Jump to content

Battle of Albuera

Coordinates: 38°43′N 6°49′W / 38.717°N 6.817°W / 38.717; -6.817
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Jackyd101 (talk | contribs) at 21:12, 25 November 2007 (→‎Soult's defeat: comma). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

38°43′N 6°49′W / 38.717°N 6.817°W / 38.717; -6.817

Battle of Albuera
Part of the Peninsular War

Marshal Beresford disarming a Polish lancer at the Battle of Albuera. Print by T. Sutherland, 1831.
DateMay 16, 1811
Location
Albuera, south of Badajoz, Spain
Result Indecisive
Belligerents

Spain
Portugal

United Kingdom United Kingdom

France French Empire

Duchy of Warsaw
Commanders and leaders
William Beresford,
Joaquin Blake
Nicolas Jean de Dieu Soult
Strength

35,284:

  • 14,634 Spanish,
  • 10,449 British,
  • 10,201 Portuguese,[1]
48 guns
24,260,[2]
48 guns
Casualties and losses
5,916 dead or wounded 5,936–7,000 dead or wounded

The Battle of Albuera (May 16 1811), an engagement of the Peninsular War, was fought between a mixed British, Spanish, and Portuguese corps and elements of the French Army's Andalusian corps. It took place at the small Spanish village of Albuera, about 12 miles (20 km) south of the frontier fortress-town of Badajoz, Spain.

From October 1810 Marshal Masséna's Army of Portugal had been tied down in an increasingly hopeless stand-off against Wellington's Allied forces, safely entrenched in and behind the Lines of Torres Vedras. Acting on Napoleon's orders, in early 1811 Marshal Soult led a French expedition from Andalusia into Extremadura in a bid to draw Allied forces away from the Lines and ease Masséna's plight. Napoleon's information was outdated and Soult's intervention came too late; starving and understrength, Masséna's army was already withdrawing to Spain. Soult was able to capture the fortress at Badajoz from the Spanish, but was forced to return to Andalusia following Marshal Victor's defeat in March at the Battle of Barrosa. However, Soult left Badajoz strongly garrisoned. In April, following news of Masséna's complete withdrawal from Portugal, Wellington sent a powerful Anglo–Portuguese corps commanded by Sir William Beresford to retake the border town. The Allies drove most of the French from the surrounding area, and laid siege to the remainder in Badajoz.

Soult rapidly gathered a new army from the French Andalusian corps and, joining with the troops retreating from Beresford, he marched to relieve the siege. With intelligence of another approaching force—a Spanish army under General Joaquín Blake—he planned to turn Beresford's flank and interpose his army between the two. However Soult was again acting on outdated information; unknown to the Marshal, the Spaniards had already linked up with the Anglo–Portuguese corps, and his 24,000 troops now faced a combined Allied army 35,000 strong.

The opposing armies met at the village of Albuera. Both sides suffered heavily in the ensuing struggle, but the French were eventually forced to retreat. Beresford's army was too battered and exhausted to pursue, but was able to resume the investment of Badajoz. Despite Soult's failure to relieve the town, the battle had little strategic effect on the on-going war—just one month later, in June 1811, the Allies were forced to abandon their siege by the approach of the reconstituted French Armies of Portugal and Andalusia.

Background

Despite his victory over elements of Marshal André Masséna's Army of Portugal at the Battle of Bussaco in September 1810, Sir Arthur Wellesley, Viscount of Wellington, was forced by Masséna's subsequent manoeuvring to withdraw his numerically inferior force behind the extensive series of fortifications he had prepared around Torres Vedras to protect the approaches to Lisbon. By 10 October 1810, only the British light division and some cavalry patrols remained outside the "Lines".[3] Wellington manned the fortifications with "secondary troops"—25,000 Portuguese militia, 8,000 Spaniards and 2,500 British marines and artillerymen—keeping his main field army of British and Portuguese regulars dispersed in order to rapidly meet a French assault on any point of the Lines.[4]

Masséna's Army of Portugal concentrated around Sobral, apparently in preparation to attack. However, after a fierce skirmish on 14 October in which the strength of the Lines became apparent, the French dug themselves in rather than launch a costly full-scale assault. They remained entrenched for a month before falling back to a position between Santarém and Rio Maior.[5] Following Masséna's withdrawal, Wellington moved the 2nd Division under Lieutenant General Hill, along with two Portuguese brigades and an attachment of Dragoons, across the Tagus to protect the plains of Alentejo, both from Masséna and a possible attack from the French Army of Andalusia.[6]

Nicolas Soult

Napoleon had previously sent dispatches to Marshal Soult, commander of the Army of Andalusia, urging him to send assistance to Masséna.[7] The Emperor's orders were based on outdated intelligence and called for only a small force; by the time Soult received them the situation had changed considerably.[8] Soult now knew a successful attack against Lisbon was beyond his means with the forces proposed—there were 30,000 Allied troops and six major fortresses between his army and the Portuguese capital—but he had received orders nonetheless and felt obliged to do something.[7] He therefore gathered an army of 20,000 men, mainly from V Corps, and launched an expedition into Extremadura with the limited aim of capturing the fortress at Badajoz and hopefully drawing some of the Allied forces away from their impregnable positions in the Lines.[9] Along with V Corps, this venture also pulled both infantry and cavalry from Marshal Victor's I Corps who were besieging Cádiz at the time. Soult ordered more of Victor's men to fill the gaps left by his use of V Corps; this was bitterly opposed by Victor since it severely weakened his own forces, leaving him with only 15,000 men besieging a city garrisoned by around 26,000 Allied troops.[10]

Following a successful campaign in Extremadura, on 27 January 1811 Soult began his investment of Badajoz. Almost immediately the Spanish Army of Extremadura arrived in the vicinity with some 15,000 troops under the command of General Mendizabal. Soult's army, too small to surround Badajoz, was unable to prevent 3,000 of Mendizabal's men reinforcing the fortress and the remainder occupying the heights of San Cristóbal. This posed a major threat to the French, so Soult moved at once to engage. In the ensuing Battle of the Gebora the French inflicted 1,000 casualties on the Spanish field army and took 4,000 prisoners, at a cost to themselves of only 400 casualties. The remnants of Mendizabal's defeated army fled towards Badajoz or into Portugal.[11]

The garrison of Badajoz, ably commanded by General Rafael Menacho, initially put up strong resistance and by 3 March the French had made little progress against the powerful fortress. On that day, however, Menacho was killed on the ramparts by a chance shot; command of the garrison fell to Brigadier José Imaz and the Spanish defence started to slacken.[12] The walls were finally breached on 10 March. Soult was anxious to press the siege, since he had learned that Masséna, in command of a disintegrating army plagued by sickness, starvation and an unusually harsh Portuguese winter, had retreated from Portugal. Concerned that the British would now be free to send a contingent to relieve Badajoz, Soult sent a deputation into the town to demand the garrison's surrender. Imaz duly capitulated and the French took possession of the fortress on 11 March.[13]

On 12 March news of Victor's defeat at the Battle of Barrosa reached Soult, and he left Badajoz to return to Andalusia, anxious that the siege of Cádiz had been broken. Reaching Seville on 20 March he was relieved to find that Victor's siege lines still held and Andalusia remained under French control.[14] Before his departure, Soult had consolidated his gains in Extremadura by garrisoning Badajoz with 11,000 French troops under the command of Marshal Édouard Mortier.[15]

Prelude to battle

William Carr Beresford

The Allies soon learnt of Soult's investment of Badajoz and, with the threat from Masséna diminished by his withdrawal towards Spain, Wellington prepared to send his 2nd and 4th divisions (now under the command of General William Beresford) to relieve the siege. The orders were first issued on 8 March, but countermanded the next day due to false reports of Masséna offering battle at Tomar.[16] Following further delays as Beresford's two divisions regrouped, the relieving force were ordered to hurry to Badajoz on 15 March. Around this time, however, Wellington received news of the town's surrender, and so the expedition could proceed at a more moderate pace.[17]

Mortier keeps busy

Marshal Édouard Mortier, commanding the Badajoz garrison, made good use of the Allied delays. Leaving six battalions to hold the fortress, in early March he moved against the nearby Portuguese town of Campo Maior with around 7,000 men and three batteries borrowed from the siege-train stationed at Badajoz. The French captured the outlying Fort São João on 14 March, the night of their arrival, but the Campo Maior fortress proved a harder proposition. Despite being manned by only 800 militia and Ordenanças commanded by Major José Talaya, the town held out for seven days, surrendering only when an entire face of the bastion crumbled under the bombardment from Mortier's artillery.[18] Mortier also sent two cavalry regiments under General Marie-Charles Latour-Maubourg to invest Alburquerque; the 6,000 strong garrison there surrendered before French reinforcements needed to be brought up.[19]

Major Talaya's prolonged defence of Campo Maior gave Beresford's divisions time to arrive before the captured fortress had been slighted. On returning to Badajoz after his successful foray into Portugal, Mortier had left one infantry and three cavalry regiments at Campo Maior, under Latour-Maubourg, to dismantle its defences; Beresford's appearance on 25 March caught the French by surprise. However, despite the Allies having 18,000 troops at their disposal, Latour-Maubourg calmly formed up his command and retreated towards Badajoz.[20] Beresford sent 1,500 cavalry after the French but the Allied cavalry commander, Brigadier General Robert Long, lost control of the action. The British 13th Light Dragoons chased the French 26th Dragoons all the way to the gates of Badajoz itself, where Mortier's garrison drove them off, and a suicidal charge by Long's heavy cavalry against Latour-Maubourg's infantry, formed in square, was only halted by Beresford's timely arrival. Latour-Maubourg was subsequently able to complete his withdrawal.[20]

Allies invest Badajoz

Beresford now began the task of positioning his army to invest Badajoz, but a series of mishaps delayed the Allied advance into Spain. The Guadiana, a major river of Spain and Portugal that delineates part of the border, lay across Beresford's line of march. Wellington had been promised a stock of Spanish pontoon boats so that a bridge could be erected, but these were not forthcoming. Instead a bridge had to be fashioned in situ—a task that would take until 3 April to complete. Furthermore the rations promised to Beresford, to be taken from the town of Estremoz, had been consumed by the remnants of Mendizabal's Army of Extremadura which had settled in the region following their defeat by Soult at the start of the year. Beresford's troops eventually had to draw on rations from the fortress-town of Elvas in order to feed themselves. Finally, the shoes of the 4th Division had completely worn out following two weeks of marching, and replacements from Lisbon would take a week to arrive. These delays gave the Badajoz garrison time to work on the fortifications, taking them from a state of serious disrepair on 25 March to being tenable on 3 April.[21] Beresford finally began to bring his army forward on 4 April, but a sudden flood swept away his makeshift bridge across the Guadiana, trapping the Allied vanguard on the eastern bank. This could have proved disastrous for Beresford, but Mortier had been recalled to Paris leaving Latour-Maubourg in command at Badajoz, and he was more concerned with repairing the fortress's defences than confronting the Allied army.[22]

By 8 April new bridges had been thrown across the Guadiana and the following day Beresford's army moved to Olivenza; they were now over the border and 15 miles (24 km) south of Badajoz. While the British 4th Division tackled the small French garrison there, which took several days,[23] the main Allied army moved on to Valverde and Albuera.[24] Latour-Maubourg had by now retired to the Andalusian border, leaving only 3,000 men garrisoning Badajoz,[22] and Beresford had been joined by the remnants of the Spanish Army of Extremadura (now under the command of General Castaños), adding 3,000 infantry and 1,000 cavalry to his strength. On 16 April two brigades of the 4th Division, having taken Olivenza, also rejoined the main army.[25] Although Beresford was now in a position to begin his siege, he did not have a siege-train available to him. Consequently the ancient artillery pieces at Elvas (some dating from before 1640) were brought forward; he took the opportunity presented by this delay to take part of his army to clear southern Extremadura of French forces.[26] With Latour-Maubourg pushed back to Guadalcanal, Beresford left his cavalry at Zafra and Llerena to watch the passes back into Extremadura, and drew his infantry back to Badajoz to begin the siege, on 20 April.[27] Wellington himself also arrived at Badajoz on 20 April, paying a flying visit to the campaign.[28] Wellington took control of the investment, and spent several days preparing plans and instructions for both the siege and the campaign as a whole. On 25 April he returned to the north, and matters were once more in Beresford's hands.[22]

Beresford's army was not the only Allied force to move into the Badajoz area. The Spanish Regency at Cádiz had sent General Joaquín Blake, with the two divisions of Zayas and Lardizabal, by sea to Ayamonte on the mouth of the Guadiana. Landing on 25 April, Blake's army moved to join General Francisco Ballesteros at the Spanish town of Xeres.[29]

Armies gather

With the French ejected from the surrounding region, by 9 May Beresford was joined at Badajoz by Ballesteros's Spanish division and Major General Charles Alten's brigade of King's German Legion (KGL) light troops. The Allied army investing the fortress now numbered around 27,000 men.[22] Blake's two divisions had moved from Xeres to Barcarrota where he was awaiting further instructions, and Beresford had left a brigade under Lieutenant Colonel John Colborne, along with a detachment of Spanish cavalry, to watch Latour-Maubourg's movements and dissuade him from returning to Extremadura.[27]

The French had also been mustering their strength. General Jean-Pierre Maransin, who had been pursuing Ballesteros, joined Latour-Maubourg on the Andalusian border, bringing the French presence there to 10,000 men. Soult brought a further 15,000 men of I Corps, IV Corps and V Corps from the Army of Andalusia to join them, and by 13 May there were 21,000 infantry, 4,000 cavalry and 48 cannon moving towards Badajoz.[30]

Beresford had been forewarned of the French movements by reports received on 12 May from Spanish patriots in Seville, who had sent word of Soult's departure with 15,000 men. On 13 May the Spanish cavalry attached to Colborne's brigade came into contact with the combined French army and, in accordance with orders given by Wellington in April, they withdrew, sending word of Soult's position to Beresford. Later that day Long's British cavalry also encountered the French advance, and hastily pulled back—although Long, too, was following Wellington's orders not to engage, Beresford considered his withdrawal somewhat premature and thought Long could have delayed the French by forcing them to deploy.[31]

File:Joaquín Blake y Joyes.jpg
Captain-General Joaquín Blake

That same day Beresford moved the British 2nd Division, Major General John Hamilton's Portuguese division and three artillery batteries from Badajoz to Valverde—an ideal position to observe the three routes open for Soult's approach. The two Spanish commanding officers, Blake and Castaños, met Beresford there and ceded overall command of the combined Allied army to him.[32]

By 15 May it was clear to Beresford that Soult was taking the central route to Badajoz, which ran through Santa Marta and the village of Albuera. He made further adjustments to his deployment, moving the 2nd Division and Hamilton's Portuguese to defend the village, where they were joined by Alten's KGL brigade and a further Portuguese brigade composed of garrison and light troops temporarily formed for the campaign.[33] Soult's movements became even clearer when his Chasseurs à cheval and hussars engaged Long's cavalry at Santa Marta—once again Long retreated in what Beresford considered to be unreasonable haste, so Beresford removed him from command and appointed Major General William Lumley as his replacement.[34] There were no further engagements that day and Beresford was able to complete his dispositions: Hamilton's division along with most of the Portuguese cavalry was moved to the Allied left wing; Major General William Stewart's 2nd Division and Lowry Cole's 4th Division, supported by Alten's KGL, formed up on Albuera itself; and the southern section was left for Castaños's and Blake's four Spanish infantry divisions, to be supported by Allied cavalry and several batteries of artillery.[35] Blake's divisions were delayed in coming forward and only arrived at around midnight 15–16 May, but they were in position in time for the opening of battle later that morning.[36]

Meanwhile Soult was making his own plans. He knew that Blake had arrived via sea from Cádiz, but was unaware that the Spanish divisions had already joined with Beresford. He decided that the best course of action would be to turn the Allies' southern flank, cutting Blake off from Beresford's army. Soult hoped that as a result he could defeat his opponents in detail, overcoming Beresford's force and then turning south to deal with Blake's divisions.[37]

Battle

Map of the battle, from Napier's History of the War in the Peninsula

Beresford deployed his troops on the reverse slopes of such hills as could be found on the battlefield; unable to see the Allied army, Soult was still unaware that Blake's Spanish divisions had come up during the night. Thus, on the morning of 16 May 1811, the Marshal proceeded with his attempt to turn the Allied right flank.[37] To approach Albuera village directly, the French would have to cross the Albuera River via a small bridge, and Soult's first move was to launch a strong feint attack in this direction. He sent Godinot's infantry brigade, flanked by Briche's light cavalry and supported by artillery, across the bridge towards the village. Four platoons of Vistula Uhlans also crossed the river, but they were driven back by the 3rd Dragoon Guards. A Portuguese gun battery had been positioned to cover the approaches to the bridge, and as Godinot's skirmishers advanced they became engaged with Alten's KGL battalions, who were defending Albuera.[38]

At the same time two brigades of dragoons and Werlé's infantry brigade showed themselves on Godinot's left, advancing out of an olive wood in front of Blake's position to Alten's right.[39] With a large concentration of French troops now menacing the village, the Allied commanders took the bait exactly as Soult had planned, and sent reinforcements to Alten's aid.[37]

French flank attack

While the Allies were bracing themselves for a frontal assault on their centre and right, Soult was preparing his real thrust. The two V Corps divisions of Generals Girard and Gazan, preceded by a cavalry brigade, swung left to begin the Marshal's flanking move—their progress was concealed by intervening olive woods, and the first the Allies knew of them was when four French cavalry regiments burst from the southern end of the woods, crossed two brooks, and scattered Loy's Spanish cavalry on the right of Beresford's lines.[40] Alarmed, Beresford rode forward to observe the French manoeuvres; when Godinot's cavalry support and Werlé's brigade began to move away from Albuera and toward Girard's rear, Soult's true intentions became clear.[41]

Beresford immediately issued new orders. He directed Blake to swing his forward line around to face the approaching French.[42] Lumley's cavalry was sent to support Loy's horse and hold Blake's right flank, while Stewart's 2nd Division was sent south from its location behind Albuera to take up a new position behind Blake in readiness to provide support if needed. Cole's 4th Division was ordered to form up behind the cavalry, and Hamilton's Portuguese moved to the Allied centre to hold Albuera and act as a reserve.[43]

Blake, however, did not follow Beresford's orders; he still believed that the French attack would come at his front. Keeping his forward line in position, he instead moved four battalions from Zayas's division to form his new southern-facing front.[44] Zayas deployed these battalions, from the Spanish second line, in two groups. Two battalions of Spanish Guards were formed up, in line, at the top of a steep incline while the remaining two formed close columns behind them; a single battery of Spanish artillery supported the whole position.[45]

Beresford, on hearing of Blake's limited redeployment, rode back to personally supervise the operation. He merged Zayas's second pair of battalions with the first pair, forming a front line four battalions strong. He then sent orders for Lardizabal to bring up three of his battalions to support Zayas's right, and for Ballesteros to bring a further two in support of the left.[45] However, these reinforcements did not arrive in time to meet the first French attack—Zayas's four battalions had to face two entire French divisions alone.[46]

Thin Spanish line holds

While Beresford had been redeploying his army, a "majestic movement changed the whole aspect of the French front".[47] Two brigades of dragoons galloped from the French right-centre, passed behind V Corps, and joined Latour-Maubourg's cavalry on the left. At the same time Werlé's division closed up with the rear of V Corps, becoming the French reserve. Soult had concentrated his entire infantry strength, except for Godinot's 3,500 men who were still engaged at Albuera, and all his cavalry save Briche's light horse, into one front marching on Blake's right flank.[47]

The two divisions of V Corps advanced one behind the other against Zayas's position. The first of these divisions, that of Girard, moved in ordre mixte—four battalions in column flanked on either side by a battalion in line, and further flanked by a battalion and a half in column—while Gazan's division moved in battalion column.[48] Girard's tirailleurs engaged Zayas line and gradually thinned the Spanish front rank.[49] When Girard's main column came within about 55 yards (50 m) of the Spaniards, the skirmishers split to the left and right and the battalions behind them opened fire. The Spaniards held their ground, exchanging volleys with the French, and eventually repelled Girard's first attack.[50]

Despite their resistance Zayas's men, possibly the best troops in the Spanish army at the time,[46] were being slowly forced back. However, they held long enough for Ballesteros and Lardizabal to come up, and for Stewart's 2nd Division to advance to their support.[51] Stewart brought John Colborne's 1st Brigade up, followed by the Division's two other brigades. The 3rd Regiment of Foot (the Buffs) took the lead, followed by the 48th and the 66th. Colborne's brigade formed up on the French left, and supported by a battery of KGL cannon the British opened fire on the French, forcing Girard's two flanking battalions to face outwards in order to return fire.[52]

Destruction of Colborne's brigade

The musketry duel that developed between Colborne's brigade and Girard's left flank was so intense that both sides faltered. The French began to break, and were only kept in place by their officers beating them back with swords as they tried to retreat.[52] The left of Colborne's brigade, assailed by both musket fire and grapeshot from Girard's supporting guns, tried to force the issue with a bayonet charge but were unsuccessful. On the right Colborne's men continued to trade volleys with the French and, seeing their resolve wavering, also fixed bayonets and charged.[53]

File:Buffs.jpg
The Buffs defend their colours.

As the brigade moved forward a blinding hail- and rain-shower hit the battlefield, rendering both sides' muskets useless.[54] Under cover of the reduced visibility Latour-Maubourg launched two cavalry regiments at Colborne's exposed right flank. Ploughing through the unprepared British infantry, the 1st Vistula Uhlans and the 2nd Hussars virtually annihilated Colborne's first three regiments. Only the fourth, the 31st Regiment of Foot, was able to save itself by forming into square.[51] The cavalry pressed on against his supporting KGL artillery battery and captured its guns (although all but the howitzer were subsequently recovered).[55]

Having captured five regimental flags and eight cannon the Uhlans swept past the 31st's square, scattering Beresford and his staff, and attacked the rear of Zayas's line.[56] Zayas met this assault unflinchingly while continuing to direct fire at Girard.[57] By this time the rainstorm had cleared and Lumley, commanding Beresford's horse, could finally make out the devastation caused by the French and Polish cavalry. He sent two squadrons of the 4th Dragoons to disperse the Uhlans, which they did, but the British troopers were in their turn driven off by a fresh hussar regiment that Latour-Maubourg had sent to cover the lancer's retreat.[58] Closing on the action, the 29th Regiment of Foot (the lead regiment of Stewart's second brigade) opened fire on the scattered Vistula lancers.[59] Most of this fusillade actually missed its intended targets and instead struck the rear ranks of Zayas's men. The Spaniards nevertheless stood firm; their actions very likely saved the allied army from destruction.[57]

British sources state that the Polish cavalrymen refused to accept any surrender by the British infantry, and deliberately speared the wounded as they lay. Tradition reports that the British 2nd Division swore to give no quarter to Poles following Albuera. In fact, of the 1,250 men lost by Colborne's first three regiments, 479 were taken prisoner.[60]

Hoghton's ordeal

The fighting on the Allied right now paused as both sides sought to regroup. Girard's division had suffered considerably in its battle with Zayas, and Colborne's actions, although ultimately disastrous, had caused significant French casualties.[61] Girard now regarded his division as a spent force and brought up Gazan's 2nd Division to take its place. Advancing in column, Gazan's battalions had to struggle through the remnants of Girard's retiring units. As a result many of the 1st Division's survivors were swept up and incorporated into Gazan's column, which grew by accretion into a huge, dense mass of 8,000 men, losing much of its cohesion in the process.[62] The ensuing disruption and delay gave the Allies time to re-form their own lines.[61] Beresford deployed Hoghton's brigade behind Zayas's lines and Abercrombie's to the rear of Ballesteros, then moved them forward to relieve the Spaniards.[63] Joseph Sherer, an officer serving under Abercrombie, recounts how a young Spanish officer rode up and "begged me ... to explain to the English that his countrymen were ordered to retire [and] were not flying."[64]

Following this hiatus the second phase of the battle began—if anything even more bloodily than the first.[61] The French only deployed a skirmish line against Abercrombie's brigade, so the weight of the renewed assault fell on Hoghton. Despite being joined by the sole survivors of Colborne's brigade (the 31st Foot) only 1,900 men stood in line to face the advancing corps.[63] Hoghton's three battalions (the 29th Regiment of Foot, 1/48th Regiment of Foot and 1/57th Regiment of Foot) suffered huge casualties, with 56 officers and 971 men killed or wounded from their complement of 95 officers and 1,556 men.[65]

Ordinarily in a duel between British line and French column, the greater volume of fire laid down by the line, where every single weapon could be brought to bear on the front and flanks of the narrower column, could be expected to be the decisive factor. In this case however the French were well supported by artillery. More than compensating for the firepower disadvantage of his infantry formation, Girard brought guns up to just 300 yards (275 m) from Hoghton's line—close enough to enfilade it with a crossfire of grape and canister.[66] Early in this engagement Colonel William Inglis of the 57th Foot was wounded by grapeshot from the French artillery. He refused to be carried to the rear and lay with the Colours; throughout the battle his voice could be heard calmly repeating "Die-Hard 57th, Die-Hard".[67] In following his exhortations, the 57th earned their nickname: the 'Die-Hards'.[64]

Under this combined arms assault Hoghton's brigade was decimated. The Brigadier himself was killed, and as casualties rose its shrinking line could no longer cover the frontage of the attacking column. However, the French were in no condition to press home their numerical advantage; British volley fire had taken its toll and Girard lost 2,000 men during the confrontation.[68] He had tried to form his unwieldy corps-sized column into line in order to bring his full firepower to bear and overwhelm Hoghton's brigade, but his deploying companies were constantly driven back into the column by the intense British musketry.[69]

Soult's defeat

Map of the battle, from Alison's History of Europe

Although the French attacks were being held, the result of the battle was still far from certain. Soult had Werlé's divisional-sized brigade in reserve, and most of Latour-Maubourg's cavalry had not been engaged. However the presence of Cole's fresh 4th Division, still formed up in readiness behind Lumley's squadrons, seems to have persuaded Soult not to use his strong force of horsemen.[70] In his subsequent dispatch to the Emperor, Soult claimed that he had only at that point learned that Blake had joined with Beresford and he faced a much larger Allied force than expected.[71] The Marshal, having out-manoeuvred the Allies with his flank attack, went on the defensive: the cavalry were refused permission to charge, and Werlé remained in reserve.[61]

On the Allied side Beresford was proving no more incisive. Anxious to reinforce Hoghton and Abercrombie, he tried to bring up de España's independent brigade, but they refused to move within range of the French.[72] Leaving Cole's division in place (according to Beresford, to protect the Allied flank from further cavalry attack, although Wellington was of the opinion that Beresford was actually securing his line of retreat[73]), Beresford instead called upon Hamilton's Portuguese Division, but Hamilton had moved closer to Albuera to support Alten in fending off Godinot's attack, and the orders took a long time to reach him. Hamilton's brigades only started moving half an hour after the orders had been sent.[72] With his right under heavy pressure and casualties mounting, Beresford finally sent for Alten's KGL, ordering 3,000 Spaniards to Albuera to relieve them and take over the defence there. Alten hastily regrouped and marched south to the Allies' right wing, but Godinot took Albuera before the Spaniards could arrive, exposing another Allied flank to the French.[61]

It was at this critical point that Cole made his move. Standing idle, with no orders from Beresford, he had been considering advancing against the French left flank, but he was wary of moving his infantry across open country in the face of 3,500 French cavalry.[74] His mind was made up though when Colonel Henry Hardinge, of the Portuguese Quarter-master-general's department, rode up and urged him to immediately advance.[75] After a brief consultation with Lumley, Cole began to redeploy his division from column into line. Mindful of the dangers presented by Latour-Maubourg's horsemen, Cole flanked his line at either end with a unit in column: on the right were the division's massed light companies, including those from Brigadier Kemmis's brigade,[25] while the first battalion of the Lusitanian Legion took station on the left.[75] Lumley formed up the whole of the Allied cavalry to the rear and right, accompanied by a battery of horse artillery, and the whole mass, some 5,000 infantrymen, advanced on V Corps' left flank.[74]

The sight of the approaching Allied line forced Soult's hand—if Cole's division was not stopped, defeat was certain. He sent four regiments of Latour-Maubourg's dragoons to charge the Portuguese section of Cole's line, and committed the whole of Werlé's reserve to protect V Corps' flank.[76] The dragoons swept down on Harvey's Portuguese brigade fully expecting to destroy it as they had Colborne's. The inexperienced Portuguese, however, stood firm and drove away the cavalry without even forming square.[77] Having once been repulsed, Latour-Maubourg's dragoons made no further attack on Cole's division, and his men marched on. The Fusilier brigade and Lusitanian Legion on the division's left soon encountered Werlé's brigade, which outnumbered them two to one.[78] Despite his advantage in numbers, Werlé had formed his nine battalions into three columns of regiments, and could not bring as many muskets to bear as the Allies. Three separate regimental musket duels ensued, as the 23rd Royal Welch Fusiliers and the two battalions of the 7th Fusiliers each took on a column.[76] During the fire-fight the French tried to extend into line (as V Corps had attempted earlier), and as before the concentrated Allied fire prevented their deployment. After 20–30 minutes of bitter conflict the French finally broke and ran.[78] The Fusiliers had lost more than half their numbers, mainly to artillery fire, while Werlé's brigade had suffered 1,800 casualties.[76]

Meanwhile, Abercrombie had wheeled his brigade round to face the right of the beleaguered V Corps and charged; Girard's and Gazan's men fled to the rear, joining the fugitives from Werlé's brigade.[79] The Allied 4th Division, and parts of the 2nd, went after the retreating French, leading Beresford to exclaim "Stop! Stop the Fifty Seventh; it would be a sin to let them go on!"[80] This admonition was unnecessary though: Latour-Maubourg quickly placed his cavalry between the chasing Allied divisions and the fleeing French infantry, and the British and Portuguese drew up on the heights they had just won. Soult also moved up his final reserve, two strong Grenadier battalions, to cover the retreat and although they suffered heavily from Allied artillery fire, they and the cavalry ensured there was little further fighting.[79] After some delay Beresford brought up three Portuguese brigades and drove the French Grenadiers back, but by this time Soult had massed his artillery in a line against the Allies and, wisely, Beresford did not commit his forces.[81]

As a postscript to the battle, Alten's KGL, who had not had time to join the southern front, returned to Albuera and drove out what French force remained in the village. After six or seven hours of bitter conflict, the battle had come to an end.[81]

Aftermath

On the morning of 17 May both sides formed up again. Beresford was preparing for another defensive battle, but Soult was only holding his ground long enough to arrange for transportation of his wounded to Seville.[82] There was little chance of Soult resuming hostilities, since Kemmis's 1,400 strong brigade (previously stranded on the north bank of the Guadiana) finally joined the Allied army on the battlefield at dawn. Beresford also had the relatively unscathed Portuguese division, Alten's KGL and several Spanish battalions ready for duty; Soult, in contrast, only had Godinot's brigade and Latour-Maubourg's cavalry in a fit state to fight.[83] News that Wellington was marching to Elvas with a further two divisions hastened the Marshal's decision to retreat, as well as persuading Beresford not to launch a premature offensive against Soult's superior artillery and cavalry.[82]

Soult marched away before dawn on 18 May, leaving several hundred wounded behind for the Allies to treat.[84] There were so many injured in the battle that two days later British casualties were still waiting to be collected from the field. The chapel at Albuera was filled with wounded Frenchmen, and the dead still lay scattered across the ground.[83] In proportion to the numbers involved, the Battle of Albuera was the bloodiest of the whole Peninsular War.[85]

The losses on both sides were horrific, and while Soult had failed in his aim of relieving the siege of Badajoz, neither side had demonstrated the will to press for a conclusive victory.[86] Allied losses amounted to 5,916: 4,159 British, 389 Portuguese and 1,368 Spaniards.[1] French casualties are harder to ascertain—Soult initially declared 2,800 in his dispatch to Napoleon, but the official figure drawn up on 6 July revised that number upward to 5,936. British historians dispute this, comparing Soult's figure of 241 officer casualties with regimental returns that total 362.[2] Sir Charles Oman extrapolates this figure to come up with a total number of French casualties which he puts at approximately 7,900. In comparison, the French historians Belmas and Lapéne place Soult's losses at 7,000.[87]

Consequences

Although he failed to lift the siege of Badajoz, Soult's campaign had managed to temporarily relieve it for three days. General Phillipon, the garrison's commander, took this opportunity to sally out and destroy the surrounding Allied trenchworks and batteries. However, before abandoning these works and moving off to Albuera on 15 May, the 4th Division had sent their more valuable supplies back to Elvas, so little more was achieved during the Allied absence. On 18 May Beresford sent Hamilton's Portuguese division, along with some cavalry, back to Badajoz. Its investment was resumed the following day.[82] Beresford's corps was joined by Wellington's field army during June 1811, but even with this reinforcement time was fast running out. The French Army of Portugal, now reconstituted under Marshal Auguste Marmont, had joined up with Soult's Army of the South, and Wellington was forced to pull his 44,000 men back across the border to Elvas. On 20 June the combined French force, over 60,000 strong, finally lifted the siege.[88]

Albuera had little effect on the overall course of the war, but it had shown that British and Spanish troops could work together. On the other hand, Anglo–Spanish political relations suffered following the battle. Wellington unfairly placed most of the blame for the losses on Blake, while a dispatch read in the Spanish cortes implied that the British had played only a minor role in the battle.[89]

Notes

  1. ^ a b Oman 1911, Appendix XV.
  2. ^ a b Oman 1911, Appendix XVI.
  3. ^ Weller 1962, pp. 141–142.
  4. ^ Weller 1962, p. 144.
  5. ^ Weller 1962, pp. 145–146.
  6. ^ Oman 1911, p. 4.
  7. ^ a b Gates 1986, p. 245.
  8. ^ Oman 1911, pp. 28–29.
  9. ^ Glover 1974, p. 142.
  10. ^ Oman 1911, pp. 30–31.
  11. ^ Gates 1986, pp. 245–248.
  12. ^ Oman 1911, p. 56.
  13. ^ Oman 1911, pp. 57–61.
  14. ^ Oman 1911, p. 62.
  15. ^ Gates 1986, p. 249.
  16. ^ Oman 1911, p. 248.
  17. ^ Oman 1911, pp. 249–251.
  18. ^ Oman 1911, pp. 253–255.
  19. ^ Gates 1986, p. 252.
  20. ^ a b Gates 1986, p. 253.
  21. ^ Oman 1911, pp. 266–267.
  22. ^ a b c d Gates 1986, p. 254.
  23. ^ Oman (1911, p. 271) claims five days, while Gates (1986, p. 254) states three.
  24. ^ Oman 1911, p. 271; Oman's timeline goes awry at this point, and he mentions 8 March instead of April. His previous, and subsequent, passages imply this is an error, and other histories (Fortescue, Gates, Glover, Esdaile et al) support this view.
  25. ^ a b Glover 1974, p. 163; Brigadier Kemmis's brigade had been stranded on the north bank of the Guadiana, and only his light companies accompanied Cole.
  26. ^ Oman 1911, pp. 272–276.
  27. ^ a b Oman 1911, p. 277.
  28. ^ Oman 1911, p. 279.
  29. ^ Fortescue 1917, p. 142.
  30. ^ Gates (1986, p. 254) and Oman (1911, p. 367).
  31. ^ Oman 1911, pp. 369–370.
  32. ^ Fortescue 1917, p. 182.
  33. ^ Oman 1911, p. 371.
  34. ^ Oman 1911, p. 372.
  35. ^ Gates 1986, pp. 257–258.
  36. ^ Oman 1911, pp. 376–377.
  37. ^ a b c Gates 1986, p. 258.
  38. ^ Fortescue 1917, p. 191.
  39. ^ Oman 1911, p. 378.
  40. ^ Oman (1911, p. 378); however, Fortescue (1917, p. 192) suggests that the French were spotted by an aide-de-camp of Zayas as they marched through the woods.
  41. ^ Fortescue 1917, p. 192.
  42. ^ The Spanish normally fought in two lines, each three ranks deep (Glover 1974, p. 160).
  43. ^ Fortescue 1917, pp. 192–193.
  44. ^ Weller 1962, p. 175.
  45. ^ a b Fortescue 1917, p. 193.
  46. ^ a b Esdaile 2002, p. 344.
  47. ^ a b Oman 1911, p. 381.
  48. ^ Fortescue (1917, p. 194) describes the ordre mixte, while Esdaile (2002, p. 344) gives the disposition of the Corps as a whole.
  49. ^ Fortescue 1917, p. 195.
  50. ^ Fortescue 1917, pp. 195–196. Beresford reported that the Spanish held for an hour and a half (Fortescue 1917, p. 196, footnote).
  51. ^ a b Weller 1962, p. 176.
  52. ^ a b Oman 1911, p. 383.
  53. ^ Fortescue (1917, p. 197) and Oman (1911, p. 383).
  54. ^ Oman (1911, p. 383) describes the sudden shower, while Weller (1962, p. 177, footnote) explains why muskets are useless in the wet.
  55. ^ Fortescue 1917, pp. 197–198.
  56. ^ Muzás (2002, para. 2) claims six colours were taken, but then goes on to acknowledge that Lieutenant Latham saved the Buff's King's Colour and that the Uhlans only took the flagstaff.
  57. ^ a b Gates 1986, p. 259.
  58. ^ Fortescue 1917, p. 198.
  59. ^ Oman 1911, p. 385.
  60. ^ Oman 1911, p. 384.
  61. ^ a b c d e Gates 1986, p. 260.
  62. ^ Oman 1911, pp. 385–386.
  63. ^ a b Oman 1911, p. 386.
  64. ^ a b Esdaile 2002, p. 346.
  65. ^ Oman 1911, pp. 386–387.
  66. ^ Weller 1962, pp. 177–178.
  67. ^ Glover 1974, p. 162.
  68. ^ Oman 1911, p. 387.
  69. ^ Fortescue 1917, p. 201.
  70. ^ Fortescue 1917, p. 202.
  71. ^ Oman 1911, p. 388; Fortescue (1917, p. 202) however argues that Soult already knew of Blake's presence and, an irresolute commander on the battlefield, simply hesitated to commit the reserves.
  72. ^ a b Weller 1962, pp. 178–179.
  73. ^ Weller 1962, p. 178, footnote 3.
  74. ^ a b Oman 1911, p. 390.
  75. ^ a b Fortescue 1917, pp. 203–204.
  76. ^ a b c Oman 1911, pp. 390–392.
  77. ^ Esdaile 2002, p. 347.
  78. ^ a b Fortescue 1917, pp. 204–205.
  79. ^ a b Oman 1911, pp. 392–393.
  80. ^ Glover 1974, p. 164.
  81. ^ a b Fortescue 1917, p. 206.
  82. ^ a b c Oman 1911, pp. 395–397.
  83. ^ a b Fortescue 1917, p. 209.
  84. ^ Oman (1911, p. 397) and Fortescue (1917, p. 209); Soult's transport was used up carrying the rest of his wounded, and he could not move those left.
  85. ^ Oman 1911, p. 393.
  86. ^ Gates 1986, p. 261.
  87. ^ Weller 1962, p. 185.
  88. ^ Weller 1962, pp. 187–189.
  89. ^ Esdaile 2002, pp. 348–349.

References

  • Esdaile, Charles (2002), The Peninsular War, Penguin Books (published 2003), ISBN 0-140-27370-0{{citation}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link);
  • Gates, David (1986), The Spanish Ulcer: A History of the Peninsular War, Pimlico (published 2002), ISBN 0-7126-9730-6{{citation}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link);
  • Glover, Michael (1974), The Peninsular War 1807–1814: A Concise Military History, Penguin Classic Military History (published 2001), ISBN 0-141-39041-7{{citation}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link);
  • Weller, Jac (1962), Wellington in the Peninsula, Nicholas Vane{{citation}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link).