Osprey, Men-At-Arms #047 The South Wales Borderers (1975) OCR 8.12
Osprey, Men-At-Arms #047 The South Wales Borderers (1975) OCR 8.12
Osprey, Men-At-Arms #047 The South Wales Borderers (1975) OCR 8.12
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Text by
CHRISTOPHER
WILKINSO -LATHAM
Colour platts by
MICHAEL ROFFE
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MEN-AT-ARMS SERIES
EDITOR: MARTIN WINDROW
ALBA:" BOOl( SERVICES
CJ30rderers
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Text by
CHRISTOPHER
WILKINSON-LATHAM
ColoUT plates by
MICHAEL ROFFE
OSPREY PUBLISHING LIMfTED
' - ~ - - - - - - -
Published in 1973 by
Publishing Ltd, 137 SouthamplOn
Reading, Berkshire
(' Copyright 1973 Osprey Publishing Ltd
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Prinled in Great Britain b)
Jarrold & Sons Ltd. ;\orwich
'Dering}
The standing army in England, although dating
from the Restoration of Charles I I, was not
properly established umilthe reign ofWilliam and
'-1ary I68g-g4)' With the bloodless revolUlion of
1688, the deposed King James fled across Lhe
Channel to the protection of Louis XIV, while
William, having been proclaimed King on
13 February 168g, set about enlarging his army
for the inevitable war with France.
On 8 March IG8g commissions were issued to
fourteen noblemen and landowners who were
each to form 'a regiment of FOOl ... for our
service'. One of these commissions was sent to Sir
Edward Dering of Surrenden, a Kcntish baronet
of substantial fortune and influence, who im-
mediately set about the task of recruiting. As
Lieutenant-Colonel of the new regiment, he
appointed his younger brother Daniel who
already had some military experience, having
bought a grenadier company in Sir William
King's Regiment in ,68..... The first muster was
held on 8 the regiment's establishment
being thirteen companies each of three sergeants,
three corporals, two drummers, and sixty privates,
a total ofBB4 officers and men,
with onc major, nine captains, nine lieutenants,
two ensigns, a chaplain, and a surgeon.
Exact details of the regiment's early uniforms
are not known, although it is almost certain that
they started off by wearing a blue coat, red
becoming the universal colour only with the reign
of Queen Anne (I 70'l-14). The officers' uniforms
were similar to those of the men but were made of
finer material and were ornamented with gold or
silver lace, a broad sash, and a gorget.
After being issued with 'sllch arms as have
usually been delivcred to other regiments of foot',
qlfecJollt!l W7Ies 'Borderers
i.e. muskets and pikes, the regiment was ordered
to move from its quarters at and
Danford and proceed to thc Midlands. In July
Ihey were sent to Hoylake to embark for Ireland
as part of General Schomberg's army, for the
deposed James II had gone to Ireland with a
number of French officers and, with the help of
Tyrconnell, his viceroy, had raised an army to
ovcrrun Ulster, where the Protestants had acknow-
ledged William as King.
On 13 August 168g, Dering's Regiment, along
with the rest of the Anglo-Dutch Army, landed on
EdWl<rd Derinll' Baron"l, of S..rread"a ia Keal. wha ...i .....
lh" r"lim"a1 in. th" ....rvlc:.. of Kiol WiI.liarn III. (South Wal...
Borderen)
3
Jou Churchitl, I.t Duke or M...lborou,h. Colo.. el or the
24d1 ResiIDeDt I ~ + (Soudl Wales Borderen)
the soulhern shores of Belfast Lough. Schomberg
quickly joined forces with the smaller army of
General Kirke, who had already taken Belfast
without a shot being fired. After the raising of the
Siege of Londonderry (28 july) and the rout at
Newton Butler, James's army was in full retreat
towards the Boyne, but they had left a small
garrison at Carrickfergus. Schomberg immediately
besieged the town and it was here that Dering's
men would have had Iheir first taste of battle.
The siege, though hampered by the inefficiency
of the artillery officers and Ihe poor quality of the
guns and ammunition, lasted a week. On its fall,
Schomberg, though uncertain of his troops,
decided to push on to Dublin. After passing
through Newry (5 September), his anny ground
to a halt at Dundalk 7 September!, held up by
the shortage of horses and wagons.
For two months Ihe army camped on the damp
peaty soil, the weather worsening along with the
4
morale of the ill-fed and illclothed troops. The
British suffered more Ihan their Dutch comrades
inarms, who, used to foraging, quickly built
themselves huts to replace the leaky issued tents.
With the bad conditions came sickness. Among
the earliest casualties was Sir Edward Dering,
who, stricken by a fe\'er from which he never
reco\'ered, died on 17 OClober 168g. The colonelcy
passed to his brOlher Daniel, at thai time a
caplain in charge of a naval \essel.
Although Ihe situation of his forces was becom-
ing increasingly serious, Schomberg decided to
keep his position at all costs. He refused to break
camp even when attacked by roaming bands of
Catholic irregulars known as 'Rapparees', know
ing full well that his troops 'if once disordered,
would be lost'.
Early in November james's army broke camp
and withdrew to winter quarters. General Schorn-
berg immediately followed suit and on 7November
his dispirited soldiers started Ihe long arduous
march back to Belfast. :\Iore Ihan I ,Goo men had
died at Dundalk, a further 800 succumbing on Ihe
Iransports laking the sick to England, and 4,000
in quarters.
On becoming colonel, Daniel Dering appointed
Samuel Venner as his lieutenantcolonel. Venner,
an ambitious soldier who had transferred from the
Dutch Army, led many a raidingparty during the
winter months, harassing the enemy's supply
columns and lines of communication.
Iii April 16g0 a muchneeded intake of recruits
arrived; they found the regiment's morale pitifully
low, for, apart from everything else, only 5,500
of the regiment's 9,600 maintenance since
September of the year before had been paid.
The summer of 1690 saw the defeat ofJames II
at the Battle of the Boyne (I july), followed by his
flight to France and the occupation of Dublin,
along with parts of Leinster and Munster, by
King William's victorious army. Unfortunalely
for Dering's Regiment, they, with one British and
two Ulster regiments, were left behind when the
army marched on Dublin and so saw nothing of
the main campaign. William advanced further
into the south but his progress was checked in
September at Limerick. With Ulster almost
secure, Dering's men had 10 contcnt themselves
with beating off the occasional raid by Rapparees.
After William's failure at Limerick the army was
sent imo wimer quarters, Dering's Regimem
~ i n g scaltered between Londonderry, Carling-
ford, and Carrickrergus.
InJune IGgI, at the opening of the new cam-
paign. Daniel Dering died and was succeeded as
colonel by Samuel Venner who appointed
Alexander Ramse)' as his lieutenant-colonel.
Shortly after his nomination, Ramsey led a
reconnaissance towards Sligo, consisting of 100 of
Venner's men with 200 Inoumed troops and 400
militia. Advancing towards the Ballysclara Bridge,
four miles from Sligo, they came upon a large
force of Irish partisans under the command of Sir
Teague O'Regan. Ramsey immediately attacked
and with such force that the Irish fled in panic,
leaving the bridge open for Schomberg's following
army to advance towards Limerick, whose siege
was to be the culmination of the Irish campaign.
Venner's Regiment formed part oCthe army on
the Clare side oCthe Shannon, where the grenadier
companies had been withdrawn from their
respective regiments to form the main attacking
force who would storm the bridgehead imo
Limerick. When the grenadiers attacked, the
rebels broke and fled, streaming hack towards lhe
town. The officer on the gate panicked and
raised the drawbridge, leaving his retreating
comrades to be CUt down, captured, or drowned
The .tt.ck On the Sc:belleabers:. (Sautb W.lu Borde",...)
as they lried to swim the Shannon. The fall of
Limerick (3 OClober) marked the end of the
campaign for Venner's Regiment. After a brief
spell of garrison duty in the captured town the)
left for England, where they were quartered
between Bridgwater and Wells in Somerset.
In ~ I a y 16g2, with the threat of a French
invasion of England, Venner's Regimem found
itself quartered at Guildford. With the French
defeat at Cape Barfleur, however (19 May), the
menace disappeared. It was now decided that an
English army would invade France, and con-
sequently founeen battalions, including Venner's
and a large artillery train, were assembled al
Portsmouth under the command of General
Schomberg's younger son. After excessive delays,
giving the French ample time to strengthen their
defences, the fleet sailed on 26July, but, after the
abortive a tempt on St Malo, the plans were
cancelled and the fleet returned to St Helen'5.
On 27 August the army, which had by now
grown considerably, was once again sent across
the Channel and succeeded in landing at Ostend
where, under the command of General Tolle-
mache, they advanced on Dixmude, which fell on
7September. With the hopes ofcapturing Dunkirk
fading, Venner's men were relieved of garrison
duty and returned to England, where in the
spring of 1693 they were ordered 'to embark in
our fleet'. The regiment was subsequently split up
among the ships of the 'Grand Fleet', which
included the Norfolk and the Ropl Sourngn, and
served with them for six months, after which they
wintered in Portsmouth. In June 16g4 Venner's
mcn took part in the attack on Camaret Bay led
by Tollemache. AI the landing the troops came
under a withering crossfire and were forced to
withdraw, suffering heavy casualties, including
the General, who died on the return voyage to
Spithead.
In the winter of 1694, after complaints made
against him by his fellow officers, Samuel Venner
was forced to vacate the colonelcy, his place being
taken by Louis James Le Vasseur, Marquis of
Puisar. nder Le Vasseur the regiment sa.... no
real active service, and with the signing of the
Peace of Ryswick they were transferred to the
1rish Establishment and reduced by two com-
panies, leaving them wilh 450 N.C.O.s and other
5
ranks and thirty-seven officers, Tn 1701 Le
Vasseur died and the vacancy was filled by William
Seymour.
In November 1700 Charles II of Spain died,
leaving his dominions in Spain, the Netherlands,
and America to Louis XIV's grandson, Philip of
Anjou. William immediately ordered the twelve
regiments in Ireland to embark for Holland;
where French troops had already occupied the
Spanish Netherlands. After an augmentation in
companies, bringing the total establishment to
883, the regiment sailed from Cork on '24 June
1701, arriving in Holland a fortnight later.
On 12 February 1702 William Seymour was
transferred to the Queen's Regiment of Foot
(later the 4th or King's Own Regiment) and the
vacant colonelcy was taken over by one of
England's greatest soldiers, John Churchill, Duke
of Marlborough.
On 4 May 172, with the Treaty of The Hague
and the 'Grand Alliance' between England,
Austria, and the Tetherlands signed (7 September
170t), war was finally declared against France.
J'r(arlborough's
'Ultrs
The first two years of the war were frustrating and
uneventful for Marlborough and his army, the
time being used in building up a base in the
United Provinces for an invasion of France,
Marlborough meanwhile trying to persuade his
allies that the solution to their problems was a
head-on confrontation with the enemy. In May
1704 Marlborough undertook his famous march
to the Danube, a journey of 400 miles, which his
army took only forty days to cover.
After forcing a passage across the Danube'by
defeating a combined Franco-Bavarian Army at
the Heights of Schellenberg, Marlborough joined
forces with Prince Eugene of Savoy and formed
up his men opposite the enemy-held position at
Blenheim, where Marshal Tallard with 20,000
reinforcements held the right of the line, the left
6
being under the command of Marshal Marsin and
the Elector of Bavaria.
At 12.30 p.m. on 13 August Major-General
Cutts, the overall commander of the infantry,
commenced his attack, the first line comprising
General Rowe's Brigade, of which the 24th was
pan. Rowe's Brigade, 'with undaunted courage
and unparalleled intrepidity altacked the village
on the muzzles of the enemy'. Undeterred by the
heavy fire-power of the French, the 24th and the
other battalions moved steadily forward without
firing a shot; only when Rowe himself plunged his
sword into the defensive palisade did they fire
their first volley and, dashing forward, tried to
force an entry. Greatly outnumbered by the
French, the brigade was forced to retire and in
doing so exposed their right flank to the enemy
cavalry. Cutts, seeing the danger, sent in the
Hessian Brigade who drove off the cavalry and
covered the withdrawal.
After the failure of the first attack Cutts sent in
a second, comprising the remnants of Rowe's
Brigade, the Hessians, and Brigadier-General
Ferguson's Brigade. When this attack was also
repulsed, Cutts was StOpped from sending a third
by Marlborough, who gave orders to pin down
the enemy in the village.
At 4 p.m. launched his great
attack. The Allied Army pounded its way through
Marshal Tallard's centre and, overwhelming the
nine battalions in support, forced the French to
beat a hasty retreat. With this great victory
Marlborough's reputation was made, to the
detriment of the French, whose prestige as the
'Invincible Army' was shatlered.
On 25 August '74 Marlborough was appointed
to the colonelcy of the 1St Foot Guards, the
vacancy in the regiment being filled by Lieutenant-
Colonel William Talton.
The next two years werc relatively uneventful
for thc regimcnt. It was nOl until 12 May 1706
that, in Meredith's Brigade, they formed part of
the nineteen battalions and fiftcen cavalry squad-
rons ofthe huge British force which confronted the
French under Marshal Villeroi at Ramillies,
where, after stubborn resistance, the French with-
drew with heavy losses.
In the winter of 1708 Tatton disposed of his
colonelcy to Gilbert who, after being
e-...... Sir David Baird, Bart.. G.c.B.. P.e., Coloa..1 of c.he
-.tla Resim..... ( ...rk.... Gall..ry)
promoted to brigadier-general on I January 1707,
had for some time been commanding the home-
based battalion of the 1st Foot Guards. No
sooner had the appointment been made when a
sudden scare of a French invasion of Scotland
necessitatcd the immediatc transfer of ten bat-
talions, including Primrose's, for home defence.
By the time arrived in Scotland the French
had been beaten off, so without setting foot on dry
land the ten battalions rejoined
army. A short time after their return the regiment
took part in the next major action ofthe campaign,
that ofOudenarde, where the French, after fierce
c1ose-quarter fighting, outflanked by the
Allied cavalry and forced to withdraw.
Marlborough's plans to march into France
were baulked by his Dutch allies so the Duke
reconciled himself to besieging Lille. Five bat-
talions took part in this operation, including
Primrose's, who lost sixty-nine killed and 208
wounded before the citadel finally capitulated.
After Lille, immediately lay siege
to Ghent and only when this city fell did he allow
his troops to move into winter quarten.
As the Allies and the French were quarrelling
over the Treaty of Ryswick and the terms of
settlement, the French General Villars assembled
an army of 80,000 men behind the skilfully
planned and extremely formidable entrench
menu which he had constructed in front of
)"falplaquet. After twelve days of hard fighting
(from 3' Augusl to II September 1709), the
Allies emerged victorious, bUl with a very heavy
casualty list comprising some 20,000 men, almost"
double that of the French.
The campaign of '710 opened with
borough's laying siege to the last important
obstacle between France and the Netherlands, the
heavily defended fortress of Douai. Eight bat-
talions, among them Primrose's, took part in the
two-month siege. When the stronghold finally
surrendered the regimelll had lost thirty-six men
killed and 157 wounded.
In December 17'1, after outwitting General
Villan and outflanking his TIL plus ultra line,
Marlborough was recalled, for in England the
Whigs had lost the election and the Tories, with
the backing of Queen Anne, had decided to put an
end to the war.
Primrose's Regiment left the Netherlands on
24June t7'3 and sailed for their new station in
Ireland. It was 168 yean later, in 1882, that the
regiment received iu reward for the War of the
Spanish Succession, when the battle honours
'Blenheim', 'Ramillies', 'Oudenarde', and 'Mal-
plaquet' were emblazoned on its colours.
7
18th @elltur),
@ampaiglls
Apart from two short sojourns in England the
regimcllI served on the Irish ESlablishmcni for
some IWClHyfjvC years, years that were ver), dull
afler whal Ihey had experienced on the Continent.
In '7 I 7 Gilben Primrose died and was succeeded
by Thomas Howard who was to be their colonel
for the ne;.:t twenty years. I( was during this time
that the regiment rcccivtd the sobriquet,
'Howard's Greens', which indicates that the
regiment had by this time adopted green facings
to their uniforms.
In [7'9 the regiment len the tedium of Irish
garrison duty and embarked as part oCthe force of
9,000 men, under the command of Lord Cobham,
who were to make a descent on the Spanish coast.
After receiving a warning that Corunna, the
expedition's original objective, was well prepared
for an allack Cobham changed course and headed
for Vigo where the Spaniards had stored most
of the equipment necessary for an invasion of
Scotland. On the evening of 29 September
Cobham landed his grenadier companies three
miles from the town, where, except for a few armed
peasants, no opposition was encountered, allowing
the disembarkation of the rcst of the troops and
stores to be completed without incident.
The next day the British advanced on the town.
Seeing the mass of troops coming towards them,
the Spaniards spiked their guns and took refuge
in the fortified citadel, where they managed to
hold out until 10 October, when, after heavy
bombardment by mortars and siege guns, the
garrison finally surrendered.
Realizing that he had no hope of taking the
heavily fortified ports of Corunna and Ferrol,
Cobham embarked his men with the best of the
Spanish guns and stores and, after destroying what
remained, sailed for home, having done 'a world
of mischief' at a cost of only 300 casualties.
Howard's Regiment returned to Ireland where
B
they continued garrison duties unlilthe spring of
1740, when, under the command of Thomas
Wentworth, who succeeded Howard in 1737, they
assembled on the Isle of Wight as part 01' Lord
Cathcart's force who were to attack the seat ofthe
Spanish Captain-General in the Indies, Sanjuan
de Cartagena. Although the campaign started off
moderately well for the British, it ended disaY
trously. The deadly climate and thick vegetation
all pointed to speed on the attackers' part, but
unfortunately Wentworth, who had taken over
command of the invasion force after the death of
Cathcart, was too cautious and delayed the final
attack on Fort St Lazar which commanded the
town. When the assault failed, Wentworth, all his
confidence evaporated, abandoned the venture
and sailed for Jamaica on 26 April 1741. In this
short campaign the regiment lost ten officers and
781 rank and file. The regiment stayed in the
West Indies for another year during which
abortive attempts were made on Cuba and
Panama. They then returned to England.
In June 1745 Thomas Wentworth relinquished
his colonelcy and was succeeded by Daniel
Houghton, a veteran who had first held a commis-
sion in 1708 and in 1741 had raised a foot regiment.
later to become the 1st Battalion Sherwood
Foresters. In March 1746 the regiment was
ordered to Scotland where they stayed for four
years helping in mopping-up operations after the
Jacobite Rebellion and later in building roads to
open up the Highlands. During this period
Houghton died and was succeeded by William
Kerr, Earl of Ancram, who transferred to the
11th Light Dragoons in February 175'2, the
vaca11l colonelcy going to the Hon. Edward Corn-
wallis. Shortly before this, in July 1751, a royal
warrant had been issued regulating the clothing
for the army. This warrant fixed the regiment's
facings as 'willow' green and the lace white with
one green stripe and one red stripe. It is interesting
to note that numbers were now coming into more
general use; after 1753 young officers found them
selves gazetted to 'The 24th. Cornwallis's
Regiment of Foot'.
In 1756 the friction between the French
settlers in Canada and the English colonists in
North America came to a head. The French,
while threatening to invade England from Brest,
Office.... (M.jo....)
I'pllolenes., .8.2-.6.
(NatiOlUlI Army
-I
-
Officer. of the .... llo (.8,2-,6). The
lu.ve toe- buttODeel backt. "veal t.e
lreeft (aciDs_ ...d .iJver lace butlon loop. in
pai..... (National Army M".om)
were secretly concentrating all their forces at
Toulon, where they were preparing a descent on
the Balearic island of MinOTca. The garrison
consisted of four battalions, including the 24th,
aU under the command of General Blakeney.
On 18 Aprill756lhe Due de Richelieu with an
army of '5,000 men landed on the western end of
the island. Blakeney immediately pulled his small
force back into Fort 51 Philip on the cancro end,
south or the entrance to Port Mahon. The fortress,
with its four bastions and undergTound galleries,
gave the defenders the possibility of all round fire
and good cover from the enemy bombardments.
So effective was the defence thal by 8 May the
French had succeeded in bringing only two siege
batteries into action.
On 19 May the tiny garrison's spirits rose high
when they saw a British naval squadron under the
command of Admiral Byng approaching from the
south-east. The next day Byng fought an in
conclusive action with the French squadron and,
after judging it impossible (Q help Fort St Philip.
9
;
a.ip P"DDyc:uJck ddnodml tbe body of hi. r.thlt'r at
Chilia.nwala, I] January lilt,. (Nuio..... A..... y MUftlUD)
sailed back loGibraltar where he was subsequently
tried by court martial and shot.
During the next month the defenders continued
their stubborn resistance, despite the heavy
bombardmenLS being handed Qut by the French.
On 27 June, after lhey managed to bring over
eighty guns and twenty mortars into action, the
french opened up an unprecedented barrage as a
prelude to the final assault. When the attack came
the garrison was too weak to hold Ollt. First onc
redoubt fell, then another; the enemy then
managing to break into the subterranean pas-
sages, rendering a counter-attack almost impos-
sible. Blakeney, feeling thaI any further resistance
would mean the slaughter of his whole garrison,
decided to capitulate.
Richelieu's terms were most generous. He
allowed his prisoners the full honours of war, to
march out with 'firelocks on their shoulders,
drums beating, colours flying, twenty cartridges
10
for each man'. They were then embarked on
French transports which set sail for Gibraltar. It
was in November 1756 that the 24th finally
reached England, where they received an en-
thusiastic welcome. The casualties were low;
three officers and 123 men killed or died of
wounds and five officers and 301 men wounded.
Of these figures the 24th had lost eleven killed or
djed of wounds and two officers and fifty.two men
wounded.
On 24 August 1756, while the regiment was stiU
at Gibraltar, they, along with fourteen others,
received orders to raise a second battalion, which
was done, mainly from the county of Lincolnshire.
Thence they joined the 1st Battalion, who, in ~ l a y
1757, were stationed in Leicestershire. This
second battalion existed for two brief years before
becoming the Ggth Regiment later the 2nd
battalion, Welch Regiment).
The quarrel between France and England had
worsened into an imperial struggle between the
Prussian King, Frederick the Great on the one
hand and :\Iaria Theresa of Austria, strongly
sustained by Louis XV of France, on the other,
thereby constituting a direct threat to the
Electorate of Hanover, part of George II's British
dominions.
For three years the British Government under
Pitt refused to send troops into Germany where
IWO French armies were cooperating with the
Austrians. Instead he preferred to employ them
with the Royal Navy in making raids on the
French coast, but without much success. The 24th
took part in those of Rochefort, 5t Malo, Cher-
bourg, and St Cast. Eventually, in 1760, Pitt was
forced to send British troops to Germany for the
protcction of Hanover. Six battalions, including
the 24th, embarked for the Continent and for the
nexl three years formed part of the Allied Army
under Ferdinand of Brunswick, filling a prominent
role in the victories of Corbach, Warburg,
Clostercamp, and Vellinghausen.
Although originally undertaken for the defence
of Hanover, the campaign resulted, under the
terms of the Peace of Paris (1763), in the with-
drawal ofall French troops and ships from Canada,
leaving Britain in control of the whole of North
America.
The close of the campaign found the 24th '201