It is 1807. Displeased by Napoleon's Continental System and the effects it has had on trade, Britain has sent an amphibious force to northern Germany to help keep the Baltic trade routes open. While ships of the Royal Navy hang at anchor, an army of 24,000 men under General Estwold has landed to march down the coast and seize the port of Rostock. Unfortunately the Dukes of Ruritania and Brunswick, motivated more by dislike of British arrogance than loyalty to Napoleon, have marched to defend the town and throw the British back into the sea.
26,000
men now stand against the British, hoping to break their assault
before they reach Rostock. They meet near the village of Raufheim...
Initial set-up. Raufheim at the crossroads in the rear. |
On the day of battle, the German right was held by the Duke of
Brunswick's men, secreted in the Erlen Woods. The village of Erm held
his vaunted horse artillery. Reist's division held the centre of the
line, with Aache's division on the northern slopes. Behind Reist lay
von Kleist's mounted division, today personally led by the Duke of
Ruritania himself.
The British centre was held by the First Division, which counted
among its ranks the 2nd Brigade of Guards. On their left was
McAuliffe's Scots Division, and on their right, the Light Division,
which was tasked with seizing the bridge across the Raufen. The
cavalry division under Imbert held the rear, waiting for the chance
of a breakthrough.
The day began with a brisk British advance. Slowed by the woods, the
Light Division nonetheless made the best progress, as the main line
slowed to face the Brunswickers. All along the line muskets began to
fire, but the cunning concealment of the blackclad Germans kept them
safe from the brunt of it. The 2nd Brigade charged Erm, and after a
bitter struggle managed to rout the German artillery and spike the
guns.
Realising the situation the Duke of Brunswick was about to be caught
in, Reist moved his regular regiments forward, leaving his grenz and
landwehr to guard the crossroads. They looked a fine sight marching
forward in the morning sun, their standards snapping in the breeze.
From his vantage point on the hill, Aache saw the first elements of
the Light Division leaving the woods, and began edging his line
forward, seeking to anchor it between Raufheim and the Raufen Copse.
Seeking a swift exit from the bottleneck presented by the River Raufen and
the Erlen Woods, Estwold and McAuliffe threw their divisions into the
assault.
The true battle begins. |
Already shaken by the sight of bright steel approaching, the Duke of
Brunswick's Brigade of Line took terrible casualties in the charge
and broken, its men streaming out of Erlen Woods in a sorry mass of
men thinking only of themselves, throwing away weapons in their
flight. His Lights did little better against the wrath of the
Highland Brigade, but retired in good order to the heart of the
forest.
On the road, the slaughter was as shocking as it was great – four
thousand casualties were reaped in those few brutal minutes. The 28th
Infantry regiment was routed by the Guards, but the 5th British were
destroyed and the 8th Brigade thrown back. McAuliffe had succeeded,
but Estwold's position was precarious.
Conscious
of the heroic defence already presented by his men, Reist threw
forward his reserve regiments, and though the Grenz balked at his
orders, they strode manfully into the fray. The regulars retired
slightly to cover the 28th, and to block the Guards from
consolidating their gains. The Ruritanian second line did masterfully
well against the 8th Brigade, sending it packing and breaking the
will of the British centre. At the same time, the mere threat of a
charge by the Brunswick Hussars sent the 2nd Brigade into paroxysms
of fear, leading to their annihilation under the flashing blades of
German sabres.
Seeing the infantry beginning to crumble, the cavalry now leapt into
action. The heavies sprang down upon the exposed Brunswick Hussars,
while the Lights sped forth to assault Reist's division. Inspired,
the Guards and Highlanders charged his rear line, while the 1st
Brigade went deeper into Erlen Woods to seek out the Brunswick
Lights, who fled under such determined pursuit.
The Brunswick Hussars fought valiantly, but were destroyed. The
irregular grenz could not stand against the British charge, and the
landwehr on their flank were undone as well. Even Reist's regulars
evaporated before King George's elites, leaving him alone and
confused with the rallied remnants of the 28th.
The British line rallies. |
Seeing what had become of Reist's gallant men, Aache threw caution to
the wind and sent his men charging towards the Light Division. While
the regular regiments approached head on, his grenz launched a sneak
attack against the British right as well. Incensed by Reist's losses
and the cowardice of the Brunswickers, the Duke led his cavalry
forward as well.
The cuirassiers rode to their devastation, but the dragoons of the
Guard brought bitter ruin to their British counterparts, breaking
their ranks and sending them fleeing in disorder to the mass of
Hussars passing behind them to assault the Light Brigades. That
slaughter, that fateful pause disrupted the Hussar advance enough
that they broke upon the 1st Light Brigade, although the second was
destroyed by the Ruritanian 2-1 Dragoons.
They say the fiercest fighting comes between countrymen, and the
King's German Legion proved the truth of that as they battled the
23rd Regiment and sent them packing, both sides licking grievous
wounds. The 13th were similarly handled by the 3rd Light Brigade, but
the 2nd, barely over the Raufen, was destroyed by the 21st Regiment
and the grenz that charged screaming from the forest of Raufen Copse.
Battered by their rough treatment, the British cavalry only moved forward
slowly to cover any moves by the remnants of their Ruritanian
opposites. The Scots Division moved forward to annihilate Reist's
remnants, and the Light Division re-engaged Aache's men.
The battlelines have thinned. |
Yet again, the redcoats carried all before them, and there,
heartbroken, the Duke of Ruritania decided to withdraw in order to
save what few of his countrymen he could.
Butcher's Bill
German: 18,500 casualties, 10,000 dead.
British: 12,000 casualties, 5,500 dead.
Overview
That
battle could have gone either way, but the iron of the Light Division
was never going to let anything hold it back. With a Morale of six
and shock,
there's really no reason not
to charge!
The fragility of cavalry formations is something I never quite
remember when it comes to Napoleonic games, and that was what broke
the British cavalry, compared to the larger infantry units.
It was nice to play Volley and Bayonet again after so long with the Too Fat Lardies
and 40k – it's a reminder of just how large a game you can get on a
2x2 board with 2mm. I should really get the rest of my Brits and
French painted up...
Man of the Match goes to the Highland Brigade for its consistent
performance, but there were no real stars in this bloodbath (fun as
it was).
Nice report. Any chance you will post the OB?
ReplyDeleteI wasn't planning to, but it should be here:
Deletehttp://www.4shared.com/office/A6eBe0eF/Battle_of_Raufheim.html
Cool. Thanks for the link.
DeleteNo worries, happy to help =]
Delete