Wishing all a very Merry Christmas.
Surprising as it sounds in all the years I have gamed the American Revolution have never fought this battle. Possibly because it was so lopsided. Possibly because you need so many militia figures! Or, because tactically it's rather boring. Both sides line up and just march forward. plain table with a few trees and swamps in both flanks.
But its time to try it out and here I'd my order of battle. Battle report will follow soon.
Battle of Camden August 1780
British Southern Army: (2100)
Lieutenant General Lord Charles Cornwallis
Rawdon's Brigade: Lieutenant Colonel Francis Rawdon
Royal Artillery (light)
Royal North Carolina Regiment (30 figures)
Bryan's North Carolina Loyalist Militia (30 figures)
Volunteers of Ireland (30 figures)
British Legion:
British Legion Infantry (16 figures)
British Legion Artillery (light)
Webster's Brigade: Lieutenant Colonel James Webster
Royal Artillery (light)
British Light Infantry (16 figures)
23rd Regiment of Foot (30 figures)
33rds Regiment of Foot (30 figures)
Reserve Brigade: Lieutenant Colonel Alexander McDonald
71st Highland Regiment (30 figures)
1st Bn/71st Highland Regiment (18 figures)*
2nd Bn/71st Highland Regiment (12 figures)*
Royal Artillery (light)
* can field as two units or as just one.
British Legion:Lieutenant Colonel Banastre Tarleton
British Legion Dragoons (180):
1st Squadron (10 figures)
2nd Squadron (8 figures)
total: 230 figures and 4 guns
American Southern Army: (4000)
Major General Horatio Gates
Continental Artillery/Army Troops:
Captain Anthony Singleton
Meredeth's (Virginia) Co/Continental Arty (light)
Dorseys (Maryland) Co/Continental Arty (light)
Bookers (Maryland) Sec./Continental Arty (light)
Waters (Maryland) Sec./Continental Arty (light)
Advance Brigade: Colonel Charles Armand
Continental & Virginia Cavalry:
Armands Legion Cavalry (6 figures)
Nelson's Virginia State Cavalry Regiment (6 figures)
Pinckneys S.C. Volunteer Mounted Infantry (6 figures)
Continental Light Infantry:
Armands Legion Foot (6 figures)
Porterfields Virginia Light Infantry (8 figures)
Armstrongs Militia Light Infantry (12 figures)
Militia Division : Major General Richard Caswell
1st North Carolina Militia Brigade: Brigadier General John Butler
Left Wing Battalion/1st NC (24 figures)
Right Wing Battalion/1st NC (24 figures)
2nd North Carolina Militia Brigade: Brigadier General Griffith Rutherford
Left Wing Battalion/2nd N (24 figures)
Right Wing Battalion/2nd NC (24 figures)
3rd North Carolina Militia Brigade: Brigadier General Isaac Gregory
Left Wing Battalion/3rd NC (24 figures)
Right Wing Battalion/3rd NC (24 figures)
Virginia Militia Brigade: Brigadier General Edward Stevens
Left Wing Battalion/Virginia (24 figures)
Right Wing/Battalion/Virginia (24 figures)
Continental Division (@1200):
Major General Baron de Kalb
1st Maryland Brigade:Major General William Smallwood
1st & 3rd Maryland Regiments (30 figures)
5th & 7th Maryland Regiments (30 figures)
2nd Maryland Brigade: Brigadier General Mordecai Gist
Delaware & 2nd Maryland Regiments (30 figures)
4th & 6th Maryland Regiments (30 figures)
Total 330 figures and 4 guns
Victory Conditions:
The first side to break and retreat off the table is the loser. The side that remains on the table is the winner
Rules:
The Whites of Their Eyes.
Game Length:
The battle began at dawn, roughly 7 am. The historical battle lasted only one hour but the game should go on until one side breaks and retreats from the field. Sunset was roughly 8 pm, but one side should break far before sunset.
My grandfather, Edward McNamara from Lexington Massachusetts served with the 101st Regiment (Medical company), 26th Yankee Division in the first world war. He seldom talked about it, and when he did it was a terrible memory which haunted him. It was only later that I found out he was mentioned in the division's orders and was decorated for heroism. He never mentioned this to me. I found out later through my own research. But I will always remember his smile when he told me how at 11:00 A.M. on 11th November the guns stopped and he and his friends knew they would live, knew they had survived. He went on to raise a family and contribute to society. During the next war he built ships for the Navy at the Charlestown Navy yard.
And as this date is now called Veterans Day I say thank you to my father in law, Aldrich Stevens who served in the 3rd Ranger Battalion (Darby's Rangers) in the Second World War. He saw service with them at North Africa, Sicily and Italy. Seriously wounded he did not make the Anzio landing and thus missed the action at Cisterna (although he may have listened to the last radio calls while at headquarters). Like my grandfather he too was haunted by the memories of what he saw, experienced and especialy those he lost. But again he went on with life. Due to the GI bill he got a education, raised a family and contributed to society.
I remember their sacrifices and hope both men have found peace.
One of my favorite stories in Bar Harbor Maine concerns an ocean liner, its cargo of gold and silver and some unusual navigation.
At the end of July 1914 the German ocean liner SS Kronprinzessin Cecilie sailed from New York harbor to Breman Germany. In addition to her full passenger list of 1200 people the ship carried a large amount of gold (over 10 million dollars) and silver (over 3 million). The Cecilie was built in 1906 and was a popular ship on the Atlantic trade. She was a little over 19,000 ton, 700 feet long with a top speed of 23-24 knots.
After an uneventful series of days at sea as the ship neared Liverpool its Captain received a coded message. War had been declared, British ships were probably searching for her and he was advised to turn back to America to avoid capture and loss of cargo. Captain Polark turned his ship about and headed back to American. To throw off any ship that spotted him he had the funnels repainted in White Star Line colors to fool passing ships into thinking he was the RMS Olympic.
But where to go? Both New York and Boston were out if the question. British ships would be patrolling off those ports and looking for enemy shipping. With dwindling coal supplies he headed for the Maine coast. One if his passengers, a summer resident of the town of Bar Harbor and a yachtsman offered to assist navigating them into the small harbor.
they came into the harbor at night. Quite a feat if navigation with the number of islands they had to slip through. When the sleepy town awake at dawn everyone was surprised to find a ocean liner in their small port. A number of passengers had summer residence in the town. They quickly had servants open their homes to wait while transportation to Boston and New York was arranged. Tours of the ship were quickly organized for the locals and just as quickly cancelled when numerous items on the ship disappear due to the fine American habit of taking souvenirs. Governments and bankers became involved in deciding who owned the gold and silver and who now owned the ship. While diplomacy played out the ships' band held daily concerts on the town green.
The ship and its crew were interned and in November they were transferred to Boston. Once America declared war on Germany the ship was sized. Turned into a transport and remained the USS Mount Vernon the old German liner became a troop ship bringing American soldiers to France. During one crossing the ship was hit by a torpedo but managed to limp back to Boston where it was repaired and continued service. Sadly after the war the ship was sold for scrap. A sad but common end for many not these beautiful ships.
Its a great story and each time I go up to Bar Harbor I like sit by the harbor on the green and imagine the ships band playing in the background and the ship sitting peacefully.
One of the more unknown and forgotten battles of the American Revolution occurred in Castine Main
Fort George was built in 1779 by the British during the American Revolutionary War in Castine, Maine built on high ground over looking Panobscot bay on the Bagaduce Peninsula. It was the site of the Massachusetts Penobscot Expedition, a disastrous attempt in July and August of 1779 to retake Castine. The British re-occupied Castine in the War of 1812 from September 1814 to April 1815, rebuilding it and establishing smaller forts around it. They withdrew after the war and following a brief period of American use, the fort was abandoned and demolished in 1819.
Fort George is a square earthwork, about 200 feet on each side. There are four bastions at the corners. Parts of the fort that have not survived includethe palisade, moat, and gateway. The fort is one of a series of defenses erected by the British in 1779, which included the digging of a canal across much of the neck separating the Bagaduce Peninsula from the rest of the mainland.
The site of the fort's remains is now a park of 7 acres owned by the state and maintained by the town. Within the fort is a baseball diamond and a soccer field. The few stone structures within it are crumbling to ruin.
The Fort is the location for Bernard Cornwell's 2010 book " The Fort",about the Penobscot Expedition. For more details of the siege and fiasco:
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Penobscot_Expedition