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The Anglo-Boer War Study Group of Australia's
EXHIBITION GALLERY No. 1
 Anglo-Boer War 1899-1902
The Australian Regiments
 
In praise of the Australian Mounted Regiments
 
[I can say] nothing but praise of their gallantry, their
conduct, their intelligence, their horsemanship and
their skill. Of all the troops they can least be spared.
For column work and guerilla warfare they have no
equals.
Colonel Sir Howard Vincent
ADC to King Edward VII
The Situation in South Africa, further personal observations & impressions
  
About 24,000 Australians served in South Africa during the Anglo-Boer War. Sixteen
thousand served with official contingents sent by the Australian Colonies, and with the
Australian Commonwealth Horse Battalions after Federation. Another 8000 joined
irregular South African units like Thorneycroft's and Bethune's Mounted Infantry
and the 2nd Bn Marquis of Tullabardine's Scottish Horse. These units, with their large
component of Australians suffered considerably in action like Spion's Kop, and the
Scottish Horse during the heroic Defence of the Guns at Bakenlaagte.
 
Highly regarded for their workload, bushcraft, horsemanship and marksmanship, the
Australians helped set a new standard for mounted infantry operations during the war.
 
Map of South Africa
The theatre of war. Cape Colony is at the foot
of the map. Orange Free State (light green),
and Transvaal (light blue) were the Boer Re-
publics. Some battles took place hundreds of
kilometres from Cape Town (bottom left) and
Port Elizabeth (bottom centre) stretching log-
istical support to its limit. The importance of
maintaining the railway system against Boer
attacks is obvious.
 
There were many proud victories and successful operations by Australian
Contingents. In addition, Australian medical teams and nurses earned deep appreciation
for their care of the sick and wounded, often in the worst of conditions.
 
Battle scene from a Magic Lantern slide.
People in faraway Australia were given
glimpses of the war in Magic Lantern
slide shows.
 
Another battles scene
The huge distances in South Africa led to
increasing reliance on mobile mounted
infantry units such as those provided by
Australia and New Zealand.
 
The striking uniform of the
first Tasmanian Contingent
of 80 soldiers in 1899. A
blanket was jauntily slung
over the right shoulder, and
each soldier wore a haver-
sack in 'field order'. These
men, when in South Africa,
were incorporated into the
1st Australian Regiment.
 
Artist: Lt-Gen. Carl Jess in
Festburg & Videon, 1971.
Uniform of 1st Tasmanian Contingent, 1899
 
Among the many colourful Australians at the war was Colonel Tom Price, one of only a handful
of Australian Officers to be given command of allied forces in addition to his own command.
Price had formed the Victorian Mounted Rifles in the mid-1880s, and led the 2nd Victorian
Contingent to South Africa. There he was given command of the Hanover Road Field Force
which included allied units like two companies of Prince Albert's Guards and a battalion
of the Lancashire Militia.
 
A Colonel Price bronze bookend A bronze bookend featuring Colonel Tom Price.
 
Major Walter Tunbridge
Major Walter Tunbridge, CO of the
3rd Contingent Queensland Mounted
Infantry, was a hero of the Siege of
Elands River Post, August 1900.
 
 
Queensland mounted infantry
Queensland Mounted Infantry in Cape Town about to entrain for the front.
 
New South Wales Lancers
The New South Wales Lancers. A small detachment returning to Australia from
England was the first Australian Colonial force to land in South Africa for the Anglo-
Boer War. The Lancers soon were joined in early operations by the 1st Australian
Regiment (formed utilising companies from most of the Australian colonies, rushed
to the seat of war by Australian governments).
 
Tasmanian and SOuth Australian horse lines at Maitland.
South Australian and Tasmanian lines at the Maitland Camp, Cape Town, where all
mounted units staged before being committed to war.
 
Victoria Mounted Rifles at Maitland.
Victorian Mounted Rifles at the Maitland staging camp. Australian infantry units
were given mounts and training at Naauwpoort by 6 February 1900.
 
A daring rescue
It was a daring rescue like this that won
a Victoria Cross for L. C. Maygar who
served with the 5th Victorian Mounted
Rifles. Maygar was among the last to
leave Gallipoli in World War I, but was
killed near Beersheba on the same day
of the famous charge by the 4th Aust-
ralian Light Horse Brigade.
 
The Birth of a National Badge
 
The first Rising Sun hat badge--now a national emblem--went with the first
units of the Australian Commonwealth Horse after Federation.
 
The first badges were of a seven-pointed design based on an arrangement
of bayonets and swords. One version suggests that the idea of the design
stemmed from a trophy of arms housed over the dooway in Major-General
Edward Hutton's office at Victoria Barracks, Melbourne.
 
It was from this basic badge that a modified design in 1904 resulted in the
famous Rising Sun worn with pride by Australian soldiers since.
 
Nurse Beatrice Huston
Nurse Beatrice Huston (front row, 6th from left) of Clermont, Queensland, served at Green
Point Military Hospital and at Bloemfontein during the Anglo-Boer War. Diseases such as
enteric fever (typhoid), dysentery, measles, pneumonia and malaria caused havoc in the
British Army and its allies. At Bloemfontein, between April--May 1900, ten thousand cases
of typhoid delayed Lord Roberts's Army for six weeks.
 
Australian Medical Staff
 
Australia sent nurses and, after Federation, the Australian Army Medical Corps to
South Africa. Both individually and as units, Australians served with distinction. One
Victorian Nurse, Ivey Hines, died at Bulawayo Hospital after contracting typhoid.
 
Australian War Correspondent Donald McDonald wrote: 'The more I see of our young
Australian doctors the greater my pride in my countrymen'. He was writing about
Surgeon Robert Buntine, formerly of Melbourne, who during the Battle at Wagon Hill
calmly did a delicate throat operation on a wounded officer while exposed in a crossfire.
Buntine busied himself all over the battlefield during the November 1899 encounter in
defence of Ladysmith.
 
 
Mounted infantry crossing a drift under fire
Mounted infantry crossing a drift under fire. From a sepia tone print
in Carter's The work of War Artists in South Africa, The Art Journal
Office, London, Christmas 1900.
 
Australian kit inspection
Kit inspection for Australians at Zand
River, South Africa.
 
 
Australian casualties
 
Of the official contingents comprising 16,378 officers and men, there were 1400
casualties. These included 251 killed; 267 who died of disease; and 735 wounded.
The casualty rate was therefore 8.55 per cent.
 
Photo of Corporal Alexander Ross
An early Australian casualty was Alex Ross.
He had joined the 4th Battalion Infantry
Brigade in 1898, being promoted Corporal
in July 1899. He joined the First Victorian
Contingent, but was killed at Rensburg on
12 February 1900, "whilst gallantly
defending a position against overwhelming
numbers. He was shot through the chest,
and died shorty after. Major Eddy and
Lieutenant Roberts also fell in the same
action. When the news of his death reached
Castlemaine a general gloom was over the
town; flags were flying half-mast, and the
stern realities of war were brought home
for the first time to Castlemaine people".
 
Photo of Private Charles Williams
Private Charles Edwin Williams had
joined the Victorian Mounted Rifles
(E Coy) in 1895, and was among the
first in his district to join the First
Victorian Contingent in 1899. He too
was killed at Rensburg on 12 February
1900. His sacrifice is commemorated
on a memorial in Violet Town, Victoria.
The handsome young soldier is here
pictured in the uniform of the Victorian
Mounted Rifle Regiment.
 
The casualty rate for Australians serving with irregular units is unknown, but
research is being undertaken by members of the Anglo-Boer War Study Group
of Australia.
 
 
The largest horse killer of this or any other age . . .
 
The total loss in horses on the British side was 326,000. Australian horses
contributed 37,245 to this number. Not one horse from Australia is known
to have returned.
 
This overall loss prompted St. John Broderick to write in a private letter to Lord
Kitchener that 'You will go down in history as the largest horse killer of your or
any other age'.
 
Horse monumwnt, Ballarat
Horse monument, Ballarat
 
St. John Broderick was wrong. The toll on horses in World War 1 was horrific. A
monument in Sturt Street, Ballarat, commemorates the 958,600 killed "including
196.000 that left these shores and never returned".
 
British cavalry
Proud British cavalry regiments
came with their splendid horses.
It was said that Australians who
helped themselves to these super-
ior animals could make them
unrecognisable to their former
owners in less than half-an hour.
 
Photo of 1st Australian Regiment at Belmont, S. Af.
Horses and men of the 1st Australian
Regiment at Belmont early in the
Anglo Boer War.
 
Australian 'Walers' taken by most of the official Australian contingents fared
quite well initially in South Africa. But being grass fed, soon began to lose condition
on the veldt. After the disastrous defeat at Wilmansrust, Boer General Ben Viljoen
described the captured Australian horses as 'the most miserable collection of animals
I have ever seen'. But these horses were more likely to have been inferior remounts.
 
The local Basuto pony was the best possible mount for difficult veldt conditions.
 
A Quiet Return
 
Crowds cheered wildly when the Australian Contingents left for the War. But as with
the more recent Vietnam War, the Anglo-Boer War veterans returned to a subdued
welcome home. The closing stages of the war in South Africa, with an all out effort to
burn crops and famhouses and force the Boers to surrender had disgusted most of
the Australian soldiers. At home in Australia too, news of the shocking conditions
endured by some Boer women and children in concentration camps, divided opinion.
 
Farewell, Lads! Departure of 2nd Vic. Contingent. "Farewell, Lads"!
Tumultuous departure of the 2nd Victorian Contingent.
 
Despite everything, the Australian force had demonstrated great adaptability,
resourcefulness and a deadly determination. Mateship, a love of two-up gambling,
and some petty pilfering too showed up as national military characteristics. The war
showed that volunteer soldiers who before then (with the exception of smaller wars
in New Zealand and the Sudan) had paraded endlessly and trained for invaders that
never came, could also survive inhospitable terrain, master new types of warfare and
dared to win.
  

Image of books SHORT SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHY
 
Festburg, Alfred S. and Barry J. Videon: Uniforms of the Australian Colonies: Hill of Content Publishing: Melbourne, 1971.
 
Holloway, David: Hooves, Wheels and Tracks: A history of the 4th/19th Prince of Wales Light Horse Regiment and its predecessors: Regimental Trustees: Melbourne: 1990.
 
In Memory of the Gallant Officers and Men of Victoria who died in Defence of Our Empire in the Transvaal War:
Printed and Published by G. A. Osboldstone: Melbourne: 1900.
 
Wallace, R.L.: The Australians at the Boer War: The Australian War Memorial & Australian Government Publishing Service: Canberra: 1976.
 
Yarwood, A. T.: Walers: Australian Horses Abroad: Melbourne University Press (Miegunyah Press): Melbourne: 1989.

 
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