Thursday, October 26, 2023

The Medifluvian Campaign: Table of Contents


...

Battle of Cpistapon -
See 'More From the Chronicles...' 

The series on the Medifluvian campaign having been concluded, here is a 'Table of Contents' (thanks to Bob Cordery!) of articles narrating events.

The first attempted relief of Hak al Kumara -
See 'Return to the Chronicles...'




Wednesday, October 25, 2023

Chronicles of Rajistan: Return to Sheikh Sa'ad.

 

Creakily rousing themselves from the cold pre-dawn, the men of 7th 'Meerut' Division crawled out of their desert bivvies and drew up to their start line of their assault upon the distant Turcowaz entrenchments. The opening salvoes of the field guns signalled 'Over the top!' All along the front, the Ruberians and their Sangrian sepoy auxiliaries surged towards the enemy lines, flickering with rifle, machinegun and gun fire.

This action was fought out solo, using the Portable Colonial Wargames 'The Widow at Windsor' rule set. Using the same rule set for the previous action on this same field, I felt that for a while I ought to have chosen the simpler 'The Gatling's Jammed...' This was due to the Horse, Foot, Guns size of basing for my armies, which made them impossible to use as 2-stand units. This meant that there was no satisfactory way of representing battalion columns.  

However, as I was setting up this action, I decided upon a slight modification that ignored battalion columns, but allowed single-stand units to double-up in tandem within a grid area. There would be no 2-hex move for columns; all foot movement would be one grid area only. However, as paired units could be activated to move with just one activation point, a certain celerity of movement was possible with compacted brigade-sized formations.

The trade-off was added vulnerability of such formations to incoming gunfire. Instead of rolling once for both units in a grid area, I rolled for each. Statistically, the expected loss is the same, but the probability of getting at least one hit is higher (56% against 33%), and the probability of getting two (22% against 33%), or of getting none (44% against 67%), is lower.

Although the 'W-at-W' rule set doesn't call for activation draws, I used my dice method, rating the respective commanders as average. Because not all the Turcowaz army was up, their activation rolls were reduced according, becoming the standard rate for the army once (if ever) the 52nd Division arrived on the field. However, as their role was static defence, it became simply a matter of prioritising defensive fire, the artillery and machine guns first, and then any remaining activations being distributed among the rifles in the forward trench. Given the reserves of cavalry and the command stands, that meant a top activation roll permitted all rifle units to shoot in a given turn.   

This was not good for the attacking troops. Closing in upon the Turcowaz first line, at one grid area per turn, took time - time in which the Turcowaz fire flayed the Ruberian lines unmercifully. At the time these three leading pictures were taken, Ruberia was down at least 12 Strength Points (SP).  But the Turcowaz was taking some loss to gunfire, 4SP so far.  

The first contacts east of the Pardis River were made on the extreme flanks. On the right, the 6th Jat Light Infantry struck an undefended section of the trench line, crossed it, and began to assault the flank of II/ 105th Infantry. That unit had already thrown back II/ Black Watch, which unit drew aside to unmask the following 21st 'Barelly' Brigade Gatling guns. Already matters were looking serious for the defenders.
In the centre, 125th Napier Rifles spearheaded the 19th 'Dehra Din' Brigade, with I/ Seaforth Highlanders backing them up. To their right, 28th Punjinjab Infantry were more or less keeping pace, but to their left, 92nd Punjinjab were falling somewhat behind. In this adventitious arrowhead formation, the brigade surged on through the dust and smoke. 

Across the river, the 28th 'Garwhal' Brigade advanced in two waves, the lead units II/ Leicestershire with 51st and 53rd Hydansikh Infantry. 56th and 62nd Punjinjab followed a short distance behind. At the point at which 62nd Hydansikh were about to assault the defence line, they had already lost 2SP, and the Leicestershires one. The Brigade's Gatling guns had dropped into action beside the river bank, their fire causing significant casualties, despite their earthen protection, among III/ 103rd Regiment.
 


As 6th Jat Light Infantry began their assaults across the trench lines, Nasr ed Din Pasha began casting anxious eyes northward. Where was 52nd Division? The arrival of that large reinforcement was to be determined by a die roll at the end of each turn once attackers had crossed over the earthworks. A roll equal to or less than the number of attackers that had penetrated the first line, would bring on 52nd Division next turn. Jat Light Infantry being the first, and so far only, a D6 roll of '1' would herald their arrival.  

The northern skyline remained empty. Disappointed, Nasr ed Din turned back to the battle.


Close by the riverbank, 97th Deccan-Decca also reached an undefended section of trench line. Chunking up the river, the gunboat Shoofly was engaging targets on either bank, eventually focusing upon III/ 103rd on the far bank.  

Matters were looking dire for 103rd Regiment on the west bank. Having inflicted heavy loss upon 53rd Hydansikh, I Battalion declined to try conclusions in the ensuing close assault, and fell back at once towards their second line. This rather left II Battalion in the lurch, and they soon found themselves fighting desperately against both Hydansikh battalions. Pushing through a gap in the trench line, II Leicestershires had almost reached the Turcowaz gun line. Having taken 50% losses already from gun and machinegun fire,  III/ 103 failed to stop them.

Here I made a bit of a mistake, I think, as the rule set really charged the Leicestershires to assault one or other of the Turcowaz infantry battalions. It probably would have been the most sensible attacking option anyhow.  

At this point I should mention that I regard all on-going close combats as 'automatic', if, once begun, they remain unresolved. Close assaults are initiated by the front of attacking unit's stand being placed just within the defending unit's grid area. That gesture counts as a move, and until made, the two opposing units are engaged in a fire fight only, and not a close combat. That placement, the attacker partially within the defender's grid area, defines a close assault, and who is the attacker, even if unresolved into the defender's turn to move. No activation points are needed to continue the fight into subsequent turns until it is resolved but elimination or retreat.

If the assailant is repulsed and has to retreat, he has to vacate the grid area from which he is attacking. 

The vagaries of the activation dice were forcing the 35th (beside the river) and 19th Brigades into piecemeal attacks - or you could say, that the attacking lines were becoming more ragged as they approached the Turcowaz earthworks. Under flanking gunfire, 92nd Deccan-Decca began attacking the right flank of I/ 104th Battalion. Far ahead of the rest of 35th Brigade, they were, for the time being, on their own.

At the other end of the 104th Regiment's line, the Napier Rifles had fallen back reduced by 50%. The Seaforth Highlanders surged through the retreating rifles right up to III/ 104th, where stood Duya ed Din Pasha, directing the defence. Twenty-eighth Punjinjab swung right to engage the machine gunners linking the 104th and 105th Regiments. 

But losses were mounting steadily.  Protected by the Napier Rifles during the advance, the Seaforth Highlanders struck the Turcowaz line comparatively fresh (no SP lost yet!), but the flanking Punjinjab battalions were showing signs of wear.  The 28th we down 50% by the time they reached the enemy Nordenfeldt guns, the 92nd less badly hit, but still well short of the first objective.


The whole of the eastern half of the main Turcowaz defence line was now under heavy close assault. The whole of 21st Brigade was now heavily engaged with the two battalions of 105th Regiment, with 28th Punjinjab of 19th Brigade keeping the Turcowaz machine gunners busy. The non-appearance of 52nd Division led Nasr ed Din to order a cavalry counter attack against the Jat Rifles and relieve II/ 105th of the pressure on its left flank. Not that that availed them much, as 41st Dogra Infantry swept up to the trench lines in front. Beside them, the Brigade commander, Colonel Ross, led 9th Bhoped's assault upon I/ 105th. Such leadership was needed: 9th Bhoped was already down 67% of its original strength.

West of the river, the Turcowaz defences were facing, if anything, more of a crisis. Gunfire from artillery, gunboat and Gatlings simply battered III/ 103rd into destruction (all 6SP lost), and the Leicestershire infantry had overrun the artillery emplacements, though, fortunately for the latter, not the guns. They had pulled out betimes. At that moment. the Sheikh Sa'ad village was without defenders; but Garwhal Brigade had yet to secure the whole of their first objective. Doggedly clinging to their fortifications, II/ 103rd were wearing down double their numbers. Down 2SP themselves, their Hydansikh adversaries had lost 5SP between them.  

Just as Nasr ed Din began to despair of holding his line, at last the news came in: 52nd division had arrived and were even now beginning to deploy onto the battlefield. West of the river, 154th Regiment was badly needed to bolster the crumbling 103rd. East of the river, 155th and 156th, together with the Divisional machinegun company already spanned the gap between the river and the impenetrable salt marshes to the east.

They arrived when prospects for 35th Division looked their bleakest. Storming across the III/ 104th trench line, Seaforth Highlanders flung back the defenders with loss. Caught up in the retreat, Duya ed Din Pasha was hit, badly wounded and trampled in the rout. It seemed by now that the whole of the first trench line must fall to the attackers.






But there remained isolated pockets of resistance here and there along the line. Barelly Brigade was still dashing itself to pieces on 105th Regiment's front, having lost 9SP to just 2. The duel between 28th Punjinjab against the machinegun company was so far equally indeterminate. Having committed 44th Regular Sipahis to assist the 105th, the other two left wing cavalry units, Nasr ed Din directed 43rd and 76th Irregulars to counter the Seaforth Highlanders' breakthrough.

This counter was successful, driving back the Highlanders as far as the trench line, but at heavy cost - 3SP for just 1.  

West of the river, the fiercely fought battle seemed to have reached an impasse. Sixty-second tribal cavalry's counter-attack to recover the river bank gun emplacement made no progress for their losses, and could see the 33rd Queen Adelaide's Own cavalry surging up between the overrun trench lines. The Turcowaz cavalry were relieved, however, when the enemy horse drew off to the flank to throw their weight behind the assaults upon II/ 103rd. Alone and isolated, reduced by half, that gallant band still clung to their lines. So far, the Ruberians were stalled, short of their third objective, the village of Sheikh Sa'ad, occupied solely by the Turcowaz right wing commander and his staffs.


Whilst the fighting in the forward lines carried on unabated, the eastern wing of 52nd Division quietly filled the reserve trench lines and redoubt spanning the river-marsh defile behind 35th Division's lines.  Should 35th Division collapse, General Reddington's army would have all do to again.



Yet that collapse seemed imminent, especially on 104th regiment's front. Although practically surrounded, still defending their sector of the first line, II/ 104th had so far endured only slight loss (1SP). Driven back almost to the second line, III/ 104th had also got off fairly lightly so far, and the pressure had been relieved by the intervention of the Turcowaz light horse. But I/ 104 had lost 50% of its strength, and the army guns had already once had to beat off an assault from the Deccan-Decca infantry, and were engaging in a gunnery duel with the Shoofly gunboat. Although taking a couple of damaging hits, Shoofly seemed disinclined yet to pull out of the action.


So matters stood, both sides tearing chunks out of each other. Though taking very heavy casualties, 105th Regiment was giving at least as good as it was taking. I/ 105th finally repulsed 9th Bhoped Dogra for good, the scant survivors (0SP) fleeing to the rear. Their front cleared, they brought 21st Brigade's MG company under effective fire. 41st Dogra was still hung up in a close quarter struggle with II/ 105th, whilst the Jat light infantry was also caught up in an indecisive duel with Turcowaz light horse. 105th Regiment had lost two-thirds of its strength (8SP) but but the Barrelly Brigade losses were even higher (13SP). The 35th Division Nordenfeldt MG company had been destroyed, but took out much of 28th Punjinjab with them. The latter was now down to one-third of its original strength.   


A considerable gap having been punched through the centre of the Turcowaz line, however, induced General Reddington to order up the cavalry. Perhaps a massed cavalry charge might decide the action?


Equally promising seemed a renewed attack by 37th Dogra Infantry upon the Turcowaz army gun line, where stood Nasr ed Din Pasha himself, directing the defence. Though supported by Shoofly's gunfire, the Dogra infantry remained stalled upon the glacis of the earthwork protecting the guns. 



On Garwhal Brigade's front, at last the II/ 103rd resistance collapsed, and the whole of the first line was overrun and the surviving defenders (0SP) taken prisoner. But the Leicestershire Infantry had been thrown out of the gun emplacement they had earlier captured. Chagrinned, the Leicestershires return to the attack, supported by the 33rd Queen Adelaide's Own cavalry charging 61st Tribal Horse nearby. Under cover of this renewed battle over the Turcowaz second line, III/ 154th Infantry quietly filed into the Sheikh Sa'ad quickly to place the village into a state of defence.



The hard fighting that had taken most of the Turcowaz front line had by now taken too too much of a toll upon the Ruberian strength. Their morale boosted by the arrival of 52nd Division, even though the latter had not even fired a shot and only a single battalion had inserted itself even partially onto the battle; even though two of 103rd Regiment's battalions had been wiped out; and even though 103rd and most of 104th Regiments had been driven back to their second line; for all their losses, 35th Division remained in the fight. 


Realising that no more could be achieved with what remained of his force - its exhaustion point having been reached - General Reddington called off the action. The was no further hope for a breakthrough, and no further hope of coming to the rescue of General Scarlett and his 6th Division, besieged at Hak al Kumara. Within the week 6th Division surrendered on terms. The Medifluvian Campaign was over.

It might be of interest to the reader to see what the 'butcher's bill' looked like. Losses were heavy on both sides, but it might serve to show what attacking a trench line is like under this rule set.

Army of Ruberia:


Seventh Meerut Division, Lt-Genl Sir Aylmer Reddington ... 6SP

19th Dehra Dun Brigade (Col Wm Dennys) ... 3SP
  • I/ Seaforth Highlanders ...6SP (elite) -4 = 2SP
  • 28th Punjinjab Infantry ...6SP -4 = 2SP
  • 92nd Punjinjab Infantry ...6SP -6 = 0SP
  • 125th Napier's Rifles (Skirmishers) ...4SP -2 = 2SP
  • Gatling detachment ...2SP
Total 19th Bde 27SP -16 = 11SP

28th Garwhal Brigade (Brig-Genl Geo. Kemball) ... 3SP
  • II/ Leicestershire Infantry ...6SP -4 = 2SP
  • 51st Hydansikh Infantry ...6SP -4 = 2SP
  • 53rd Hydansikh Infantry ...6SP -5 = 1SP
  • 56th Punjinjab Infantry ...6SP 
  • 62nd Punjinjab Infantry ...6SP
  • Gatling Detachment ...2SP
Total 28th Brigade 35SP - 13 = 22SP

35th Brigade (Brig-Genl G.B.H. Rice) ...3SP
  • I/ 5th Buffingtonshire Infantry ...6SP -3 = 3SP
  • 37th Dogra Infantry ...6SP -4 = 2SP
  • 97th Deccan-Decca Infantry ...6SP -2 = 4SP 
  • 102nd King's Own Grenadiers ...6SP
  • Gatling Detachment ...2SP
Total 35th Brigade  29SP - 9 = 20SP

21st Barrelly Brigade (Col G Ross) ...3SP
  • II/ Black Watch ...6SP (Elite) -1 = 5SP
  • 6th Jat Light Infantry (Skirmishers) ...4SP -2 = 2SP
  • 41st Dogra Infantry ...6SP -3 = 3SP
  • 9th Bhoped Infantry ...6SP -6 = 0SP
  • Gatling Detachment ...2SP -1 = 1SP
Total 21st Bde 27SP - 13 = 14SP

6th (Indian) Cavalry Brigade: (Brig-Genl R. Thered) ...3SP
  • 14th King's Hussars ...4SP (elite)
  • 4th Cavalry ...4SP
  • 7th Harian Lancers ...4SP
  • 33rd Queen Adelaide's Own Light Cavalry ...4SP
  • 'S' Battery, RHA (Horse artillery) ...2SP
Divisional Artillery:
  • IV, IX, XIII Brigades, @2SP = 6S
Gunboat:
  • HRMS Shoofly, ...8SP  - 2 = 6SP

36 units, 153SP, Exhaustion Point -51SP.
Total losses: 53SP 


Army of Turcowaz:

Corps Command: Nasr ed-Din ... 6SP

35th Division: Duya ed-Din ... 3SP KIA -3SP

  • 103rd Regiment, 3 Bns (stands) @6SP = 18SP - 12 = 6SP
  • 104th Regiment, 3 Bns @6SP = 18SP - 7 = 11SP
  • 105th Regiment, 2 Bns @6SP = 12SP - 8 = 4SP
  • Nordenfeld MG Company @2SP - 2 = 0SP
  • Artillery, 2 batteries @2SP = 4SP - 1 = 3SP
Cavalry:
  • 43rd, 44th Regular cavalry @4SP = 8SP - 2 = 6SP
  • 75th, 76th Irregular Sipahi @4SP (poor) = 8SP - 2 = 6SP
  • 61st, 62nd Tribal Light Horse @4SP (poor) = 8SP -3 = 5SP
Reinforcements (off table, and remained unengaged):

52nd Division: Abdullah Jemal ... 3SP
  • 154th Regiment, 3 Bns @6SP = 18SP
  • 155th Regiment, 3 Bns @6SP = 18SP
  • 156th Regiment, 3 Bns @6SP = 18SP
  • Nordenfeld MG  Company @ 2SP

24 units, 140SP, E.P. -47SP
Total losses:  37SP + Division Commander, 3SP = 40SP total.

This was a decisive victory for the Turcowaz army.

Appalled at their losses and the outcome of the whole campaign, the remains of General Sir Aylmer Reddington's army retreated the 300 miles down the Pardis River, all the way to the Gulf of Parthia, there to await what might be the sequel. Might Ruberia mount a more powerful invasion of Medifluvia? Who knew what machinations took place in the hallowed halls of Ruberian High Command?









Monday, October 16, 2023

Return to Chronicles of Rajistan: Second Attempt to Relieve Hak al-Kumara

 

The armies lined up for battle: 7th 'Meerut' Division
on their start lines; 35th Turcowaz Division with 
cavalry support lined up in defence.


After the failure of Lieutenant-General Sir Aylmer Reddington's relief attempt, Major-General Sir Grinmore Scarlett was forced for several weeks to wait out the siege at Hak al Kumara. A serendipitous discovery of a large hoard of grain had at least given his 6th Division - such as had so far survived the rigours of a failed offensive operation and the siege - the stamina to hang on for the two months before General Reddington could mount a second relief attempt. On 7 March 1876, two months and one day following the first attempt, 7th 'Meerut' Division launched its second assault upon the Turcowaz positions close by Shaikh Sa'ad village.
The Turcowaz right - west side of the Pardis 
River: 103rd Infantry, 3 cavalry units and half 
the army's artillery
In fact, poor old Sir Grinmore has had to sit there for over three years before I finally got around to mounting this second relief attempt. At that I might have used the time to research the progress of the subsequent events of early 1916 to relieve Major-General Townshend's beleaguered Division at Kut al Amara, but that would have added to the OOBs of both sides. My second attempt pitched the same forces against each other, with but two trivial changes (the camelry became cavalry, and 6th Jat infantry became a skirmishing rifle unit). The respective forces were:

 Army of Turcowaz:

Corps Command: Nasr ed-Din ... 6SP

35th Division: Duya ed-Din ... 3SP
  • 103rd Regiment, 3 Bns (stands) @6SP = 18SP
  • 104th Regiment, 3 Bns @6SP = 18SP
  • 105th Regiment, 2 Bns @6SP = 12SP
  • Nordenfeld MG Company @2SP
  • Artillery, 2 batteries @2SP = 4SP
Cavalry:
  • 43rd, 44th Regular cavalry @4SP = 8SP
  • 75th, 76th Irregular Sipahi @4SP (poor) = 8SP
  • 61st, 62nd Tribal Light Horse @4SP (poor) = 8SP
Reinforcements (off table):

52nd Division: Abdullah Jemal ... 3SP
  • 154th Regiment, 3 Bns @6SP = 18SP
  • 155th Regiment, 3 Bns @6SP = 18SP
  • 156th Regiment, 3 Bns @6SP = 18SP
  • Nordenfeld MG  Company @ 2SP
These reinforcements were scheduled to arrive on table once the first line of entrenchments had been breached.*

24 units, 146SP, E.P. -49SP

* For this action I made this change. The arrival of 52nd Division was triggered by Ruberian breaches of the first line of fortifications, but they had to be diced for. At the end of the turn in which an attacking unit forced its way across the trench line into the Turcowaz position, I rolled a single D6 die.  If the score matched the number of attackers who had successfully done so, then the whole of 52nd Division arrived on the Turcowaz table edge to moved into the table next turn. As it transpired, it was something like 4 turns before 52nd Division arrived, by which time at least five and I think six units had forced the first line of defence.

 

Turcowaz centre: 104th Infantry supported by the 
other half of the artillery. Nasr ed-Din stands with 
the artillery; Duya ed-Din with III/104th Battalion

Turcowaz left - protected by a vast salt marsh.  
The understrength 105th Regiment, beefed up by the 
35th Division machine guns. In support, the other 
half of the cavalry: regular sipahis and 
tribal light horse.

Army of Ruberia:


Seventh Meerut Division, Lt-Genl Sir Aylmer Reddington ... 6SP
19th Dehra Dun Brigade (Col Wm Dennys) ... 3SP
  • I/ Seaforth Highlanders ...6SP (elite)
  • 28th Punjinjab Infantry ...6SP
  • 92nd Punjinjab Infantry ...6SP
  • 125th Napier's Rifles (Skirmishers) ...4SP
  • Gatling detachment ...3SP

28th Garwhal Brigade (Brig-Genl Geo. Kemball) ... 3SP
  • II/ Leicestershire Infantry ...6SP 
  • 51st Hydansikh Infantry ...6SP
  • 53rd Hydansikh Infantry ...6SP
  • 56th Punjinjab Infantry ...6SP
  • 62nd Punjinjab Infantry ...6SP
  • Gatling Detachment ...3SP
    28th Brigade on west bank of
    Pardis River

35th Brigade (Brig-Genl G.B.H. Rice) ...3SP
  • I/ 5th Buffingtonshire Infantry ...6SP
  • 37th Dogra Infantry ...6SP
  • 97th Deccan-Decca Infantry ...6SP
  • 102nd King's Own Grenadiers ...6SP
  • Gatling Detachment ...3SP
    35th (nearer thr river) and 19th Brigades 

21st Barrelly Brigade (Col G Ross) ...3SP
  • II/ Black Watch ...6SP (Elite)
  • 6th Jat Light Infantry (Skirmishers) ...4SP
  • 41st Dogra Infantry ...6SP
  • 9th Bhoped Infantry ...6SP
  • Gatling Detachment ...3SP
    21st Infantry and 6th Cavalry Brigades

6th (Indian) Cavalry Brigade: (Brig-Genl R. Thered) ...3SP
  • 14th King's Hussars ...4SP (elite)
  • 4th Cavalry ...4SP
  • 7th Harian Lancers ...4SP
  • 33rd Queen Adelaide's Own Light Cavalry ...4SP
  • 'S' Battery, RHA (Horse artillery) ...2SP
Divisional Artillery:
  • IV, IX, XIII Brigades, @2SP = 6SP 
    HRMS Shoofly gunboat. Captained by 
    Lt-Cdr James Rosemount, she played a far more
    active role than in previous actions.



Gunboat:
  • HRMS Shoofly, ...8SP  

36 units, 163SP, Exhaustion Point -55SP.



Earliest moves by Ruberia's attacking formations.

To be continued: the battle narrative...

Friday, October 13, 2023

Tony Adams

Five months ago, the creator of The Woodscrew Miniatures Army and the world of Tian passed away after a brief illness. Yesterday (13 October) would have been Tony's 71st birthday.

I had discovered his blog some time before and discovered his whole different approach to war gaming. As one who, as a child, fought battles with bits of straw, crude paper cut-outs and small building bricks (Betta-Bilda), I found it easy to comprehend an army of woodscrews.  On to my reading list went his blog.

And what an army! Tony's interest was less in the battles than in the recruitment and building of a huge army of around 1890 in technology, right down to transports, bridging trains, couriers, field kitchens, logistic support, commissariat and medical services. Scaled down as it was, nevertheless it was a vast undertaking. Rather than a description from me, check out these links:

Unfortunately he never quite got the chance fully to realise his ambitious vision. But consider: his cavalry arm alone comprised something over 4000 'figures' together with over 300 regimental vehicles, all organised into 24 regiments of 5 squadrons each.  

Tony never actually fought out table, floor or lawn battles with these troops. Rather he played out his wars in his head, his Union Army forming the protagonists in the conflict narratives being played out.  He created a map of the world of Tian, an alternate Earth, comprising countries familiar to us in entirely imaginary settings. So it was that the Union, at some time, had a common land border with China, with, of course, the resulting frictions. In 1888 (Tian's time), the Union had just fought a victorious, but exhausting, war against Russia and Germany both. 

The climactic battle in the Second Sino-Union War

For mine, this world cried out for a campaign - a short war. Running it by Tony, I got the go-ahead, and so the narrative of the Second Sino-Union War began, just on two years ago. I like to think Tony found the thing entertaining, although I had to persuade him to permit the Chinese a mounted arm, however exiguous. He was aghast at the battlefield knocks his own Union cavalry took - being ambushed at the outset of the campaign, and later suffering an unexpected defeat. But they survived to contribute to the final outcome. The whole thing was fun, even unto writing up 'newspaper articles' by way of furthering the narrative. It ended, much to Tony's relief, in a decisive Union victory, and the defeat of Emperor of China's attempt to recover vast territories lost twenty years before.  

There were no plans for a second tabletop Woodscrew campaign - Tony probably would not have permitted it, even were I to have asked. But I miss our occasional exchanges, the way his armies were developing, and his reviews of a wide range of books on military matters. 

Happy Birthday, Tony...


 

Wednesday, October 4, 2023

"More guns: we need more guns!"

 

It was whilst sorting out the organisation of my WW2 Red Army - the Prizrak Front comprising 6th Shock and 71st Armies - that the underrepresentation of the artillery arm impressed itself upon my mind. So I have undertaken at least partially to redress that deficiency by adding six more pieces - which turned out to be seven.


We begin with these three cardboard, balsa and toothpick items. I had intended to build just two more, but discovered that I had begun another many years before - the one on the right - but had never got around to assembling it. Never mind, no doubt the extra gun will find employment... These represent 76.2mm (3-inch) field guns, of which I now have nine.

This is a later model 76.2mm fellow, on its base ready to be flocked.

Below are some of the pieces destined to become 122mm L22 medium howitzers. The wheels for these have been taken from toy Army Men vehicles. I'll be using the same for the two 57mm Anti-tank guns when I get around to building them. I'll probably redo the gun assembly.



Almost all my Soviet artillery are home made scratch-builds, though some have incorporated leftover bits from actual kitsets. The exception is a metal 122mm howitzer, sent me years ago by a fellow blogger.


This one (above pic) is a 152mm piece built up from the Airfix 5.5-inch howitzer. The gun barrel with the 'shark-gill' muzzle brake has replaced the original, and the gun shield has been added. I gather that the piece often had extra wheels alongside those shown here, but apparently this was not invariably the case. My other three 152s have the longer gun barrel.  

Not counting anti-tank guns, I will have 9 x 76.2mm, 4 x 122mm, 4 x 152mm towed artillery. In my present project, I'm thinking of 1 stand represents up to 24 pieces, with each strength point representing 6. So a standard artillery 'stand', will have 4 strength points maximum, but a piece that represents a lesser number might have 1-3 SPs instead. 


If this works, the whole will represent 408 artillery pieces carried by the Prizrak Front. The anti-tank guns will add 200 more, and we haven't added the assault guns.

One can never have too much artillery...