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Ken Tout

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Beschreibung

Yeomen of England were called to bring their own horses to form England's first Home Guard when a dictator assembled his army across the Channel in 1794. They went on to become one of the most famous mounted regiments of the British Army. During the First World War they served on the frontline in the battles of Ypres, Neuve Chapelle and Artois. In the Second World War they found fame as one of the great tank regiments to be found on the frontline during the Normandy Landings, Battle of the Bulge and the Rhine Crossings. This book weaves together military history and personal anecdotes to follow the regiment from its horsed days, parading under the Earl Spencer who promoted Nelson to fleet command, through moments of repressing civil rioters, on to the bloodiest of cavalry charges in World War 1 and exceptional achievement with tanks in World War 2, only eventually to suffer what Napoleon, Kruger, the Kaiser and Hitler could not do – be wiped out by government cuts in the 1960s. Ken Tout, who proudly served with the regiment during the Normandy landings pays tribute to a much-loved part of the British Army.

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Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2012

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We remember the humans who died. Spare a thought too for those superb sentient horses.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

This book was intended originally as a collection of anecdotes from my Second World War regiment, the Northamptonshire Yeomanry. However, a brief survey of history revealed that there are so many fascinating aspects of the Yeomanry and the book seemed to fill up with wider and wider views of a unique formation.

As far as the Northants history is concerned, I appreciated the courtesy of the Chairman of the Regimental Association, Ben Howkins, and also the president, Earl Spencer, in encouraging me to speak freely on the subject according to whatever information I might discover. A main support has been W.J. ‘Bill’ Hornsey, the indefatigable Hon. Secretary of the Association, who not only has furnished me with contacts and pictures but has himself amassed a wealth of information into which I could dip. We relied much on former members of the regiment who did much research over the years but sadly are no longer with us, including Captain Bill Bellamy, H. de L. Cazenove, George Jelley MBE, Vic Lawrence, Major A.E. ‘Sandy’ Saunders, Trooper Les ‘Spud’ Taylor as well as, happily still with us, Captain Tim Deakin, Reg Spittles and Tanky Turner. Many valuable facts and anecdotes were supplied by NY veterans quoted in the text.

Great help and encouragement were offered by Yeomen of the present day, record offices, regimental museums and period enactors. Individual friends who were particularly helpful included Charles, Earl Spencer, Major B. Mollo, Major C. Roads, Captain D. Aiton, Captain J.T. David, Captain A. French, Captain C.A. Parr MBE, Lieutenant Liz Weston, Juliette Baxter, Paul Connell, Geoff Crump, Martin Dawson, Caroline Dwyer, Sarah Elsom, David Fletcher, Jon at Pembroke Museum, Mark Lewis, Paul Robinson, George Streatfeild, and Eleanor Winyard.

It was most enjoyable working with Jo de Vries at The History Press, who is the most helpful and sympathetic of editors, together with her excellent collaborators. A special vote of thanks must go to my wife Jai. The research and writing of this book took place during our removal from Essex to West Sussex and involving the total renovation of our new abode. The author shamelessly quoted press deadlines whilst Jai undertook the marshalling of plumbers, builders and decorators, as well as showing dexterity and versatility with machetes, secateurs, screwdrivers and paint brushes.

CONTENTS

Title

Dedication

Acknowledgements

Foreword by Earl Spencer

1 Horses for my Kingdom (1794–1815)

2 Call out the Riot Squad! (1815–1899)

3 Boer War or Bore War? (1899–1902)

4 Forming the Fighting Force (1902–1914)

5 Courses not fit for Horses (1914–1916)

6 The Slaughter of the Horses (1917–1918)

7 Punctured Pride (1919–1939)

8 Two Lines of Defence (1939–1944)

9 Armoured Steeds Hunt Tigers (1944–1946)

10 Hands off the TA! (1947–2011)

11 Unremitting Remembrance (2012 for posterity)

Glossary

Bibliography

Copyright

NY Association Hon. Secretary, W.J. ‘Bill’ Hornsey presents a memorial cup to the 2011 army cadet winner. (Northamptonshire Yeomanry Archives, NYA)

FOREWORD

BY EARL SPENCER

The history of the Northamptonshire Yeomanry is distinguished, of course, with consistent bravery in battles fought abroad. But, as the name of the regiment reminds us, this is a local force – and, for me, it is particularly close to home, having so many links with my family, and with Althorp.

George John, 2nd Earl Spencer (my great-great-great grandfather), founded the Yeomanry when Napoleon’s France was a terrifying threat to Britain. George John was First Lord of the Admiralty at the time of the Battle of the Nile, and was someone who knew about fighting men: he was arguably Nelson’s most prominent patron, giving him what we would term ‘fast-track promotion’.

The 5th Earl Spencer also had a record of public service, serving in all of Gladstone’s Cabinets, and twice serving as Viceroy of Ireland. It was he who, a little over a century ago, resurrected the Northamptonshire Yeomanry. A Master of the Pytchley, the ‘Red Earl’ continued the regiment’s proud record of producing fine mounts for its men – many of these ‘war horses’ having learnt their skills pursuing foxes.

My grandfather, Jack – the 7th Earl – was a passionate champion of all things Northamptonshire. Wounded and left for dead in the First World War, he brought various talents to his links with the Yeomanry, some of them not military – even designing the new guidon for the regiment.

In my twenty years overseeing the estate, I have frequently been reminded of the links between this historic place and its local regiment. It will be my great pleasure later this year to welcome those who have served in the Northamptonshire Yeomanry back, as my guests, to Althorp – ‘home’ for us all.

The 9th Earl Spencer DL

Patron

The Northamptonshire Yeomanry

CHAPTER ONE

HORSES FOR MY KINGDOM

(1794–1815)

Where are the Yeomen –

the Yeomen of England?

… As foemen may curse them,

No other land could nurse them. (Merrie England)

‘A horse! A horse! My kingdom for a horse!’ cried Richard III, according to Shakespeare. Another more modern playwright featured the ‘Mad King’, George III, and it was in George’s name the cry now went out, not for a single horse but for fifteen thousand: Britain was in mortal peril!

A would-be invader stood at the gates. On Beachy Head and all around the coast the bonfires waited to blaze; bell-ringers had been briefed to send out the warning peal. In Parliament prophecies of doom prevailed as across the Channel an army was massing, landing ships were being built and plans to land on the south coast, in Wales, in Ireland, were being refined. The regular forces on hand to repel invaders were insufficient to the task; a Home Guard was needed.

To make matters worse, an insidious doctrine, like an icy fog propelled by an easterly wind, was seeping in from the Continent. The people over there, a mere 20 miles distant, had dethroned their monarch, sent their aristocracy to the guillotine and established a reign of terror instigated by the ruthless dictator Robespierre, as cruel as Caligula or Nero. The politics proclaimed by the new regime encouraged the downfall of royal houses and the rule of the common people. Such an enticing philosophy might well rouse the poorest in Britain, as food prices rose and unemployment increased; as the rich got richer and the poor got poorer. There was danger of internal strife, riots, a ‘break in and help yourself’ psychology. The country as a whole had no established police force, no riot squad; a Home Guard was needed! Volunteers – men, horses, swords and carbines.

But this Home Guard was not to be a Dad’s Army as the more recent television caricature depicts. No arthritic grandfathers and callow youths; no civilian clothes hastily militarised by donning shabby armbands; no drill with broomsticks or antiquated guns; no makeshift vehicles; no unattractive, sagging battledress once uniforms had tardily arrived; no long delay before this enthusiastic but untrained rabble could be coerced into a well-drilled, if still rather motley force ready to face the enemy when the church bells rang, the beacons flared and the code word circulated. This Home Guard would instantly be flamboyantly uniformed, fully accoutred with lethal weapons, intricately drilled and furnished with towering, plumed helmets to scare the enemy or cow a rioting populace.

The creation of this new force would not be done on the cheap. A receipt for the first forty uniforms for the Northampton Troop reveals the cost of putting a Yeoman into uniform from local funds in 1794. Each uniform was costed as follows:

Coat and waistcoat

£3. 3s.

Leather breeches

£1. 7s.

Boots

£1. 2s.

Hat with bearskin, feather and cockade

£1. 0s.

Total

£6. 12s. (or about £620 in current money)1

So, in 1794, Prime Minister William Pitt the Younger called for volunteers, both horsed and foot, fit and of military age, to assemble for service locally. It was to be a well-planned mobilisation, based on the county system and imposing clear and urgent objectives on the highest local authorities. The cavalry contingents would, he said, consist of ‘Gentlemen and Yeomanry’, and the incentive or coercion for men of high local standing would not be financial gain; indeed, they would be required to contribute lavishly. The compulsion would be the lesson offered by the high authorities across the Channel. They had failed in their trust and now had suffered political oblivion, cruel personal imprisonment and, for many, death.

Northamptonshire Yeomanry officer, 1794, in green tunic with buff facings. (NYA)

‘Gentlemen’ was an easily comprehended term, but who were the ‘Yeomanry’? What indeed was a Yeoman? The idea of horsed volunteers was not new, as there had been earlier voluntary units, such as, in Northamptonshire, The King’s Carbiniers, or the Duke of Montagu’s Horse, raised in Kettering in an earlier war but later disbanded.

What distinguished a Yeoman from any other kind of individual of military age? A simple definition was ‘a person who could bring a horse to battle and ride the horse’. Thus was adapted a term with a long history. Legally, in the 1700s it was ‘a person qualified by possessing free land of forty shillings annual rental value [£160 today] to serve on juries, and vote for knights of the shire’. Way back before 1400 the Yeoman was only ‘a common menial attendant’. In Chaucer’s Middle English period a ‘Yoman’ could simply be a young man. To search back through the ages to Old Frisian, pre-Anglo-Saxon, the origin of the word may have been ‘Gauman’, with Gau meaning a village. By 1794 he would be ‘any small farmer or countryman above the grade of labourer’. In terms of the Yeomanry regiments now to be established, townspeople of trader or craftsman standard could also be enrolled if they brought a horse and could stay on its back. Thus a shopkeeper from Kettering could ride boot to boot with a smallholder from Luddington-in-the-Brook. A Northampton brewer could drill with a blacksmith from Brafield-on-the-Green. A Daventry schoolmaster could break bread with a miller from Bugbrooke.

Given twenty-first-century complaints about the inefficiency of the mail or the problems of travel or the dead hand of bureaucracy, the 1794 mobilisation was an amazing example of urgency, commitment and objectivity. On 14 March 1794, Secretary of State Lord Westmorland wrote to all lord lieutenants outlining a plan to raise voluntary cavalry. On 7 April the Militia Bill was given its third reading in Parliament, covering both infantry and cavalry, and all lord lieutenants were instructed to put the plan into action forthwith. By 10 April things began to take shape.

In Northamptonshire the Lord Lieutenant, the 8th Earl of Northampton, was absent at that moment but three deputy lieutenants (DL) requested that the High Sheriff, Richard Booth, call a meeting. This took place in the County Hall on 10 April to discuss a local plan already circulated by Sir William Dolben, DL, a well-known man of action on the national scene. In 1788 he had been the author and prime mover of the act to regulate conditions on board slave ships, which would be enforced by the Royal Navy and was an early step in the abolition of slavery.2

The draft plan was read and contained proposals to raise Yeomanry troops of from fifty to eighty men per troop ‘for the Purpose of the local Defence of the particular Places where they may be raised’; a person raising two troops was to become a major, four troops a lieutenant colonel and six troops a colonel; the ‘Horses to be furnished by the Gentry or Yeomanry who compose the Corps’; to recruit pioneers to assist the horsemen; that the troops also be available ‘for the Suppression of Riots and Tumult’; ‘that a Subscription be opened to defray the Expense of carrying into Effect such Measures’; that a committee ‘may be established in Consequence of these Resolutions’; and that the said committee do meet immediately in the Record Room. The resolutions were moved by Earl Spencer, seconded by Mr W.R. Cartwright and passed unanimously.

Indeed, on 10 April the new committee sat with Earl Spencer in the chair and appointed treasurers and a secretary. It also worked out a rota by which sub-committees should be formed, and recruiting begun of troops in nine towns, including Peterborough which was then in the Northamptonshire electoral district, all to be concluded by the 29th instant. A list of thirty-nine subscribers was formed who offered sums from 5 guineas upward. The list was headed by Earl Spencer who committed £500 (now about £47,000) and the total of that initial ‘collection’ was £3,217 5s (about £300,000 today). The committee minutes ended with the note that the recruits ‘be substantial Householders who shall engage to bring a Horse to be approved by the Commanding officer of the Troop’. The various troops would become the Northamptonshire ‘Corps of Gentleman and Yeomanry’, and later the Yeomanry Regiment.

If Sir William Dolben could be described as a man of action on the national scene, then it would apply even more so to George John, 2nd Earl Spencer. He was the outstanding First Lord of the Admiralty who had successfully dealt with historic naval mutinies which had erupted due to bad working conditions. Over the heads of more senior admirals he promoted the relatively young Horatio Nelson to command of the Mediterranean Fleet and therefore contributed greatly to Trafalgar and final victory in the long Napoleonic Wars, while overseeing earlier naval victories. George John had many and varied interests, including the creation one of the largest libraries in the world with 40,000 books at Althorp House. He also founded the Roxburghe Club, still the pre-eminent international association of bibliophiles.

George John, 2nd Earl Spencer founded the Northamptonshire Yeomanry in 1794. (Courtesy of Charles, 9th Earl Spencer)

The 2nd Earl Spencer was also a fox-hunting man. There had been a pack of hounds at Althorp for a century and a half, which he continued, and with other enthusiasts he helped to develop the Pytchley Club, later the Pytchley Hunt, which rode over neighbouring areas including the Althorp estate. Fox hunts were responsible for the improvement and training of members’ horses to the extent that they would become a prime source for providing suitable horses, both in the Napoleonic Wars and throughout the First World War. The Northamptonshire Yeomanry over the years would include both masters and hunt staff with their admirable mounts.

The importance of the horses to Yeomanry regiments and the concern which officers felt for their steeds are well illustrated in only the third meeting of the Northamptonshire Yeomanry (NY) Committee, which was held at Earl Spencer’s London house on 2 June 1794. Concern was expressed for their fine hunters as it was thought that the regulation military saddle ‘may hurt the horse’s back’. The committee therefore approved the sum of £1 5s each for the men to obtain their own more flexible saddles. The attachments, such as girths, stirrups and holsters, would be provided by the regiment.

Meanwhile, by 9 May 1794 the War Office had confirmed officers’ commissions. Colonel Spencer was personally raising the Northampton Troop, his lieutenant colonel, Earl Fitzwilliam, recruiting at Peterborough, Major W.R. Cartwright forming Brackley, and sundry captains at Daventry, Kettering, Oundle and Towcester. As early as 17 May more than 200 volunteers on horseback attended an initial rally commanded by Earl Spencer, before drinks at the Peacock Inn, setting up a pleasurable precedent. Within a few days Earl Fitzwilliam carried out a first inspection of the Peterborough Troop, consisting of sixty men on horseback, after which refreshment was sought at the Angel Inn. That evening a ball was given by the Gentlemen of the Troop for the ladies of the city and this was ‘very genteely attended’.

One great attraction in recruitment was the colourful, even gaudy design of the uniform of a troop or a regiment, and poets were already at work writing patriotic songs. On 4 June a Brackley troop had been enrolled and met for their first ‘military evolutions’, surely one of the earliest exercises by Yeomanry. Afterwards they retired to the Crown Inn where, after loyal toasts, they sang in ‘the most convivial and harmonious manner’ about their uniform, although whether it was already available to wear, and whether they would ever wield broadswords, is rather doubtful. No doubt over their beers they bellowed:

British Yeomen, valiant Yeomen, brave Yeomen for ever

Green coats faced with black and in each hat a feather

Their waistcoats are buff and their trousers are leather

With broadswords and pistols and hearts without fear

Great Jove must be pleased when these Yeomen appear.

The 1794 roll of the Northampton Troop, under Earl Spencer as colonel, shows a captain, a cornet (junior lieutenant), a quartermaster (QM) and two sergeants plus eighty Yeomen, while the Brackley troop under Major W.R. Cartwright, had a lieutenant, a cornet and forty-two Yeomen. There were a number of fathers and sons or brothers enlisted together, such as John and Samuel Pell of Overstone and John H. Pell, of Sywell; S.H. and John Butterfield at Brackley; William and John Lathbury; Henry and John Webb; and various Waltons, Marriotts and Butlins. Two worthies by the name of Aris, a surname well known in the 1940s through Jack Aris, 1NY, a corporal cook and great character at more recent Association reunions.

The colour and design of tunics and hats was left to the individual commanders as units sprang up all over Britain. On 31 May Earl Spencer received a letter from Lord Carnarvon asking for advice, as his Lordship was forming the Yeomanry in Wiltshire. The Wiltshires, who would become the senior Yeomanry regiment by dint of continuous service, came into being on 4 June 1794 at a meeting in the Bear Inn, Devizes, at the call of Richard Long, High Sheriff of Wiltshire. Troops sprang up around the coast, particularly at towns in Kent, although the entire coastal population felt menaced. Had not the Spanish Armada sailed right around the British Isles? In Pembrokeshire, the Lord Lieutenant, Lord Milford, recruited the nucleus of a regiment; in Ayrshire the Earl of Cassillis formed a troop; inland, other counties also responded, with Captain John Somers-Cocks forming the Worcestershire’s first troop at the Unicorn Inn in Worcester, favouring a spectacular Hussars tunic of bright red with white facings. An elaborate Hussar design was also selected in Oxfordshire. It was rather later, and possibly with an eye more on civil disobedience than foreign invasion, that the first London troop appeared in Uxbridge.3

Brackley troop officer and trooper in green tunic with buff facings, 1790s. (NYA)

Whilst national and county authorities drove relentlessly on towards a War Office total of 15,120 Yeomanry cavalry in 1798, junior officers and non-commissioned officers (NCOs) wrestled with the growing problems of a new organisation. The troops in Northamptonshire needed an expert military horseman to lick them into shape in the way that infantry regimental sergeant majors (RSMs) drilled foot soldiers to perfection. After advertisements and enquiries, Thomas Pickering was discovered. He had already served for more than twenty years with the Household Cavalry, latterly as their riding master, and would now contribute another twenty years’ service to the Yeomanry in Northamptonshire. He, like all other Yeomen, would go on to a fixed remuneration scale, starting at 2s 9d per day of duty rendered. (In 1942 the author joined up on 3s a day, but the 1794 allowance was worth far more for part-time attendance!) Yeomen would also gain other perks, including exemption from paying toll charges if in uniform and also from a tax on the white wig powder so often used by dandies of the time.

Captain Arnold in Daventry lacked a suitable troop sergeant, so he placed an advert in the Mercury newspaper on 14 June 1794 calling for a qualified person. A response came from former regular sergeant Samuel Clitsey, who was considered suitable despite lacking a thumb. Now very happy, the Daventry Troop paraded next time with their worthy, single-thumbed troop sergeant. Clitsey’s horse, an unfamiliar steed of an anarchic disposition, promptly reared up and threw the sergeant heavily. His leg was broken so badly that he had to resign from the troop forthwith. Captain Arnold placed another advert in the Mercury.

There seems to have been no great problem with the provision of arms for the first troops raised. A trooper’s armament consisted of a carbine, about the size of a modern rifle, together with a bayonet and rammer to muzzle-load the gun; a rather complicated large pistol with a bore the size of a carbine’s; and a sword, initially some of them straight but usually of the slightly curved sabre type. Then there was the question of the distinguishing badge. In some cases, county units simply took the county badge as their emblem. With a voice at court, Earl Spencer petitioned the king for use of the king’s own badge, the galloping ‘White Horse of Hanover’. This was graciously approved, the NY being one of four military formations to be allowed to wear that emblem.

The next priority was the standard around which the unit would rally. For the cavalry the appropriate form of flag was, and still is, the guidon – an oblong shape with a triangular segment cut out of the leading edge. This is seen very much as a royal honour gracing the regiment, squadron or troop. Amid all his other activities, Earl Spencer gave his attention to the design and production of the regiment’s first three guidons. On 5 October 1795 Messrs Cox and Greenwood presented their invoice for ‘three standards and paint, with proper badges, arms and etc. Gold fringe and tassels, staves and cases and 3 cornet belts, gold laced. Total £41.0.0.’

Thus it was possible on Saturday 17 October 1795 for the local Mercury to report:

This town has been witness to many a public scene that pleased the eye and interested the heart; but safely may we assert that never were the inhabitants more pleased, or their hearts more gratified, than by the splendid scene which took place on the general review of the regiment of Yeomanry, by their Colonel, and the delivery of the Standards by Lady Spencer. All appeared Love, Loyalty and Unanimity. So deeply did the spectators enter into the spirit of the show that it was only after it was all over they recollected the morning was wet and unfavourable for a public spectacle.

Presentation of three guidons by ‘the ladies’, 1795. (Tout)

The regiment had assembled on the racecourse before riding into town. There, three cornets ‘had the distinguished honour of having the standard belt put over their shoulders by the fair hands of their patriotic countrywomen’. Lady Spencer then handed the standards ‘with inimitable grace’ to the colonel who delivered each to the proper officer. With an eye to current politics, the chaplain, Reverend Bailey, prayed that the Yeomen would ‘stand forth in support’ of, among other priorities, the ‘Constitution under which, through thine infinite goodness, these kingdoms have hitherto prospered, and which, by thy gracious Providence, they may be enabled to maintain, and to transmit, unimpaired, to their latest posterity’.

At the presentation of the first guidon to the Gloucestershire Gentlemen and Yeomanry the chaplain, the vicar of Cheltenham, was much more poetic than Reverend Bailey, although still assuming that God would provide similar reinforcement, declaiming:

Lurks here sedition in her murky cell,

With whom congenial imps of darkness dwell.

Your magic swords shall, like Ithuriel’s spear,

Detect the monster in her foul career.

’Tis yours kind friends, to guard with tender care,

And shield from brutal insolence the Fair;

The brightest actions from these sources spring

Truth, friendship, Love, our altars and our King.4

In Northampton Earl Spencer addressed the troops with obvious pride, acknowledging ‘the unwearied pains, which, it was evident to the delighted eye of every spectator, they had taken since he last saw them, which gave him the most sensible satisfaction’. He then took his place at the head of the column, with the ‘several standards flying at the head of each squadron’ as they returned to the ‘race-ground’. For the ladies there was ‘a very elegant cold collation’ prepared in the grandstand, but the troops themselves were released to the George Inn and the Peacock Inn, where their consumption of roast beef and beers led to more loyal toasts and exuberant singing, including:

Success to our Fleets and our Armies who roam

Likewise our brave Yeomen who guard us at home

May George long be King and his Subjects be free

And Fame sound the praise of his brave Yeomanry.

Another of their songs included the significant lines: ‘And Northamptonshire Yeomen … have like Britons come forward, to humble all those, who are Englishmen bred, yet are Englishmen’s foes.’ Even before the presentation of the guidons the NY had been called out on civil disturbance duty. In April 1793 the price of wheat in Northampton had been 42s a bushel, but by August 1795 it had risen to 108s a bushel. The price of bread rose accordingly, as did the cost of other essentials, and this led to inevitable protests. Then on 4 April 1795, near Queen Eleanor’s Cross, Northampton, as food wagons approached the town:

A numerous body of people proceeded to cut open the butter flats [wagons], the contents of which, as well as a quantity of meat, they carried off. In a short time all the Yeomanry who reside in the town, attended by their officers, J.H. Thursby, jnr, and R.B. Cox esqr., were on horseback, completely acoutred and ready to give assistance to return order … but the crowd soon dispersed.

So there was already a call for local action in civil situations. And it is highly likely that the rampaging civilians at Queen Eleanor’s Cross were less impelled by French republican philosophy than by sheer common hunger. But if the average Yeoman was dreaming of glorious cavalry charges at the gallop against the republican Frenchmen, they were, in the vast majority, likely to be disappointed. Under Carnot, who followed Robespierre and preceded Napoleon as French head of state, there were certainly serious plans afoot in 1796 for an invasion of the British Isles.

In fact the young rising military star, Napoleon Bonaparte, had refused the opportunity of invading England and the task reverted to Colonel William Tate, an elderly Irish-American. The French War Minister, General Hoche, raised a SecondeLegiondeFrance, mainly from specially pardoned prisoners and deserters, which led to the formation being termed the ‘Black Legion’. Ships were provided to convey these troops, not to the nearest Kent or Sussex coast, but to Wales and Ireland. The latter attack was aimed at creating an independent pro-French Ireland and, at the same time, a Welsh landing would gain a bridgehead on the mainland: Britain would be attacked through the back door from a firm Irish base. The western section of the French fleet had aimed to land in the Bristol Channel, but adverse winds drove it north to Cardigan Bay. Sailing under British colours, those ships anchored at Carreg Wasted Point, near Fishguard, on Wednesday 22 February 1797, hoisted the French tricolour and disembarked. Tate set up defence points on Carn Wynda and Carn Gelli hills but, as the French soldiers had not been provided with food supplies, they immediately began to disperse and forage widely. Some soldiers located a farmhouse stocked with wine from a smuggler’s boat which had been wrecked on Pencaer Rocks. The lucky lads began to imbibe.5

At 11 p.m. that night Lord Cawdor was alerted at his home nearby. There were volunteer infantry available under the young Lieutenant Colonel Thomas Knox, but he had no military experience, so Cawdor appointed the more experienced Lord Milford, captain of the Castlemartin Yeomanry Cavalry, to command the defence. Meanwhile, the French troops had been dismayed to see their ships sail away and leave them at the mercy of whatever armies might assemble against them. The French admiral Castagnier intended to cross to Ireland to land more troops there. At this point the British Navy intervened and the French infantry around Fishguard were effectively marooned. Had they been experienced, disciplined troops they would still have been a formidable, well-armed invasion force.

Against the invaders Lord Milford had a motley but spectacular little army. Many civilians had rallied to the scene carrying makeshift weapons such as farm implements. The militia infantry formed up in drilled lines. On horseback the Castlemartin Yeomanry in their splendid uniforms were an impressive sight. It is not known precisely if it was an idea of Lord Milford’s but, spontaneous or planned, a force of 400 Welsh women in red flannel cloaks and traditional tall hats marched into sight. One of the women, Jemima Nicholas, a tall 47-year-old cobbler armed with a pitchfork, had already rounded up and captured a dozen of the foraging enemy.

On the French side, Tate and the planners had hoped that their invasion would provoke revolutionary anarchy among the depressed and desperate local population. Now, as one report describes it, ‘the French troops had not shown any real inclination to fight but a strong inclination to drink. Lord Cawdor called for an unconditional surrender and the invaders laid down their arms. The success of the defenders’ bluff, and the danger which might have developed, is illustrated by the fact that the local people collected about fifty-five cartloads of French weapons from Goodwick Sands after the surrender. The Castlemartin (Pembrokeshire) Yeomanry thus became the only Yeomanry to be in action against the French and have since proudly carried the unique battle honour ‘Fishguard’ on their guidons.