Memories of Forty-Eight Years Service Chapter 1b - The Zulu War
My charge extended from Greytown to Helpmakaar, about 100
miles, but the important part of it was the thorn country from Burrup's Store
to Sandspruit, about 50 miles. This included the passage of the Mooi and Tugela
Rivers and several dangerous " spruits." There were certain rules which had to
be observed when actually in the thorn country. (1) On no account should cattle
be allowed to graze, for redwater (a fatal disease) would almost surely result.
To avoid this, forage should be carried on the wagons, so that, on outspanning
at a camp, bullocks could be tied to the poles and fed instead of being loosed
to graze. (2) Should a wagon get stuck in a dry spruit, no matter how
improbable rain might appear to be, it must be got out at all cost and not left
there the night. Each wagon was drawn by sixteen oxen; convoys consisted of any
number, but were usually of about twenty, and were mostly in charge of an
officer senior to myself, and my difficulty was to get these orders carried
out. One Cavalry Captain scorned my instructions and broke both of the above
rules, and lost three quarters of his cattle from redwater and the wagon loaded
with all the stores for the C.-in-C.'s mess, and then called on me to help him
out.
This part of the country during November and December was
liable to terrific thunderstorms, the worst I have seen anywhere, and a dry
spruit would in an hour or so become a raging torrent 12 or even 20 feet deep,
and this is how Lord Chelmsford's wagon was lost. At sundown the bullocks would
not pull it out of a spruit, and instead of getting it out somehow by fresh
teams or by off-loading, my friend left it for the night, and in the morning it
had disappeared, having been swept down into the main river (the Tugela)
several miles below. Curiously enough, I was the person to suffer, for the
C.-in-C., becoming convinced that the officer referred to was unfit for
transport work, posted him to an irregular mounted corps instead of myself, as
I had been led to expect, leaving me with the Transport.
To give an instance of the terror of these thunderstorms :
one day I, to avoid one, was standing inside Burrup's Canteen Store. Hail was
descending as big as pigeons' eggs, the thunder was deafening, and the
lightning blinding. On the road in front of the store stood a wagon with
sixteen oxen, The trek-tow or rope, to which their yokes were attached, was a
steel hawser. Suddenly there was a blinding flash, and when it cleared, lo and
behold ! sixteen oxen stretched and lying like dead, and six of them were dead.
It was in the thorn country that I first met Hallam-Parr
(afterwards General Sir H. Hallam-Parr) of the 13th (Somersets), then a Captain
on the Staff of the Lieutenant-Governor of Natal, Sir Henry Bulwer, one of the
smartest and best beloved officers I have ever met, an enthusiastic Mounted
Infantryman and for years Adjutant-General of the Egyptian Army. Alas! I
attended his funeral from his own house in Somersetshire in April 1914.
By the 19th January 1879 the force, consisting of the two
Battalions of the 24th, one Battery R.A., one Company each of R.E. and M.T.,
and eight locally raised units, was ready at Rorke's Drift astride the Blood
River, and, moving forward next day some ten miles, it camped that night on the
east of that remarkably shaped and ill-starred hill called Isandhlwana
(literally, " a little hand "), erroneously called by some " Isandula." Some of
the Transport with an escort did not arrive until the morning of the 22nd. I
was in charge of the Transport depot at Rorke's Drift, and had been warned
before starting that I should have to return there at once from Isandhlwana
with a convoy of empty wagons to bring up more stores, so I left my camp kit in
a tented wagon at Rorke's Drift.
At about midnight I was sent for by General Lord Chelmsford
and told to take a dispatch back to Rorke's Drift for Colonel Durnford, R.E.,
who was expected there with reinforcements consisting of native levies. I rode
back, 10 miles, arriving at Rorke's Drift just before dawn on the 22nd, and
delivered my dispatch. It ought to have been a very jumpy ride, for I was
entirely alone and the country was wild and new to me, and the road little
better than a track; but pride at being selected to carry an important dispatch
and the valour of ignorance (for I only realised next day that the country was
infested with hostile Zulus) carried me along without a thought of danger.
Colonel Durnford was just moving off with his levies towards Sandspruit (away
from Isandhlwana), but on reading the dispatch, which conveyed instructions to
move up to reinforce the Isandhlwana camp (as Lord Chelmsford, with the main
body of the force, leaving the camp standing, was moving out some miles to the
east to attack the Zulu Army), he at once changed the direction of his march.
I had several arrangements to make for Transport at Rorke's
Drift, amongst others the erection of a gallows for making riems. This gallows
was some 15 feet high, and the process consisted of cutting hides of bullocks
into strips about an inch wide, working in a circle ; the strips then had the
appearance of the peel of an apple all coiled up, and in order to be fashioned
into straight straps had to be passed over the gallows and through a weighted
wagon-wheel below. These strips were then worked over the gallows and through
the wheel, stretched and rubbed with fat until the curves were lost, resulting
in very long, soft strips of hide, which could eventually be cut into lengths
for tying to the horns of oxen as head-ropes. It is interesting to relate that
the first use I saw the gallows put to was for hanging Zulus who were supposed
to have behaved treacherously the day after the Rorke's Drift fight.
After starting the gallows, I went up to see Captain " Gonny
" Bromhead, in command of the company of the 24th, and I told him a big fight
was expected, and that I wanted revolver ammunition. He gave me eleven rounds,
and hearing heavy guns over at Isandhlwana, I rode off and got into that camp
about 8 a.m., just as Colonel Durnford's force arrived. Colonel Durnford was
having a discussion with Lieutenant-Colonel Pulleine of the 24th, who had been
left by Lord Chelmsford in command of the camp, Lord (Chelmsford and all the
troops, including the 2/24th, having gone out to attack the Zulus.
Lieutenant-Colonel Pulleine's force consisted of six companies of the 1/24th,
two guns under Brevet-Major Smith and Lieutenant Curling, and some native
levies.
As far as I could make out, the gist of Colonels Durnford
and Pulleine's discussion was that the former wished to go out and attack the
Zulus, whilst the latter argued that his orders were to defend the camp, and
that he could not allow his infantry to move out. Colonel Durnford and his
rocket battery under Russell, R.A., and his mounted Basutos under Cochrane
(32nd), then rode off towards a small hill, apparently a spur of the main
range, and 1.5 miles from the camp (see A on sketch). Of the 24th, one company
(Lieutenant Cavaye) was on picket out of sight of the camp and about a mile to
the north on the main range. We could hear heavy firing in this direction even
then (8 a.m.). This company was reinforced later by two more (Mostyn's and
Dyson's), and the three fell back fighting about noon and covered the north
side of the camp. The remaining three companies present (for two under Major
Upcher, with Lieutenants Clements, Palmes, Heaton, and Lloyd, only reached
Helpmakaar on the 22nd from the old colony) were extended round the camp in
attack formation, covering especially the front and left front. Two battalions
of native levies were also in this line, but they were not to be relied on and
were feebly armed, only one man in ten being allowed a rifle, lest they should
desert to the enemy. In consequence of the heavy firing to the north and the
appearance of large numbers of Zulus on the main range of hills, and partly, I
believe, to support Colonel Durnford's movement, the line was pushed out on a
curve, but to no great distance from the tents. Farther than this it never
went. Our two guns were at the same time pushed out into the firing-line to the
north-east of the camp (see sketch).
At about 12 a.m. the Zulus, who had apparently fallen back
behind the hills, again showed in large numbers, coming down into the plain
over the hills with great boldness, and our guns and rifles were pretty busy
for some time, causing the Zulus again to fall back. It was difficult to see
exactly what was going on, but firing was heavy. It was evident now that the
Zulus were in great force, for they could be seen extending (i.e. throwing out
their horns) away across the plain to the south-east, apparently working
towards the right rear of the camp. As far as I can make out, Colonel Durnford
with his force never actually left the plain, but was close under the foot of
the small spur he originally went to seize.
Nothing of importance occurred, beyond the constant increase
of the Zulus and the spreading out of their horns, until about 1 p.m., when
they started their forward movement direct on the camp. Our troops were in the
positions they had occupied hours before, our two guns busy throughout shelling
the enemy.
Forty-five empty wagons stood in the camp with the oxen in.
It was a convoy which I was to have taken to Rorke's Drift for supplies early
in the morning, but which was stopped until the enemy should be driven off.
These wagons might have at any time been formed into a laager, but no one
appeared to appreciate the gravity of the situation, so much so that no steps
were taken until too late to issue extra ammunition from the large reserves we
had in camp.
I will return to the advancing Zulus' line at about 1 p.m.
It was a marvellous sight, line upon line of men in slightly extended order,
one behind the other, firing as they came along, for a few of them had
firearms, bearing all before them. The rocket battery, apparently then only a
mile to our front, was firing, and suddenly it ceased, and presently we saw the
remnants of Durnford's force, mostly mounted Basutos, galloping back to the
right of our position. What had actually happened I don't think we ever shall
know accurately. The ground was intersected with " dongas," and in them Russell
with his rocket battery was caught, and none escaped to tell the tale. I heard
later that Durnford, who was a gallant leader, actually reached the camp and
fell there fighting.
And now the Zulu Army, having swept away Durnford's force,
flushed with victory, moved steadily on to where the five companies of the 24th
were lying down covering the camp. They were giving vent to no loud war-cries,
but to a low musical murmuring noise, which gave the impression of a gigantic
swarm of bees getting nearer and nearer. Here was a more serious matter for
these brave warriors, for the regiment opposed to them were no boy recruits,
but warworn, matured men, mostly with beards, and fresh from a long campaign in
the old colony where they had carried everything before them. Possessed of
splendid discipline and sure of success, they lay on their position making
every round tell, so much so that when the Zulu Army was some 400 yards off, it
wavered.
After the War the Zulus, who were delightfully naive and
truthful people, told us that the fire was too hot for them and they were on
the verge of retreat, when suddenly the fire slackened and on they came again.
The reader will ask why the fire slackened, and the answer is, alas! because,
with thousands of rounds in the wagons 400 yards in rear, there was none in the
firing line ; all those had been used up.
I will mention a story which speaks for the coolness and
discipline of the regiment. I, having no particular duty to perform in camp,
when I saw the whole Zulu Army advancing, had collected camp stragglers, such
as artillerymen in charge of spare horses, officers' servants, sick, etc., and
had taken them to the ammunition-boxes, where we broke them open as fast as we
could, and kept sending out the packets to the firing-line. (In those days the
boxes were screwed down and it was a very difficult job to get them open, and
it was owing to this battle that the construction of the ammunition-boxes was
changed.)
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