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Siege of Ladysmith

Siege of Ladysmith
Part of Second Boer War

The town hall at Ladysmith, showing shell damage to the tower
Date2 November 1899 – 28 February 1900
(3 months, 3 weeks and 5 days)
Location
Ladysmith, Natal
(present-day South Africa)
28°33.6′S 29°46.8′E / 28.5600°S 29.7800°E / -28.5600; 29.7800 (Ladysmith)
Result British victory
Belligerents
 United Kingdom  Transvaal
 Orange Free State
Commanders and leaders
George Stuart White Petrus Jacobus Joubert
Louis Botha
Christiaan De Wet
Strength
12,500 max 21,000 men
Casualties and losses
c. 850 killed and wounded
800 prisoners
52+ killed
Total casualties unknown

The siege of Ladysmith was a protracted engagement in the Second Boer War, taking place between 2 November 1899 and 28 February 1900 at Ladysmith, Natal.

Background edit

As war with the Boer republics appeared likely in June 1899, the War Office in Britain dispatched a total of 15,000 troops to Natal, expecting that if war broke out they would be capable of defending the colony until reinforcements could be mobilized and sent to South Africa by steamship. Some of these troops were diverted while returning to Britain from India; others were sent from garrisons in the Mediterranean and elsewhere. Lieutenant General Sir George White was appointed to command this enlarged force. White was 64 years old and suffered from a leg injury incurred in a riding accident. Having served mainly in India, he had little previous experience in South Africa.

Outbreak of war edit

Contrary to the advice of several British officials such as Sir Alfred Milner, the High Commissioner for Southern Africa, the Boer governments were not over-awed by the despatch of British troops to Natal. Instead, they regarded it as evidence of Britain's determination to seize control of the Boer republics. The Transvaal government under President Paul Kruger considered launching an attack in September, but President Steyn of the Orange Free State, who would later become the spiritual heart of the Boer resistance, dissuaded them for several weeks while he tried to act as intermediary. With the complete breakdown in negotiations, both republics declared war and attacked on 12 October.

A total of 21,000 Boers advanced into Natal from all sides.[1] White had been advised to deploy his force far back, well clear of the area of northern Natal known as the "Natal Triangle", a wedge of land lying between the two Boer republics.[2] Instead, White deployed his forces around the garrison town of Ladysmith,[3] with a detachment even further forward at Dundee. The entire British force could concentrate only after fighting two battles at Talana Hill and Elandslaagte. As the Boers surrounded Ladysmith, White ordered a sortie by his entire force to capture the Boer artillery. The result was the disastrous Battle of Ladysmith, in which the British were driven back into the town having lost 1,200 men killed, wounded, or captured.

Siege edit

 
Sketch map of the positions in November 1899

The Boers then proceeded to surround Ladysmith and cut the railway link to Durban. Major General John French and his chief of staff, Major Douglas Haig escaped on the last train to leave, which was riddled with bullets.

This town was then besieged for 118 days. White knew that large reinforcements were arriving, and could communicate with British units south of the Tugela River by searchlight and heliograph. He expected relief soon. Meanwhile, his troops carried out several raids and sorties to sabotage Boer artillery.

Louis Botha commanded the Boer detachment which first raided Southern Natal, and then dug in north of the Tugela to hold off the relief force. On 15 December 1899, the first relief attempt was defeated at the Battle of Colenso. Temporarily unnerved, the relief force commander, General Redvers Henry Buller, suggested that White either break out or destroy his stores and ammunition and surrender. White could not break out because his horses and draught animals were weak from lack of grazing and forage, but also refused to surrender.

On Christmas Day 1899, the Boers fired into Ladysmith a carrier shell without fuze, which contained a Christmas pudding, two Union Flags and the message "compliments of the season". The shell is still kept in the museum at Ladysmith.

Battle of Wagon Hill (or Platrand) edit

 
Imperial Light Horse Memorial on Platrand Ladysmith (28°35′28″S 29°45′33″E / 28.59104°S 29.75909°E / -28.59104; 29.75909) – at the location of the Battle of Wagon Hill in which 30 men from the regiment died and whose names are engraved on the monument.

The Boers around Ladysmith were also growing weak from lack of forage. With little action, many fighters took unauthorised leave or brought their families into the siege encampments. Eventually, with the Tugela in flood, preventing Buller from giving any support,[4] some younger Boer leaders persuaded General Piet Joubert to order a storming attempt on the night of 5 January 1900, before another relief attempt could be made.

The British line south of Ladysmith ran along a ridge known as the Platrand. The occupying British troops had named its features Wagon Hill to the west and to the east Caesar's Camp (after features near Aldershot, well known to much of the British army[citation needed]).[5] Under Ian Hamilton, they had constructed a line of forts, sangars and entrenchments on the reverse slope of the Platrand, of which the Boers were unaware.[citation needed]

In the early hours of 6 January 1900, Boer storming parties under General C.J. de Villiers began climbing Wagon Hill and Caesar's Camp. They were spotted and engaged by British working parties who were emplacing some guns. The Boers captured the edge of both features, but could not advance further. British counter-attacks also failed.[5]

At noon, de Villiers made another attack on Wagon Hill. Some exhausted defenders panicked and fled, but Hamilton led reserves to the spot and recaptured some empty gun pits. Late in the afternoon, a terrific rainstorm broke, and the Boers withdrew under cover of it.[5]

The British suffered 175 killed and 249 wounded. 52 dead Boers were left in the British positions, but their total casualties were not recorded.

Later siege and relief edit

 
The Relief of Ladysmith. Painting by John Henry Frederick Bacon (1868–1914)
 
Rejoicing in St. Andrews, Canada upon receipt of the news of the relief of Ladysmith

While Buller made repeated attempts to fight his way across the Tugela, the defenders of Ladysmith suffered increasingly from shortage of food and other supplies, and from disease, mainly enteric fever or typhoid, which claimed among many others, the life of noted war correspondent G.W. Steevens. The Boers had long before captured Ladysmith's water supply, and the defenders could use only the muddy Klip River.

Towards the end of the siege, the garrison and townsfolk were living largely on their remaining draught oxen and horses (mainly in the form of "chevril", a meat paste named after the commercial beef extract "Bovril").

Eventually, Buller broke through the Boer positions on 27 February. Following their succession of reverses, his troops had developed effective tactics based on close cooperation between the infantry and artillery. After the protracted struggle, the morale of Botha's men at last broke and they and the besiegers retreated, covered by another huge thunderstorm. Buller did not pursue, and White's men were too weak to do so.

The first party of the relief column, under Major Hubert Gough and accompanied by war correspondent Winston Churchill, rode in on the evening of 28 February.[6] White reportedly greeted them saying, "Thank God we kept the flag flying".[7]

Aftermath edit

 
Varieties of ammunition collected at Ladysmith

The relief was widely celebrated,[8] followed by much larger celebrations after the siege of Mafeking. There were four Victoria Crosses awarded during the siege: John Norwood on 30 October 1899, at Wagon Hill on 6 January 1900, Herman Albrecht and Robert James Thomas Digby-Jones (who both died), and James Edward Ignatius Masterson.

Medical treatment during the siege edit

Early in the siege an agreement between George Stuart White and Piet Joubert led to the creation of the neutral Intombi Military Hospital some 5 kilometres (3.1 mi) outside Ladysmith. This was run by Major General (later Sir) David Bruce and his wife Mary.[9] During the siege, the number of beds in the hospital camp grew from the initial 100 to a total of 1900. A total of 10,673 admissions were received and treated at Intombi.[10] One train per day was allowed to carry wounded from Ladysmith to Intombi.[11]

Notable casualties during the siege edit

  • Arthur Stark, author of The Birds of South Africa, was killed after being hit by an unexploded Boer shell in the Royal Hotel.[12]
  • George Warrington Steevens, British author and war correspondent, of enteric fever.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Pakenham, p. 106
  2. ^ Pakenham, pp. 97, 107
  3. ^ Durand, Henry Mortimer; White, George Stuart (1915). "III – Arrival in South Africa". The life of Field-Marshal Sir George White, V.C. Vol. II. Edinburgh, London: W. Blackwood. pp. 17–27. Retrieved 1 December 2009.
  4. ^ Symons, Julian (1963), "10 – Spion Kop", Buller's Campaign, London: The Cresset Press, p. 191
  5. ^ a b c Spiers, Edward, ed. (2010), Letters from Ladysmith: Eyewitness Accounts from the South African War (illustrated ed.), Frontline Books, p. 77–84, ISBN 9781848325944
  6. ^ Churchill, W.S. London to Ladysmith via Pretoria, London: Longmans, Green & Co. 1900, pp. 208–10
  7. ^ "Boer Traits and British Traits" (PDF). The New York Times. 6 March 1900. Retrieved 11 May 2009.
  8. ^ "Small Riots in Cape Colony" (PDF). The New York Times. 5 March 1900. p. 2.
  9. ^ Stirling's Talking Stones ISBN 1-870-542-48-7
  10. ^ Watt, S. "Intombi Military Hospital and Cemetery". Military History Journal. 5 (6). Die Suid-Afrikaanse Krygshistoriese Vereniging.
  11. ^ "Intombi". LadysmithHistory.com. Retrieved 11 May 2009.
  12. ^ Nevinson, Henry. Ladysmith – The Diary of a Siege. p. 106.

Bibliography edit

  • Breytenbach, J. H. (1969–1996). Die Geskiedenis van die Tweede Vryheidsoorlog in Suid-Afrika, 1899–1902 [The History of the Second War of Independence in South Africa, 1899–1902] (in Afrikaans). Pretoria: Die Staatsdrukker.
    • Breytenbach, J. H. (1969). Die Boere-offensief, Okt. – Nov. 1899 [The Boer Offensive, Oct. – Nov. 1899]. Die Geskiedenis van die Tweede Vryheidsoorlog in Suid-Afrika, 1899–1902 (in Afrikaans). Vol. I. Pretoria: Die Staatsdrukker. OCLC 798106662.
    • Breytenbach, J. H. (1971). Die eerste Britse offensief, Nov. – Des. 1899 [The first British offensive, Nov. – Dec. 1899]. Die Geskiedenis van die Tweede Vryheidsoorlog in Suid-Afrika, 1899–1902 (in Afrikaans). Vol. II. Pretoria: Die Staatsdrukker. OCLC 768446219.
    • Breytenbach, J. H. (1973). Die stryd in Natal, Jan. – Feb. 1900 [The battle in Natal, Jan. – Feb. 1900]. Die Geskiedenis van die Tweede Vryheidsoorlog in Suid-Afrika, 1899–1902 (in Afrikaans). Vol. III. Pretoria: Die Staatsdrukker. ISBN 9780797012394. OCLC 612581136.
  • Donald, MacDonald (1900). How We Kept the Flag Flying: The Story of the Siege of Ladysmith. Ward, Lock & Co. Available as How We Kept the Flag Flying: The Story of the Siege of Ladysmith at the Internet Archive.
  • Kruger, Rayne; Goodbye Dolly Gray, New English Library, 1964.
  • McElwee, William; The Art of War: Waterloo to Mons, Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1974. ISBN 0-253-20214-0.
  • Pakenham, Thomas; The Boer War, Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 1979, ISBN 0-7474-0976-5.
  • Reitz, Deneys (1929). Commando: A Boer Journal of the Boer War. ISBN 0-571-08778-7.
  • Richards, Maureen (1999). Into the millennium : Anglo-Boer War centenary diary : today and 100 years ago. October 1899-December 1900, October 1999-December 2000. Pietermaritzburg: Shuter & Shooter. ISBN 0796014930. OCLC 44904717.

External links edit

  • Ladysmith, The Diary of a Siege by Henry W. Nevinson at Project Gutenberg
  • Four Months Besieged, The Story of Ladysmith by H. H. S. Pearse at Project Gutenberg
  • The Record of a Regiment of the Line by M. Jacson at Project Gutenberg, Being a Regimental History of the 1st Battalion Devonshire Regiment during the Boer War 1899–1902. Deals extensively with the Siege of Ladysmith
  • Conan Doyle, Arthur; The Great Boer War
  • Creswicke, Louis; South Africa and the Transvaal War, Vol. 2 (of 6)

siege, ladysmith, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, august, 2. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Siege of Ladysmith news newspapers books scholar JSTOR August 2010 Learn how and when to remove this message Siege of LadysmithPart of Second Boer WarThe town hall at Ladysmith showing shell damage to the towerDate2 November 1899 28 February 1900 3 months 3 weeks and 5 days LocationLadysmith Natal present day South Africa 28 33 6 S 29 46 8 E 28 5600 S 29 7800 E 28 5600 29 7800 Ladysmith ResultBritish victoryBelligerents United Kingdom Transvaal Orange Free StateCommanders and leadersGeorge Stuart WhitePetrus Jacobus Joubert Louis Botha Christiaan De WetStrength12 500max 21 000 menCasualties and lossesc 850 killed and wounded800 prisoners52 killedTotal casualties unknown The siege of Ladysmith was a protracted engagement in the Second Boer War taking place between 2 November 1899 and 28 February 1900 at Ladysmith Natal Contents 1 Background 2 Outbreak of war 3 Siege 4 Battle of Wagon Hill or Platrand 5 Later siege and relief 6 Aftermath 7 Medical treatment during the siege 8 Notable casualties during the siege 9 See also 10 References 11 Bibliography 12 External linksBackground editAs war with the Boer republics appeared likely in June 1899 the War Office in Britain dispatched a total of 15 000 troops to Natal expecting that if war broke out they would be capable of defending the colony until reinforcements could be mobilized and sent to South Africa by steamship Some of these troops were diverted while returning to Britain from India others were sent from garrisons in the Mediterranean and elsewhere Lieutenant General Sir George White was appointed to command this enlarged force White was 64 years old and suffered from a leg injury incurred in a riding accident Having served mainly in India he had little previous experience in South Africa Outbreak of war editContrary to the advice of several British officials such as Sir Alfred Milner the High Commissioner for Southern Africa the Boer governments were not over awed by the despatch of British troops to Natal Instead they regarded it as evidence of Britain s determination to seize control of the Boer republics The Transvaal government under President Paul Kruger considered launching an attack in September but President Steyn of the Orange Free State who would later become the spiritual heart of the Boer resistance dissuaded them for several weeks while he tried to act as intermediary With the complete breakdown in negotiations both republics declared war and attacked on 12 October A total of 21 000 Boers advanced into Natal from all sides 1 White had been advised to deploy his force far back well clear of the area of northern Natal known as the Natal Triangle a wedge of land lying between the two Boer republics 2 Instead White deployed his forces around the garrison town of Ladysmith 3 with a detachment even further forward at Dundee The entire British force could concentrate only after fighting two battles at Talana Hill and Elandslaagte As the Boers surrounded Ladysmith White ordered a sortie by his entire force to capture the Boer artillery The result was the disastrous Battle of Ladysmith in which the British were driven back into the town having lost 1 200 men killed wounded or captured Siege edit nbsp Sketch map of the positions in November 1899 The Boers then proceeded to surround Ladysmith and cut the railway link to Durban Major General John French and his chief of staff Major Douglas Haig escaped on the last train to leave which was riddled with bullets This town was then besieged for 118 days White knew that large reinforcements were arriving and could communicate with British units south of the Tugela River by searchlight and heliograph He expected relief soon Meanwhile his troops carried out several raids and sorties to sabotage Boer artillery Louis Botha commanded the Boer detachment which first raided Southern Natal and then dug in north of the Tugela to hold off the relief force On 15 December 1899 the first relief attempt was defeated at the Battle of Colenso Temporarily unnerved the relief force commander General Redvers Henry Buller suggested that White either break out or destroy his stores and ammunition and surrender White could not break out because his horses and draught animals were weak from lack of grazing and forage but also refused to surrender On Christmas Day 1899 the Boers fired into Ladysmith a carrier shell without fuze which contained a Christmas pudding two Union Flags and the message compliments of the season The shell is still kept in the museum at Ladysmith Battle of Wagon Hill or Platrand edit nbsp Imperial Light Horse Memorial on Platrand Ladysmith 28 35 28 S 29 45 33 E 28 59104 S 29 75909 E 28 59104 29 75909 at the location of the Battle of Wagon Hill in which 30 men from the regiment died and whose names are engraved on the monument The Boers around Ladysmith were also growing weak from lack of forage With little action many fighters took unauthorised leave or brought their families into the siege encampments Eventually with the Tugela in flood preventing Buller from giving any support 4 some younger Boer leaders persuaded General Piet Joubert to order a storming attempt on the night of 5 January 1900 before another relief attempt could be made The British line south of Ladysmith ran along a ridge known as the Platrand The occupying British troops had named its features Wagon Hill to the west and to the east Caesar s Camp after features near Aldershot well known to much of the British army citation needed 5 Under Ian Hamilton they had constructed a line of forts sangars and entrenchments on the reverse slope of the Platrand of which the Boers were unaware citation needed In the early hours of 6 January 1900 Boer storming parties under General C J de Villiers began climbing Wagon Hill and Caesar s Camp They were spotted and engaged by British working parties who were emplacing some guns The Boers captured the edge of both features but could not advance further British counter attacks also failed 5 At noon de Villiers made another attack on Wagon Hill Some exhausted defenders panicked and fled but Hamilton led reserves to the spot and recaptured some empty gun pits Late in the afternoon a terrific rainstorm broke and the Boers withdrew under cover of it 5 The British suffered 175 killed and 249 wounded 52 dead Boers were left in the British positions but their total casualties were not recorded Later siege and relief editMain article Relief of Ladysmith nbsp The Relief of Ladysmith Painting by John Henry Frederick Bacon 1868 1914 nbsp Rejoicing in St Andrews Canada upon receipt of the news of the relief of Ladysmith While Buller made repeated attempts to fight his way across the Tugela the defenders of Ladysmith suffered increasingly from shortage of food and other supplies and from disease mainly enteric fever or typhoid which claimed among many others the life of noted war correspondent G W Steevens The Boers had long before captured Ladysmith s water supply and the defenders could use only the muddy Klip River Towards the end of the siege the garrison and townsfolk were living largely on their remaining draught oxen and horses mainly in the form of chevril a meat paste named after the commercial beef extract Bovril Eventually Buller broke through the Boer positions on 27 February Following their succession of reverses his troops had developed effective tactics based on close cooperation between the infantry and artillery After the protracted struggle the morale of Botha s men at last broke and they and the besiegers retreated covered by another huge thunderstorm Buller did not pursue and White s men were too weak to do so The first party of the relief column under Major Hubert Gough and accompanied by war correspondent Winston Churchill rode in on the evening of 28 February 6 White reportedly greeted them saying Thank God we kept the flag flying 7 Aftermath edit nbsp Varieties of ammunition collected at Ladysmith The relief was widely celebrated 8 followed by much larger celebrations after the siege of Mafeking There were four Victoria Crosses awarded during the siege John Norwood on 30 October 1899 at Wagon Hill on 6 January 1900 Herman Albrecht and Robert James Thomas Digby Jones who both died and James Edward Ignatius Masterson Medical treatment during the siege editEarly in the siege an agreement between George Stuart White and Piet Joubert led to the creation of the neutral Intombi Military Hospital some 5 kilometres 3 1 mi outside Ladysmith This was run by Major General later Sir David Bruce and his wife Mary 9 During the siege the number of beds in the hospital camp grew from the initial 100 to a total of 1900 A total of 10 673 admissions were received and treated at Intombi 10 One train per day was allowed to carry wounded from Ladysmith to Intombi 11 Notable casualties during the siege editArthur Stark author of The Birds of South Africa was killed after being hit by an unexploded Boer shell in the Royal Hotel 12 George Warrington Steevens British author and war correspondent of enteric fever See also editField gun competition Clive MacDonnell Dixon William Henry WrightReferences edit Pakenham p 106 Pakenham pp 97 107 Durand Henry Mortimer White George Stuart 1915 III Arrival in South Africa The life of Field Marshal Sir George White V C Vol II Edinburgh London W Blackwood pp 17 27 Retrieved 1 December 2009 Symons Julian 1963 10 Spion Kop Buller s Campaign London The Cresset Press p 191 a b c Spiers Edward ed 2010 Letters from Ladysmith Eyewitness Accounts from the South African War illustrated ed Frontline Books p 77 84 ISBN 9781848325944 Churchill W S London to Ladysmith via Pretoria London Longmans Green amp Co 1900 pp 208 10 Boer Traits and British Traits PDF The New York Times 6 March 1900 Retrieved 11 May 2009 Small Riots in Cape Colony PDF The New York Times 5 March 1900 p 2 Stirling s Talking Stones ISBN 1 870 542 48 7 Watt S Intombi Military Hospital and Cemetery Military History Journal 5 6 Die Suid Afrikaanse Krygshistoriese Vereniging Intombi LadysmithHistory com Retrieved 11 May 2009 Nevinson Henry Ladysmith The Diary of a Siege p 106 Bibliography editBreytenbach J H 1969 1996 Die Geskiedenis van die Tweede Vryheidsoorlog in Suid Afrika 1899 1902 The History of the Second War of Independence in South Africa 1899 1902 in Afrikaans Pretoria Die Staatsdrukker Breytenbach J H 1969 Die Boere offensief Okt Nov 1899 The Boer Offensive Oct Nov 1899 Die Geskiedenis van die Tweede Vryheidsoorlog in Suid Afrika 1899 1902 in Afrikaans Vol I Pretoria Die Staatsdrukker OCLC 798106662 Breytenbach J H 1971 Die eerste Britse offensief Nov Des 1899 The first British offensive Nov Dec 1899 Die Geskiedenis van die Tweede Vryheidsoorlog in Suid Afrika 1899 1902 in Afrikaans Vol II Pretoria Die Staatsdrukker OCLC 768446219 Breytenbach J H 1973 Die stryd in Natal Jan Feb 1900 The battle in Natal Jan Feb 1900 Die Geskiedenis van die Tweede Vryheidsoorlog in Suid Afrika 1899 1902 in Afrikaans Vol III Pretoria Die Staatsdrukker ISBN 9780797012394 OCLC 612581136 Donald MacDonald 1900 How We Kept the Flag Flying The Story of the Siege of Ladysmith Ward Lock amp Co Available as How We Kept the Flag Flying The Story of the Siege of Ladysmith at the Internet Archive Kruger Rayne Goodbye Dolly Gray New English Library 1964 McElwee William The Art of War Waterloo to Mons Bloomington Indiana University Press 1974 ISBN 0 253 20214 0 Pakenham Thomas The Boer War Weidenfeld amp Nicolson 1979 ISBN 0 7474 0976 5 Reitz Deneys 1929 Commando A Boer Journal of the Boer War ISBN 0 571 08778 7 Richards Maureen 1999 Into the millennium Anglo Boer War centenary diary today and 100 years ago October 1899 December 1900 October 1999 December 2000 Pietermaritzburg Shuter amp Shooter ISBN 0796014930 OCLC 44904717 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Siege of Ladysmith Ladysmith The Diary of a Siege by Henry W Nevinson at Project Gutenberg Four Months Besieged The Story of Ladysmith by H H S Pearse at Project Gutenberg London to Ladysmith via Pretoria by Sir Winston S Churchill at Project Gutenberg The Record of a Regiment of the Line by M Jacson at Project Gutenberg Being a Regimental History of the 1st Battalion Devonshire Regiment during the Boer War 1899 1902 Deals extensively with the Siege of Ladysmith Conan Doyle Arthur The Great Boer War Creswicke Louis South Africa and the Transvaal War Vol 2 of 6 The Great Boer War Chapter 13 The Siege Of Ladysmith Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Siege of Ladysmith amp oldid 1214816586 Battle of Platrand, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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