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Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 95

The Brian Ritchie Collection of H.E.I.C

Schätzpreis
3.000 £ - 3.500 £
ca. 5.720 $ - 6.673 $
Zuschlagspreis:
4.400 £
ca. 8.389 $
Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 95

The Brian Ritchie Collection of H.E.I.C

Schätzpreis
3.000 £ - 3.500 £
ca. 5.720 $ - 6.673 $
Zuschlagspreis:
4.400 £
ca. 8.389 $
Beschreibung:

The Brian Ritchie Collection of H.E.I.C. and British India Medals The Maiwand D.C.M. awarded to Battery Sergeant-Major William Paton, “E” Battery, “B” Brigade, Royal Horse Artillery Distinguished Conduct Medal, V.R. (4198 By. Sgt. Maj. W. Paton, R.H.A.) edge bruisies and contact marks, otherwise better than very fine £3000-3500 Footnote D.C.M. recommendation submitted to the Queen on 5 March 1881, an award for the battle of Maiwand, 27 July 1880, and retreat to Kandahar, 27-28 July 1880. For three hours E/B, with the Bombay Grenadiers moving up on its left and Jacob’s Rifles on its right, banged away firing 120 rounds from each gun as the Afghan horde began to envelope Burrows’s front which now curved round in a salient with the Grenadiers at the apex. At about 2 p.m., the roar of battle died down to an ominous rumble as Ayub prepared to launch a general advance. From a nullah opposite Jacob’s Rifles and the 66th Foot on the British right, wave upon wave of wheeling, circling, cavorting tribesmen rose up only to be mown down in hundreds by deadly volleys from the 66th. But ghazis are undeterred by the prospect of death and they kept rushing at the 66th, until, momentarily flinching in the face of the disciplined fire, they changed direction across the front of Jacob’s Rifles and headed straight for E/B’s guns. Colonel H. S. Anderson (qv) of the Bombay Grenadiers saw them coming and tried to form company squares but at the same moment his regiment was charged on its left and front. Confusion reigned in the Grenadier ranks. The guns of E/B swept the ground before them with a murderous fire of canister shot, but nothing was going to stop the ghazi rush. Captain Slade, who now commanded E/B in place of Blackwood (Ritchie 1-120) who had been wounded, knew that he must get the guns away before they fell into enemy hands. He shouted orders for the guns to limber up and retire, and led out Fowell’s centre division himself, Fowell having been wounded. Lieutenant Osborne passed the orders for the right division to pull out, and dismounting from his horse helped the surviving Gunners to hook-in. But before he could mount again an Afghan shot him dead - but his guns galloped away to safety. ‘Maclaine (qv) either did not hear the order to retire, which is unlikely, or he knew better and still hoped to stem the rush and save the day. He fired his last round of case-shot when the enemy were but twenty yards from his gun-muzzles, and then tried to hook-in and go. It was too late. The ghazis flooded over the position, slashing and thrusting, hacking at the men. Gunners fought back furiously with handspikes and sponge-rods, anything that they could find. A limber came up, but the drivers were dragged struggling from their horses and slaughtered on the ground, while the team galloped masterless and riderless to the rear without its gun. Maclaine, himself slightly wounded, saw that the other gun had been overrun and that there was no hope of recovering it, so decided at least to save the team. But just before it left, the Number One, Sergeant Patrick Mullane, charged back in rage among the ghazis, who recoiled before his fury. He managed to grab a wounded driver from under the very knives of the tribesmen, and to carry him back and put him on the limber. They galloped away to rejoin the battery, leaving the ghazis and Kabuli infantry standing proudly around two 9-pounder guns of the Royal Horse Artillery.’ Captain Beresford-Pierse of the 66th still thought there was a chance of recovering the guns and he turned the rear rank of his left half-company around to fire volleys at the captors. But almost at once numbers of Sepoys from Jacob’s Rifles, under Colonel W. G. Mainwaring (Ritchie 1-126), crowded into his ranks causing further chaos. Following an abortive charge by the cavalry brigade the guns fell back on Mundabad with Nuttall. Maclaine retired gunless to join Slade and the rest of E/B at the place where Blackwood had chosen his first positio

Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 95
Auktion:
Datum:
02.03.2005
Auktionshaus:
Dix Noonan Webb
16 Bolton St, Mayfair
London, W1J 8BQ
Großbritannien und Nordirland
auctions@dnw.co.uk
+44 (0)20 7016 1700
+44 (0)20 7016 1799
Beschreibung:

The Brian Ritchie Collection of H.E.I.C. and British India Medals The Maiwand D.C.M. awarded to Battery Sergeant-Major William Paton, “E” Battery, “B” Brigade, Royal Horse Artillery Distinguished Conduct Medal, V.R. (4198 By. Sgt. Maj. W. Paton, R.H.A.) edge bruisies and contact marks, otherwise better than very fine £3000-3500 Footnote D.C.M. recommendation submitted to the Queen on 5 March 1881, an award for the battle of Maiwand, 27 July 1880, and retreat to Kandahar, 27-28 July 1880. For three hours E/B, with the Bombay Grenadiers moving up on its left and Jacob’s Rifles on its right, banged away firing 120 rounds from each gun as the Afghan horde began to envelope Burrows’s front which now curved round in a salient with the Grenadiers at the apex. At about 2 p.m., the roar of battle died down to an ominous rumble as Ayub prepared to launch a general advance. From a nullah opposite Jacob’s Rifles and the 66th Foot on the British right, wave upon wave of wheeling, circling, cavorting tribesmen rose up only to be mown down in hundreds by deadly volleys from the 66th. But ghazis are undeterred by the prospect of death and they kept rushing at the 66th, until, momentarily flinching in the face of the disciplined fire, they changed direction across the front of Jacob’s Rifles and headed straight for E/B’s guns. Colonel H. S. Anderson (qv) of the Bombay Grenadiers saw them coming and tried to form company squares but at the same moment his regiment was charged on its left and front. Confusion reigned in the Grenadier ranks. The guns of E/B swept the ground before them with a murderous fire of canister shot, but nothing was going to stop the ghazi rush. Captain Slade, who now commanded E/B in place of Blackwood (Ritchie 1-120) who had been wounded, knew that he must get the guns away before they fell into enemy hands. He shouted orders for the guns to limber up and retire, and led out Fowell’s centre division himself, Fowell having been wounded. Lieutenant Osborne passed the orders for the right division to pull out, and dismounting from his horse helped the surviving Gunners to hook-in. But before he could mount again an Afghan shot him dead - but his guns galloped away to safety. ‘Maclaine (qv) either did not hear the order to retire, which is unlikely, or he knew better and still hoped to stem the rush and save the day. He fired his last round of case-shot when the enemy were but twenty yards from his gun-muzzles, and then tried to hook-in and go. It was too late. The ghazis flooded over the position, slashing and thrusting, hacking at the men. Gunners fought back furiously with handspikes and sponge-rods, anything that they could find. A limber came up, but the drivers were dragged struggling from their horses and slaughtered on the ground, while the team galloped masterless and riderless to the rear without its gun. Maclaine, himself slightly wounded, saw that the other gun had been overrun and that there was no hope of recovering it, so decided at least to save the team. But just before it left, the Number One, Sergeant Patrick Mullane, charged back in rage among the ghazis, who recoiled before his fury. He managed to grab a wounded driver from under the very knives of the tribesmen, and to carry him back and put him on the limber. They galloped away to rejoin the battery, leaving the ghazis and Kabuli infantry standing proudly around two 9-pounder guns of the Royal Horse Artillery.’ Captain Beresford-Pierse of the 66th still thought there was a chance of recovering the guns and he turned the rear rank of his left half-company around to fire volleys at the captors. But almost at once numbers of Sepoys from Jacob’s Rifles, under Colonel W. G. Mainwaring (Ritchie 1-126), crowded into his ranks causing further chaos. Following an abortive charge by the cavalry brigade the guns fell back on Mundabad with Nuttall. Maclaine retired gunless to join Slade and the rest of E/B at the place where Blackwood had chosen his first positio

Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 95
Auktion:
Datum:
02.03.2005
Auktionshaus:
Dix Noonan Webb
16 Bolton St, Mayfair
London, W1J 8BQ
Großbritannien und Nordirland
auctions@dnw.co.uk
+44 (0)20 7016 1700
+44 (0)20 7016 1799
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