Napoleonic & ECW wargaming, with a load of old Hooptedoodle on this & that
Showing posts with label Sieges. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sieges. Show all posts
Thursday, 15 August 2019
Another Quick Burst of Engineers
Mostly to give myself a little break from refurbing the 70eme Ligne, I've painted some more soldiers for my French Siege Train. Here are the 1st and 3rd companies of the 2eme Bataillon de Sapeurs, all ready for Ciudad Rodrigo or the Salamanca Forts.
The guys who will do the actual work are from Hagen. The officers are clearly of a superior breed altogether - these are from the Franznap Pontonniers Command set. I've had the Franznap set for a while, but since I am unlikely to make any serious attempt at a wargaming pontoon team, here they are.
I enjoyed painting all of them - a lot of fun. I'm usually a bit nervous of Franznap - the sculpts are lovely, the castings (by Schilling, I believe) are very good too, but the figures are very slender - a bit delicate for tabletop handling, maybe - the castings regularly arrive bent from the supplier, especially the legs of horses, and I am always doubtful about any wargame figures which have to be assembled from bits - they just look as if they are going to come apart in moments of stress.
Anyway, here they are, to sit in The Cupboard and remind me I was going to get back to my siege game any time soon. The officers look a little senior for digging trenches or saps - a Chef de Bataillon and possibly a Colonel? - I guess that must be a really important piece of wood they have there.
As with all (most?) of my siege stuff, these chaps are on the earth brown bases - these are individually based, on magnets, so they can be deployed around the diggings once I have got the siege rules a bit more stable...
Monday, 25 September 2017
Vauban Fort update - a hesitant toe in the water
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| Low-grade photo of my current half-fort from the old Terrain Warehouse range |
Two bits of bad news:
(1) The range was never complete - I had some correspondence with TW back then about providing drawings for some extra sections - garrison buldings, gates, a ravelin with a bridge etc.
(2) Terrain Warehouse stopped production - the range was sold on.
I have spent some years trying to keep tabs on who had the moulds, and what they intended to do with them. The current owners manufacture a wide range of products, and they are rationalising. I learn this morning that they have decided that the Vauban Fort is not one of the items which will be continued. The word is that they might be open to offers for the moulds and, since the manufacture uses an expanding foam product, the moulds come with a frame to hold the parts rigid during curing.
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| In context - with extra buildings (not in range) and 20mm figures - a useful piece of kit |
* The most sensible approach for me here might be simply to shrug, and resign myself to scratch-building any future fortress expansions
* On the other hand, it does seem a pity to let these things disappear.
* I have no experience of (nor facilities for) resin casting - I did, however, have a friend who had to pack in his business and retire because he damaged his health running exactly this type of cottage industry...
* There are many unknowns - I have no idea what sort of price the current owners would be looking for (not huge, I think), I have no idea at all of the current state of the moulds - or where they are. Basically I have no idea about anything.
* I said it was a toe in the water.
I'm looking for some input here. Anyone have experience of working with these materials, or a tame, air conditioned workshop just waiting to start up, or any thoughts at all, really?
This is not necessarily a vision of a crack-pot start-up or a business venture - though such a thing is not out of the question if there is interest and it makes sense. If someone with a current manufacturing capability would like to take these on, or talk about them, that would be useful. What I am NOT looking for is for someone to take the stuff on, and then shelve it as commercially unviable. We've already been through that - a few times, in fact.
At that point I would just go back to the scratch-building plan...
This is not a hustle. As a first priority, I have no wish to mess anyone about - not the current owners, nor anyone else - especially myself. If you wish to get in touch, without commitment, email me at the address in my Blogger Profile, or send a comment here, which I shall not publish if it is sensitive or confidential. I'm interested to see whether we can save these things from disappearing, but only if it makes any sort of sense.
Friday, 2 June 2017
Vauban Fort - maybe back on again?
This topic has been on and off like the girls' costumes in an old Windmill Theatre revue. Last update was about two years ago - here.
As discussed before, I am the proud owner of approximately one half of a Vauban fort - it is nominally in 15mm scale (vertically), but the (horizontal) ground scale seems to be about right with my game scale of one-7-inch-hex-equals-200-paces, so you can work out what that might be if you can be bothered. Whatever it is, it looks very presentable and works nicely for my siege games (such as they are). The fort was made and painted by the old Terrain Warehouse operation (henceforth TW) - this fort, by the way, was once described by Henry Hyde as "the Rolls Royce" of fortress kit in this scale, so you have no need merely to accept my word that it is nicely done.
I have had some adventures over recent years, trying to get more parts for it. TW no longer exist, and the rights and moulds for the fortress were sold to another firm; I had a faltering dialogue with them two years ago, and the suggestion was that it might go back into production some time - not definite - but there was a good chance that they could make up some extra pieces for me.
Then, as so often happens, the line went dead. I have recently been thinking about doing some scratch building to augment the fort - the original production did not extend to gates, and there were a few other obvious bits missing, so scratch building had always been somewhere on the agenda.
Well, I am now back in contact with the current owners - it seems they about to set up a new company to concentrate on MDF and resin buildings, and the fort is a high priority.
We've been here before, of course, but that seems like potentially good news - I am asked to keep in touch - when something more definite develops I'll mention it here.
My original dealings with TW included me sending them some sketches of other pieces they could add to the range - so the garrison could get in and out. The aerial photo shows the original TW kit, the action picture (from 2009 or so) includes additional buildings to make up a fortified town.
Anyway - no news really, but the Windmill girls are once again in a "back on" situation.
Sunday, 26 February 2017
Not Quite the Siege of Newcastle 1644 - (3) A Moderate Tweak
As discussed in my last post, the real Siege of Newcastle makes an uncomfortable basis for a game, since it was really two separate events with a sort of extended hangover period between. I have now produced a fudged version of the history, which gives a better excuse to stage a proper siege. The scenario is now some weeks earlier than the real event, and the garrison of Newcastle seems to have been augmented by some returning veteran troops who, in complete defiance of accepted history, did not fight to the last man at Marston Moor, but marched off back home at the first opportunity, just squeaking over the bridge into the town before the Scots captured Gateshead and slammed the - erm - gate.
To get round the further issue that the Scots' best strategy appears now to be to wait and starve the town into submission, I've also applied some political and contextual reasons for them to have to get on with taking the place.
I think it will be all right. The game will take place on Wednesday - I shall have one guest general taking the part of the besieged, the other the besiegers, and I shall be the umpire. That may sound nastily as though I will actually play a solo game, with two slaves to help, but I shall take care to ensure it doesn't work like that. The three of us will - collectively - play through our version of the Siege of Newcastle - if it turns out that the town never stood a chance then the process should at least be educational. If it turns out that the rules don't hang together very well then we can agree to patch them on the fly. It's all in an excellent cause. And there will, of course, be some supper.
I've managed to reduce my multiple attempts at siege rules (9 years of false starts, plus numerous manuscript scribbles - some actually jotted down while away on holiday) to a single typed document - well, all right, a mature draft - I still have a little time to check to see if some of the numbers need to be altered to give a balanced game. I have also produced three documents, to set the context for our game. I have one each for the two commanders, telling them what they, personally, need to know, and I have a general preamble, which I shall include here, which sets out the (amended) historical situation in terms which are common knowledge - stuff which can be freely shared.
I'll publish the specific notes for the two commanders, and the OOBs, along with the game report - these chaps are quite crafty enough to check for secrets on my blog...
Here goes - this is the first handout - both commanders get this as a starter.
Preamble
(general knowledge, issued to both commanders)
It is 8am on Monday 3rd October
1644. It is a dreary, cold morning – blustery, with the threat of rain later.
The scene is the area outside the walls on the northern side of Newcastle upon
Tyne, an important coal and commercial centre with a population of about 11,000.
Newcastle has been loyally supportive of King Charles throughout the first two
years of the Civil War. It is a bleak landscape – not enhanced by the presence
of many small, abandoned coal workings and the burned-out ruins of some humble suburbs
that had grown up outside the town’s Newgate and Pilgrim Street Gate, destroyed by the garrison to clear the field of fire from the walls.
The town of Newcastle has had varying
numbers of Scottish Covenanter troops stationed outside it (their HQ is at
Elswick) since they arrived in February, at which time a demand for surrender
of the town was refused. Rather than commit time and effort to a major siege,
the Scots then marched south to Sunderland, leaving a small force to watch Newcastle.
The main objectives of this campaign were always York and the main Royalist
field armies.
Since then the Battle of Marston Moor has
taken place in Yorkshire (2nd July), which was a massive defeat for
the Royalists and in which the Scottish army was heavily involved. Shortly
afterwards the important Royalist city of York surrendered. The King’s
situation in the North is now desperate – with the exception of isolated
garrisons at Pontefract, Carlisle, Durham, Newcastle and a few other places,
there is no prospect of the Royalists re-establishing any significant level of
control, thus their focus is increasingly centred on holding the city of
Chester, which is an important port on the other side of the country and
controls access to North Wales.
The great champion of the King’s cause in
the North, William Cavendish, Marquis of Newcastle, who almost single-handedly
raised and financed the Royalist effort in the North-East, has now gone into
exile in Germany, largely as a consequence of Prince Rupert’s having
successfully shifted the blame for Marston Moor onto his shoulders. He and almost all his
field army are lost to the Royalist effort – a major blow.
The Scottish troops, under Lord Leven, have
now returned to finish the business at Newcastle itself. Apart from its role as
the last major Royalist port in the North-East, Newcastle is an essential
supplier of coal to Parliamentarian London – restoration of the London coal
supply is seen as the main deliverable from capture of the town, and Leven is
now under a lot of political pressure to take the place, and quickly.
The situation in Newcastle is now critical
– though an effort has been made to collect supplies into the town, the arrival
of a fresh Scottish force under the Earl of Callander resulted in the capture
of the town of Gateshead (27th July), on the other end of the only
bridge over the Tyne, and of the fort at
South Shields, at the mouth of the river, so that the town is now cut off from
the outside world for the first time – prior to this, despite a supposed
Parliamentary blockade, some ships had been taking coal to Rotterdam and
Hamburg, and returning with provisions and armaments.
Leven arrived back at Elswick from
Yorkshire on 15th August with his main army – the Scots have now
constructed pontoon bridges across the Tyne both upstream and downstream from
Newcastle, and hold the south bank of the Tyne – the port and castle can now be
fired on from across the river. They have troops and guns all around the town.
There has been an extended exchange of
diplomatic letters between Leven and Sir John Marley, who is both Mayor and
Military Governor of Newcastle. Leven has been urging for speedy surrender, to
avoid unnecessary loss of life (and to protect the coal supply!), and Marley
has deliberately been prevaricating and nitpicking over the protocols under which
terms should be agreed, and about whose fault it will be if bloodshed does
occur. Marley’s obvious aim is to play for as much time as possible, which
seems odd since there is no chance of being rescued by any kind of relieving
force.
Leven is known to be subject to much
criticism in London for what is perceived as a dilatory and otherwise unsatisfactory
showing at Newcastle. There is also a widespread feeling that, after a long and
illustrious military career, he is now too old for the stresses of campaigning
- even his most loyal colleagues fear this may be true. Throughout the
protracted game-playing of Marley’s supposed negotiations for terms of
surrender, Leven has intermittently carried out some limited bombardment of the
town, but it seems to have been more to emphasise his overwhelming advantage
than to destroy the place out of hand.
Leven has a total force of perhaps 20,000
soldiers, stationed on both sides of the Tyne and all around the walls of
Newcastle. The obvious site for batteries to breach the walls is on the ridge
at The Leazes, which faces the medieval town wall between Newgate and Pilgrim Street
Gate. The walls of the town have been repaired, but they are of an archaic
style which predates siege artillery, and there are no earthworks to protect or
support them against roundshot.
Marley’s total force is unknown, but it
cannot be more than a couple of thousand. He has recently sent a couple of
sorties out in the vicinity of the Sandgate (off the table – outside the town
on the riverside, to the east) which went surprisingly well, they caused some
casualties, upset the Scots and took a few prisoners. Scottish morale seems
surprisingly low…
Separate Topic
The Contesse has been sorting out her folders of photos, and she found this rather scary exhibit - I never knew such a picture had been taken, though I shall be on my guard in future. Apparently this was almost exactly three years ago - obviously on a dark and stormy night. In the intervening period, both the sofa and my sweater have gone to the landfill, it seems (you can see why), but the fierce concentration and the Silence of the Lambs magnifying "jeweller's loop" (which I occasionally wear when answering the door, just to frighten the mailman) are still very much in evidence. I had a half-hearted attempt to see if I could work out what I was painting, but didn't get very far.
As you can probably see, one of the difficulties I have in painting is that my nose is too long to allow me to get close enough to the job. As you can also see, one of the advantages of this hobby is that you don't always have to look your best.
Monday, 20 February 2017
Not Quite the Siege of Newcastle 1644 – (2) What Really Happened
…and why it won’t make a very good game
without serious revision of the narrative.
First thing to know about the Siege of
Newcastle is that it doesn’t get a lot of coverage. If you read Peter Young, or
CV Wedgwood, or Gardiner, or just about any of the respectable general
histories, then you will find either no mention at all or else a casual
one-liner about the town having eventually fallen to Parliament. It goes
without saying that it was a matter of the greatest importance to the people
who lived there at the time, but by the time the place surrendered the war had
moved on elsewhere, and the final capture was in any case a foregone
conclusion.
What follows is a summary of my understanding of what
happened – it will certainly reflect my own limited attention span and the fact
that most of my sources are Scottish, so I would not recommend that you base
your homework on it without checking further!
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| Alexander Leslie, Earl of Leven |
When the Earl of Leven led the Scottish
Covenanter army into Northumberland on the 19th January 1644, he
expected to reach the Tyne by the 27th. He appears to have had no
intention of undertaking any kind of formal siege – the town of Newcastle had
surrendered to him without resistance in 1639, during the brief Bishops’ Wars, and
there seemed every chance that the same thing would happen now. Leven’s army
did not have the best of either luck or weather on their march, and did not
reach Newcastle until 3rd February, by which time the principal
Royalist in the Northern Counties, the Earl of Newcastle (whom I shall henceforth refer to as William Cavendish, to avoid confusion), had managed to reach the
town with some 4000 troops. Leven’s request that the gates be opened to him was
dismissed out of hand. Since his heavy artillery was still en route, having
been sent by ship from Leith to Blyth, his bluff was called, though he probably
had in the region of 17000 soldiers under arms.
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| William Cavendish, Earl (later Marquis) of Newcastle |
Newcastle stands on the River Tyne, at a
point where the river was a very serious military obstacle – from Newcastle to
the sea there was no crossing point, and there were Royalist forts at the mouth
of the Tyne, at Tynemouth and South Shields, which hindered naval blockade of
the port. On the western side of the town the nearest ford was at Newburn, some
7 miles upstream, with another at Heddon on the Wall, maybe another 2 miles.
Across the river from Newcastle was the town of Gateshead (referred to as
Gatesyde in contemporary Scottish accounts), which commanded the other end of
the only bridge.
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| View across the Tyne from Gateshead, showing the only bridge |
If Leven were immediately to set up a formal siege of
the town of Newcastle, he would have no control of the south bank of the Tyne,
and the forts would enable an amount of maritime traffic to persist – blockade
or no, boats are known to have continued to take coal from Newcastle to
Hamburg, and maybe Rotterdam, and return with supplies including armaments. The
wider strategic demands of the war required the Scottish army to be available
further afield, and the cost and delay of a siege at this point were not
appealing. Without better control of the river, a besieging army could not even
seal off the town.
Leven decided to move on – he left 6
regiments of foot and some cavalry under James Lumsden to watch the town, and
marched the bulk of his army to the western fords and thence south towards
Sunderland (which was favourably disposed toward Parliament), which became his
base of operations for a while. He captured the fort at South Shields (though
it subsequently changed hands again), and managed to outmanoeuvre Cavendish’s
field army (which apparently had left the “blockaded” town of Newcastle pretty
much at will) fairly consistently through a short campaign which included the
indecisive action at Boldon Hill (see previous game report from last year).
At this point news reached Cavendish of
Parliament’s capture of Selby, in Yorkshire, which increased the threat against
York, so that he chose to march south to support the Royalist effort in
Yorkshire. Leven followed him, and in July both forces were involved in the Battle of
Marston Moor, which pretty much destroyed any effective Royalist control in the
North. In addition, it resulted in Cavendish quitting the country (he moved to
Germany to avoid being humiliated at court, since Prince Rupert managed to
place most of the blame for the defeat with him) and may have marked the
beginning of some disaffection between Cromwell and the Covenanters.
After Marston Moor, York surrendered, and
Leven turned his attention once again to Newcastle, which town’s situation was
now hopeless – there was no possibility of a relief force.
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| James Livingston, Earl of Callander |
A reinforcement had been sent from Scotland for
Leven’s ragged and weary troops – the Earl of Callander arrived with a further
8000 men, and set about the south bank of the Tyne with some vigour. He
recaptured the forts at the mouth of the Tyne, and took Gateshead on 27th
July – the riverfront, castle and port of Newcastle could now be fired upon
from across the river. With the forts lost, the town was now sealed off, and
hunger was added to the miseries of the townspeople.
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| Sir John Marley, Mayor and Military Commander of Newcastle during the siege |
Callander placed a pontoon bridge across
the river to the east of the town, near Ouseburn, and Leven’s engineers did the
same upstream, on the west side. By September there were batteries placed all around the town,
there was mining work under way. Then began a long drawn-out series of letters between Leven and Sir John Marley, the mayor of Newcastle. Hostages
were exchanged, formal parties were sent to negotiate. Marley merely wished to
play for time. He later claimed that any demands he could make on the armies of
Parliament, any nuisance he could offer, struck a blow for his king, but there may have been some wisdom in
his strategy. Winter was coming, enthusiasm for a siege which would yield
little must have been waning among the Scots. The defenders managed a couple
of successful sorties, though their resources were very limited, and
successfully destroyed a few mines, and some of Callander’s men were returned
to Scotland, to help with the growing problem of the Marquis of Montrose.
Eventually, Leven’s patience ran out, and on the 19th October a
major bombardment breached the walls in a number of places, and this was followed by a full assault. The town fell quite quickly – the
invaders were surprised how quickly the streets were empty, as the civilian
fighters went home to hide and have their wounds tended to.
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| The Keep of Newcastle Castle |
Marley and a few of the firebrands locked
themselves in the castle, and left the townspeople to cope with the aftermath.
An attempt to renew the exchange of demands was ignored by Leven, and when the
castle ran out of food Marley, too, surrendered. Legend has it that he required
a bodyguard to protect him from the ire of the citizens.
******
So – as a game?
The early period of confrontation in February is not promising –
the Scots’ inability to seal off the river and the port is crucial, and after
the main army marched south they had enough strength only to mask the town.
By October the forces are overwhelmingly uneven – the Royalists have no food, insufficient troops, old-fashioned fortifications and no chance at all of relief or reinforcement. A siege in such circumstances has, potentially, to quote the Mad Padre, all the fascination of a slow-motion movie of someone being hit by a bus.
By October the forces are overwhelmingly uneven – the Royalists have no food, insufficient troops, old-fashioned fortifications and no chance at all of relief or reinforcement. A siege in such circumstances has, potentially, to quote the Mad Padre, all the fascination of a slow-motion movie of someone being hit by a bus.
I am working on some tweaks to give a more evenly-balanced game! More later...
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| The Durham Tower today... |
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| ...and the Herber Tower... |
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| ...the Walls near Newgate Street... |
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| ...and at Orchard Street |
Wednesday, 15 February 2017
Not Quite the Siege of Newcastle 1644 - (1) Beginnings and Set Up
It will be a little while until the actual game takes place, but I've made a start on setting up an appropriate battlefield. Because of the short artillery ranges, the ground scale and the small size of 17th Century towns, I have decided to play the game across the table, which has a number of advantages.
My starting point is a contemporary map of Newcastle, dating from 1610 or so. Here it is.
By the time Lord Leven arrived at the gates in February 1644, a number of changes had taken place. The suburbs outside the northern section of the wall had been demolished (they burned for days, apparently), the walls had been put into a good state of repair (they had even been plastered, to make escalade more difficult - my walls have not been plastered...), but were still old-fashioned medieval walls with no frontal protection against artillery, and a sconce had been erected at Shieldfield, north east of the town, to cover the Sandgate area against possible approach along the valley of the Pandon Burn.
Having stared at the map for a while, consulted my various sources and scratched my chin, I have decided to represent the northern side of the town on the table. This represents only part of the assault (which did not take place until October, for reasons which I shall attempt to explain at some point in the next few posts), but it is the easiest section to play as a game, and it does include the location of the primary artillery barrage.
This first post is primarily to show off my very approximate version of Newcastle, and the captions to the pictures will give a little more information. In later posts I'll say more about why the real siege of Newcastle does not lend itself to a game without a lot of fudging - which will involve one of Foy's infamous potted histories - and discuss some new aspects of my rules. One further advantage of setting the field up early, of course, is that I can do some experimenting with particular rule mechanisms to see how they look. The game itself will probably be in a couple of weeks (availability of commanders permitting), and it will be a collaborative, rather than a competitive, effort!
Somewhere via this link you will find an entertaining little dramatisation of some of the key issues of the real siege - click on the movie and you will meet some of the principal characters - notably Sir John Marley (the town mayor) and the Earl of Leven (the commander of the Scottish army outside). They are heavily disguised, apparently, but you get the idea. I'll introduce them again in a later part of this short series of posts.
My starting point is a contemporary map of Newcastle, dating from 1610 or so. Here it is.
By the time Lord Leven arrived at the gates in February 1644, a number of changes had taken place. The suburbs outside the northern section of the wall had been demolished (they burned for days, apparently), the walls had been put into a good state of repair (they had even been plastered, to make escalade more difficult - my walls have not been plastered...), but were still old-fashioned medieval walls with no frontal protection against artillery, and a sconce had been erected at Shieldfield, north east of the town, to cover the Sandgate area against possible approach along the valley of the Pandon Burn.
Having stared at the map for a while, consulted my various sources and scratched my chin, I have decided to represent the northern side of the town on the table. This represents only part of the assault (which did not take place until October, for reasons which I shall attempt to explain at some point in the next few posts), but it is the easiest section to play as a game, and it does include the location of the primary artillery barrage.
This first post is primarily to show off my very approximate version of Newcastle, and the captions to the pictures will give a little more information. In later posts I'll say more about why the real siege of Newcastle does not lend itself to a game without a lot of fudging - which will involve one of Foy's infamous potted histories - and discuss some new aspects of my rules. One further advantage of setting the field up early, of course, is that I can do some experimenting with particular rule mechanisms to see how they look. The game itself will probably be in a couple of weeks (availability of commanders permitting), and it will be a collaborative, rather than a competitive, effort!
| General view from the north east. |
| General view from the north west. |
| Looking from the Castle, towards Newgate Street. |
| View towards the Newgate, inside the walls - get your ticket for the guided walk... |
| Pilgrim St Gate from the top of Pilgrim St. |
| The new fort added by Lord Glemham at Shieldfield - it looks a little more grand than it really was - it occupies 2 hexes, and was manned by about 300 musketeers. |
Saturday, 4 February 2017
ECW - Work on Sieges, and the Distraction of Local Ruins
Within the next few weeks I intend to get
out my ECW siege bits and pieces, and have a more formal attempt at a siege.
One of my invited guests will be David the Cruncher, my chiropractor, who
appeared in this blog a little while ago when he came here to be introduced to
wargaming. In honour of his South Shields origins, on that occasion we played a
game based on the Battle of Boldon Hill, which in reality had never quite been
a proper battle at all, but the fact that David’s uncle lives in one of the
villages on the battlefield was an overwhelming case in favour of the scenario.
My intended action this time will be "Something a Little Bit Like the Siege of Newcastle" (1644) – you will hear more
of this shortly. Because of the impending presence of guest generals (and my
experience of guest generals is that the beggars sometimes wish to have some
idea what is going on), I am working on tidying up the rules, and writing them
out in a form which might be understood by someone apart from me – in
particular, all the scribbled pencil tables and post-it notes need some
attention.
Anyway – I hope to set out more details of
all this over the coming few weeks, including (maybe) a revised draft of the
siege rules. In the meantime, I have become a little diverted by some of our
local castles here in East Lothian.
It is, in any case, a topic which I find
interesting, and there are a great many sites around here which have history
related to the ECW. The most recent distraction came during my studies of the
activities of the Covenanter Armies – I was reading about the East Lothian
regiment which marched into Northumberland with Lord Leven (subsequently
appearing at, for example, Marston Moor and the sieges of York and Newcastle),
and it seems that the colonel and patron of this unit was Sir Patrick Hepburn,
who lived at Waughton Castle.
Now I know Waughton – it is about 4 miles
from where I am sitting – and I know there is a pile of old stones and the
remains of a medieval doocot (dovecot, to English readers) on the farm at Old
Waughton, but I know nothing about the history of the place – it really doesn’t
look very interesting.
Wrong. A quick look at Andrew Spratt’s splendid website devoted to reconstructions of Scottish castles reveals that Waughton
Castle was a fine thing – in fact here it is.
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| Waughton |
So, if it was still the home of an
important local family in the mid 17th Century, how has it vanished
so completely? – so much so, in fact, that a reclusive old nerd like me (who
has plenty of free time, a camera and walking boots, and lives, as I say, 4
miles away) did not even know it was there.
Mr Spratt likens the disappearance of these
old fortified houses to children’s sandcastles on the beach being swept away by
the tide. Yes, it is true that there were a number of dramatic incidents such
as Cromwell and Monck destroying the places, but even in the cases where the
places just fell into disuse there was a sort of gradual tidal wave as the locals requisitioned
the stone to build houses, barns, field boundaries. I must have seen the stones
of Waughton Castle many times, but they are built into farm steadings and stane
dykes. They must have migrated in countless small carts and barrows over the
centuries. There may be some on our garden rockery…
So I have resolved that I will take a bit more
trouble to spend some time looking at Andrew’s website, and visit what is left
of these local places. Apart from the well-known National Trust sites at Tantallon (Douglas family) and Dirleton (Ruthvens), within a very few miles of here I know of Waughton (Hepburn), Hailes (more Hepburns), Innerwick, Yester and many others, I also now see that the ruin in the woods on the farm here at
Auldhame, which is less than a mile away and which I had previously
believed to be an ancient abbey, is now thought to have been a house destroyed
by Monck after the Battle of Dunbar. Hmmm – Andrew, you have my full attention.
There is also a tale that the Laird of Lochhouses (2 miles from here, now a
working farm) was wounded at the Battle of Dunbar, followed home by English
dragoons and shot on the doorstep of his “tower” – this patently is not the extant Victorian farmhouse, so I think there must be another ruin somewhere nearby.
![]() |
| Hailes |
![]() |
| Yester |
![]() |
| Auldhame - 15 minutes squelch from here |
The church at Whitekirk (also about 2 miles
away) is reputed to have been used to stable some of the Roundheads’ horses
after Dunbar, but there are innumerable such stories, and there is a whiff of
resentful outrage in this one – as an example of the sort of heretic rascals
these chaps were.
![]() |
| Whitekirk Parish Church |
Anyway – if the weather starts to improve,
I would welcome the excuse to go squelching round the local countryside in
search of ancient stones. I shall have to stock up on pork pies to add
excitement to the packed lunches.
Please note that I use Mr Spratt's illustrations without any permission to do so - if you are interested in this, I would recommend that you visit his website via the link in this post - well worth the time.
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