Siege of Drayglossop

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Siege of Drayglossop
Part of War of the Vionnan Coalition
Drayglossop.jpg
Date11th May - 30th June 1851
Location
Drayglossop, Saxondale
Belligerents
Flag of Castile-La Mancha.svg Vionna-Frankenlisch SaxondaleFlag.png Saxondale
Commanders and leaders
Viscount Lynwood Count of Drayglossop
Strength
12,000
Casualties and losses
3,463 10,600 (9,000 captured)

The Siege of Drayglossop was the first major engagement of the War of the Vionnan Coalition and the opening of the Imperial offensive against Saxondale and Ballaeter. The Imperial army of Lord Lynwood besieged the city of Drayglossop, a vital citadel in eastern Saxondale. Defended by a Saxoner garrison of 12,000 regular troops and militia, the city endured a fifty-day siege before being taken by storm on 30th June 1851.

Background

Imperial Campaign

The Imperial Army's march on Drayglossop was the first stage of the Imperial offensive against Saxondale and Ballaeter. It was the initial plan of the Imperial command to strike against those two nations before they had time to mobilise their forces, with the aim of disrupting their mobilisation by defeating the assembling armies in detail. A furious disagreement between several Imperial commanders and the government in Frankenlisch led to the dismissal of the Duke of Gestoria as commander of the army and his replacement by the inexperienced but highly-favoured Lord Lynwood. Lynwood approved of the Secretary of War, Lord Featherwick,'s proposal to launch the main Imperial thrust from the Duchy of Grythshead in the south of the country, with the intention of driving north through Saxondale and into Ballaeter. The terrain of southern Saxondale is mostly flat plains and farmland, and at the time was furnished with good roads upon which the army might march comfortably. The dissenting proposal, primarily championed by the Duke of Gestoria, was to advance into Ballaeter across its northern frontier with the Duchy of Erin. This was opposed due to the heavily forested, and often very hilly, terrain in that region.

This debate amongst the Imperial command came to a head on 1st May 1851, when Lord Featherwick arrived in person at the Duke of Gestoria's headquarters in southern Cunaris to dismiss him as commander. The Duke of Gestoria argued that a strike north from Grythshead or Teutonberg would meet the formidable Saxoner armies head on and would be forced to break through the fortifications in that part of Saxondale. He suggested that, while the terrain of northern Ballaeter was not ideal for a campaign; an advance from that direction would avoid a lengthy siege or series of sieges. Lord Lynwood, then the Duke of Gestoria's chief of staff, was asked how the Imperial Army would handle such a siege and responded: "We'd batter our way through." By 5pm that day, the Duke of Gestoria was dismissed and Lord Lynwood given the command.

The Imperial forces marched south from Cunaris at dawn on 2nd March. To begin with, Lord Lynwood targeted the city of Innstein in the west of Saxondale. However, short on time to begin the campaign before the Saxoner armies could gather in force, Lynwood instead decided to attack the eastern city of Drayglossop, despite the fact that it was far better fortified, due to it being only roughly a week's march away for his army. Drayglossop was reached after an eight-day march. The vanguard of Lynwood's army was Lord Eldham's First Corps and it arrived outside Drayglossop late on 10th May. Lord Eldham sent for Lynwood's permission to make an immediate assault with scaling ladders and field guns but this was rejected. The rest of the Imperial army arrived throughout 11th May and the city was placed under a state of siege.

Siege

Preparations

The main body of the Imperial force arrived over the course of 11th May, though the complete strength of Lynwood's full army was not assembled until the 20th. For the first nine days of siege, the army's heavy guns and engineers were not present and there was little course but to encircle the city and wait. Lynwood was later criticised for keeping his entire army at Drayglossop instead of pressing the advance and leaving a smaller force to besiege the city. This was discussed at a council on 14th May but it was decided that, without having the city in Imperial control, it would be too difficult to supply a large army in Saxoner territory for long.

The bombardment of Drayglossop began on the 15th of May and opened up with six 32lb guns and four 6-inch howitzers which were aimed at the curtain wall to left and right of the gatehouse. Trevik considered it a waste of time to target the gates themselves as a ram would be able to batter them down during the potential assault. Scaling ladders were assembled but as Lord Lynwood was determined not to launch an assault until a workable breach was opened they were made at a variety of lengths. The walls themselves, constructed in the 13th Century by King Wladslav of Brehm to defend his newest and final conquest (then called Draklosp), were thick and made from good stone yet worn from age and poor upkeep. Nonetheless, they withstood the bombardment for an admirably long time. Soldiers of the 1st Infantry Division were those immediately opposite the gate and breaching points and were put to work on digging entrenchments to get closer to the walls for the eventual assault.

The wall to the left of the gatehouse buckled on the 1st of June from a heavy bombardment followed by strong rain the night before and on the 3rd part of it collapsed completely leaving a strongly workable breach. Trevik moved all of his guns to fire on the right wall and opened a steeper yet wider breach on the 10th. The First Brigade was given the task of clearing the breaches and the First (King's Own) Regiment of Foot and the Third (Duke of Gestoria's Volunteer) Regiment of Foot were assigned the left and the right breaches respectively. Both regiments nominated their grenadier companies to make the initial assault as the Forlorn Hope. The Second Brigade was kept in close support with the Third Brigade in reserve. It was around this point that Lynwood decided it would be better for the other corps to attack from different directions to spread out Saxoner resistance. The Second Corps was provided with scaling ladders long enough to reach the parapet while the 3rd Corps utilised a small number of its own artillery to open another breach, a task which was fulfilled on the 25th of June.

The 2nd Corps selected O'Reiley's Regiment and the Earl of Lopenfort's Regiment from the 4th Division to make their assaults. 3rd Corps selected the King's Rifles Regiment to assault their breach. Both provided sufficient reserves and guns from the 2nd Artillery Brigade were allocated to the 1st and 2nd Corps for support. Major Trevik put forward the night of the 29th of June to make the assault under cover of darkness and Lynwood agreed. The date was set for the assault.

Assault

For First Corps, the Forlorn Hope of their assaults would number 450 men, the combined Grenadier companies of the King's Own Regiment and the Duke of Gestoria's Volunteers. Quickly behind them, as the second wave would follow the First Battalions of those regiments in detail, numbering 2,250 men. The remnants of the First and Third Regiments along with the Larkinge Fusiliers Regiment would make up the third wave to force a breakthrough should the first two attacks fail to gain ground. The Second Corps had a much larger assaulting party consisting of all six regiments in three successive waves. The Third Corps, under Lieutenant General Lord Rainchester's command, had opted for a more cautious approach with the King's Rifles making their first attack slowly with accurate fire and skirmish tactics. Rainchester had planned for a forceful assault with the Duke of Grythshead's Regiment, however, should the cautious method fail.

As night fell on the 29th, the assembled battalions received an extra gin ration and each regiment had special religious services from both Christian and Andyist clerics. Army clerks were brought up to make up wills and write letters for those who required them and at 11 pm the first assault began. The Forlorn Hope split in the trenches leading the breaches and the First Regiment's grenadiers began their climb first with the Third's beginning theirs not long after. Initially, they were undetected by the outstretched Saxoner sentries but when artillery fire began in an attempt to screen the assault by Third Corps, the soldiers at the gatehouse threw burning bales of pitch-coated hay and sticks to illuminate the breach and quickly began firing on the advancing grenadiers. All of the leading officers were killed and the Forlorn Hope was repulsed with an almost 50% casualty rate. The First Battalion of the King's Own Regiment followed their grenadiers almost immediately and, led by Colonel Fletcher, managed to clamber onto the wall itself and fought a harsh melee with the defenders until they were relieved by their Second Battalion along with advanced companies of the Larkinge Fusiliers. On the right breach, Colonel Pritchard was not so successful, he was hit in the thigh by a pistol ball but continued to lead the attack until he fainted from blood loss. His second, Major Cartwright, led the remains of his battalion back to the Imperial lines where he was ordered back to the breach but reinforced by the 3rd Regiment's Second Battalion. The united force was able to fight its way into the gatehouse and opened the gates, allowing the Larkinge Fusiliers and the 3rd Brigade to storm the city.

The Earl of Lopenfort's Regiment with O'Reiley's Regiment of the left advanced with long scaling ladders against the city's north wall. Under cover of light artillery fire from the 12pdr guns of the 2nd Artillery Brigade, the attack was personally led by Harold Gallagher, the Earl of Lopenfort. At the head of his regiment, Gallagher oversaw the advance and personally hefted a ladder up to the wall. Accounts say that he was the first of his men over the wall and from his own account and the medical log of Doctor Hans Webber, a Saxoner doctor, he sustained seven sword wounds and a pistol ball to the hip during the assault. His ensigns both dead in the attack, Lord Lopenfort lifted both the Regimental standard and the King's colours and planted the Imperial flag atop a bastion to signal the success of his attack. For the assault, Lord Lopenfort received the Cross of Romulus from King Edward.

Against the right wall's breach, the King's Rifle Regiment made multiple harassing attacks until the ill-disciplined militia abandoned the section of wall entirely. The 37th Regiment under Colonel Sir Herbert Simmerson was sent forward to capture the breach. Mistakenly believing that the wall had been cleared, Simmerson advanced his forces and scaled the breach without support from skirmishers or artillery. His forces soon came under withering fire from the wall bastions and the 2nd Battalion was forced back under heavy gunfire. The First Battalion, however, managed to force its way onto the wall and began clearing out resistance. The bastions were cleared with bayonets and grenades. The attack cost the 37th Regiment 320 casualties.

Following the costly yet successful attack by the 1st, 3rd and 4th regiments, the rest of First Division's infantry quickly pushed into the town and, after clearing the barbican, swarmed towards the last holdfast of the defending garrison. The town hall of Drayglossop took the place, and still does today, of an ancient hill fort that stood on the small motte in the centre of town. Throughout history, it had become a strong stone keep and since the 14th century, the Counts of Drayglossop made it their place of rule. During the fighting on the walls, much of the garrison had been employed constructing barricades around the keep. Cleverly, Count Maximillian had pulled the militia forces back to the keep and moved his regular troops to these barricades, allowing the militia to have the benefit of high ground and good cover to make up for their imperfections as soldiers. Colonel Jonathan Barclay led his regiment of the Third Brigade, the Duke of Glynmoran's Foot, in a column of attack down Keep Road, the direct road leading from the main gate to the town keep. Under withering musket fire and cannon shot from light artillery in the keep, Barclay's regiment suffered heavy casualties and five of his companies fell back in disorder. Nonetheless, he continued the advance and his light company took to skirmishing with the Saxoner regulars. Finally reinforced by the 6th Regiment, Barclay ordered his troops to charge and, headed by the grenadier company, his regiment cleared the barricades.

The walls were now devoid of Saxoner troops as they had all been killed, captured or had fallen back to the keep. The units which had stormed the town now formed up within the walls as Lynwood consulted with Trevik and his engineers to discuss the issue of the keep. The First Division was ordered to bring up their galloper guns to blow open the gates. Five 6pdr guns were advanced through the gates and set up in cover to bombard the gate to the keep. Unknown to the Imperials, Count Maximillian and his family, guarded by the remains of his regular force, were rapidly escaping through tunnels underneath the town which ran parallel to the sewer system. Suddenly aware that their lord and commander had escaped, the keep's garrison surrendered.