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Battle of Diamond Hill

Battle of Diamond Hill
Part of Second Boer War

The Charge of the City of London Imperial Volunteers ('CIVs') and Coldstreams at the Battle of Diamond Hill, after a drawing by William Barnes Wollen
Date11–12 June 1900
Location
Diamond Hill, near Pretoria, Transvaal
25°47′S 28°28′E / 25.783°S 28.467°E / -25.783; 28.467 (Battle of Diamond Hill)Coordinates: 25°47′S 28°28′E / 25.783°S 28.467°E / -25.783; 28.467 (Battle of Diamond Hill)
Result British victory
Belligerents

 British Empire

 South African Republic
 Orange Free State
Commanders and leaders
Lord Roberts
John French
Ian Hamilton
Reginald Pole-Carew
Louis Botha
Koos de la Rey
Strength
20,000 men and 83 guns[1] up to 6,000 men and 30 guns[1]
Casualties and losses
28 killed and 145 wounded[1] about 30 killed and wounded
Several captured[1]

The Battle of Diamond Hill (Donkerhoek) (Afrikaans: Slag van Donkerhoek) was an engagement of the Second Boer War that took place on 11 and 12 June 1900 in central Transvaal.

Background

The Boer forces retreated to the east by the time the capital of the South African Republic (Transvaal), Pretoria, was captured by British forces on 5 June 1900. British Commander-in-Chief in South Africa Field Marshal Lord Roberts had predicted a Boer surrender upon the loss of their capital, but when this was not fulfilled, he began an attack to the east in order to push Boer forces away from Pretoria and enable an advance to the Portuguese East Africa border.[1]

Prelude

The commandant-general of Transvaal, Louis Botha, established a 40-kilometer north to south defensive line 29 kilometers east of Pretoria; his forces numbered up to 6,000 men and 30 guns. The Pretoria–Delagoa Bay rail line ran eastward through the center of the Boer position. Personnel from the South African Republic Police manned positions at Donkerpoort just south of the railway in the hills at Pienaarspoort, while other troops held positions at Donkerhoek and Diamond Hill. Botha commanded the Boer centre and left flank and General Koos de la Rey commanded north of the railway line.[1]

Weakened by the long march to Pretoria and the loss of horses and sick men, the British force mustered only 14,000, a third of whom were mounted on wobbly horses.[2]

He despatched Robert Broadwood's 2nd Cavalry Brigade, which included the 10th Royal Hussars, 12th Royal Lancers and the Household Cavalry Regiment, on a Special Mission.

As the sun came up it was a "bitterly cold Monday morning...we are hidden in the hills at Donkerhoek...ready for battle..." confided Botha to his diary.[3]

Battle

The cavalry of John French with Edward Hutton's brigade attacked on the left in an attempt to outflank the Boers to the north, while the infantry of Ian Hamilton with Lieutenant Colonel Beauvoir De Lisle's corps attempted an outflanking movement on the right. In the center, the infantry of Reginald Pole-Carew advanced towards the Boer center, with the gap between Pole-Carew and French covered by Colonel St.G.C. Henry's corps of mounted infantry.[2]

On the left, the cavalry of French entered a valley and attracted fire from three sides. De Lisle's corps was similarly pinned down on the right flank in a horseshoe-shaped group of hills. As a detachment of 10th Hussars swung off to the right, they were attacked from Diamond Hill. A section of Q Battery RHA attempted to return artillery fire, but had no infantry support, until the 12th Lancers arrived on the front line. Lord Airlie took 60 men to clear the Boers from the guns, and in the ensuing exchange of rifle fire at short-range, Lord Airlie was killed. The Boers pressed the matter hard. Two squadrons of the Household Cavalry Regiment and one squadron of the 12th Hussars charged at full gallop at Boers firing from concealed positions. The enemy dispersed.[4] Following the indecisive results of 11 June, Roberts decided to make a frontal attack on the next morning.[2]

The morning of 12 June with artillery fire from guns escorted to forward positions by a squadron of New South Wales Mounted Rifles led by Captain Maurice Hilliard, allowing a Regular infantry advance that captured Diamond Hill. A counterattack was planned by Botha, supported with fire from Rhenosterfontein Hill. The regular Mounted Infantry from De Lisle's corps advanced to a farm, where two rapid firing pom-poms were positioned, supported by the Western Australian Mounted Infantry of Hatherley Moor. The hill was attacked by the New South Wales Mounted Rifles, who trotted across the plain in extended order, then increased to a gallop under Boer fire before they dismounted at the base of the hill. The mounted rifles advanced up the hill and charged the Boer defenders, forcing the latter to retreat. They held the hill despite Boer artillery fire, which forced Botha to call off the counterattack, as British artillery fire from the hill carried the potential to confusion with the Boer retreat.[clarification needed] Among those killed in the attack were Lieutenants Percy Drage and William Harriott of the New South Wales Mounted Rifles.[2]

On the morning of 13 June De Lisle's corps pursued the retreating Boers until they expended their ammunition and received artillery fire in return.[2]

Aftermath

On 13th the Botha's army retreated to the north, they were chased as far as Elands River Station, only 25 miles from Pretoria, by Mounted Infantry and De Lisle's Australians.[5][6][7][8] Although Roberts had removed the Boer threat to his eastern flank, the Boers were unbowed despite their retreat. Jan Smuts wrote that the battle had "an inspiriting effect which could scarcely have been improved by a real victory."[9]

Forty-four years after the battle, British General Ian Hamilton opined in his memoirs that "the battle, which ensured that the Boers could not recapture Pretoria, was the turning point of the war". Hamilton credited war correspondent Winston Churchill with recognizing that the key to victory would be in storming the summit, and risking his life to signal Hamilton.[10]

Order of battle

British Forces

South African Field Force Field Marshal Lord Roberts
Cavalry Division (Lieutenant General John French)
1st Cavalry Brigade: Colonel T.C. Porter 4th Cavalry Brigade: Major General J.B.B. Dickson
2nd Dragoons (Royal Scots Greys) 7th Dragoon Guards
6th (Inniskilling) Dragoons 8th King's Royal Irish Hussars
Carabiniers (6th Dragoon Guards) 14th King's Hussars
New South Wales Lancers O Battery, Royal Horse Artillery
1st Australian Horse E Section Pom-Poms
T Battery, Royal Horse Artillery
J Section Pom-Poms
1st Mounted Infantry Brigade (Major-General Edward Hutton)
1st Corps Mounted Infantry: Lt-Col. Edwin Alderson 3rd Corps Mounted Infantry: Lt-Col. Thomas Pilcher
1st Canadian Mounted Rifles Queensland Mounted Infantry
2nd Canadian Mounted Rifles New Zealand Mounted Infantry
1st Battalion Mounted Infantry 3rd Battalion Mounted Infantry
G Battery Royal Horse Artillery
C Section Pom-Poms
4th Corps Mounted Infantry: Colonel St.G.C. Henry
South Australian Mounted Rifles 4th Battalion Mounted Infantry
Tasmanian Mounted Infantry J Battery, Royal Horse Artillery
Victorian Mounted Rifles L Section Pom-Poms
7th Imperial Yeomanry[11]
11th Division (Lieutenant General Reginald Pole-Carew)
1st (Guards') Brigade: Major-General Inigo Jones 18th Brigade: Major General Theodore Stephenson
3rd Grenadier Guards 1st Essex
1st Coldstream Guards 1st Yorkshire
2nd Coldstream Guards 2nd Royal Warwickshire
1st Scots Guards 1st Welsh
Division troops
2nd West Australian Mounted Infantry Struben's Scouts
Prince Alfred's Guard (detachment) 12th Imperial Yeomanry
83rd Field Battery, Royal Artillery 2 x Naval 4.7-inch guns (Bearcroft's)
84th Field Battery, Royal Artillery 2 x Naval 12-pounders
85th Field Battery, Royal Artillery 2 x 5-inch siege guns (Foster's)
Column of Lieutenant General Ian Hamilton
2nd Cavalry Brigade: Major General Robert George Broadwood 3rd Cavalry Brigade: Brigadier General J.R.P. Gordon
Composite Regiment of Household Cavalry 9th Lancers
10th Hussars 16th Lancers
12th Lancers 17th Lancers
Q Battery, Royal Horse Artillery R Battery, Royal Horse Artillery
K Section Pom-Poms D Section Pom-Poms
21st Brigade: Major General Bruce Hamilton
1st Royal Sussex 1st Derbyshire
1st Cameron Highlanders City Imperial Volunteers[12][13]
76th Field Battery, Royal Artillery 82nd Field Battery, Royal Artillery
2 x 5-inch siege guns (Massie's)[14]
2nd Mounted Infantry Brigade: Brigadier General Charles Parker Ridley
2nd Corps Mounted Infantry: Lieutenant Colonel Beauvoir De Lisle 5th Corps Mounted Infantry: Lieutenant Colonel H.L. Dawson
West Australian Mounted Infantry Marshall's Horse
6th Battalion Mounted Infantry Roberts' Horse
New South Wales Mounted Rifles Ceylon Mounted Infantry
P Battery, Royal Horse Artillery 5th Battalion Mounted Infantry
A Section Pom-Poms
6th Corps Mounted Infantry: Lieutenant Colonel Norton Legge 7th Corps Mounted Infantry: Lieutenant Colonel Guy Bainbridge
Kitchener's Horse Burma Mounted Infantry
City Imperial Volunteers Mounted Infantry Rimington's Guides
2nd Battalion Mounted Infantry 7th Battalion Mounted Infantry
Derby Mounted Infantry (2 companies)[12][13]
 
Memorial to Lieutenant P. W. C Drage who fell in the Battle of Diamond Hill. In St James' Church, Sydney.

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f Wessels 2017, pp. 236–237.
  2. ^ a b c d e Wilcox 2002, pp. 86–87.
  3. ^ Battle of Diamond Hill
  4. ^ Viljoen, My Reminiscences
  5. ^ "Diamond Hill – Rundle's Operations". Historion.net.
  6. ^ "Letter From The Front". The Inverell Times. Vol. 21, no. 2849. New South Wales. 18 August 1900. p. 2. Retrieved 22 November 2016.
  7. ^ "The Diamond Hill Fight". The Age. No. 14, 133. Victoria, Australia. 22 June 1900. p. 5. Retrieved 22 November 2016.
  8. ^ "The Battle of Diamond Hill". Windsor and Richmond Gazette. Vol. 12, no. 641. New South Wales. 26 January 1901. p. 1. Retrieved 22 November 2016.
  9. ^ Pakenham 1992, p. 160.
  10. ^ Kelly (2008) pp. 57–58
  11. ^ Maurice 1908, p. 217.
  12. ^ a b Williams 1906, pp. 503–505.
  13. ^ a b Williams 1906, p. 280.
  14. ^ Williams 1906, p. 290.

Bibliography

  • Brian Kelly, Best Little Stories from the Life and Times of Winston Churchill Cumberland House Publishing, 2008
  • Sir George Arthur, The Story of the Household Cavalry 1887–1900, vol.III
  • Maurice, John Frederick, ed. (1908). History of the war in South Africa, 1899–1902. Vol. III. London: Hurst and Blackett. – Official history
  • Pakenham, Thomas (1992). The Boer War (Paperback ed.). New York: Harper Perennial. ISBN 9780380720019.
  • Williams, Basil, ed. (1906). The Times History of the War in South Africa, 1899-1902. The Times. Vol. IV. London.
  • Ben Viljoen, My Reminiscences of the Anglo-Boer War, (Hood, Douglas and Howard 1902)
  • Wessels, André (2017). "Diamond Hill (Donkerhoek), Battle of (June 11–12, 1900)". In Stapleton, Timothy J. (ed.). Encyclopedia of African Colonial Conflicts. Vol. I. Santa Barbara, California: ABC-CLIO. ISBN 9781598848373.
  • Wilcox, Craig (2002). Australia's Boer War: The War in South Africa 1899–1902. South Melbourne: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-551637-0.

battle, diamond, hill, part, second, boer, warthe, charge, city, london, imperial, volunteers, civs, coldstreams, after, drawing, william, barnes, wollendate11, june, 1900locationdiamond, hill, near, pretoria, transvaal25, coordinates, resultbritish, victorybe. Battle of Diamond HillPart of Second Boer WarThe Charge of the City of London Imperial Volunteers CIVs and Coldstreams at the Battle of Diamond Hill after a drawing by William Barnes WollenDate11 12 June 1900LocationDiamond Hill near Pretoria Transvaal25 47 S 28 28 E 25 783 S 28 467 E 25 783 28 467 Battle of Diamond Hill Coordinates 25 47 S 28 28 E 25 783 S 28 467 E 25 783 28 467 Battle of Diamond Hill ResultBritish victoryBelligerents British Empire United Kingdom Canada Queensland Victoria Western Australia South Australia Tasmania New South Wales South African Republic Orange Free StateCommanders and leadersLord Roberts John French Ian Hamilton Reginald Pole CarewLouis Botha Koos de la ReyStrength20 000 men and 83 guns 1 up to 6 000 men and 30 guns 1 Casualties and losses28 killed and 145 wounded 1 about 30 killed and woundedSeveral captured 1 The Battle of Diamond Hill Donkerhoek Afrikaans Slag van Donkerhoek was an engagement of the Second Boer War that took place on 11 and 12 June 1900 in central Transvaal Contents 1 Background 2 Prelude 3 Battle 4 Aftermath 5 Order of battle 5 1 British Forces 6 References 7 BibliographyBackground EditThe Boer forces retreated to the east by the time the capital of the South African Republic Transvaal Pretoria was captured by British forces on 5 June 1900 British Commander in Chief in South Africa Field Marshal Lord Roberts had predicted a Boer surrender upon the loss of their capital but when this was not fulfilled he began an attack to the east in order to push Boer forces away from Pretoria and enable an advance to the Portuguese East Africa border 1 Prelude EditThe commandant general of Transvaal Louis Botha established a 40 kilometer north to south defensive line 29 kilometers east of Pretoria his forces numbered up to 6 000 men and 30 guns The Pretoria Delagoa Bay rail line ran eastward through the center of the Boer position Personnel from the South African Republic Police manned positions at Donkerpoort just south of the railway in the hills at Pienaarspoort while other troops held positions at Donkerhoek and Diamond Hill Botha commanded the Boer centre and left flank and General Koos de la Rey commanded north of the railway line 1 Weakened by the long march to Pretoria and the loss of horses and sick men the British force mustered only 14 000 a third of whom were mounted on wobbly horses 2 He despatched Robert Broadwood s 2nd Cavalry Brigade which included the 10th Royal Hussars 12th Royal Lancers and the Household Cavalry Regiment on a Special Mission As the sun came up it was a bitterly cold Monday morning we are hidden in the hills at Donkerhoek ready for battle confided Botha to his diary 3 Battle EditThe cavalry of John French with Edward Hutton s brigade attacked on the left in an attempt to outflank the Boers to the north while the infantry of Ian Hamilton with Lieutenant Colonel Beauvoir De Lisle s corps attempted an outflanking movement on the right In the center the infantry of Reginald Pole Carew advanced towards the Boer center with the gap between Pole Carew and French covered by Colonel St G C Henry s corps of mounted infantry 2 On the left the cavalry of French entered a valley and attracted fire from three sides De Lisle s corps was similarly pinned down on the right flank in a horseshoe shaped group of hills As a detachment of 10th Hussars swung off to the right they were attacked from Diamond Hill A section of Q Battery RHA attempted to return artillery fire but had no infantry support until the 12th Lancers arrived on the front line Lord Airlie took 60 men to clear the Boers from the guns and in the ensuing exchange of rifle fire at short range Lord Airlie was killed The Boers pressed the matter hard Two squadrons of the Household Cavalry Regiment and one squadron of the 12th Hussars charged at full gallop at Boers firing from concealed positions The enemy dispersed 4 Following the indecisive results of 11 June Roberts decided to make a frontal attack on the next morning 2 The morning of 12 June with artillery fire from guns escorted to forward positions by a squadron of New South Wales Mounted Rifles led by Captain Maurice Hilliard allowing a Regular infantry advance that captured Diamond Hill A counterattack was planned by Botha supported with fire from Rhenosterfontein Hill The regular Mounted Infantry from De Lisle s corps advanced to a farm where two rapid firing pom poms were positioned supported by the Western Australian Mounted Infantry of Hatherley Moor The hill was attacked by the New South Wales Mounted Rifles who trotted across the plain in extended order then increased to a gallop under Boer fire before they dismounted at the base of the hill The mounted rifles advanced up the hill and charged the Boer defenders forcing the latter to retreat They held the hill despite Boer artillery fire which forced Botha to call off the counterattack as British artillery fire from the hill carried the potential to confusion with the Boer retreat clarification needed Among those killed in the attack were Lieutenants Percy Drage and William Harriott of the New South Wales Mounted Rifles 2 On the morning of 13 June De Lisle s corps pursued the retreating Boers until they expended their ammunition and received artillery fire in return 2 Aftermath EditOn 13th the Botha s army retreated to the north they were chased as far as Elands River Station only 25 miles from Pretoria by Mounted Infantry and De Lisle s Australians 5 6 7 8 Although Roberts had removed the Boer threat to his eastern flank the Boers were unbowed despite their retreat Jan Smuts wrote that the battle had an inspiriting effect which could scarcely have been improved by a real victory 9 Forty four years after the battle British General Ian Hamilton opined in his memoirs that the battle which ensured that the Boers could not recapture Pretoria was the turning point of the war Hamilton credited war correspondent Winston Churchill with recognizing that the key to victory would be in storming the summit and risking his life to signal Hamilton 10 Order of battle EditBritish Forces Edit South African Field Force Field Marshal Lord RobertsCavalry Division Lieutenant General John French 1st Cavalry Brigade Colonel T C Porter 4th Cavalry Brigade Major General J B B Dickson2nd Dragoons Royal Scots Greys 7th Dragoon Guards6th Inniskilling Dragoons 8th King s Royal Irish HussarsCarabiniers 6th Dragoon Guards 14th King s HussarsNew South Wales Lancers O Battery Royal Horse Artillery1st Australian Horse E Section Pom PomsT Battery Royal Horse ArtilleryJ Section Pom Poms1st Mounted Infantry Brigade Major General Edward Hutton 1st Corps Mounted Infantry Lt Col Edwin Alderson 3rd Corps Mounted Infantry Lt Col Thomas Pilcher1st Canadian Mounted Rifles Queensland Mounted Infantry2nd Canadian Mounted Rifles New Zealand Mounted Infantry1st Battalion Mounted Infantry 3rd Battalion Mounted InfantryG Battery Royal Horse ArtilleryC Section Pom Poms4th Corps Mounted Infantry Colonel St G C HenrySouth Australian Mounted Rifles 4th Battalion Mounted InfantryTasmanian Mounted Infantry J Battery Royal Horse ArtilleryVictorian Mounted Rifles L Section Pom Poms7th Imperial Yeomanry 11 11th Division Lieutenant General Reginald Pole Carew 1st Guards Brigade Major General Inigo Jones 18th Brigade Major General Theodore Stephenson3rd Grenadier Guards 1st Essex1st Coldstream Guards 1st Yorkshire2nd Coldstream Guards 2nd Royal Warwickshire1st Scots Guards 1st WelshDivision troops2nd West Australian Mounted Infantry Struben s ScoutsPrince Alfred s Guard detachment 12th Imperial Yeomanry83rd Field Battery Royal Artillery 2 x Naval 4 7 inch guns Bearcroft s 84th Field Battery Royal Artillery 2 x Naval 12 pounders85th Field Battery Royal Artillery 2 x 5 inch siege guns Foster s Column of Lieutenant General Ian Hamilton2nd Cavalry Brigade Major General Robert George Broadwood 3rd Cavalry Brigade Brigadier General J R P GordonComposite Regiment of Household Cavalry 9th Lancers10th Hussars 16th Lancers12th Lancers 17th LancersQ Battery Royal Horse Artillery R Battery Royal Horse ArtilleryK Section Pom Poms D Section Pom Poms21st Brigade Major General Bruce Hamilton1st Royal Sussex 1st Derbyshire1st Cameron Highlanders City Imperial Volunteers 12 13 76th Field Battery Royal Artillery 82nd Field Battery Royal Artillery2 x 5 inch siege guns Massie s 14 2nd Mounted Infantry Brigade Brigadier General Charles Parker Ridley2nd Corps Mounted Infantry Lieutenant Colonel Beauvoir De Lisle 5th Corps Mounted Infantry Lieutenant Colonel H L DawsonWest Australian Mounted Infantry Marshall s Horse6th Battalion Mounted Infantry Roberts HorseNew South Wales Mounted Rifles Ceylon Mounted InfantryP Battery Royal Horse Artillery 5th Battalion Mounted InfantryA Section Pom Poms6th Corps Mounted Infantry Lieutenant Colonel Norton Legge 7th Corps Mounted Infantry Lieutenant Colonel Guy BainbridgeKitchener s Horse Burma Mounted InfantryCity Imperial Volunteers Mounted Infantry Rimington s Guides2nd Battalion Mounted Infantry 7th Battalion Mounted InfantryDerby Mounted Infantry 2 companies 12 13 Memorial to Lieutenant P W C Drage who fell in the Battle of Diamond Hill In St James Church Sydney References Edit a b c d e f Wessels 2017 pp 236 237 a b c d e Wilcox 2002 pp 86 87 Battle of Diamond Hill Viljoen My Reminiscences Diamond Hill Rundle s Operations Historion net Letter From The Front The Inverell Times Vol 21 no 2849 New South Wales 18 August 1900 p 2 Retrieved 22 November 2016 The Diamond Hill Fight The Age No 14 133 Victoria Australia 22 June 1900 p 5 Retrieved 22 November 2016 The Battle of Diamond Hill Windsor and Richmond Gazette Vol 12 no 641 New South Wales 26 January 1901 p 1 Retrieved 22 November 2016 Pakenham 1992 p 160 Kelly 2008 pp 57 58 Maurice 1908 p 217 a b Williams 1906 pp 503 505 a b Williams 1906 p 280 Williams 1906 p 290 Bibliography EditBrian Kelly Best Little Stories from the Life and Times of Winston Churchill Cumberland House Publishing 2008 Sir George Arthur The Story of the Household Cavalry 1887 1900 vol III Maurice John Frederick ed 1908 History of the war in South Africa 1899 1902 Vol III London Hurst and Blackett Official history Pakenham Thomas 1992 The Boer War Paperback ed New York Harper Perennial ISBN 9780380720019 Williams Basil ed 1906 The Times History of the War in South Africa 1899 1902 The Times Vol IV London Ben Viljoen My Reminiscences of the Anglo Boer War Hood Douglas and Howard 1902 Wessels Andre 2017 Diamond Hill Donkerhoek Battle of June 11 12 1900 In Stapleton Timothy J ed Encyclopedia of African Colonial Conflicts Vol I Santa Barbara California ABC CLIO ISBN 9781598848373 Wilcox Craig 2002 Australia s Boer War The War in South Africa 1899 1902 South Melbourne Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 551637 0 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Battle of Diamond Hill amp oldid 1088411753, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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