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Bamford - A Bold and Ambitious Enterprise: the British Army in the Low Countries, 1813-1814

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Bamford A Bold and Ambitious Enterprise: the British Army in the Low Countries, 1813-1814
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A Bold and Ambitious Enterprise: the British Army in the Low Countries, 1813-1814: summary, description and annotation

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Title Page; Copyright Page; Table of Contents; Plates; Introduction; Chapter I -- Not at Present in a Fit State; Chapter II -- An Essential Service; Chapter III -- First Blasts of Patriotism; Chapter IV -- Experienced Troops Are So Much Wanted; Chapter V -- We Drove Them Before Us Like Sheep; Chapter VI -- A Want of Bon Foi; Chapter VII -- A Fair Trial Against Antwerp; Chapter VIII -- Want of Means and of Time; Chapter IX -- We Might Get Hold of Bergen-op-Zoom; Chapter X -- I Am in First; Chapter XI -- Filled with Melancholy Forebodings;The British campaign in the Low Countries in 1813-14 in support of the Dutch revolt against the French is one of the lesser-known campaigns of the Napoleonic Wars, but one, which the great historian of the British Army Sir John Fortescue wrote that it was impossible to understand the Waterloo campaign without a knowledge of. The book deals with all aspects of the campaign, from grand strategy, with the proposed marriage alliance between the House of Orange and the House of Hanover, to tactical analysis of the battles and sieges that took place, including the disastrous attack on Bergen-op-Zoom, where heroic British soldiers paid with their lives for their commanders failures. The problems of co-operation between the British and Prussians described here foreshadowed those, which would affect Wellington in 1815. Illustrated with contemporary portraits, plans of the fortifications of Bergen and eight maps.

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Table of Contents Appendix I Proposed and Actual Strengths for Grahams - photo 1
Table of Contents

Appendix I
Proposed and Actual Strengths for Grahams Forces, December 1813
Appendix II Order of Battle for the First Advance on Antwerp 1016 January - photo 2
Appendix II
Order of Battle for the First Advance on Antwerp, 1016 January 1814

Commander-in-Chief: General Sir Thomas Graham

First Division:Major General George Cooke
Guards Brigade:Colonel Lord Proby
2/1st Foot Guards
2/Coldstream Guards
2/3rd (Scots) Foot Guards
First Brigade:Major General Herbert Taylor
2/44th (East Essex)
55th (Westmoreland)
2/69th (South Lincolnshire)
Divisional Artillery
Rogerss Brigade (2nd Company, 3rd Battalion, RA)
Second Division:Major General Kenneth Mackenzie
Light Brigade:Major General Samuel Gibbs
2/35th (Sussex)
2/52nd (Oxfordshire Light Inf.)
2/73rd
Rifle Battalion
Second Brigade:Colonel John Macleod
2/25th (Kings Own Borderers)
33rd (1st Yorks. West Riding)
54th (West Norfolk)
3/56th (West Essex)
2/78th (Highland)
Divisional Artillery
Fyerss Brigade (9th Company, 3rd Battalion, RA)
Cavalry:Lieutenant Colonel Baron Linsingen
2nd KGL Hussars
Left in Garrison
2/21st (Royal North British Fusiliers)
2/37th (North Hampshire)
1st Royal Veteran Battalion
For most unit strengths, see Appendix I. Earliest strengths for 2/21st and 2/78th are from 25 January, being 282 (174 effective) and 315 (262 effective) respectively.
Duncan, Francis, History of the Royal Regiment of Artillery . London: John Murray, 1873, Vol. I, p. 223, only gives Rogerss Brigade as present at Merxem, but Graham specifically notes that Fyerss was attached to the Second Division there, leading to the assignments conjectured in this order of battle.
Appendix III
Order of Battle for the Second Advance on Antwerp, 30 January7 February 1814

Commander-in-Chief: General Sir Thomas Graham

First Division:Major General George Cooke
Guards Brigade:Colonel Lord Proby
2/1st Foot Guards(strength 708)
2/Coldstream Guards(479)
2/3rd (Scots) Foot Guards(499)
First Brigade:Major General John Skerrett
2/44th (East Essex)(399)
55th (Westmoreland)(295)
2/69th (South Lincolnshire)(433)
Flank Companies, 2/21st and 2/37th(264)
Divisional Artillery
Rogerss Brigade (2nd Company, 3rd Battalion, RA)
Second Division:Major General Samuel Gibbs
Light Brigade:Lieutenant Colonel William Harris
2/25th (Kings Own Borderers)(319)
2/52nd (Oxfordshire) Light Infantry(185)
54th (West Norfolk)(439)
2/73rd(474)
Rifle Battalion(255)
Second Brigade:Major General Herbert Taylor
33rd (1st Yorks. West Riding)(502)
2/35th (Sussex)(432)
3/56th (West Essex)(255)
2/78th (Highland)(262)
Divisional Artillery
Fyerss Brigade (9th Company, 3rd Battalion, RA)
Cavalry:Lieutenant Colonel Baron Linsingen
2nd KGL Hussars(451, with 517 horses)
Left in Garrison
Centre Coys, 2/21st (Royal North British Fusiliers)(107)
Centre Coys, 2/37th (North Hampshire)(179)
1st Royal Veteran Battalion(330 + 131 detached)

Strengths are effective rank and file, from Monthly Return of 25 January 1814 in TNA, WO17/1773.

Appendix IV
British Casualties in the Second Advance on Antwerp

Casualties at the Second Battle of Merxem, 2 February 1814

Casualties at the Bombardment of Antwerp 36 February 1814 Casualty - photo 3

Casualties at the Bombardment of Antwerp, 36 February 1814

Casualty Return TNA WO1199 pp 581-2 Casualty Return TNA WO1199 p - photo 4
Casualty Return TNA WO1199 pp 581-2 Casualty Return TNA WO1199 p - photo 5

Casualty Return, TNA, WO1/199, pp. 581-2.

Casualty Return, TNA, WO1/199, p. 589. This return also records the loss of 16 horses killed and 9 wounded, as well as a further 12 that escaped during the firing, listed as missing.

Appendix V
Ordnance Employed in the Bombardment of Antwerp

On 3 February 1814

British OrdnanceFour 10-inch mortars
Two 8-inch howitzers
Six 24-pounders
Dutch OrdnanceThree 12-inch Gomers mortars
Four 11-inch mortars
Six 7-inch mortars
Total25 pieces

On 4 February 1814

British OrdnanceFour 10-inch mortars
Two 8-inch howitzers
Six 24-pounders
Dutch OrdnanceThree 12-inch Gomers mortars
Two 7-inch mortars
Total:17 pieces

On 5 February 1814

British OrdnanceTwo 10-inch mortars
Two 8-inch howitzers
Three 24-pounders
Dutch OrdnanceThree 12-inch Gomers mortars
Six 7-inch mortars (without beds)
Total18 pieces

Detailed in Graham to Bathurst, 6 February 1814, TNA, WO1/199, pp. 56978.

Appendix VI
British Casualties at Bergen-op-Zoom, 8-9 March 1814
The above figures come from Return of Killed Wounded and Missing of the Army - photo 6

The above figures come from Return of Killed Wounded and Missing of the Army under the Command of His Excellency General Sir Thomas Graham KB in the attack upon Bergen op Zoom by storm on the Night of the 8th and Morning of the 9th March 1814, TNA, WO1/200, p. 211. The accompanying List of Officers Killed Wounded and Missing, ibid., pp. 21517, additionally lists 1 officer killed, 5 wounded and 2 missing from the staff of the army. Missing, in this context, equates to prisoners of war although when the final count was complete the total of prisoners came out at 1 major general, 4 lieutenant colonels, 2 majors, 20 captains, 62 subalterns, 4 surgeons, 93 sergeants and 1,872 rank and file, for a total of 2,058 all ranks. See State of English Prisoners included in the Capitulation, TNA, WO1/200, p. 223.

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