Friday, 20 February 2026

Sunday Napoleonic Game

A bit late with this AAR from last Sunday at Barrys. A Napoleonic "encounter" in 1814 as the Allies (Brits and Bavarians) approach the outskirts of Paris. At the same time, a French force is heading in the opposite direction. Each force was given its own specific aims by umpire/scenario designer Paul - I played on the Allied side with Barry and Rick - Mark and Chris were the French, with Paul coming on as reinforcements on a random die roll 


Initial set up


Chris with his newly minted Duchy of Warsaw force


My Brits advance straight up the middle - our aim was to capture the road that exited the centre of the French table edge


My supporting cavalry - three heavy, one light, plus a horse battery.


Rick (to my right) haired off into a densely wooded area with his cavalry??!


While Barry's Bavarians advanced steadily in a solid block


Chris has painted far too many of these bloody lancers - they look nice though!


My columns got about two thirds of the way across the table - when Paul turned up with the French reinforcements - Chris had rolled a 1 for the turn number they arrived on - oh great!


The lancers charged my riflemen and wiped them out!


My Light Dragoons returned the favour, eventually driving the lancers off


Marks French hussars boldly charged Ricks RA battery - it didn't end well for the hussars!


British battalion's mass to pass through the central crossroads


To my right, the French cavalry were busy, destroying most of Ricks command piecemeal!


The French reinforcements line the ridge opposite the Bavarians


The British cavalry brigade watch the Poles advance


Mark continues to beat up Ricks Brits


"I say, what the hell is that chap up to on the flank, Carruthers?!"


"He appears to be losing his entire command, my Lord!"


Impressive looking Duchy of Warsaw columns advance remorselessly


The lancers clash with British dragoons


The 90th Foot occupy a farm adjacent to the central crossroads


The Light Division moves forward - 43rd and 52nd Regiments to the fore


The French had the advantage of defending higher ground.....


Reinforcements arrive in the form of a Portuguese Brigade of five battalions - well, it's what I had with me!


The Light Division assault drives back one French battalion.


The Poles advance ominously against the British centre


And their massed columns look unstoppable as they move towards the thin blue line of Portuguese


The remnants of Ricks British command move behind the Portuguese troops and reach the road to Paris


The Portuguese bounce the Poles back - and counterattack!


Two or three Polish battalions are driven from the field!


Highlanders v's Poles in the centre


The close combats were inconclusive, neither side gaining the upper hand


The Poles came in again against my Portuguese, supported by French cavalry who had finished beating up Ricks command by this stage.


In the centre, one of the leading battalions of the Light Division were repulsed and fell back in disorder


The Portuguese succeeded in holding then pushing back the Polish columns


The Poles formed line - they do look pretty!


A completely fresh French infantry brigade moves to support the Poles against the Portuguese


Portuguese and Polish lines trade volleys


A final shot of inconclusive combat in the centre.

It was 4pm and time to call it a day. The Light Division had managed to drive off two battalions of French infantry from the heights but the road to Paris was still in French hands. The Bavarians had slogged away against the French reinforcements but not really made any headway, and the British right flank had been comprehensively defeated by Marks French cavalry - if the Portuguese had not arrived, it might well have been a rout! Rather generously, Paul declared the result a draw - in the circumstances, I was more than happy with that result!

A hard slog of a game but nice to get some old friends on the table (most of my Napoleonic Brits were painted 20+ years ago - lovely Front Rank figures cast by Paul and Mark, most of them!)

Sunday, 15 February 2026

Friday Night At Julians - Sharpe Practice Again

John was unable to attend this week, so Julian and I took the British against Chris with the French. The scenario was three groups of French voltigeurs had seized a strategic point to secure the advance of their army. Some reinforcements were coming up to support them, but the British had also arrived to drive them out

We had about 6-8 units per side and only 4 commanders, as Julian wanted to speed things up a bit 

Here is my force - three units of line infantry with a leader, two units of light dragoons with a leader and a C in C leader 


The voltigeurs occupy a rather nice 3d house from Temu that Julian has recently acquired! 


The British cavalry leader 


The Brits advance


The enemy - two units of French dragoons, who proved to be quite troublesome!


The voltigeurs open fire at long range on my light dragoons, scaring them off


The ubiquitous Richard Sharpe was in Julians command this week


Close up of nicely painted British light dragoon (on his own cos he was killed by the voltigeurs initial volley!)


My light dragoons headed off to the flank where Julian was advancing - or are they just hiding behind the woods from the nasty French?

 
The situation after a few turns, my Brits deployed into line as a single unit under the C in C. Chris moved his dragoons up and looked like he would charge my line - this could get bloody!


But he didn't roll quite enough, so wheeled into Julians riflemen at the edge of the wood instead, forcing them to voluntarily fall back


A dangerous situation developed for Julians three units in the woods...the dragoons eventually pursued one unit of light infantrymen right off the table edge!


Meanwhile, the British line, using "Present" to enhance their firing, gradually wiped out the unit of voltigeurs in the open between the house and the trees


With the riflemen unloaded, the French grenadiers attempted to charge them


And Julian rolled this when he decided to fall back again - you add the dice together for the distance you retire - EXCEPT if you are in woods, you deduct one inch for each dice.... sigh


Needless to say, you are at all sorts of disadvantages if caught in the flank or rear, plus unloaded! Julian is pointing out some of them!


5 or 6 to kill I believe - this was what Chris rolled


And Julian reprised his earlier efforts - even Mr Sharpe shuffled off his mortal coil in this one!


I think I stopped taking photos because not an awful lot more changed - mostly we just blazed away at each other. The French dragoons ended up back adjacent to the voltigeurs, their infantry were advancing steadily through the woods, and the British were nowhere near taking the house, so it ended as a French victory.


A nice bit of easy going fun at the end of the week - today I am off to Barrys with a British Napoleonic force of twelve battalions of foot, three heavy and one light cavalry plus three guns - so a report on this scenario by Paul will follow here in a day or two.