Rare photographic find records soldiers heading off to bash the Boers

Blackleaf

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A rare and extraordinary photo album showing British troops fighting the Boer War has been made public by the descendants of an army captain who fought in the conflict.

It contains more than 150 black and white images of the First Battalion Rifle Brigade and provide a fascinating record of their battles with the Boers in South Africa from 1899 to 1902.

The war was the first major conflict of the 20th Century, claiming tens of thousands of lives on both sides and signalling the birth of the modern British Army.

Birth of the modern British Army: Rare photographic find records soldiers heading off to bash the Boers in Empire's first major conflict of the 20th Century


The album contains more than 150 black and white images of the First Battalion Rifle Brigade during Boer War

They
provide a fascinating record of their battles with the Boers in South Africa from 1899 to 1902
Annotated images show large parade of men before embarking on a ship on the Isle of Wight to take them to war

A young Winston Churchill and Mahatma Gandhi both saw action in the war, which cost 22,000 British lives


By Matt Hunter For Mailonline
2 August 2016

A rare and extraordinary photo album showing British troops fighting the Boer War has been made public by the descendants of an army captain who fought in the conflict.

It contains more than 150 black and white images of the First Battalion Rifle Brigade and provide a fascinating record of their battles with the Boers in South Africa from 1899 to 1902.

The war was the first major conflict of the 20th Century, claiming tens of thousands of lives on both sides and signalling the birth of the modern British Army.

The annotated images show a large parade of men before embarking on a ship on the Isle of Wight to take them to South Africa in 1899.


The Boer War lasted two years and eight months, resulting in tens of thousands of deaths. It is rare for such striking photography to emerge so long after the battle, but these images cover soldiers fighting, resting and being treated for injuries.


Both sides suffered huge casualties in the conflict, the first major war of the 20th Century. This photograph shows bodies on the battlefield in Pretoria in January 1900


Cavalry, which were still a key part of the British Army in the late 19th century, are seen in this photograph with artillery


British soldiers, who included troops from New Zealand and Australia, had to fight the Boers in often searing temperatures in South Africa


Although traditional artillery was used by both sides during the war it was one of the first conflicts to feature guerrilla warfare


There was concern in Britain that the country's failure to quell the opposition force meant the Empire was in decline


The Second Boer War lasted three years from 1899 to 1902 and would claim 22,000 British and 12,000 African lives


This photograph, featuring British soldiers relaxing, has an annotation saying it was taken in 1900 in Pretoria, South Africa


As well as the thousands of soldiers who died around 30,000 Boer civilians were taken to concentration camps


British officers are shown here with annotations featuring their names and whether they died or were wounded in the war


The Transvaal and Orange Free State were the two states in 1899 of what is today known as South Africa


Despite the British Army's vast numbers, officers struggled to combat the much smaller but well-trained and mobile Boers


The Rifle Brigade feature in this photograph taken between 1899 and 1900 during the Boer War


A large parade of men before embarking on a ship on the Isle of Wight to take them to South Africa in 1899


This photograph is annotated describing the picture showing artillery on Zwartkop firing at Boer trenches

The action highlighted in the photographs took place in Ladysmith, Spion Kop and St. Pieters. Winston Churchill saw action in the Second Boer War as a young army officer before embarking on his political career and then serving in the First World War.

And Mahatma Gandhi, who later led India to independence, volunteered as a stretcher-bearer for the Boer side.

One harrowing photo shows a number of fallen soldiers at Spion Kop after the battle. Numerous English football clubs - most notably Liverpool - later named banks of terraces after the steep hill in South Africa.


The Kop at Anfield, home of Liverpool FC

Other images depict British soldiers in the heat of battle, either shooting or shelling the enemy, them laid up on a hospital ship as well as numerous Boer prisoners.

One of the most poignant images shows a large group of officers of the Rifle Brigade taken at the start of the war which was annotated afterwards to reveal those who were killed and injured.

The album belonged to Captain Charles Lamb of Hastings, East Sussex. It is not known if he took the photos or collected them but he did annotate them.


Mahatma Gandhi, who later led India to independence, volunteered as a stretcher-bearer for the Boer side.


The British Army used a scored earth policy to remove resources including farm land from the Boers


The British eventually won by the Army's sheer numbers while officers used a 'scorched earth policy' to cut off supplies to the Boers

The album has been held by his family ever since but has now been made available for sale at Bellmans Auctioneers, West Sussex, for an estimated £600.

Denise Kelly, valuer at Bellmans, said: 'It is incredibly rare to come across such a comprehensive photograph album from the Boer War.

'It charts this battalion of the Rifle Brigade from leaving England, to engaging in battle and the end of the conflict three years later.

'What is extraordinary is that quite clearly the person who took these pictures was quite often stood in the middle of where there was a battle raging.'

The auction takes place tomorrow.

A WAR WHICH CLAIMED 22,000 BRITISH LIVES

The second Boer War broke out after tensions between Britain and the Boers failed to heal following the first war in 1880-1881.

The Transvaal and Orange Free State were the two states in 1899 of what is today known as South Africa.

But Afrikaners, the descendants of Dutch and French settlers, were angry as they had to pay high rates of taxes and wanted equal rights to those in the British colonies of Cape Colony and Natal. To make matters worse thousands of mainly British Uitlanders (foreigners) had come to the Transvaal for the gold rush.

The Second Boer War lasted three years from 1899 to 1902 and would claim 22,000 British and 12,000 African lives.

Around 25,000 Afrikaners also died in the war, most of them in concentration camps.

Despite the British Army's vast numbers, officers struggled to combat the much smaller but well-trained and mobile Boers.

In one week - 10-15 December 1899 - the Boers won a number of battles and besieged the key towns of Ladysmith, Mafeking, and Kimberley.

The British were cut off in Ladysmith after being surrounded by the Boers in early November 1899.

Some top officers escaped on the last train but the remaining soldiers had to dig in defend the town in east South Africa.

The siege lasted almost 120 days and finally ended when increasing numbers of British troops overwhelmed the Boers.

Another famous battle was for Spion Kop, 24 miles from Ladysmith, which resulted in a victory for the Boers.

As it was the highest peak in the region it was a key target for the British to capture.

British troops had captured the summit by surprise in late January 1900 but morning fog blinded them from seeing they were overlooked by Boer guns on surrounding hills.

Boers then fired down on the British who had dug poor defensive positions.

The battle would claim 350 British lives and almost 1,000 wounded.

The British eventually won by the Army's sheer numbers while officers used a 'scorched earth policy' to cut off supplies to the Boers.

 

EagleSmack

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The National Museum of Bermuda at the Royal Navy Dockyards was also a British fort and prison for captured Boers. I've visited this museum a number of times and the have an exhibit on the Boer POWs with items they left behind (or were confiscated. lol).

 

Machjo

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How cruel to force those Boers who would rather have spent time with their family wasting all their time having to shoot British invaders.
 

Blackleaf

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The National Museum of Bermuda at the Royal Navy Dockyards was also a British fort and prison for captured Boers. I've visited this museum a number of times and the have an exhibit on the Boer POWs with items they left behind (or were confiscated. lol).



Bitterenders, Boers who refused to pledge allegiance to the British Crown, were sent as prisoners to Bermuda's five islands. Boer prisoners were also sent to India.

How cruel to force those Boers who would rather have spent time with their family wasting all their time having to shoot British invaders.

What really pissed off the lovely Boers was Britain's abolition of slavery in 1834. They hated the British for that.

And the only reason why the British had a foothold in the area in the first place was because they had defeated the Dutch settlers (the Boers' ancestors) at the Battle of Blaauwberg in 1806 in the Napoleonic Wars and took some of the land that the Dutch themselves had taken from the natives.
 

Blackleaf

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ah..the concentration camps...damned hitler

"Britain invented concentration camps during the Boer War and these served as inspiration for the Nazis"

This seems to be an oft repeated and fashionable myth that's entered the collective knowledge.

The first recorded use of concentration camps against civilians was in Cuba, during the 10 years war between 1868 and 1878. Pictures and sources of Spain's "Reconcentrado" policy can be found here

The Americans also employed a similar tactic in the American-Phillipino war at the same time the Boer war was going on - a quick look into it shows that both of these events had far higher estimated death counts than the concentration camps used in South Africa by the British.

In regards to it being "inspiration for the Nazis" that actually had a lot more to do with the Herero and Namaqua Genocide that Germany carried out in Namibia in the early 20th century. This was a true attempt at exterminating an ethnic group and bears much more in common with the events that were later to take part in Europe during the Nazi regime.

There are definitely a lot of things to criticise the British Empire for, and the tactics used in the Boer War were no doubt ruthless, but to categorise them as uniquely cruel to the time or having inspired the Nazis seems to be largely incorrect.

There is no denying the Concentration Camps were horrible, squalid cesspits not fit for human habitation, but there is little reason to believe that this was intentional on the part of the British, let alone that it was part of a concerted effort to commit genocide against the Boers. The terrible conditions, lack of medical care, and poor quality food were a product of negligence and lack of foresight, as well as a lack of sympathy after the conditions became apparent.

As originally envisioned, the camps were for displaced persons from the fighting, and many of the families who voluntarily made their way there were Boers who had sided with the British and feared reprisals for their sympathies. It was only once the British instituted their scorched earth tactics, which also resulted in kicking out Boer sympathizers from their homes, that the refugee population soared in the camps, and they principally became populated by the women and children of Boer families who were no fans of the British (most men, captured as POWs, were housed in locations outside of South Africa not in the camps). There wasn't enough space, enough food, or enough medicine, and death rates were terrifying. Literally half of the Boer population under 16 would die as a result of the conditions. Overall, the death rate was about 25 percent for inhabitants of the camps.

All of that is justifiably horrifying, and perhaps can find some parallels in the reservation system employed in the American West in terms of the sheer lack of concern for the welfare of those kept there. But to compare this to the system employed by the Germans, whose concentration and death camp system were set up with the expressed purpose of destroying an entire people - although not before employing them as slave laborers in many cases - is dishonest to say the least.

What I find interesting though is that we decry the treatment of the Boers (rightly so, even if some go too far), but forget the even worse treatment visited upon the native population. Displaced person camps were set up for the black refugees of the fighting as well, and it should be noted that few supported the Boer cause. Most either took no side or supported the British. Yet their camps were even worse than those of the Boers, and while the firestorm started by Emily Hobhouse caused great political scandal back in the UK over the appalling treatment visited upon the Boers in the camps, and brought about real changes in the camps by the end of the Second Boer War (death rate, while still too high as only zero is acceptable, was below 5 percent IIRC), little was ever done to improve the conditions for the native camps. That is the much more tragic side of the story in my mind, but is generally ignored.

https://www.reddit.com/r/badhistory...ain_invented_concentration_camps_in_the_boer/
 
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