Yorkshire Regiment Regimental Handbook v3.0

Page 110

C a m pa i g n s a n d B at t l e s

C a m pa i g n s a n d B at t l e s

and the Black Sea. Britain and France declared war on Russia on 28th March 1854. The 33rd Foot (Duke of Wellington’s Regiment) left Malta in May 1854 and was joined at Scutari by the 19th Foot (Green Howards) where they were brigaded, 1st and 2nd Brigades respectively, in the Light Division. The British and French forces concentrated at Varna, expecting to be involved in fighting along the Danube. However, disease broke out, hastening an expedition to the Crimea, with the aim of taking Sevastopol and neutralising the Russian Black Sea Fleet. On 14th September the Light Division landed at Eupatroia, Kalamata Bay, unopposed, but woefully short of transport, provisions, tentage and medical services. It was not until the 19th September that the Army was ready to advance on Sevastopol, skirting to the East of the strongly defended Russian naval base to take the small port of Balaklava as their supply base. After marching south for about 20 miles, with little evidence of the enemy, the Allies discovered that Prince Mentchikov had drawn up a large Russian force of infantry interspersed with artillery on the heights overlooking the River Alma, a position he considered to be impregnable. The Allies ponderously prepared to force the crossing, with the Turks and the French to the seaward. It was not until midday that the British force was ready to cross the river, swift flowing and waist deep in places, to assault the 500 feet high rocky ridge on the south bank. The British attack was led by the Light Division with the 1st Brigade, the 33rd at its centre, on the right and the 2nd Brigade, including the 19th, on the left. Their objective was the battery of siege guns on the heights overlooking the river, the key to the Russian defences known as the Great Redoubt. After struggling through enclosed vineyards and clambering over stone walls they reached the precipitous banks of the river where they were exposed to plunging fire from the Russian positions as they forded the river and scrambled up the far bank. They then advanced up the hill into the teeth of the Russian guns. The Russians, still armed with muskets, soon lost their air of invincibility as the British Minié bullets began to rapidly thin their ranks, and the closely packed columns began to melt away as the men at the front found the British could penetrate two or three men with each shot. This

allowed the British to force their way up the slope and onto the Redoubt but it was a success achieved at great cost. The Russian counter attack was not long in coming. The Light Division had been so mauled in the attack that they were briefly forced off the position until the Guards Division and Highland Brigade reinforced the attack to re-establish control of the Redoubt. By 4 p.m., after only some three hours of intense fighting, the battle was over and the Russians in full flight. It was a victory brought about almost entirely by the indomitable courage of the British infantry that cost them dearly. The British casualties were 2,002 and the casualties within the 19th and 33rd were particularly severe. The 19th lost 220 greater than any other regiment except the 33rd who lost 239. In no regiment outside the Light Division did the casualties exceed 200. Two days were required to clear the battlefield of the dead and evacuate the wounded It was here also that the 19th captured the seven Russian Drums of the Vladimir, Minsk and Borodino Regiments (still treasured in the Yorkshire Regiment – four are held in the 2nd Battalion and three in the Green Howards Museum). The Army then went on to lay siege to Sevastopol throughout the winter of 1854/55 suffering severe hardships in the trenches and batteries, but finally broke through the defences in September 1855, bringing the war to an end. Two Victoria Crosses were retrospectively awarded to soldiers of the 19th when the decoration was instituted in January 1856: Private S Evans, for repeatedly volunteering for hazardous duties to repair the trenches under heavy fire on 13th April 1855, was gazetted on 23rd June 1857 and Private, later Corporal, John Lyons was gazetted on 24th February, 1857, for his gallantry in the trenches by picking up a live shell and saving the lives of his comrades on 10th June 1855. From the 33rd, Private Patrick McGuire’s name was submitted for the award of a VC after killing two Russian soldiers who had taken him prisoner. While he was being escorted back he sprang on his captors, seized his musket. Shot one his captors dead and despatched the other with the butt of his rifle and returned to his post to the cheers of his own pickets with all his own as well as the weapons and accoutrements of his captors. He achieved remarkable acclaim at the time but Queen Victoria personally

216

217


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook

Articles inside

Music

10min
pages 140-147

Introduction

3min
page 163

A Brief History of The Yorkshire Regiment

9min
pages 164-167

Antecedent Regimental Histories

8min
pages 168-176

Corps of Drums The Yorkshire Regiment

41min
pages 148-162

No. 14 Dress

9min
pages 136-139

No. 13 Dress

7min
pages 134-135

No. 11 Dress

10min
pages 131-133

No. 2 (Service) Dress

15min
pages 119-122

No. 8 Dress

11min
pages 123-125

No. 1 Dress

24min
pages 113-118

No. 10 Dress

18min
pages 126-130

Regimental Accoutrements

12min
pages 110-112

Dress

12min
pages 107-109

Communications

23min
pages 88-94

Purchasing and Supplies

11min
pages 104-106

Finance

12min
pages 83-87

Sport

12min
pages 56-63

The Regimental Family

15min
pages 64-73

Moral Component

10min
pages 21-23

The Colours

39min
pages 24-36

Warrant Officers, Non-Commissioned Officers and Soldiers

9min
pages 45-51

Foreword

8min
pages 7-10

Naming Conventions

4min
pages 19-20

The Regimental Headquarters

12min
pages 15-18
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.