The Great Boer War eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 793 pages of information about The Great Boer War.

The Great Boer War eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 793 pages of information about The Great Boer War.

That wily and indefatigable man was not long out of our ken.  On June 14th he appeared once more at Rhenoster, where the construction trains, under the famous Girouard, were working furiously at the repair of the damage which he had already done.  This time the guard was sufficient to beat him off, and he vanished again to the eastward.  He succeeded, however, in doing some harm, and very nearly captured Lord Kitchener himself.  A permanent post had been established at Rhenoster under the charge of Colonel Spens of the Shropshires, with his own regiment and several guns.  Smith-Dorrien, one of the youngest and most energetic of the divisional commanders, had at the same time undertaken the supervision and patrolling of the line.

An attack had at this period been made by a commando of some hundred Boers at the Sand River to the south of Kroonstad, where there is a most important bridge.  The attempt was frustrated by the Royal Lancaster regiment and the Railway Pioneer regiment, helped by some mounted infantry and Yeomanry.  The fight was for a time a brisk one, and the Pioneers, upon whom the brunt of it fell, behaved with great steadiness.  The skirmish is principally remarkable for the death of Major Seymour of the Pioneers, a noble American, who gave his services and at last his life for what, in the face of all slander and misrepresentation, he knew to be the cause of justice and of liberty.

It was hoped now, after all these precautions, that the last had been seen of the gentleman with the tinted glasses, but on June 21st he was back in his old haunts once more.  Honing Spruit Station, about midway between Kroonstad and Roodeval, was the scene of his new raid.  On that date his men appeared suddenly as a train waited in the station, and ripped up the rails on either side of it.  There were no guns at this point, and the only available troops were three hundred of the prisoners from Pretoria, armed with Martini-Henry rifles and obsolete ammunition.  A good man was in command, however—­the same Colonel Bullock of the Devons who had distinguished himself at Colenso—­and every tattered, half-starved wastrel was nerved by a recollection of the humiliations which he had already endured.  For seven hours they lay helpless under the shell-fire, but their constancy was rewarded by the arrival of Colonel Brookfield with 300 Yeomanry and four guns of the 17th R.F.A., followed in the evening by a larger force from the south.  The Boers fled, but left some of their number behind them; while of the British, Major Hobbs and four men were killed and nineteen wounded.  This defence of three hundred half-armed men against seven hundred Boer riflemen, with three guns firing shell and shrapnel, was a very good performance.  The same body of burghers immediately afterwards attacked a post held by Colonel Evans with two companies of the Shropshires and fifty Canadians.  They were again beaten back with loss, the Canadians under Inglis especially distinguishing themselves by their desperate resistance in an exposed position.

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The Great Boer War from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.