A reader of Britannia’s
Wolf approached me with a question that is equally relevant to Britannia’s Reach. The question reads “Dawlish seems to be pretty comfortable fighting on shore, but he was
an officer in the Royal Navy. How come he seems to be able to fight so well on
land?”
The answer is that from his entry into the Navy in 1859 Dawlish,
like other officers and ratings of the time, was trained to fight on land as
well as sea. His skill as a horseman, learned in boyhood, proved an extra
advantage.
Throughout the nineteenth century the Royal Navy had a
strong tradition of landing “Naval Brigades” in trouble spots – invariably
succeeding brilliantly. Trouble often
flared up in remote locations, to which sending Army units would be slow and
difficult. The Navy was in a position to land ad-hoc forces made up of marines
and bluejackets and to facilitate this most ships carried light field-guns,
typically 9 or 12-pounders. These were designed to be broken down into their
components – barrel, wheels etc. – for easy transport and easily reassembled
for action. Such Field-Gun Competitions are still held in the Royal Navy, with
teams competing for the Brickwood Trophy, and can be witnessed at public
displays. Gatling, Gardner or Nordenvelt semi-automatic weapons were also
employed and, later, the fully automatic Maxim.
Field-gun drill, circa 1895 |
In addition to such light weapons considerably larger
ordnance was sometimes also landed, most notably the two 4.7” guns from HMS Powerful and HMS Terrible which were mounted in improvised carriages and which
played a key role in the relief of Ladysmith in 1899 during the Second Boer
war. Seamen, no less than marines, were trained in musketry and their skill
with the cutlass – a fearsome close-quarters weapon – was legendary. Seaman’s
familiarity with blocks and tackles made them especially valuable when
transporting equipment across obstacles and ships’ carpenters were capable of
taking on any challenge from constructing gun carriages to building bridges.
Naval Brigade restoring order in Alexandria 1882 |
Though there were too many such Naval Brigade operations to
be listed here the most spectacular were those which served in The Crimea
(1854-56), the Indian Mutiny (1857-58), the Ashanti War (1873-74), Alexandria
(1882 - see illustration above), the Gordon Relief Expedition (1885) and the
Boxer Rising (1900). During the Abyssinian campaign of 1868 the only body of
men in the whole army which arrived at Magdala, after a toilsome march of 400
miles across the mountains, without a single man falling out for any cause, was
the Naval Brigade. There were literally dozens of smaller actions. Particularly
notable was the Benin Expedition of 1897 which was almost an entirely naval
“show” without Regular Army participation.
Naval Brigade formed by HMS Doris and HMS Rambler, 2nd Boer War, South Africa 1899 |
In the 1890s a large Royal Navy vessel – such as an “R-Class”
battleship such as HMS Royal Sovereign – was capable of landing a “Battalion”
of four “Companies”, with sixty men in each. Two 9-pounders and two Maxim
machine guns, all on field carriages, were available to land with them. When
fully accoutered the men carried rifles, ammunition pouches, water bottle, haversack,
blanket and entrenching spade. They were trained to carry out regimental attack
and defence manoeuvres – as the dramatic photograph below illustrates “forming square” to repulse cavalry.
The vulnerability of a square to artillery, but not to cavalry, is obvious |
Equally important was proficiency in rifle shooting,
practice at sea being made possible by use of the “Morris Tube” calibre-adapter
which allowed miniature rounds to be used in the standard rifle of the time, the
.303 Lee-Metford. A photograph below shows such practice on the quarterdeck of HMS
Royal Sovereign (1891).
Rifle practice, using Morris tubes, on HMS Royal Sovereign circa 1895 Note the men lying down and the three small targets near the ensign-staff. |
The cutlass, the weapon most closely associated with the
British bluejacket, was still considered a useful weapon. A photograph below, taken on the restored HMS Warrior at Portsmouth, shows them stowed on a deckhead. They are surprisingly short weapons by comparison with a sword - probably from having been initially designed for use below deck in boarding operations.
The “stamp, thrust and
hack” associated with its use must have been terrifying at close quarters and regular
exercising was a normal part of every ship’s routine.
Cutlass drill ashore, circa 1895 |
Cutlass drill on the quarterdeck of HMS Royal Sovereign circa 1895 |
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