One of the titles
bestowed on the Royal Scots, that of “Pontius Pilate’s Bodyguard,”
marks the claim of the regiment to antiquity. Under Marlborough, in
the French war in America, at Corunna, through the Peninsular war
with Wellington, at Quatre Bras and Waterloo, in India, the Crimea,
and in China, have the battalions of the Royal Scots upheld the
honour of the British Army; and it stands to their credit that in
the South African campaign, in which they were engaged practically
from start to finish, there was not a single case of surrender of a
party of the Royal Scots.
The history of the regiment in the present war begins at Landrecies
and Mons, and it is worthy of note that the first story of a man of
the regiment that comes to hand concerns the bravery of men of other
units. The man in question was twice wounded himself before being
invalided home; but, declining to talk about himself, he remarked
that for real British pluck he had never seen anything to equal that
of the Middlesex regiment. He saw them digging trenches near Mons
when a mass of Germans, who seemed to come from nowhere, came down
on them. He conjectured that the Germans had been apprised of the
position of the Middlesex men by an air scout, and he saw how the
Germans came on the Middlesex, who were totally unprepared in the
matter of equipment, and had to face fixed bayonets with no apparent
means of reprisal. But the sergeant of a company set the fashion by
the use of his fists, and “downed” two of the attacking Germans; the
whole of the company followed suit, but they were badly cut about by
the Germans, and the sergeant was bayoneted. Near by were the
Connaughts, who, after six guns had been taken by the Germans,
charged down on the enemy and took back the guns, with the aid of
artillery fire. But, regarding the doings of the Royal Scots at the
time, the man of the regiment who tells this story has never a word
to say.
A corporal of the ist Royal Scots tells how Lieutenant Geoffrey
Lambton, nephew of the Earl of Durham, died. It happened in the
third rearguard action after Mons that the lieutenant was in charge
of his men in a wood, and was directing fire from a mound. Before
and beneath the Scots the Germans were in strong force, and were
preparing to attack, when Lambton gave the order to fire, and,
picking up a rifle himself, set the example to his men. Fatally
wounded by a German bullet, he knew that he had not long to live, so
handed over to the corporal his pocket-book, note-book and
sketch-book, to take back to his people.
Another corporal of the regiment testifies to the spirit of its men
at Landrecies, where in company with about fifty others he was cut
off from the main body, and engaged in desperate street fighting.
The party joined up with the Grenadier Guards, and in the streets of
Landrecies German officers called on them to surrender, but the
officers answered that “ British never surrender—fix bayonets and
charge! So well did they charge that the streets were piled with
German dead. The Royal Scots were heavily engaged at Landrecies, and
accounted for a great number of the enemy there.
Graphically is the story of the retreat told by one Private Stewart,
who was invalided home after the battle of the Marne. “After Mons,”
he says, "the hardships of fighting on the retreat began. We had
little time for sleep; both day and night we retreated, and as they
marched the men slept. If a man in front of you happened to stop,
you found yourself bumping into him. I didn’t have my clothes off
for six weeks, and my kit and overcoat have been left on the field.
At one place where we halted for the day the lady of the farmhouse
was washing, so some of us took off our shirts to have them washed.
While they were hanging up to dry the order came that the troops had
to move on, and the wet garments had to be put on just as they were.
Mine was dry next morning. Two of my mates were killed in the
trenches by one shell, which burst close to them. We were not deeply
entrenched, and the German artillery fire was so heavy that we had
to lie on our sides like pitmen and dig ourselves in deeper. 'We had
a chance to look up occasionally when our guns replied. Another time
the Royal Scots were having a meal by the roadside, when we got
orders that we must be finished in five minutes. In less than that
time the Germans opened fire, but fortunately the side of the road
was an embankment, and so formed a natural trench. We lay there
during the rest of the day and the greater part of the night,
keeping off the attack by constant fire. My company captured about
forty German cyclists, who offered no resistance —this was after the
Marne, when the Germans retired. The British had been blazing away
for some time at what appeared to be the helmets of the men in the
trenches, when an officer saw that the helmets were not moving. He
gave the order to advance, and when we got up we found that the
Germans were retiring, and had left their helmets as a blind. Many
prisoners were taken that day.”
Brief as an official report is this story, and as pithy, giving as
it does an outline of the work in which the Royal Scots have been
engaged from the time of Landrecies onwards. For it is not what is
actually written that counts in such a sincere piece of writing as
this, but the facts that appear between the lines. The brief
reference to the hardships of the retreat, the queer washing day,
and the interrupted meal, are chapters of war in themselves,
reported with a brevity and conciseness which stamp the document as
authentic.
Another man of the regiment was in the first of the fighting at
Landrecies, and went on to the positions of the Marne and the Aisne,
returning wounded from the latter, with four splinters of shrapnel
in his back, one in his ribs, and a bullet wound in his head—surely
enough to send any man back from the firing line. At Landrecies he
and his fellows encountered a looting party of Germans, who carried
large quantities of jewellery, clothing, and other articles :
practically every account of the first of the fighting tells of
German attention to details of this kind.
At the position of the Aisne, the Royal Scots had a stiff struggle
in the holding of a pontoon bridge, and the man who tells this story
was wounded there during a rain of shell fire to which his battalion
was subjected. After he was hit, he lay unconscious for seven hours,
and in order to escape after regaining his senses he had to propel
himself, feet first, along a sort of furrow or ditch. It was a weary
business, and, exposing himself momentarily, he was hit again on the
head by a bullet, though the lead failed to penetrate to any depth;
and during his journey he was for a time between the fire of Germans
and British. He came on a German trench full of dead men, and was
struck by the elaborate arrangement of the trench, for there were
tables and chairs, and a quantity of champagne bottles, both full
and empty—the trench was well stocked with wine.
Previously to being wounded, this man made one of a party that
captured a number of Germans, one of whom spoke English well, and
told his captors that he had a wife and five children in Glasgow,
and that the only way to get back to them was to court capture. This
German had been in employment in Glasgow, and was called up five
months before the war broke out—a significant fact when it is
remembered how German statesmen are still insisting that Britain
made the war.
A man of the Royal Scots has told how Captain Price of the regiment
died. While in the trenches, and under a hot fire, Captain Price ran
forward to help a corporal who had been shot in the arm, and in
kindly fashion the captain was preventing the corporal from seeing
his wound—shielding the injured arm while it was being dressed.
While so engaged Captain Price was struck in the head by a piece of
shrapnel, and he died while being carried to the field hospital. On
the testimony of the men of the regiment, a braver or kindlier
officer than Captain C. L. Price, D.S.O., has never worn uniform.
With regard to the work of the regiment in the trenches of the
Aisne, and the enemy they have had to face, one man of the regiment
speaks. “The Germans are good range finders with their big guns,” he
says, “and their fire is very effective—but you could get boys to
give them points with the rifle. One thing has made an impression on
me, and that is that the enemy has no respect 26 whatever for the
Red Cross. Our men were proceeding along a road, when they came on a
Red Cross waggon lying on its side, with several Red Cross men lying
dead beside it. There was one brave incident I witnessed, and
although I do not know the name of the fellow who showed such pluck,
I know he belonged to the Royal Scots. I saw him carry one of his
comrades across a field for about three hundred yards, though the
fire from the German ranks was simply awful at the time.”
Here, again, is an instance of the way in which the men tell of each
other’s deeds but make no mention of their own. The French soldier,
as a rule, knows when he has done a brave action, and talks about
it—the quality does not make him less brave, but it is one that is
inconsistent with British character. The average British soldier is
usually quite unconscious that he has done anything worthy of note,
and, even if he knows the value of what he has done, he is very shy
of speaking about it, and usually prefers to talk about the things
somebody else has accomplished.
A certain Private Kemp, invalided home to Berwick, testifies to the
way in which tobacco and cigarettes have come to be regarded by the
men in the firing line. He tells how, when out scouting, he was
captured by three Uhlans, who took away his arms and equipment, and
were just about to take him away as a prisoner when a shot was
fired, and the Uhlans took to their heels. Kemp, wounded in the leg,
fell, and after lying for an hour and a half, he was picked up by
advancing British troops. “One great hardship,” he says, “was the
lack of tobacco all the time. I and many of my comrades have been
reduced to smoking dried tea-leaves wrapped in old newspaper. A real
smoke would have been a blessing.”
One officer of the regiment, wounded while out in front of the
trenches studying the position of the enemy with field-glasses, was
carried back into shelter, and laid in the trench until the field
ambulance should come to remove him to the rear. “He lay there
smoking cigarettes,” says one of the men, “and shouting—Good old
Royal Scots— well done!" whenever anything came off.” And in this
and incidents like it lies the spirit that makes the Royal Scots
what they are—it is the spirit of men who do not know when they are
beaten, who will never admit defeat. It is the spirit that Findlater
showed at Dargai.
Yet another private of the regiment, writing with no address and no
date to his letter, says : “In the last scrap I was in we had a
terrible time one way and another. After marching from the Sunday to
the Tuesday night, we got anchored near a farm, and the next
morning, just when breakfast was ready, we had to leave it lying and
get stuck into our trenches, as the Germans had come on us. We could
see them moving up on our front, and our artillery were not long in
getting their range and sending them out of it. Our big guns were
going finely until the afternoon, when they seemed to stop all at
once, compared with the guns the Germans had brought up. They
started to shell a village behind us with their siege guns, and they
just blew holes in it. We had a church for a hospital, and that went
up too—but that is their usual dirty game. They have no respect for
a Red Cross waggon, and, as far as I can see, they seem to take them
for targets. We had to retire after being shelled for about eight
hours, and we lost a good few men, but had the consolation of
knowing that, as usual, the enemy had lost a good many more. We are
having a rest now, and have not seen the battalion for two weeks. It
is a very sad sight to see the people here going about homeless;
most of them are of the poorer class, and it must be an awful time
for them.”
Writing later, the same man says: “We have come through four days’
hard fighting, and have been relieved—we drove the Germans out of
all their positions. At one place the French were trying to shift
the enemy, so our lot were brought up to assist; and although we
lost a good few men in the open fields, our chaps stuck it well.
General Smith-Dorrien sent along a message—Good, Royal Scots! and
then when we took the other side of the bridge he said "Bravo, Royal
Scots! so we have not done so badly.”
And there, for the present, the record of this oldest regiment of
the service must be broken off. It tells of work from Mons and
Landrecies, through the great retreat to the position of the Marne,
and on to the Aisne—and there it ends, for the present. We know that
many of the regiments along the line of the Aisne have been moved up
to assist in the great Flanders battles, and in all probability
there have been Royal Scots in that Flanders line as well as along
the Aisne.
There is one story of this first regiment of British infantry which,
though it is nearly fourteen years old, should always be told in any
account of the deeds of the regiment. It concerns a certain Sergeant
G. Robertson, placed in command* of a party of about twenty men who
were acting as railway escort to a train from Pretoria. The train
was bound for the Eastern Transvaal, and, on reaching Pan, it was
stopped by Boers blowing up the line. The Boers attacked in force,
being concealed in a trench a few yards from the train, and the
escort at once, under orders from Sergeant Robertson, opened fire.
The Boers, who greatly outnumbered the escort, called on Robertson
to surrender, but he answered—“No surrender!” Almost immediately
afterwards, he was shot through the head.
A similar case concerns Major Twyford, an officer of the Royal
Scots, who in April of 1901 was attacked by a commando under Jan de
Beers in the Badfontein Valley. Twyford and his party numbered eight
all told, mounted men, and they took up a position among the ruins
of a farmhouse which afforded some shelter from the fire of the
enemy. The commando of Boers closed in on them, and, having in mind
the enormous disparity of the forces, called on them to surrender.
Major Twyford declined to do so, and went on firing on de Beers’
commando until shot dead by the enemy.
Captain Price, of whom mention has already been made, was a
lieutenant at the time of the South African war, and was recommended
at that time for the Victoria Cross for especial gallantry in
leading “E” company at the action at Bermondsey. Three of the
non-commissioned officers and men were specially mentioned for their
gallantry in this affair, a certain Corporal Paul was promoted
sergeant for his bravery, and Lieutenant Price, recommended for his
V.C., obtained the D.S.O. France saw him brave as ever, and the
regiment will keep his memory as that of one of its most gallant
officers.
But, if one begins to tell the story of the deeds of the regiment of
Royal Scots in previous campaigns, the story is without end, and
space will not admit of it. It were unwise to say that the Royal
Scots are first in bravery in action, as they are first in seniority
among line regiments; but at least, in the matter of courage, they
are equal with any, as the present campaign in France has proved. |