Posts Tagged ‘Queen Victoria’

Officer's Coatee of Capt Hervey Tower
The Coldstream Guards landed at Kalamita Bay in the Crimea in September 1854, as part of the Guards Brigade, 1st Division, English Army of the East. These were Her Majesty Queen Victoria’s elite personal guards. In the Crimea the Guards Brigade consisted of the Grenadier Guards, Coldstream Guards, and Scots Fusilier Guards. The Guards’ battle honours include Alma, Inkerman, and the Siege of Sevastopol.
Although they may have modified or discarded uniform parts later, when the Guards Brigade landed, they wore their full parade dress uniform with epaulettes and bearskin cap. This photograph shows a fine example of a Coldstream Guards’ officer’s coatee, worn during his Crimean service by Captain Hervey Tower, 1st Battalion, 2nd (Coldstream)Regiment of Foot Guards.
The Star of the Order of the Garter, the badge of the Coldstream Guards, can be seen on each side of the Prussian collar. It is also identified as Coldstream Guards by the sets of two buttons in double rows down the coatee front, thus the 2nd Regiment of Foot Guards. The 1st (Grenadier) Regiment of Foot Guards buttons are evenly spaced, and the 3rd (Scots Fusilier) Regiment of Foot Guards buttons are in sets of three. The back of the collar and cuff facings are blue, as were all Guards regiments. There is a rose and crown in silver on gold on the strap of the epaulettes, designating the rank of Captain. There was also a difference in the size and shape of the bullion descending from the crescent, depending on the rank.
Close observation shows usage stains on the white lining of the skirts. In addition, the small slash pockets inside the turn backs can be seen. These were used to carry such necessary and essential items to a Guards officer as white gloves, or a dance card.
This artifact was photographed courtesy of the Guards Museum, London, UK.


Uniform of Capt & LtCol Percy, VC, Grenadier Guards
The Grenadier Guards landed at Kalamita Bay in the Crimea in September 1854, as part of the Guards Brigade, 1st Division, English Army of the East. These were Her Majesty Queen Victoria’s elite personal guards. In the Crimea, the Guards Brigade consisted of the Grenadier Guards, Coldstream Guards and Scots Fusilier Guards. The Guards’ battle honours include Alma, Inkerman, and the Siege of Sevastopol.
Henry Percy was commissioned into the Grenadier Guards at age nineteen. After almost twenty years of service, he embarked for the Crimea at age thirty-seven, as a Captain and Lieutenant Colonel (The dual rank system exclusive to Her Majesty’s Guards regiments).
At Alma he was wounded in the arm, but continued to lead his men in battle. At Inkerman he led a charge into the Sandbag Battery, then held it against repeated Russian assaults by superior numbers. Having run out of ammunition, he ordered his men to throw stones at the attacking enemy. The Russians began doing the same, knocking Percy off the parapet once. Upon his climbing back up, he was knocked senseless with another even larger stone. He awoke bleeding badly and half blinded, but was able to join his men in a charge driving the enemy down the hill below the battery. Out of ammunition and cut off, the wounded Percy led his men through dense brush to safety. He received the Victoria Cross from Queen Victoria, personally, in Hyde Park on 26 June 1857.
This photograph shows his coatee, sash, and epaulettes under an officer’s greatcoat draped over the coatee in the manner commonly worn by officers in the Crimea. Note that Percy had cut the standing collar from his coatee, no doubt to make it less restrictive on campaign. The right sleeve of the coatee (not visible under the greatcoat) shows signs of rough field repair and dried blood. The epaulettes show the grenade of the Grenadier Guards, and the braiding and crown of a Captain and Lieutenant Colonel.
This artifact was photographed courtesy of the Guards Museum, London, UK.


Bearskin Cap worn by Sir Charles Russell, VC, Grenadier Guards, in the Crimea
The Grenadier Guards landed at Kalamita Bay in the Crimea in September 1854, as part of the Guards Brigade, 1st Division, English Army of the East. These were Her Majesty Queen Victoria’s elite personal guards. In the Crimea the Guards Brigade consisted of the Grenadier Guards, Coldstream Guards, and Scots Fusilier Guards. The Guards’ battle honours include Alma, Inkerman, and the Siege of Sevastopol.
Sir Charles Russell was awarded the Victoria Cross, Britain’s highest decoration for bravery, for his actions at the Battle of Inkerman, 5 November 1854, at age twenty-eight. The then Brevet Major Russell offered to dislodge a significant group of Russians from the Sandbag Battery, asking if anyone would follow him. A sergeant and two privates volunteered. His assault party met much resistance, and seemed on several occasions to be close to annihilation. Their skill, particularly with the bayonet, prevailed, and the enemy was sent on their way. Russell fought with great distinction, at one point wrenching the rifle from the hands of a large, powerful Russian. Sir Charles achieved the rank of Lieutenant Colonel before retiring from the Guards.
The 1846 Uniform Regulations describe the cap in the photograph as a “bear-skin, twelve inches deep, fastened under the chin by a plain gilt taper chain.” Just prior to embarking for the Crimea, the Guards modified their bearskin caps by cutting them down a few inches. Perhaps in keeping with this modification, the actual measurement for the cap in this photograph was ten inches deep. It is also interesting that this bearskin is a soft leather collapsible cap, rather than the stiff Guards caps routinely seen, which have a bamboo-like cage beneath the skin itself. The white goat’s hair plume on the left side indicates the bearskin is Grenadier Guards, who were on the right flank of the Guards Brigade. A Coldstream Guards’ scarlet cut-feather plume was on the right side, as they were on the left flank. The Scots Fusilier Guards had no plume and were in the center of the line.
This artifact was photographed courtesy of the Guards Museum, London, UK.


Goodlake's Pepperbox Pistol and Bullet Pouch
Lieutenant and Captain (The dual rank system exclusive to Her Majesty’s Guards regiments) Gerald Goodlake, Coldstream Guards, took part in the Battle of Alma, Inkerman, and the Siege of Sevastopol. The Coldstream Guards landed at Kalamita Bay in the Crimea in September 1854, as part of the Guards Brigade, 1st Division, English Army of the East. These were Her Majesty Queen Victoria’s elite personal guards. In the Crimea the Guards Brigade consisted of the Grenadier Guards, Coldstream Guards, and Scots Fusilier Guards. The Guards’ battle honours include Alma, Inkerman, and the Siege of Sevastopol.
During a Russian probing action up Windmill Ravine on 28 October 1854, a week prior to the Battle of Inkerman, he led approximately 40 Guards sharpshooters against ten times their number in delaying a Russian flanking movement. This allowed British reinforcements to arrive and drive the enemy back into Sevastopol. For his gallantry in this action he was presented the Victoria Cross at Hyde Park by Queen Victoria, personally, on 26 June 1857. He retired in 1881 as a Major General, and was awarded the Honorary Rank of Lieutenant General.
The photograph is of Goodlake’s six-shot ‘Pepperbox’ revolving pistol and his leather bullet pouch. He used these items throughout the Crimean War. This type pistol, sometimes referred to as a “Pepperpot or Pepperbox”, was manufactured in .36 through .40 calibre, beginning in around 1830. It was primarily for self-defense. The six barrels were about 3.5 inches long. The pistol, itself, was about 9 inches long, and weighed about 2 pounds.
The barrels revolved around a spindle, firing in turn as they came under the hammer. As the trigger was pulled, the hammer cocked, the barrel rotated, and the hammer dropped on a percussion cap (thus igniting the powder and firing the bullet). The bullets were round lead balls, loaded from the front of each barrel. Fairmans of London manufactured this particular pistol.
This artifact was photographed courtesy of the Guards Museum, London, UK.


British observers on McClellan's staff. Charles Fletcher is seated on the far right, and Edward Neville is also seated, third in from the right.
Almost everyone you talk to about British military observers in the American Civil War can think of only one – Lieutenant Colonel Arthur James Lyon Freemantle, Coldstream Guards. Freemantle is considered by most as a British military observer who chose to remain with, and ‘observe’ the southern side. Because perhaps of the fame of Freemantle through his book, Three Months in the Southern States, or possibly as a result of how he was portrayed in the recent movie, Gettysburg, even historians are unaware of two important historical facts:
1. Although Freemantle was an officer of the Coldstream Guards, he was on leave of absence while in the States, likely didn’t have a uniform with him, wore tweeds most of the time, and was – in point of fact – more a “tourist” than anything else. (David Horn, the then curator of the Guards Museum, London, and a renowned historian, tried to tell the Gettysburg movie folks these facts, but they insisted on putting Freenantle in a scarlet uniform as an official British observer at Gettysburg, regardless – Go figure.)

Lt Col Arthur Freemantle (In later years)
2. On the other hand, there were a dozen or so authorized British military observers with General McClellan and the Federal Army of the Potomac for several months in 1862. These officers, mostly from Guards regiments and the Royal Artillery, came south from Canada to join Little Mac’s staff.
You see, a brigade of Guards and other regiments, with accompanying artillery, had been sent to Canada by Her Majesty Queen Victoria in response to the “Trent” affair on the high seas. During this incident, two Confederate politicians were taken from a British ship, HMS Trent, causing great outrage in Britain. By the time these elite British troops arrived in Canada, things were smoothed over between President Lincoln and the Queen, and a nasty potential war on our northern border was averted. This left these officers sitting in Canada with practically nothing to do. Why not observe this “Yank” war first hand?
It is one of these British observers, Ian Carlyle, in the Scots Fusilier Guards, who is the hero of my recently released novel, The Gettysburg Conspiracy. I modeled my character, Ian, after two of the actual observers on McClellan’s staff, Charles Edward Fletcher and Edward Neville. They can be seen in the photographic image at the beginning of this blog. These were both fine officers.
By the way, I survived the dentist. My cunning plan worked like a charm.
Photographic image of British and other foreign observers with the Federal Army

More views of these British and other foreign observers on McClellan's staff

The real Bob. He can be seen at the National War Museum-Scotland, at Edinburgh Castle
Sticks survived the Crimean War, and came home a hero in his own right. His comrades in the Scots Fusilier Guards even fashioned a medal for him. As they made their grand victory march through the London streets, past their beloved Queen Victoria, Sticks led the regiment.
His heroic deeds in the Crimea were legend. He even disappeared for weeks from the frozen trenches before Sevastopol. He returned wearing a Russian religious medal around his neck. The Sergeant Major winked, and said, “Guess the damned Ruskies know a good dog when they see one, aye. Glad ta hav ye back laddie.”
Private Gorman also survived the war. He left the Scots Fusilier Guards a few years later, but Sticks chose to remain. He had found a home, indeed a calling. Sean knew it as well. Sticks didn’t belong to him. He belonged to the Scots Fusilier Guards, and still does – in memory.
———————————————————————————
Yes, there was a real Sticks, but his name was “Bob.” He did belong to a butcher, but may well have chosen the life of a soldier, rather than having been rescued by one, as in my fictional tale. He fought in many of the battles in the Crimean War beside his comrades in the Scots Fusilier Guards, and survivied the war.
He even survived the freezing trenches of that first winter of 1854. His mates did fashion a medal for him, and a collar of white belt leather, festooned with regimental buttons.
Unfortunately, the irony of fate caught up to Bob. On a cold February morning in 1860, he was marching through London in his usual place at the head of the Scots Fusilier Guards. Outside Buckingham Palace he was run over by a butcher’s cart and died as a result of the accident.
Much mourned, his spirit lives on, even today. You see his friends just couldn’t let him go. They had him preserved, and he can be seen by all of you – sitting tall, still on guard duty, at the National War Museum of Scotland in Edinburgh Castle.
I hope you’ve enjoyed my tale about Sticks as much as I’ve enjoyed spinning it for you.
In memory of Bob … a warrior.

The first in the Ian Carlyle Series.
What on earth possessed me, a Yank, to write for my debut novel a book about the Crimean War, a very British war – not well known in the US. Actually it didn’t start out that way. My original thought was to write about British observers in the American Civil War on General McClellan’s staff. There were about a dozen of them.
I began writing about these Civil War observers, but it soon dawned on me that they received their combat experience, and became the fine officers they were, in the Crimea, six years before our Civil War. I decided that the setting for the first novel must be the Crimea. I would bring my characters into the American Civil War in the sequel. The Crimean War then became my passion, my obsession, if you will.
Through the next three years of research I made numerous visits to the UK, and two trips to the Crimean battlefields. After a ton of hours at the Scots Guards archives at Wellington Barracks, London; Eton College; and various amazingly beautiful places in Scotland; I finally felt I could put pen to paper … or more precisely finger to keyboard.
Actually, people know more about the Crimean War than they may realize. For instance, the Charge of the Light Brigade – Florence Nightingale, the lady with the lamp – the ‘Thin Red Line’. These all came out of the Crimean War. It took place at the height of the reign of Queen Victoria, and was primarily fought on the Western coast of the Crimean peninsula (present day the Ukraine), between 1854, and 1856.
The war’s origins are shrouded in political mystery and intrigue, ranging from somewhat bogus religious reasons to the expansionist doctrine of the Russian Czar, Nicholas I, in an effort to gain free access (A warm water port) between the Black Sea and the Mediterranean Sea. The spark which caused the feces to hit the fan was when Russia invaded the then Ottoman (Turkish) Empire.
Britain and France, the most unlikely of bedfellows, came to Turkey’s aid, supported by Sardinia. Although a Turkish Army basically forced Russia back across her borders, the people and governments of Britain and France felt strongly that Russia needed to be taught a lesson. Thus in September 1854, a combined allied army landed on the Crimean peninsula. Their mission was to capture Sevastopol and sink the Russian Black Sea fleet harbored there. Their long term strategic goal was to stop Russia from ever again entertaining ideas of expansion in the Mediterranean.
The Russians sunk a major part of their own fleet to block the harbor to British and French ships, and it took the allied army, at great cost, the next two years to ‘capture’ Sevastopol. In the end, the Russians merely evacuated the city in good order, and left it to the British and French.
I think a writer must follow his instincts and above all his passion. I guess my original intent was that “Follow Me to Glory” would be a prequel to the major American Civil War work, but as I researched and wrote, Ian Carlyle’s owing up adventures and his Crimean combat experiences took on their own character and importance. Thus, it is a prequel in the sense that it is the first in the Ian Carlyle Series, where his character comes of age as a man, then as an officer in the caldron of war. The sequel, “The Gettysburg Conspiracy,” brings Ian Carlyle, now a seasoned veteran, into the American Civil War. There will also be at least a third in the Ian Carlyle series. I am determined, however, that each book will be of equal importance, and each will stand alone as a story in itself.
I did ponder the idea of making the setting for the series in a different era, but there is such a strong connection and impact between the Crimean War and our Civil War (only a few years apart) that I doubt there is any other period or set of wars which would so readily lend themselves to my vision.
I have always been mesmerized by this simpler Victorian age. Where they were more gentle and genteel among themselves, yet still using terribly blunt linear tactics when throwing armies at one another head-on. The lines drawn in cultural values, and in war, seem to me clearer than more recent conflicts. Of course, there’s that passion of mine for the 19th century. I couldn’t very well ignore that, could I?




