazette 8 Sept. 1882). He was present at the capture and occupation of Tel-El-Mahuta, engaged in the two attacks upon Kassassin on 28 Aug. and Sept. 9, and also at the storming and capture of Tel-El-Kebir. On reaching Cairo he was placed in command  of the Royal Marine Battalion, and remained in command during the remainder of the campaign. For his services in Egypt he was promoted to the rank of Brevet Lt. Colonel and awarded the Osmanieh  4th class. His Egypt medal was presented by the Queen on his return and he was appointed A.D.C. to the Queen on 5th Oct. 1886. Lt. Col. Scott was awarded the C.B. on the Queen's birthday 1891. In March of the following year he was appointed Colonel Commandant of the Chatham Division and retired as Major Gen. in March 1895. He died at his home in Devon on Sept. 16 1914.

 

Royal Marine Light Infantry

Background to the Campaign

In occupying Egypt, Britain had also assumed responsibility for the Egyptian Sudan where an Islamic revolt had begun in 1881, led by Mohammed Ahmed, who styled himself the ‘Mahdi’ or ‘guide’. By the end of 1882, the Mahdists controlled much of the Sudan, and on 5 November 1883, at El Obeid, they annihilated an Egyptian force that had been sent to restore order. The Mahdi was supported by Osman Digna, leader of the Beja tribesmen of the Red Sea area. In January 1884, the Beja, whose extravagant hairstyles earned them the nickname of ‘Fuzzy-wuzzies’ from the British, wiped out an Egyptian force under Colonel Valentine Baker outside the Red Sea port of Suakim. To rectify the situation, a 4,000 strong British force under Major-General Gerald Graham was sent to Suakim. On 29 February, they defeated Osman Digna at El Teb, but two weeks later were almost defeated themselves at Tamai. The British fought in two brigade squares, one of which was temporarily broken by the Mahdist forces. The situation was only retrieved when the second square moved up in support. Whilst these two victories were a boost to public morale, they had little long-term effect. Osman Digna was able to recover from his losses and Graham’s force was withdrawn. Meanwhile, Major-General Charles Gordon had been sent to Khartoum. His orders were to oversee the evacuation of the Sudan, but instead he elected to stay and defend the Sudanese capital. Khartoum was invested by the Mahdi in May 1884 and Britain was forced to organise a relief expedition to rescue Gordon.

The Desert Column started from Korti on the 30th of December. Their strength did not exceed 1,100 officers and men, but they were the flower of the army. Dropping their communications, they set forth along the caravan route towards Metemma. The knowledge which we have since gained of the resources of the Mahdists enables the peril of their desperate venture to be fully appreciated. Although the Dervishes were neither so well armed nor trained as at a later date, they were nearly as numerous and equally devoid of fear. Their tactics were more in accordance with modern conditions: their fanaticism was at its height. The British force, on the other hand, was equipped with weapons scarcely comparable with those employed in the concluding campaigns. Instead of the powerful Lee-Metford rifle, with its smokeless powder, its magazine action, and its absence of recoil, they were armed with the Martini-Henry, which possessed nonthese advantages. In place of the deadly Maxim there was the Gardner gun--the very gun that jammed at Tamai, and that jammed again at Abu Klea. The artillery was also in every respect inferior to that now in general use. Besides all this, the principles of fire-discipline and of scientific musketry were new, little understood, and hardly admitted. Nevertheless, the Camel Corps went boldly forward, and engaged an enemy whose destruction ultimately required the strength of a better-armed and better-instructed army twelve times as strong.
 
On the 3rd of January they reached Gakdul Wells. A hundred miles of their march was accomplished. But they were now delayed by the necessity of escorting a second column of supplies to Gakdul, and after that until the arrival of reinforcements which raised their strength to 1,800 of all ranks. The interval was employed in building two small forts and establishing an advanced depot; nor was it until the 13th that the march was resumed. The number of camels was not sufficient for the necessities of the transport. The food of the camels was too poor for the work they had to perform. By the 16th, however, they had made fifty miles, and approached the wells of Abu Klea. Here their further advance was disputed by the enemy.
 
The news of the advance of the Desert Column had been duly reported to the Mahdi and his Arab generals. A small party of English, it was said, with camels and some cavalry, were coming swiftly to the rescue of the accursed city. Their numbers were few, scarce 2,000 men. How should they hope to prevail agains 'the expected Mahdi' and the conquering Ansa  who had destroyed Hicks? They were mad; yet they should die; not on  should escape. The delay in th advance offered ample opportunity. A great force of Arabs was concentrated. Slatin relates how several thousand men under important Emirs were detached from the army before Khartoum and marched northward eager for the slaughter of 'the enemies of God.' At Metemma the main strength of the Jaalin tribe was collected.
With the reinforcements from Omdurman the total force of the Arab actually at hand was not less than 10,000, and behind were many thousands
 more. They permitted the little column to advance until their retreat  if defeated, was impossible, and then, confident of victory, offered battle near the wells of Abu Klea.
 
The Camel Corps remained halted during the morning of the 16th, and built a small fort, in which they placed their reserve of stores, and made some arrangement for the reception of wounded. At one o'cloc  they moved leisurely forward, passed through the rocky defile which ledinto the valley of Abu Klea and bivouacked. Early the next morningthe force moved out in square formation and advanced upon the enemy. The most savage and bloody action ever fought in the Soudan by British troops followed. Notwithstanding the numbers and the valour of the Arabs, that they penetrated the square, and that they inflicted on the troops a loss of nine officers and sixty-five men killed and nine officer and eighty-five men wounded--10 percent of the entire force--they were
driven from the field with great slaughter, and the Desert Columncamped at the wells.
 
On the morning of the 18th they rested, placed their wounded in thesmall fort they had built, and buried their dead. In the afternoon they continued their advance, marched all through the night, and, having covered twenty-three miles, halted exhausted, almost within sight of the river, at daylight on the 19th. Meanwhile the enemy had again collected in great strength, and an effective rifle fire was opened on the column. Sir Herbert Stewart received the wound of which a few weeks later he died. The command devolved upon Sir Charles Wilson. The position was desperate. Water was running short. The Nile was only four miles away; but the column were impeded by their wounded and stores, and between the river and the thirsty men lay the Dervish army, infuriated by their losses and fully aware of the sore straits to which their astonishing enemy was now reduced.
 
It now became necessary to divide the small force. Some must remain to guard the baggage and the wounded; the others must fight their way to the water. At three o'clock in the afternoon of the 19th, 900 men left the hastily made zeriba and marched towards the river. Without their camel or those of the transport they appeared insignificant, a mere speck on the broad plain of Metemma. The Dervishes hastened to clinch the matter.
 

The square advances slowly and painfully over the stony ground, with frequent jerky halts to preserve order and to pick up the wounded. Little puffs of white smoke dot the distant sandhills. Here and there a gaudy flag waves defiantly. In front the green tops of the palm-trees by the Nile tantalise but stimulate the soldiers. On the left the great mud labyrinth of Metemma stretches indefinitely. Suddenly the firing stops. The low scrub in front is alive with the swarming figures of the enemy. All the flags dance forward together. Ragged white figures spring up in hundreds. Emirs on horses appear as if by magic. Everywhere
are men running swiftly forward, waving their spears and calling upon the Prophet of God to speed their enterprise. The square halts. The weary men
begin to fire with thoughtful care, The Dervishes drop thickly. On then, children of the desert! you are so many, they are so few. They are worn
with fatigue and their throats are parched. You have drunk deeply of the Nile. One rush will trample the accursed under the feet of the faithful. The charge continues. A bugle sounds in the waiting square. The firing stops. What is this? They lose heart. Their ammunition is exhausted. On, then, and make an end. Again the smoke ripples along the line of bayonets and fire is re-opened, this time at closer range and with far greater effect. The stubborn grandeur of the British soldie  is displayed by desperate circumstances. The men shoot to hit. The attack crumples. The Emirs--horse and man--collapse. The others turn and walk--for they will not run--sullenly back towards the town. The square starts forward. The road to the river is open. With dusk the water is reached,
and never have victors gained a more longed-for prize. The Nile is won. Gordon remains.

Winston S. Churchill

Winston Churchill later stated that the battle of Abu Klea was "the most savage and bloody action ever fought in the Sudan by British Troops".

dhm_111.gif (1091848 bytes)

The Battle of Abu Klea was an engagement between British forces and Dervishes in the Sudan on January 17th 1885 at Abu Klea

At the moment the Mahdists broke into the corner of the square against the Heavy Camel Regiment. 17th January 1885.

 

Battle flag of the Mahdi's forces. The Arabic inscription reads: "Oh Allah! Oh Merciful! Oh Compassionate! Oh Living! Oh Unchanging! Oh Lord of Majesty and Liberality! There is no God but Allah, and Mohammed is the Prophet of Allah. Mohammed the Mahdi is the Successor of the Prophet of Allah. Upon him be Blessings and Peace of Allah!"

 

The classic British Square prepares to receive the enemy.


RARE & SCARCE //

2.

EGYPT MEDAL NAMED TO: 1021. TP. SGT. MAJOR. W, BEALE. 19th HUSSARS.

Clasps: SUAKIN 1884, EL-TEB-TAMAAI, THE NILE 1884-85 & ABU KLEA.

D.C.M NAMED TO: TP. SGT. MAJOR. W. BEALE. 19th HUSSARS. JAN. & FEB. 1895.

MSM NAMED TO: SGT. MAJOR. W.C. BEALE. 19th HUSSARS.

D.C.M. recommendation submitted to the Queen 7 November 1885, "in recognition of gallant conduct during the recent operations in the Soudan."  Another source gives the citation for Beale's award: "Having been conspicuous on  many occasions with the Desert Column and for his coolness and gallantry in reconnoitering in from in the Soudan Campaign."

M.S.M. awarded 15 November 1892, with Annuity of 15 pounds.

William Charles Beale was born at Ramsgate, Kent, in Feb., 1852, and attested for the 19th Hussars at Canterbury on 13 January 1870, just one month short of his eighteenth birthday. He rose rapidly through the ranks to become Sergeant in March 1877, and Troop Sergeant-Major in September 1880. He re-engaged to complete 21 years in December 1881, and was appointed Regimental Sergeant-Major in April 1885. Described by his commanding officer, Colonel French, in Feb., 1889, as a man of "irreproachable character", Sergeant-Major Beale took his final discharge on 31 Aug., 1891, and died as a pensioner on 11 Sept., 1898.

Condition: GVF.

 

A native mounted on a camel.

General Sir Garnet Wolseley travelled by river from Korti to Khartoum, Stewart's column was to cut across country by column directly for Khartoum, since time was running short according to what little information was available from the garrison. The force was composed of four regiments of camel-mounted troops (Guard, Heavy, Light & Mounted Infantry), formed from detachments of the various regiments in Egypt and the River Column, and a detachment of the 19th Hussars, mounted on horses. Four light field pieces and a small Naval Brigade manning a Gardner machine gun finished off the force.

As the column approached the wells at Abu Klea, they were set upon by a Mahdist force. The troops were formed in square, with the cannon on the north face and the Naval Brigade, with their Gardner, at a corner. Several officers and men of HMS Alexandra were killed at the battle. The Gardner gun, was run out to the left flank of the infantry square to provide covering fire. The square closed behind them leaving them exposed. After seventy rounds were fired, the gun jammed and as the crew tried to clear it they were cut down in a rush by the dervishes. Out of the forty men in the Naval contingent, Lieutenants Alfred Piggott and Rudolph de Lisle were killed along with Chief Boatswain's Mate Rhodes and five other seamen and seven more were wounded.  Lord Charles Beresford was 'scratched' on the left hand by a spear as he managed to duck under the gun. The weight of the rush pushed the sailors back into the face of the square. Several Dervishes were able to gain access to the square, but found the interior full of camels and were unable to proceed. The troops in the rear ranks faced about and opened fire into the press of men and camels behind them, and were able to drive the Dervishes out of the square and compelling them to retreat from the field.

 


Ex. DNW Auction September 2004.

3.

Scarce //

EGYPT MEDAL 1882 named to: CAPTAIN. VIVIAN DALTON MATHAS.  ROYAL MARINE ARTILLERY

Clasp: ALEXANDRIA 11th JULY.

KHEDIVE'S STAR 1818

50th JUBILEE FOR QUEEN VICTORIA MEDAL.

Condition: NEF.

CAPTAIN V. D. MATHAS WAS PRESENT AT THE BOMBARDMENT OF ALEXANDRIA AND LANDED ON 13th 1882 IN COMMAND OF A DETACHMENT OF ROYAL MARINE ARTILLERY FOR THE DEFENCE OF THE CITY. HIS SERVICE PAPERS STATE THAT HE "HAD CHARGE OF A COMBINED FORCE OF BLUEJACKETS AND MARINES WITH FIELD GUNS AND GATLING GUNS FOR THE DEFENCE OF THE CITY GATES". HIS TASK  COMPLETE CAPTAIN MATHAS RETURNED TO THE SUPERB BUT WAS ONCE MORE LANDED THE FOLLOWING MONTH, IN DEFENCE OF THE CIY LINES, AND WAS "ENGAGED IN SKIRMISHES WITH BEDOUINS" - GRANTED THE BREVET OF Lt. COLONEL FOR THESE SERVICES.

H.M.S. SUPERB:

1880; SIXTEEN 10inch GUNS. HAD THE LARGEST BATTERY OF SINGLE-CALIBRE GUNS EVERY MOUNTED IN A BRITISH BATTLESHIP AND FIRED THE HEAVIEST BROADSIDE OF ANY BRITISH BATTLESHIP AS OF THAT DATE.

 


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4.

Baltic Medal named to: CAPTAIN AND Bt. MAJOR. C.B.P.N.H. NUGENT. ROYAL ENGINEERS.

Baltic Medal Officially Impressed.

Egypt 1882 medal named to: Br. GEN. C.B.P.N.H. NUGENT. C.B.

KHEDIVE'S STAR.

Condition: GVF and VF.

 

Taken from the Royal Engineers Journal February 1, 1900:

Sir Charles Nugent

In Sir Charles Nugent of Corps lost an Officer of very high attainments, full of zeal and energy, and of considerable mental capacity. He was born on the 25th of September, 1825, and was educated at Winchester College, whence he passed into the R.M. Academy, passing out at the head of his batch in December, 1845, joining at Chatham in the early days of 1845, in the autumn of which year he went to Nova Scotia for two years, and thence to Bermuda for nearly four years, where he was continuously engaged, under the late Sir William Gordon, in the designing and construction of the western defences of the islands, and where he was distinguished by his proficiency in all games and sports, as well as by his performance of his professional duties. In 1852 he was selected with three of four other subalterns to superintend the construction of forts and defensible barracks in Alderney under Captain (afterwards Sir William), Jervois, the object of which forts was to protect the harbour of refuge, which was then being formed in that island.

At the commencement of the Crimean War, in 1854, Nugent was one of the earliest R.E. Officers selected for employment, embarking in H.M.S. Duke of Wellington on 9th March in charge of a detachments R.E. for service in the Baltic, where he acted as Senior Engineer Officer to the Commander, Admiral Sir Charles Napier. He remained with the Fleet the whole of that year during which he was the military reconnaissances of Sweaborg, Cronstadt, Bomarsund and was sent on a special mission to Stockholm; he was present at the capture of Aland Islands and Bomarsund. After Bomarsund, he was sent home by the English Naval Commander-in-Chief with detailed despatches. In 1855 he was again selected by the Admiralty for service with the Fleet in the Baltic, where he was attached to the Naval Commander-in-Chief, Admiral Sir R. Dundas, and was present at the bombardment of Sweaborg. For these services he was mentioned in despatches got his brevet majority, and received the medal and clasps.

He then returned to ordinary Corps duties, being stationed at Sheerness for a year and after a few months employment in the I.G.F.'s office he was selected for the post of Adjutant to the Corps at Chatham, which post he held till June, 1859, when he was appointed C.R.E. at Weymouth. Here he remained till August, 1865, when he went as C.R.E. to Newfoundland, and thence to Bermuda in the same capacity, returning to England in 1870. He was then specially employed as President of the Torpedo Committee, at the time when submarine mining was first adopted as a competent means of defence, till July, 1871, when he was appointed Assistant Director of Works (Fortifications), in which branch he remained till the close of 1880. His services were acknowledged by a c.B. in the Birthday Honours List of 1873; he was given the Deputy Director of Works in 1875, and was given the substantive rank of colonel in 1878. He then served as a member of the Ordnance Committee till August 1882, when he was sent out as C.R.E. (Brigadier-General) on the Egyptian Campaign. He was left in command of the troops at Kassassin during the Battle of Tel-el-Kebir; was twice mentioned in despatches during this campaign, received the Medal Bronze Star 2nd Class Medjidie and was made a K.C.B. At the close of the Egyptian Campaign Sir Charles, who had declined, on public ground, to have his place on the Committee kept for him, although the offer was made,  was employed on special duties and on the Ordnance Committee till April, 1884, in the autumn of which  year he was caught by the relentless  regulations on retirement and was thus forced to close his military career of nearly 40 years duration on the 25th September of that year with the rank of colonel, having declined the proffered honorary rank of Major-General. 

He was, however, still full of energy and his mental powers were as keen and active as ever. Many will remember the valuable and instructive lectures he gave at  the United Service Institution, specially those on "The Advantages and Disadvantages of the Different Lines of Communication with our Eastern Possessions in the Event of a Great Maritime War". "Militarism" was another of his favourite subjects, and "Imperial Federation" yet another. In short, to his end his mind was every actively at work for the good of his profession. He was a firm friend of GENERAL CHARLES GORDON, and admired of his work; and though at the time holding an appointment at the War Office, with  excellent prospects of advancement, he sympathized to such an extent with General Gordon and his projects for the development of the freedom and prosperity of the Soudan that he had very nearly arranged to throw up his work at the War Office and accompany General Gordon in his mission to Equatoria. Nugent was one of the earliest supporters of the "Gordon Boys" movement and was chairman of the Cheltenham Branch of that society at the time of his death.

K.C.B. was given to Colonel Nugent by Queen Victoria at Windsor Castle on 24th  November 1882 for Egypt Service.

Brig-General given by Queen Victoria 21st November 1882 at Windsor Castle.

 

 

CDV by Maull & Co. of London of General Wolsey

Sir General Wolsey Despatch from Egypt 1882:

"Brig-General Nugent, R.E., remained during the action in command of the left at Kassasin, to our rear of the army operating in his immediate front to protect that position, with all its stores and deports, from any possible attack from the enemy's force at Salihiyeh. He rejoined my in the evening at Tel-el-Kebir, having carried out the orders he had received."

The Baltic Campaign.

Approval for the issue of this medal was given on 23 April 1856 after Queen Victoria reviewed the Fleet at Spithead. The medal was authorized without clasps. The medal was minted in two different thicknesses and with two different types of claws, one plain, and the other more ornate at the suspension top. The obverse has a crowned Queen's head engraved by William Wyon, Royal Academy. The reverse of the medal, engraved by Leonard Charles Wyon, shows Britannia seated on a rock, holding a trident in her right hand, and by her side is a naval cannon with a pile a cannon balls. She is looking towards the fortress of Bomarsund and in the distance is Fort Sveaborg. It was issued unnamed to the Royal Navy, Royal Marine Artillery, and Royal Marine Light Infantry. Some of these medals were later rim engraved with the naval or marine recipents details. One hundred six men of the Royal Sappers and Miners received medals that were rim named with officially impressed block capital letters. Hastings Irwin states that the Royal Sappers and mines served on the Flagship of the Fleet during the campaign. This ship was the H.M.S. Duke of Wellington. There are a substancial number of very dangerous forgeries of this medal named to the Royal Sappers and Miners that can potentially show up on the market. Consequently these medals should only be purchased with a complete guarantee of the medals correctness in all details.

The following ships were employed in the Baltic : H.M.S. " Duke of Wellington,* " " Saint George," " Neptune," " Princess Royal," " Royal George,* " " Saint Jean d'Acre," " Majestic,* " " Nile,* " " James Watt,* " " Prince Regent," " Caesar,* " " Monarch," " Boscawen," " Cumberland," " Cressy,* " " Blenheim,* " " Hogue,* " " Edinburgh,*" " Amphion,*" " Arrogant,*" " Ajax,*" "Euryalus,*" " Imperieuse,* " "Cruiser," "Odin," "Dauntless," "Archer," "Leopard," "Valorous," "Desperate," " Magicienne," "Vulture," "Dragon." " Porcupine," " Bulldog," " Conflict," " Driver," " Hecla," " Basilisk," " Rosamund," " Lightning," " Alban," and H.M.S. Hospital Ship " Belleisle."

 

After the recall of Sir Charles Napier, who was censured for not attacking Sveaborg, a fleet was dispatched to the Baltic under Rear-Admiral Hon. R. Dundas. It included the ships named above marked with an asterisk, and the " Calcutta," " Colossus," "Orion," " Cornwallis," " Exmouth." "Russell," "Hawk," "Pembroke," "Hastings," "Retribution," "Falcon," " Esk," "Tartar," "Cossack." "Archer," " Harrier," and " Pylades," with a number of smaller vessels and gunboats. During the second operations in the Baltic, Lieutenant Dowell of the Marine Artillery gained the V.C. for leading a volunteer crew in a boat from the " Ruby," and taking the cutter of the " Arrogant " in tow when she was swamped after the explosion of her magazine during an attack on some vessels at Viborg.

The following vessels took part in the attack on Sveaborg : H.M.S. " Duke of Wellington," " Arrogant," "Euryalus," "Exmouth/' "Cornwallis," "Cossack," " Pembroke," " Merlin," " Vulture," " Dragon," " Locust," " Volcano," " Lightning," " Hastings," " Am-phion," "Edinburgh," " Magicienne," "Geyser," "Eolus," "Belleisle," "Cruiser," "Princess Alice," and the gunboats and mortar vessels " Redwing," " Lark," " Magpie," " Starling," " Skylark," " Stork," " Drake," " Redbreast," " Weasel," " Badger," " Mastiff," "Snapper," "Biter," "Growler," " Pincher," " Porpoise," " Snap," " Blazer," " Dapper," " Pelter," " Pickle," " Havock," " Prompt," " Manly," " Sinbad," " Beacon," " Carron," and " Grappler."

Thank you Fred Larimore.


Royal Marine Artillery

General Wolseley always considered himself an innovator and sought in his campaigns to produce some starting tactical innovation with which to carry on his battles. In the Sudan campaign of !884-85 he tried two - a river column of whale boats (similar to the Red River Campaign of Canada where he won his fame), and a flying desert column of camel mounted troops.

Of course the idea of a camel corps did not originate with Wolseley, but the Sudan was the first time a camel corps figured into the major plans of the British army. Its object was to cross the Bayuda Desert from Korti to Metemma in order to place a small but effective force close to Khartoum to either reinforce it or relieve it entirely while the bulk of the British army rowed its weary way up the Rile. The Desert Column was to be a self-sufficient force of cavalry, artillery and infantry. Though not all infantry involved belonged to the Camel Corps, the four regiments that comprised the newly raised unit were to be the backbone of the force.

The first contingent of the Camel Corps was raised in Dongala and was composed of the Royal Sussex Regiment and a wing of the Mounted Infantry. It was known as Major Marriott's Camel Corps. Volunteer were seconded from regiments serving in Egypt as well as some home regiments, and the first batch of these volunteers began to arrive at Alexandria on October 7, 1884. On October 26, 1884 the Camel Corps was officially divided into four regiments. They were:

Guards Camel Regiment: 23 officers, 403 men; 1st, 2nd 3rd Grenadier Guards, 1st and 2nd Coldstream Guards, 1st and 2nd Scots Guard, 10o Royal Marine Light Infantry (RMLI).

Heavy Camel Regiment: 24 officers, 430 men; 1st and 2nd Life Guards, Royal Horse Guards, 2nd, 4th, 5th Dragoon Guards, 1st, 2nd (Scots Greys) Dragoons, 5th and 16th Lancers.

Light Camel Regiment: 21 officers, 387 men; 3rd 4th, 7th, 10th, 11th, 15th, 18th, 20th, 21st Hussars.

Mounted Infantry Camel Regiment: 26 officers, 480 men; 1st South Staffordshire (38th), 1st Royal West Kents (50th), 1st Black Watch Highlanders (42nd), 1st Gordon Highlanders (75th), 2nd Essex (56th), 1st Sussex (35th), 2nd Duke of Cornwall's Light Infantry (46th), 3rd King's Royal Rifle Corps, Rifle Brigade, Somerset Light Infantry, Connaught Rangers, Royal Scots Fusiliers.

The Light Camel Regiment was left at Korti and was used to guard supplies. The final composition of the Desert Column was:
2 squadrons 19th Hussar 8 officers Guards Camel Regiment Heavy Camel Regiment Mtd. Inf. Camel Regiment 1st Royal Sussex Naval Brigade 1/2 of 1st Bty., 1st Bde./
Sou. Div., Royal Arty.

1/2 26th Co, Royal Engineers

All of the above numbers are approximate as many men were used on convoy and garrison duty, and rarely did the entire Column move together. Rather they were sent in two or three waves from one point to another. Fifty men of the Essex Regiment relieved the Mounted Infantry Camel Regiment at El Howeiya Wells so that the Mounted Infantry could join the rest of the Column, and 150 of the Royal Sussex were stationed at Gakdul, leaving only 100 to travel with the rest of the Column. (Ibid., pp. S, 14). The total strength of the Desert Column was 98 officers, 1,509 NCO's and men, 296 natives and interpreters. 8 Egyptians, 2,778 camels. 155 horses, and two mules (Ibid., p. 6).

All of the Desert Column, except the 19th Hussars, were mounted on camels. This included the Royal Sussex, the Naval Brigade, the Royal Artillery, and the Royal Engineers in addition to those designated as Camel Corps.

The Naval Brigade had one five-barreled Gardner gun with four camels to carry it; one for the barrels, one for the wheels and elevating gear, one for the trail, and one for the ammunition. The Camel Battery of the Royal Artillery had three 7 pdr. screw guns. Each gun, plus two boxes of ammunition, were carried on six camels with one native driver allotted to every two camels.

The staff of the Desert Column consisted of Sir Herbert Stewart as Commander-in-chief, with Colonel Burnaby as second in command. Wilson took over command after Stewart was mortally wounded at Abu Kru. The Guards Camel Regiment was commanded by Lt. Colonel E. Boscawen; Heavy Camel Regiment by Lt. Colonel R.A. Talbot; the Mtd. Inf. Camel Regiment by G. H. Gough; the Royal Sussex by Major Sunderland; 19th Hussars by Lt. Colonel P. Barren; Naval Brigade by Capt, Lord Charles Beresford; Royal Artillery by Capt. G. Norton, and the Royal Engineers by Major Darward.

After leaving Gakdul before Abu Klea the Column marched out with 300 men of the Heavies, 367 of the Guards, 360 of the Mounted Infantry, 100 Royal Sussex, 3 troops (90 men) of 19th Hussars, 30 men and 3 guns from Royal Artillery. 30 men and one Gardner Gun of the Naval Brigade, and 25 Royal Engineers.

At Abu Klea the square was broken momentarily and the Column suffered heavy losses. Colonel Burnaby himself was killed, so Charles Wilson became second in command. At Abu Kru, four miles from the Nile, Stewart was mortally wounded and though he did not die until some time later, Wilson assumed entire command.

At the Nile the column met four of Gordon's steamers which contained over 100 of his irregular Black Sudanese riflemen (who also sported a small brass mountain gun). Taking two of these steamers, along with portions of the Naval Brigade, the Sudanese, and 20 of the Royal Sussex, Wilson and Beresford tried to steam up to Khartoum before it fell. They were two days late.

Redvers Buller was sent with the Royal Irish Regiment and the West Kents to take command of the Desert Column. He left Korti on January 29, 1885, and though ordered to attack and take Metemma, he decided his force was too small and began withdrawing them. An earlier attack on the Madhist town by Wilson had failed. In the meantime Buller had left the West Kents to guard the wells on the route back and six companies of the Royal Irish joined the Desert Column at Gubat. The Light Camel Corps arrived at Abu Klea on the 20th of February and Sir Evelyn Wood and three companies of the West Kents arrived at Gakdul on the 17th. The Desert Column withdrew from the Sudan on foot, even the 19th Hussars, who had only a few horses left.   

Contrary to the portrayal in the movie "Khartoum", the Camel Corps never used their camels for cover! Nor, as some war gamers might be tempted to do, did they ever fight mounted as cavalry. From the beginning they were conceived of as a mounted infantry force, and fought as mounted infantry.

In a memorandum dated 27th October, 1884 and signed by Redvers Buller, the following guidelines were issued:

"The soldiers of the Camel Regiments will fight only on foot. They are mounted on camels only to enable them to make long marches. The camel is a good traveller; but he is a slow mover.

He cannot be managed as easily as a horse, and he cannot be mounted, or dismounted From, with great rapidity. The men of the Camel Corps must therefore trust dolely to themselves and their weapons when once they have dismounted, This cannot be too strongly impressed upon the men. If we have to fight in the Sudan, we must expect to meet an enemy far outnumbering us, and who may at first charge recklessly home, apparently regardless of the intense fire we bring to bear upon him.

...The attack formation far infantry of our Drill Book is not intended to be employed against an enemy like the Arabs of the Sudan, It is designed to enable infantry to advance with the least possible lost over ground swept by a heavy fire from guns and rifles of an enemy as well armed and disciplined as ourselves, against whom an advance in close order would be impossible.

In acting against Arabs who are Indifferently armed and bad shots, the open formation of the grill Book is not necessary." (Colville, II, p.240).

The Black Watch in Egypt and the Sudan..

 

When under attack the Camel Corps dismounted and lashed its camels' knees together, thus eliminating the need to keep "horse-holders" back per regular mounted infantry. The camels were placed In "a compact formation under guard" (see below) and the main force would march away to battle so as to keep the camels From being brought under fire.

At Abu Klea, however, the Column Has caught unaware and had to hastily construct a zariba of boxes and saddles keeping the camels inside of the square itself.

The Royal Engineers were brought along to help construct earthworks like the stone forts surrounding the wells at Gakdule, as well as to work the pumps used to bring the water out of the wells. Occasionally they built smaller squares for the camels or wounded away from the main square, and often times the Naval Brigade's Gardner gun was placed in these smaller squares.

At Abu Klea the Column made the mistake of sending out skirmishers to cover the square, The Mahdist's advanced so fast, and the square had to hold fire until the skirmishers got into the square, that only a few volleys were fired before the Mahdists engaged the British in hand-to-hand fighting. The cavalry was reserved for scouting. The guns were usually put in the corners of the square, or placed in smaller fortified zaribas outside of the main square.

 

 

The Mahdist Rising

 click on picture to enlarge

 

5.

 EGYPT MEDAL NAMED TO: 2052. J. CHRISTILE, 1/ROYAL HIGHLANDERS. CLASP: EL-TEB_TAMAAI.

KILLED IN ACTION // EXTREMELY SCARCE //

At the battle of Tamaai the Black Watch suffered the following casualties, Killed: Major Walker Aitken, 8 sergeants, 1 drummer, 50 privates. Wounded—Lieut. -Col. W. Green, Captain N. K. Brophy, Lieut. D. A. M’Leod, 1 sergeant, 3 corporals, 22 privates.

 

Bagpipes in War
Greg D. Allen

"War or peace, war or peace, it’s all the same to me,
In war I might be killed, in peace I might be hanged"

 

6.

click on picture to enlarge

2511. PTE. DANIEL CAMPBELL. 1/42 FOOT.

Clasps: TEL-EL-KEBIR, SUAKIN 1881, EL-TEB-TAMAAI, THE NILE 1884-85 & KIRBEKAN.

PTE. D. CAMPBELL WAS A PIPER IN THE BLACK WATCH.

Public Record Office: W016/1732-4

On 12th December, Colonel Duncan Macpherson, C.B., whose term of command had expired, handed over the charge of the regiment to Lieut.-Col. W. Green. Colonel Macpherson, on leaving the regiment, stated in Regimental Orders:-

"that he could not leave the regiment without expressing his deep sorrow at relinquishing his position as commanding officer of a regiment any officer would be as proud as he is of having command. His greatest wish as a subaltern was that one day he might succeed to the command of the regiment with which he has been connected for years ; and he is proud to say that his wish has been accomplished, having had the honour to command the regiment in two campaigns, the last of which has added another page to the glorious history of the Black Watch. To Lieut.-Col. Green, Lieut.-Col. Bayly, and the officers of the regiment generally, he begs to tender his best thanks for the cordial support he has received from them in maintaining discipline and the high character the regiment has always borne. To Lieut. Lee his special thanks are due for his unwearied zeal displayed in performing the arduous duties of adjutant. He also begs to tender his best thanks to Captain Forbes, quartermaster, whose excellent services deserve his highest commendation.

"To the late Sergt.-Major M’Neil, who fell at Tel-el-Kebir nobly doing his duty, his thanks would have been conveyed had he survived ; to the present Sergt.-major and non-commissioned officers he, in bidding them farewell, thanks them one and all for their uniform good behaviour and gallantry.

"To the rank and file he begs to say that he hopes they will continue to have the same exprit de corps which has earned the approbation of H. R. H. the Field-Marshal Commanding-in-Chief, and of the various generals under whom they have served and carried the colours of the Black Watch to victory."

The Egyptian medals for the campaign of 1882 were presented to the men by the Lieut.Colonel Commanding on 26th February; Lieut.-General Sir Archibald Alison, who had been requested to present them, being unable to undertake the duty. The following is an extract taken from his reply to Lieut.-Colonel Green:-

"There is no regiment in the army to which I would present medals with such sincere pleasure as the Black Watch. In two campaigns they have been in my brigade, and I have been with them in three actions. I am sorry to say, however, that my doctor gives me no hope of being able to name any time when I could do so."

 

SUMMARY of the Killed, Wounded, and Missing in the action at Tel-el-Kebir on the 13th September 1882.

Corps.

Killed.

Wounded.

Missing.

Remarks.

Officers.

N.C.O.
and
Men.

Officers.

N.C.O.
and
Men.

Officers.

N.C.O.
and
Men.

Staff, Army Corps     1        
[Staff] 1st Division     1        
2nd B[attalio]n Grenadier Guards   1 1 9      
2nd Bn. Coldstream Guards     1 7      
1st Bn. Scots Guards       4      
2nd Bn. Royal Irish Regiment 1 1 2 17      
Royal Marine Light Infantry 2 3 1 53      
2nd Bn. York and Lancaster       12      
1st Bn. Royal Irish Fusiliers   2   34   3  
19th Hussars     1        
2nd Bn. Duke of Cornwall's}
L[igh]t Inf[antry]                         }
    1 5      
Royal Artillery     2 17      
1st Bn. Royal Highlanders 2 7 6 37   4  
1st Bn. Gordon Highlanders 1 5 1 29   4  
1st Bn. Cameron Highlanders   13 3 45      
2nd Bn. Highland Light Infantry 3 14 5 52   11  
3rd Bn. King's Royal Rifles       20      
1st Bn. Seaforth Highlanders   1   3      
Native Troops   1   9      
Chaplains     1        

Total

9

48

27*

353

 

22

 

GRAND TOTAL of Casualties, all ranks                          459

* Lieutenant Park, Royal Highlanders, since dead.

The 42nd Foot formed the front face of the square at the battle of El Teb against Osman Digna, taking part also in the affairs of Tamai and Tamanieh, and after a brief period in garrison at Cairo, formed part of the Nile expeditionary force for the relief of General Gordon, adding to the list in the campaign roll the name "Nile 1884-5".  In this expedition the regiment ascended the great river 1,300 miles in sixty three days, doing the return journey in twenty eight days.

In occupying Egypt, Britain had also assumed responsibility for the Egyptian Sudan where an Islamic revolt had begun in 1881, led by Mohammed Ahmed, who styled himself the ‘Mahdi’ or ‘guide’. By the end of 1882, the Mahdists controlled much of the Sudan, and on 5 November 1883, at El Obeid, they annihilated an Egyptian force that had been sent to restore order. The Mahdi was supported by Osman Digna, leader of the Beja tribesmen of the Red Sea area. In January 1884, the Beja, whose extravagant hairstyles earned them the nickname of ‘Fuzzy-wuzzies’ from the British, wiped out an Egyptian force under Colonel Valentine Baker outside the Red Sea port of Suakin. To rectify the situation, a 4,000 strong British force under Major-General Gerald Graham was sent to Suakin. On 29 February, they defeated Osman Digna at El Teb, but two weeks later were almost defeated themselves at Tamaai. The British fought in two brigade squares, one of which was temporarily broken by the Mahdist forces. The situation was only retrieved when the second square moved up in support. Whilst these two victories were a boost to public morale, they had little long-term effect. Osman Digna was able to recover from his losses and Graham’s force was withdrawn. Meanwhile, Major-General Charles Gordon had been sent to Khartoum. His orders were to oversee the evacuation of the Sudan, but instead he elected to stay and defend the Sudanese capital. Khartoum was invested by the Mahdi in May 1884 and Britain was forced to organize a relief expedition to rescue Gordon of Khartoum.

 

The fall of Khartoum

 

"The position of General Gordon, besieged at Khartoum, unfortunately remains exceedingly precarious. Yesterday we published the unwelcome report that he is now totally isolated. All communications have been cut. A month ago the British government was fully warned that it would become necessary to employ something more than moral force at Khartoum. The necessity is now becoming urgent, but the government has not yet ordered the commander of British and Egyptian forces in southern Egypt to march to Khartoum.'

Commentary in The Times, London, March 20, 1884

 

In I882 there arose in the Soudan, a province of Upper Egypt, one Mohammed Ahmed, who called himself the Mahdi or Messiah, and invited all true believers to join in a holy war against the Christians. Thousands of wild tribesmen flocked to his banner, and in the following year he annihilated an army of eleven thousand English and Egyptians that had attempted to subdue the revolt. Rather than send more soldiers to die in the deserts of the Upper Nile, England decided to abandon the province. But first the thousands of Europeans who had taken refuge in Khartoum and other towns of the Soudan must be rescued from their perilous position. In this crisis the Government turned to the one man who could effect the withdrawal if it was still possible, and in January, 1884, appointed General Gordon to superintend the evacuation of the Soudan.

"He (Gen. Gordon) carried no weapon himself, but always went into action armed with a small cane, with which he would stand calmly under the hottest fire, pointing to the spots he wished to be attacked, and encouraging his soldiers by voice and gesture."

 

click on picture to make it larger

Major-General Charles George Gordon (1833-1885)
Engraved by G. Cook from a photograph by Adams and Scanlan, Southampton

The son of an artillery officer, Gordon was commissioned in the Royal Engineers in 1852. He distinguished himself in the Crimean War (1853-56) and in 1860 volunteered for the 'Arrow' war against the Chinese. In May 1862 Gordon's corps of engineers was assigned to strengthen the European trading centre of Shanghai, which was threatened by the insurgents of the Taiping Rebellion. A year later he became commander of the 3,500-man peasant force raised to defend the city. During the next 18 months Gordon's troops played an important role in suppressing the Taiping uprising.

He returned to England in January 1865, where an enthusiastic public had already dubbed him 'Chinese Gordon'. In 1873 he was appointed governor of the province of Equatoria in the Sudan. Between April 1874 and December 1876 he mapped the upper Nile and established a line of stations along the river as far south as present Uganda. He was then promoted to governor-general, where he asserted his authority, crushing rebellions and suppressing the slave trade. However, ill health forced him to resign and return to England in 1880 before traveling once more to places including India, China and South Africa.

In February 1884 Gordon returned to the Sudan to evacuate Egyptian forces from Khartoum, threatened by Sudanese rebels led by Muhammad Ahmad al-Mahdi. Khartoum came under siege the next month and on 26th January 1885 the rebels broke into the city, killing Gordon (against al-Mahdi's instructions) and the other defenders. The British relief force arrived two days later.

The British public reacted to his death by acclaiming 'Gordon of Khartoum' a martyred warrior-saint and by blaming the government, particularly Gladstone, for failing to relieve the siege. However, historians have since suggested that Gordon defied orders and refused to evacuate Khartoum even though that remained possible until late in the siege.

click on picture to enlarge.

Photograph of British General Charles G. Gordon in his uniform as Governor-General of the Sudan. When the Mahdi's forces cut off Khartoum and surrounded it, Gordon successfully defended the city for ten months. Eventually, in January, 1885, the Mahdi's troops overran the city and Gordon was killed. (Gen. Gordon was a Royal Engineer.)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Photograph of an officer in the Mahdist army of the Khalifa Abdullahi, captured by the British at the Battle of Toshka in Lower Nubia, 1889. He wears the unique patched costume of the Mahdi's followers. Known as the jibba, it was meant to symbolize one's devotion to God and the Mahdi as the Messiah of God.

Wolseley’s relief column set off from Cairo in October 1884. Realizing that his infantry, traveling in boats up the Nile, might not reach Khartoum in time to save Gordon, he detached a desert column under to travel overland by a faster, but more dangerous route. On 17 Jan 1885, this column, commanded by Brigadier-General Sir Herbert Stuart, was attacked by the Mahdists at Abu Klea. Winston Churchill later described the resulting battle as, ‘the most savage and bloody action ever fought in the Sudan  by British troops’. Despite suffering heavy losses to British rifle fire, the Mahdists succeeded in penetrating the British square, which was closed only after desperate hand to hand fighting. The British suffered 168 casualties, the Mahdists about 1100. The column finally reached Khartoum on 28 January, 2 days after Gordon had been killed and the town had fallen.

Six months after the capture of Khartoum, the Mahdi died of typhus. The task of establishing and maintaining a government fell to his deputies--three caliphs chosen by the Mahdi in emulation of the Prophet Muhammad. Rivalry among the three, each supported by people of his native region, continued until 1891, when Abdallahi ibn Muhammad, with the help primarily of the Baqqara Arabs, overcame the opposition of the others and emerged as unchallenged leader of the Mahdiyah. Abdallahi--called the Khalifa (successor)--purged the Mahdiyah of members of the Mahdi's family and many of his early religious disciples.

 

 

 

 

Last Watch, Khartoum

Last Watch, Khartoum


"So here 's to you, fuzzy wuzzy, at

your home in the Sudan,

your a pore benighted heathen

but a first class fighting man.

And here's to you fuzzy-wuzzy with

your ayrick head of hair

you big back bounding beggar

for you broke the British square!"

A Poem by Rudyard Kiplin

This poem was written and inspired after the Tamai battle in the campaign in the Sudan where the Dervish forces broke the British square.

7.

SUDAN MEDAL NAMED TO: 4022. PTE. H. BRADSHAW. 'B' TP. 21st. LANCERS.

KHEDIVE'S MEDAL NAMED TO: 4022. PTE. H. BRADSHAW.  21st. LANCERS.

KILLED IN ACTION AT OMDURMAN 2.9.98.

Ex. Tom Gustard collection.

click on picture to enlarge

Horace Bradshaw was born January 23rd 1877 at No. 22 Leek Road, Shelton, Stoke on Trent in one of the many Victorian terrace houses which stood on the site now occupied by the Roe Buck public house. He was born to parents George and Sarah Bradshaw. There are no records to indicate Horace every harried. According to the army records that still exist, he was still living at the family house in Leek road until enlisting with the army in early 1897. He had been employed as his father had been employed in the pottery industry. As he was later assigned to a cavalry regiment he could, of some experience of horses and equipment. His name first appears on the muster roll of the 21st Lancers, age 20. Up to 1896 the 21st Lancers had been a Hussar Regt.

Before leaving to active service in the Sudan, no. 4022 Trooper Bradshaw was stationed at the Lancers Depot at Canterbury in Kent where he would have done most of his military training. In early August of 1897 the Lancers and other British regiments embarked on troopships bound for Egypt to join General Kitchener's vast army for the re-conquest of the Sudan. After arriving in Cairo, the Lancers were stationed in the Abbasya barracks and after a few days of acclimatizing to the North African head the men and horses were assumed ready for the fourth coming battle of Khartoum and Omdurman.

In just just over three weeks trooper H. Bradshaw and twenty of his comrades of the 21st Lancers would lie dead on the battlefield after the heroic but tragic charge of the 21st Lancers, which gained the regiment their first battle honour during the battle of Omdurman Sept. 2nd 1898.

SUDAN campaign the battle of Omdurman September 2nd 1898:

The battle of Omdurman was to be General Kitchener's final and decisive battle in the Sudan campaign and to avenge the death of general Gordon. On Sept. 2nd. 1898 Kitcheners Anglo Egyptian army of 22,000 men formed up in a defensive position. British infantry in two ranks, front row kneeling and the rear row standing just as British Red Coats had done before at the battle of Waterloo. The British had formed up only five miles from the enemy held town of Khartoum and Omdurman and had their backs to the river Nile which was patrolled by the British gun boats. At dawn on Sept. 2nd 1898 the Dervish army of about 40,000 medieval style  mail clad warriors was seen advancing on the Anglo Egyptian positions the fanatical Dervish army armed with mainly spears, swords and shields and very few modern weapons were facing the largest most modern equipped army that the British had put in the field for over 40 years.

As the Dervish army advanced the whole desert seemed to be alive with the multi coloured flags and costumes of the Dervish warriors (fuzzy wuzzy's, as the British army called them at that time), due to their hair styles. On they came screaming and singing their war chants. At about 06:50 a.m. the British Artillery opened fire, followed by the massed rifle fire of the British and Egyptian forces. The deadly rapid fire of the mazim guns caused terrible carnage amongst the onrushing Dervish warriors. This never ending hail of bullets and shells prevented the enemy getting any closer to the Anglo Egyptian positions than about 300 yards.  At about 08:30 a.m. the Dervish forces started to withdraw from the field leaving about 2,000 dead and hundreds more wounded. The Anglo and Egyptian forces had only lost about 15 men, The Dervish forces did have some minor success when they trapped the Camel Corps. The British Guns Boats from the Nile fired in the Dervish forcing a withdraw and saving the Camel Corps.

The Anglo Egyptian forces began a mopping us operation leaving their positions to chase and attack the enemy. Although the Dervish army had little success many British officers including Winston Churchill remarked on the bravery of the Dervishes. Eventually the Egyptian cavalry turned the Dervish retreat into a rout as the whole Anglo Egyptian force advanced from their positions driving the retreating Dervish army in the desert, by 11:30 a.m. the battle was over leaving over 10,000 Dervish dead and thousands wounded or captured.

The battle of Omdurman was the first major battle where all the British Troops wore the now familiar drab khaki uniforms instead of the once Imperial scarlet coats which were phased out in the late 1880's. Even Lancers were now in khaki but still wore their blue and red uniforms and plumed helmets on home service.

The Charge of The 21st Lancers

The 21st Lancers were ordered to cut the Dervish line of retreat into the city.

 

Colonel Martin had caught site of what was thought to be about four hundred Dervishes. At once he ordered his four squadrons of lancers to attack. Trooper H. Bradshaw was a member of number two squadron which appeared dto be in the fore front of the charge. As the lancers reached the enemy position they were suddenly confronted by over three thousand screaming Dervish warriors who had hidden from view in a long shallow valley. To late to stop and order his regiment back, Colonel Martin ordered his regiment forward surging down the shallow sides of the valley into the  massed ranks of the enemy, their horses falling and plunging as the Dervishes hacked at both horse and rider. The large part off the lancers managed to fight their way through and ride into the enemy and out to the other side where they dismounted and took up a firing position opening a withering fire from their carbines, forcing the Dervishes to withdraw before getting themselves clear. In the heroic charge which had not been planned the 21st Lancers lost 21 dead including Trooper H. Bradshaw.

Private Wade Rix wrote: 'As my horse leapt in among them, my lance entered the left eye of a white-robed figure who had raised his sword to strike. The impact shattered the lance and I quickly drew my sword as another man pointed his flintlock. I struck him down and blood splattered his robe.'

As a result of the charge at Omdurman, the 21st Lancers were awarded the title 'Empress of India's' by Queen Victoria, became the only Regiment entitled to wear her Royal Cypher, and were allowed to return to their french-grey facings, which had previously been replaced by scarlet. To this day The Queen's Royal Lancers still wear a form of Queen Victoria's Royal Cypher on their uniform. C Squadron maintains french-grey as their Squadron colour and celebrate 2nd September each year, the anniversary of the charge at Omdurman, as their Squadron Battle Honour.

Three Victoria Crosses were awarded, each of them for rescuing a wounded comrade from the midst of the enemy. Lieutenant Winston Churchill, attached to the Regiment from the 4th Hussars, commanded a troop in the charge.

 

NILE EXPEDITION 1898

Roll of men who lost their lives during the Campaigns of the Nile 1896-98

Corporal A. Allen - 1st Bn Cameron Highlanders - killed at the Battle of Omdurman
Sergeant R.
Allen - 21st Lancers - killed at the Battle of Omdurman
Pte W.
Allen - 1st Bn Grenadier Guards - died at Jebel Royan
Sapper R.
Allsopp - Royal Engineers - died at Darmali
Pte J.
Ansell - Lincolnshire Regiment - died at Darmali
Pte G. Baker - 1st Bn Northumberland Fusiliers - died at Jebel Royan
Pte W.
Bartlett - Cameron Highlanders - killed at the Battle of the Atbara
Pte J.H.
Blomley - 2nd Bn Lancashire Fusiliers - died at Jebel Royan
Pte H.
Borthwick - 21st Lancers - killed at the Battle of Omdurman
Sergeant J.
Bowden - Rifle Brigade - died at Jebel Royan
Pte W.
Bowman - Seaforth Highlanders - killed at the Battle of the Atbara
Pte H.
Bradshaw - 21st Lancers - killed at the Battle of Omdurman
Pte J.
Brannon - Lincolnshire Regiment - died at Darmali
Sergeant E.
Carter - 21st Lancers - killed at the Battle of Omdurman
Pte F.
Chesworth - Cameron Highlanders - killed at the Battle of the Atbara
Driver J.
Clark - 32nd Field Battery, Royal Artillery - died at Atbara
Pte W.
Clayden - Lincolnshire Regiment - died at Darmali
Pte G.
Clayton - 1st Bn Royal Warwickshire Regiment - died at Jebel Royan
Pte J.
Close - Royal Warwickshire Regiment - died at Darmali
Pte W.
Cooper - Cameron Highlanders - died at Darmali
Drummer
Cox - Royal Warwickshire Regiment - died at Darmali
Pte T.
Cross - Cameron Highlanders - died at Darmali
Lance-Corporal T.
Cullen - Cameron Highlanders - killed at the Battle of the Atbara
Bandsman W.
Cuthbert - Cameron Highlanders - died at Darmali
Pte A.
Daper - Seaforth Highlanders - killed at the Battle of the Atbara
Pte A.
Dawson - Lincolnshire Regiment - died at Darmali
Pte G.
Deneghan - Cameron Highlanders - killed at the Battle of the Atbara
Pte J.
Derlin - Seaforth Highlanders - killed at the Battle of the Atbara
Sergeant H.
Doughty - Royal Warwickshire Regiment - died at Darmali
Pte W.
Dutton - Royal Warwickshire Regiment - died at Darmali
Lance-Corporal F.W.S.
Elliot - 21st Lancers - killed at the Battle of Omdurman
Pte B.
Ellis - Seaforth Highlanders - died at Darmali
Pte G.
Ellis - Lincolnshire Regiment - died at Darmali
Pte W.
Etherington - 21st Lancers - killed at the Battle of Omdurman
Shoeing-Smith G.
Evans - 32nd Field Battery, Royal Artillery - died at Jebel Royan
Pte J.
Fleming - Cameron Highlanders - killed at the Battle of the Atbara
Pte W.