Progress this week has been a bit slower than of late but have finally finished off the latest GNW Swedes - the Nylands Regimente (I have been writing Regimentet but apparently that translates as THE regiment..)
This is the the first unit I have painted wearing the traditional Karpus headgear - there are three more to go I think.
Rangiriri
The decisive
battle for Waikato was fought in November 1863 at Rangiriri, where a Māori
defensive line was constructed along a ridge between the river and Lake
Waikare. The defences consisted of an entrenched parapet with ditches on both
sides. Concealed rifle pits covered by fern were protected by wooden stakes
driven into the ground. The most obvious approach route from the north was
covered by a central redoubt designed by Pene Te Wharepu. Lieutenant-General
Duncan Cameron, commander of the Imperial forces, later conceded that the
strength of this position had not been detected by the British. Swampy ground
made an approach from the south difficult. But formidable as Rangiriri’s
earthworks were, they were incomplete.
A number of
important Māori chiefs – including King Tāwhiao and Wiremu Tāmihana – were
present at Rangiriri, but the pā was seriously undermanned. The Kīngitanga
forces had now been managing the circulation of fighters between their homes
and the front for nearly three months. After Meremere, manpower was stretched
to the limit.
According to (New Zealand historian James) Belich, it was ‘inevitable that the Meremere army should break up’ to plant
crops and undertake other essential tasks. The British were not going to wait
until it reformed. On the morning of 20 November they assembled a force of 860
men - backed up by artillery - just north of Rangiriri. Another 600 men were
ferried upstream by the river fleet. Men from the 65th, 12th and 14th regiments
were organised into three lines, with a detachment of the 40th and the remainder
of the 65th in reserve. A scaling party carrying ladders and planks was poised
for action. Royal Artillery led by Captain Henry Mercer were ready to shell the
pā.
The river
force eventually made it ashore and quickly occupied the now-abandoned rear
defences. The central redoubt was surrounded but would be a tough nut to crack.
‘Barely 12 paces’ wide, it was crowded with defenders, including a number of
women who reloaded muskets.
With British
soldiers now within the pā, the artillery fire was halted. All available men –
including Mercer’s gunners – were mustered for a final assault. Strong
resistance continued. Mercer was shot in the face and dragged to a ditch where
20 other men lay wounded or dead. Assistant Surgeon William Temple disregarded
his own welfare in attending to the wounded. Lieutenant Arthur Pickard showed
similar courage by running back through enemy fire to seek help from Cameron.
Both men were awarded the Victoria Cross for their endeavours.
A naval
force followed Mercer’s artillerymen in charging the pā. They chased a number
of Māori into the swamp, shooting nearly all of them. (according to a Maori historian I saw on You Tube, these were mainly the elderly, women and children...KR) But when they returned to
assault the rifle pits they were quickly forced to take cover. By nightfall
there was a stalemate. The bank of the central redoubt had proven too high to
scale. The ditch and approaches were ‘littered with dead and wounded’.
A
combination of factors thwarted a plan to blow up the redoubt and plans were
made for a renewed assault at dawn.
White flag
Overnight a
number of Māori were evacuated via the eastern ditch – the only remaining
escape route to Lake Waikare. As many as 36 men accompanied Tāmihana and a
similar number may have escorted King Tāwhiao and the Māori wounded, who
included the mortally wounded architect of the pā, Pene Te Wharepu.
The planned
dawn attack became unnecessary when Māori
raised a white flag, which the British chose to interpret as a sign of
surrender. Facing no resistance, they moved into the redoubt. The
remaining Māori defenders were confused. Lieutenant Pennefather, one of the
first men to have ‘tumbled into’ the central redoubt, gave this account to
Archdeacon Robert Maunsell:
The Maoris then (at 5.00 a.m.)
hoisted the white flag. He [Pennefather] at once scrambled into their redoubt,
and with his men mingled amongst them, shaking hands, and the General came up
about ten minutes afterwards complimented them on their bravery and demanded
their arms. To this they demurred: but the chiefs felt that to resist now was
out of the question and decided upon delivering up the arms as required having
first said that the reason of hoisting the white flag was that they might ask what terms they might expect. [Maunsell’s italics]
A decisive victory?
Casualties
at Rangiriri were high – 35 British and a similar number of Māori were killed.
Ten more members of the British force died later from their wounds, including
the unfortunate Mercer, who had lost most of his jaw.
Many reports
exaggerated the magnitude of the British victory, with claims of up to 280
Māori casualties. Other accounts were less celebratory, seeing the number of
Māori killed as a poor return for 130 British casualties. Settler William
Morgan wrote in his journal that it was ‘extremely annoying, in fact it is
galling, to think of our losing so many fine officers and men by such savages
as those we had a sight of yesterday’.
The
Kīngitanga had suffered a major blow. In addition to those killed and wounded,
183 prisoners – including a number of chiefs – were taken, along with their
weapons. The importance of the victory was recognised by Cameron’s subsequent
knighthood.
Cameron knew
that the war was not yet won. But the occupation of the Kīngitanga’s capital,
Ngāruawāhia, on 8 December 1863 prompted Grey to tell London that ‘there can, I
think, be no doubt that the neck of this unhappy rebellion is now broken.’
While this was a moral and political victory for the British, King Tāwhiao had already retreated into Ngāti Maniapoto territory (now known as the King Country), where he would remain unmolested for 18 years. Cameron knew that ultimate success depended on the capture of the economic heartland of the Waikato around the settlements of Rangiaowhia, Te Awamutu and Kihikihi.
Youtube Clip
here
Attack on Rangiriri,
November 20th 1863 - YouTube
A great addition to your GNW project, Kit. I like the headdresses of Karpus, it's nice to see that each regiment has some individual characteristics.
ReplyDeleteThanks Dmitry...I like a bit of variety too but need to remember most of the Swedish army did wear the standard blue and yellow uniform, so I need to paint some more like that!
DeleteAnother superb addition to your Swedes
ReplyDeleteThank you Neil, the white facing made a nice change
DeleteReally like the base shown in photo 9 … dynamic drummer, bloke with the bandaged head and lovely basing including the hat on the floor - very nice.
ReplyDeleteThanks Norm, my basing style has evolved over the years, but I have always tried to make sure there is some variety and points of interest....the old saying that average figures can be enhanced by good basing holds true in reverse...you sometimes see very well painted figures ruined by being plonked on a piece of card or plastic painted bright green and nothing else! The plastic kits mean an abundance of left over "bits" that can be added to bases. If Ebor did a pack of dead Russians, I would add a corpse or two as well!
DeleteAgreed, I am thinking of going back to some old bases and bringing them a bit more up to my latest methods.
DeleteI have never seen any of your figures look anything other than outstanding Norm!
DeleteAnother lovely unit Keith, and I remember that gun turret well. There's also a nice cheese shop in Mercer near the turret with a few rather unique varieties made from locally-sourced dairy.
ReplyDeleteThanks Lawrence, yes indeed, Mercer is famous for its cheese and just up the road is Pokeno, home of bacon AND real fruit ice cream!
DeleteGreat job on two disparate subjects. The unit is very nice, and I must say your attention to the stands is top notch.
ReplyDeleteYou dud a good thumbnail sketch of the battle, a lot of good background included.
Thank you, Joe. I can't take any credit for the info on the battle, I just copy and pasted it from the Web.
DeleteGreat looking complete Swedish unit! There seemed a fair bit of assaulting prepared positions, I remember an article in about 1977 in military modelling showing an assault in 54mm and clearly being quite taken by it as I can still remember it!
ReplyDeleteBest Iain
Thanks Iain. Yes most of the engagements invoked the Maori defending a fortified Pa site.The TV series by James Belich is quite interesting and all available on You Tube. He came to some controversial conclusions eg that the Maori invented trench warfare!
DeleteKeith, this is a sharp looking regiment for your growing collection. Thanks for your fascinating history of an action in the Maori War.
ReplyDeleteThank you Jon, and you are most welcome!
DeleteExcellent regiment, Keith. I love the mustaches on the grenadiers. Great narrative of the Maori "uprising" too - reminds me a bit of the some of the rebellions by Native Hawaiians against the Provisional Government, including the Wilcox Rebellion - far less bloody than the ones in NZ, though. I was surprised to learn they actually fought in areas where I grew up - near Diamond Head, etc. I must do some research on this.
ReplyDeleteThanks Dean, it's always intersting to dig into the history of our own area....I am sure there will be lots of information available about conflicts in Hawaii
DeleteAnother great unit Keith and the next one should look good too. As always nice to see 'local' photos as you have some stunning places in NZ.
ReplyDeleteCheers Steve - I managed to crank out the six figure command base for the Narke Varmalands Regt yesterday, so hope to post full unit later this week.
DeleteA splendid addition to your Swedes Keith...
ReplyDeleteCertainly one of my favourites to date...
Yet another lovely and informative road trip...
All the best. Aly
Thanks Aly, you should like the Narke Varmalands regiment currently on the painting desk too.
DeleteYou will be close to finishing that army soon Keith! What project will be next? Like you I always rush past Rangiriri and always mean to stop one day...we will be passing it again today on the way back from Rotorua and no doubt it will be rush past again as we try to beat the traffic up the Southern Motorway and get the chores done before I am back at work tomorrow.
ReplyDeleteThanks Mark - still got four Regts of foot to do, then I will need to do about twelve squadrons of horse, plus some artillery crews, so should still be painting Swedes for a while yet. Not sure what will be after that - probably building up some previous collections - none of my Napoleonic armies really have enough cavalry, for example. Dont feel bad about Rangiriri - we have lived ten minutes drive from Alexandra Redoubt at Tuakau for twenty years and I didnt even know it was there till a coupe of years ago....
DeleteThose GNW miniatures just... keep ...coming! Nice! You’ll have a full army in no time. 😀
ReplyDeleteThanks Stew - that is certainly the plan - hope your house hunting/moving is progressing?
DeleteGreat post Keith, wonderful looking figures and a fantastic road trip to boot.
ReplyDeleteCheers
Stu
Cheers Stu - next time I get down to Tauranga, I might try to visit Gate Pa - another significant military action in the NZ Land Wars
DeleteAnother top looking unit Keith. The white sets off the blue really well and it's good to have a few other than with yellow facings.
ReplyDeleteRe. capes, have you considered using paper and/or putty. Such things are easily done and look good once painted. Plus you have a unique figure and the pleasure of knowing that you did it yourself. IFF such a thing interests you, mind!
Another top travelogue and photos too. NZ has done a far better job than Oz with its colonial past. The treaty likely assists this, I suspect. We are a bit behind...
Regards, James
Thanks James - and I will have a think about your suggestion re the capes - I have never used "greenstuff" so am a bit wary - I know lots of people use it for this type of conversion....maybe I can experiment with the paper idea first....
DeleteJust as an observer of things GNW, I had not thought very much of the karpus as a piece of kit. However, the effect of the white/blue karpus as illustrated in this regiment has changed my mind: very smart!
ReplyDeleteThanks Ed! I agree...initially, I did not order any figures in the Karpus; however, most of the regiments who had a facing colour other than yellow seem to have worn this headwear, so I remedied my earlier omission with a second order to Ebor!
DeleteLove the regiment and greatly enjoyed the local history tour.
ReplyDeleteCheers Mark, thanks for dropping by and commenting!
Delete