If one should ask any
man, of any regiment of the British Army, what was the quality of
the regiment to which he belonged, the answer would be to the effect
that his was the best regiment in the service, without any
exception. If any other answer should be returned to such a query,
it might be assumed that there was something wrong with that
particular man ; he ought not to be a soldier, for every soldier
worthy of the name firmly believes that his regiment is the best.
The Scottish regiments are not exempt from this belief, and surely,
judging by their regimental histories, they have good cause. Certain
peculiar honours are theirs, too : they form the only kilted force
of regular troops in the world, for one thing ; and for another
thing the oldest regiment of the British Army is Scottish—for the
Royal Scots, with definite history dating back to 1625, lay claim to
direct descent from the Scottish archers who were kept for centuries
as guards for French kings. Putting legend and tradition aside, it
is certain and beyond dispute that John Hepburn led the Royal Scots
under Gustavus Adolphus, the great Swedish champion of liberty, as
early as 1625; and in 1633, with eight years of hard work on
Continental battlefields to season their ranks, the Royal Scots were
definitely and officially included in the British Army, seeing
service under Marlborough at Blenheim, Ramillies, Malplaquet, and
Oudenarde. There is a story of Blenheim to the effect that the
Commander-in-chief of the French Army, taken prisoner by
Marlborough, congratulated the latter on having overcome “the best
troops in the world.” The Duke caustically requested him to “Except
those troops by whom you have been conquered.”Prominent among these
were the Royal Scots.
But, although senior in point of age, the Royal Scots is not “the
right of the line” in the British Army. This proud distinction is
held by the Royal Horse Artillery, which probably numbers as many
Scotsmen in its ranks as men of any other nationality. The
Artillery, however, knows no nationalities in its nomenclature. One
is first a gunner, and then either English, Scotch, Welsh, or
Irish—the guns count before territorial distinctions. Next to the
R.H.A., if ever the line of the whole Army were formed, would come
the Brigade of Guards, and here the Scots Guards find a place, very
near the right of the line, when the length of that line is
considered.
It is possible, to a certain extent, to trace the history of each
unit of the Army, as far as the present European war is concerned,
by means of the letters sent home by the men of each unit. Such
histories are necessarily brief and scrappy, but they afford some
idea of what the various regiments are doing on the field; and the
object of this book is, to some extent, to show how each Scottish
regiment has contributed to the glory of Scotland and the fame of
the British Army since August of 1914. Some reference to the earlier
exploits of Scots on other fields may perhaps be pardoned, for there
are some stories—like that already quoted regarding the Duke of
Marlborough—that never grow old.
Of the Scots Guards, few records have as yet come to hand, beyond
those that are common knowledge. The regiment has nearly three
hundred years of history, having been raised as the “Scots Fusilier
Guards” in 1641. Nineteen years later they became the “Scots
Guards,” and in the closing years of the seventeenth century they
fought in Flanders, subsequently serving with distinction under the
Duke of Marlborough. From “Dettingen” through the Napoleonic and
Crimean wars up to “Modder River” the battle honours on their
colours range, for like the great majority of British regiments they
had their share of South Africa in the last campaign there.
Personal records of their deeds in the early stages of this present
war are scarce, but certain it is that there were Scots Guards at
the battle of the Marne, although the official dispatches are chary
of mentioning the names of regiments engaged in definite actions or
at definite points. For, previously to the battle of the Marne,
there was a Guardsman of Kilmarnock of whom a story is told. He was
on duty with a comrade when two mounted men approached, and on
challenging the riders the Scots found that one of them was a Uhlan—who
made off with all speed. The Kilmarnock man advanced on the other
rider, whom his comrade had covered with his rifle, but the horseman
made a motion with his left hand toward his revolver. Thereupon the
Kilmarnock man, being tall and powerfully built, struck out with his
fist and knocked the man from his saddle, ascertaining subsequently
that he was a German scout officer, and that he carried a diary
which gave particulars of the movements of the brigade to which the
Scots Guards were attached, from the time of its leaving Havre
almost up to the time of the officer’s capture. There were in the
diary frequent allusions to “those hellish British”—which comment
speaks for itself.
Later, along the position of the Aisne, the first battalion of the
Guards were busy. On a certain Sunday afternoon the Guards and the
Black Watch were in the thick of the fighting, and that night they
were ordered to the trenches—and the Germans had the position of the
trenches ranged to a nicety, so that they were able to drop shells
with wicked precision all night. Next morning the German infantry
retreated for a matter of a mile, uphill, and there waited for the
inevitable advance of the Guards and the Black Watch. The retreat
was a trap, for on the advance the two British battalions were
subject to shell as well as rifle fire, and out of one section of
fourteen men only one was left. This one, a corporal, was badly cut
about the face, and had one knee severely damaged, but with a field
dressing tied round his leg he remained in the firing line all day,
going over to the Black Watch, since he had drifted too far away
from his own battalion to rejoin it at once. “I had to stick it in
the field all day,” he says, “and the fighting was awful. The
Germans had all their big guns firing at us, and we could not get
our own guns up to fire back at them. I never expected to get out of
it alive. Well, after lying half the night wet in the open, among
the dead Germans and our own dead, I got strength enough to crawl
back, and managed to find a hospital about twelve o’clock at night,
nearly dead. I never got any sleep that night, but guess what the
Germans did in the morning ! They blew the hospital up in the air. I
happened to be near the door, so I got away all right; but I got
another bit in the back that flattened me out for awhile. I missed
all the ambulances through this. The next carts that came along were
the ammunition ones. The driver helped me on to the back of one, but
I had hardly enough strength to hang on. The Germans shelled all
these carts for miles, and the horses of the one I was on got hit
with a shell, and I had not the strength to climb on to another one.
The drivers were hurrying away for their lives, so I had to scramble
along for two miles on my own to a big barn, which they called a
field hospital.’’
And there the record ends. It makes a scrap of history of the
Guards, though when the regimental histories of this war come to be
written it will be found that such stories as these are only scraps
of the whole, for the battles of the Aisne and of the coast do not
mark the end.
With regard to the Scots Greys, their work in the early days is well
known now, for from Mons down through the three weeks of the great
retreat they upheld the honour of Scotland so well that on the 8th
of September Sir John French addressed the regiment in words that
officers and men alike will remember. He came on them while they
were resting, and these were his words, as given by a man of the
regiment :
“I am very sorry to disturb you from your sleep, Greys, but I feel I
must say a few words to you. I have been watching your work very
closely, and it has been magnificent. Your country is proud of you,
and I thank you from the bottom of my heart. It is not the first
time I have had the^pleasure of thanking you, and I hope it will not
be the last. There are no soldiers in the world that could have done
what you have done/’
This, it must be pointed out, is as it is told by a soldier of the
regiment ; it is worth while to make the contrast between it and a
letter said to be from a man of the Greys to his wife, in which he
says:
“I was in the retreat from Mons. We were told to go out and draw the
enemy, and before going all our officers and generals said,
‘Good-bye,’ so you can bet we felt all right.
“A couple of chaps in my troop went through the South African war,
but after the Mons fighting said the medals they got in Africa were
not worth the keeping. They saw more shot and shell in one day here
than they saw in three years in South Africa.
“The inhabitants go fairly mad when they see us, as they know they
will be cared for by us.”
The writer of that letter may have heard a German shell in the
air—and he may not. Queries rise in one’s mind as to whom the
“officers and generals” said good-bye to, and also a query rises as
to how many generals the Scots Greys have in their ranks—these
points come up automatically. It is not the custom in the British
Army, after the order for an advance has been given, to give time
even for the “officers and generals” of a regiment to wander round
with last messages; and, if ever the Greys played this game in the
fighting in France, there can be little doubt that the inhabitants
of the country went “fairly mad” over the regiment. The letter looks
like a fraud, but it is typical of some that are finding their way
into print nearly every day.
Circumstantial and bearing the impress of truth is the account of
the doings of the regiment given by one Private Ward, who came home
wounded from the Aisne. He tells, all too briefly, how from the
second day after landing in France the regiment was continually in
action. The work for the most part, however, was in the nature of a
grand artillery duel, and the Greys were mainly employed in
scouting, with an occasional charge “thrown in.” In the battle of
the Aisne the Greys supported the King’s Own Scottish Borderers and
the Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders in the crossing of the river;
and, after the infantry had all crossed, the Greys went in single
file, with sixteen feet between man and man, over a pontoon bridge
that was under shell fire from the German guns, placed on the
heights in front. Many of the horses were killed, and Ward himself
was struck in the leg with a piece of shell, causing so severe a
flesh wound that he had to be taken to the field ambulance, and
thence home. And thus the story of the Greys ends, so far as this
record is concerned.
It is a regiment of great traditions, as British cavalry regiments
go. Alone among the cavalry the Greys wear the bearskin in place of
the metal helmet in parade dress, and they are nearly as old as the
Scots Guards, having been raised as a regiment in 1678, and forming
the oldest regiment of Dragoons in the service. Originally they were
known as the “Royal Regiment of Scots Dragoons,” a title that was
subsequently changed to “Grey Dragoons,” from which their present
title of Scots Greys was evolved. Unto this day the sergeants of the
regiment wear the badge above their chevrons that commemorates the
taking of the French eagle of the famous Regiment du Roi; and at
Waterloo they charged with the Gordons clinging to their stirrup
leathers, while cavalrymen and Gordons alike yelled— “Scotland for
ever!” To Napoleon they were known as “ces terribles chevaux gris,”
and out of the charge of the Heavy Brigade in the Crimea they
brought back two Victoria Crosses.
No record of the doings of Scottish regiments in this present war
can be compiled without mention of the Scots Guards and the Greys,
but their history properly belongs to that of the Guards Brigade and
of the cavalry respectively —and in these two counts they must be
reckoned for a full recital of their doings. The foregoing mere
incidents will serve as compromise, lest it should be thought that
the two regiments had been overlooked. As for the Royal Artillery,
it knows no more of territorial distinctions, as already mentioned,
than it does of battle honours—for every battle in which a British
Army has fought might be inscribed on the colours of the gunners, if
they had colours. It is probable that, when the relative populations
of the four nationalities are taken into account, Scotsmen will be
found to preponderate in the R.A., for the Scot is always a little
mechanically inclined, and the working of the guns needs most
mechanical knowledge of any of the three arms.
Of infantry of the line, there are ten definitely Scottish
regiments, and an effort will be made to trace their histories in
the great European campaign— or rather, in the first days of that
campaign, as far as personal narratives will admit. Blanks and gaps
there must be, but the stories that officers and men have to tell
will, when collated and set down in some sort of order, enable us to
conceive of the nature of the work in which Scots are well
maintaining the honour of their regiments. |