Napoleonic & ECW wargaming, with a load of old Hooptedoodle on this & that
Wednesday, 9 October 2013
Hooptedoodle #101 - What Are You Doing in My Garden?
[If you're looking for the report of the big battle where the Spanish army got hammered, it's the previous post]
The Summer is definitely coming to a close - cold and windy here, but this afternoon there was a bit of sunshine, and it seemed a good opportunity to give the lawns their last cut of the year. An area of one of the lawns seems to have turned into a mushroom bed. So I thought I should photograph them before I mowed them into oblivion (we don't mess about, me and the Honda...).
I wondered if they were edible - we did have a small crop of morels some months ago (which we didn't eat), but these new chaps look a bit like Jack-o'-Lantern to me, which will give you a definite touch of The Others, so not only will I not eat them, but I'll also wash my hands carefully before I eat anything else.
Not seen these in anything like this quantity before. I don't think it's the Global Warming; like the morels, they are certainly caused by the rotting of the roots of our old Eucalyptus, which was cut down 4 or 5 years ago (or whatever), and the roots must be brewing up nicely.
Attractive though, eh?
Tuesday, 8 October 2013
Solo Campaign - Battle of Vinuesa, Saturday 22nd August 1812
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| General view at the start, from behind the French right |
Battle of
Vinuesa, 22nd Aug 1812
Spanish Third Army (General
Pedro Agostin Giron) - 13200 inf, 1800 cavalry, 18 guns
First Division (España)
Zaldibar’s Brigade
1/2o
Princesa + Tiradores de Castilla
Parker Carroll’s
Brigade
1/Sevilla +
1/2o Jaen + Cazadores de Castilla
Pardo’s Brigade*
Vols de Valencia + Ligero del
Reino de Valencia + 2o Loyales de Zamora + Defensores de Fernando
VII
Cavalry Brigade*
(Sanchez)
1er
& 2o Lanceros de Castilla
Foot battery (Capt Herrera)
Avila volunteer battery* (Capt
Arguellas)
Second Division (Morillo) – Morillo
was absent, ill, and Espeleta commanded the Division
Bausa y Ortiz’s Brigade
1/Leon +
1/Bailen + Vols de la Victoria
Cordoba’s Brigade
1/La Union
+ 1/2o Mallorca + Legion Extremena
Espeleta’s Brigade*
Vols de
Guadalajara + Aragon + Cuenca + Regto del Ribeiro
Cavalry Brigade (Penne)
Coraceros
Espanoles + Hus de Extemadura + Vols de España
Foot battery (Capt Hidalgo)
Foot battery (Capt Estrabismo)
* -
formations marked with an asterisk are classified as militia for C&CN rules
Since the
Spanish artillery batteries have only 4 guns each, they are classed as
“Reduced” in the CCN rules
French Army (Marshal Jourdan) - 9950 inf, 1750
cavalry, 14 guns
Division D’Armagnac [from Army of Centre]
Brigade Neuenstein
2e Nassau
(2 Bns) + Regt de Francfort (1) + 4e Bade (2)
Brigade Chassé
4e Hesse-Darmstadt
(2) + 3e Berg (1)
Brigade St Paul
(Italian)
2e Léger
(1) + 3e (2) & 5e Ligne (2)
Italian Foot battery (Capt
Ferrarese)
Cavalry (Maupoint) [combined from Armies of Centre & North]
Brigade Maupoint
13e
Cuirassiers + 15e Chass a Chev + 5e Chev-Leg
Brigade Kleinwinkel
1er &
2e Chev-Leg Rugeois
11/3e Art a Cheval (Capt
Demilune)
The positions and the development of the action should be clear from the
pictures. Giron placed his right on a loop of low but quite rugged hills. His
overriding concern throughout was that a large proportion of his troops were
volunteers (who rank as militia in the game rules). Spanish line troops are
subject to double retreats, and militia to treble retreats, and this did prove
to be a major problem throughout the day. He placed Morillo’s line division on
these hills, with the majority of the voluntarios in reserve, behind them.
Morillo himself was absent, suffering from malaria, and his division was
commanded on the day by General Espeleta.
The Spanish left was in more open terrain, and Giron stood Espana’s
veterans in this area, making best use of wooded areas. He placed his cavalry
on both flanks, expecting them to play little part in the action.
Jourdan had St Paul’s Italian brigade on his left, entering the field
through more woods. The German brigades which formed the remainder of
D’Armagnac’s Division occupied the middle and right of the French position.
The Italians made little progress against Espeleta on the French left,
but a regular pattern began to emerge. As Spanish units were driven back, the
multiple retreats had a big effect – apart from the loss of ground, there were
numerous occasions when retiring units did not have room to make a full
retreat, and the rules force a loss of blocks when this happens. For the first
hour of the action the impression was that the movement and the weight of fire
appeared to be about even, but the Spanish problem with retreats meant that the
eliminated units were all Spanish. The “Victory Banners” score very quickly
rose to 6-0, 10 being the target required for an overall win.
The French had every advantage they could have hoped for – apart from
the assymetrical rules, they also had marvellous cards and dice throws
throughout. Jourdan would do well to retire from the army at this moment, for
he will never have such a lucky day again.
One such card – La Grande
Manoeuvre – resulted in a sudden advance, as the French centre moved to their
right and a heavy attack developed against Espana’s troops, who crumbled
disappointingly, and a fairly humble brigade of Confederation light cavalry,
with no particular reputation but with Maupoint leading them in person, swept
away the Spanish cavalry and clinched a convincing and surprisingly one-sided
win (10-2 in banners) to the French. Giron’s right remained doggedly where it
started, but his left was destroyed.
This result is a major setback to the Allies’ progress, and the
appointments of a number of the Spanish generals are under close examination.
Espana in particular has been heavily criticised, but there is a great deal of
mutual accusation as to who is to take the blame for the disaster.
The Spanish lost 4200 infantry, 1125 cavalry and 4 guns, the French lost
1600 infantry and 125 cavalry. The fact that Giron had the advantage of
defence, greater numbers and more artillery is not lost on his political
opponents.
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| Legio Extremena in the woods |
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| The Spanish left - where it all went wrong |
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| Spanish position, from their left flank |
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| General Giron's big day out - he may not get another... |
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| Spanish Line troops, 1812 style - 2nd Mallorca |
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| Italians - the woods were full of them |
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| Genl Von Neuenstein with the 2nd Nassau - the spyglass was a useful precaution, since he managed to stay a long way from the action |
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| Stoical Germans - the Confederation troops did a great job - just got on with it |
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| Gunner's view - that Spanish battery opposite didn't stay there long |
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| The Spanish left wing again - hmmm... Espana with the white base border |
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| The Spanish right, from another viewpoint |
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| Here is the crux of the matter - the Regimiento del Ribeiro, being voluntarios, have to take triple retreats - one hit, plus a retreat they didn't have space for, did for them. There was a lot of this. |
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| The combined light companies from St Paul's Italian brigade performed real heroics, but were battered in the end |
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| Spanish volunteer artillery. On the day, they couldn't hit the proverbial whatsit in the thingummy with a how's-your-father |
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| Great card - started the French swing to the right |
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| Here they go... |
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| The briefest of appearances by my posh new Spanish hussars ended with their being soundly beaten by the brigade of Rugeois light horse, led by Maupoint |
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| That would do it - the sort of dice which the French turned up all day |
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| Espeleta brings forward the Bailen regiment, possibly wishing he'd gone for a less conspicuous uniform |
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| The French attack, from behind their right |
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| Maupoint, with the unstoppable Rugeois, finishes the game |
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| Position at the finish - the Spanish left, at this end, has gone |
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| Whichever way you look at it... |
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| Some friends of Lee's! - some of the voluntarios - they look great, but they didn't do so well today! |
I'll include the revised maps and army returns with Week 32's report, in a few days.
Sunday, 6 October 2013
Solo Campaign - Action at Arnedillo, Friday 21st August 1812
Action at Arnedillo, Friday 21st
August 1812
French forces (Gen de Bde
Jean-Marcel-Auguste Paquerette)
17e Regiment Provisoir (111e, 114e &
115e bns Garde Nationale)
18e Regiment Provisoir (112e bn GN et
3/Garde du Tarn)
7/5e Art à Pied
(Cpt Borrance)
Total: 3910 men, with 8 guns
Spanish forces (Don
Iago Pacheco, “El Banquero”)
3600 irregulars from
the Junta de Vizcaya, of whom approx. 280 are mounted.
Paquerette’s men are
Garde Nationale soldiers from the Languedoc and Albi areas of France. Originally
recruited to serve in their home region, to release front-line troops for the
main field armies, these men were subsequently very bemused to be moved, first
to Bayonne, then to serve in North-Eastern Spain. They have no battle
experience, though they have acquired some skill in dealing with guerrilleros
and policing hostile towns, and their morale is surprisingly good.
Pacheco has under his
command a mixture of troops with a wide range of experience and enthusiasm –
from seasoned resistance fighters to terrified conscripts. The Junta’s
recruiting methods are pretty ruthless. His men are aware that the fairly open
terrain does not suit their normal manner of fighting, but their contempt for
the French prevents any undue pessimism, though the more experienced men are
concerned about the French artillery.
Early on Friday
morning, in a light drizzle, the French units pass through the village of
Arnedillo, and march on towards the area of small hills around the (deserted)
Convent of Nuestra Senora de Penalba, which has been stripped repeatedly by
both sides over the last 4 years. A tributary of the River Cidacos rises near
the village, the source being a long-established working for the extraction of
building sand. The river is not deep, but very muddy, and it may only be
crossed at the old Roman bridge.
[Because of the small numbers involved, the action will be
played out end to end of the table. This renders the normal C&CN concepts
of centre and flank sectors meaningless – thus the game will use C&CN
combat mechanisms, but the Command Cards will not be used, activation being
carried out by a dice-based system. These are fairly poorly trained troops – on
both sides. None of the infantry is able to form square and – to avoid an
unnecessary bloodbath – victory conditions are light – the French need to
eliminate 5 units or officers to win, the Spaniards need to eliminate just 3.
This could be a very short battle!
The French infantry are classed as militia, and are thus
subject to triple retreats, though the artillery are trained regulars. The
Spanish have the special guerrilla classification I use in C&CN – they may
move 2 hexes and fight, and may move freely through woods and villages, but a
single, uncancelled retreat will eliminate any unit.]
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| Dust & sweat (1)... |
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| Dust & sweat (2) |
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| Foy seen in the sky above Arnedillo |
The Action
The Spanish infantry
took advantage of what cover and broken ground there was, and Paquerette
marched his men forward in good order. The speed of deployment of the
guerrilleros enabled them to bring a lot of units against the French advance,
and an intensive firefight commenced, though the standard of shooting was not
what we would expect from the line. The French rookies performed steadily,
though a couple of battalions retired (with fairly light losses). The Spaniards
(whose units are small – counting only 2 bases each) are invariable brittle in
action, and soon there was a steady stream of the wounded and discouraged to
the rear.
With militia and
irregular troops, C&CN requires units to be clustered together for mutual
support, and to have generals close at hand. Both generals did a decent job of
bringing up fresh units to fill gaps and relieve battered ones. As ever with
C&C related games, the ghost of Mr Borg was somewhere around, and once
again we reached a stage where one further loss either way would decide the
action.
At this point,
Paquerette aspired to a little text-book C&CN, performing an attack with
combined arms (artillery + infantry charge) as his men finally closed to within
melee range of the enemy. It was a near thing – with 7 combat dice available,
he was handicapped by the fact that militia (and the French classed as militia
here) do not get to count “crossed sabres” in a melee, but he managed the
single infantry hit required to eliminate a fifth Spanish unit and El Banquero
withdrew without battling back.
Both commanders did
quite well, but the French troops’ musketry was disappointingly ineffective
early in the engagement. The Spaniards suffered a total of about 1200 losses –
a great majority of which were runaways. The French had 100 killed, 280
missing, and about 400 wounded.
The rapidity of the
Spanish movement, plus the lack of French mounted troops, allowed El Banquero
to retire in reasonable order, without further harassment. The first shots were
timed at around 9:30. The Spaniards had melted away, with most of their
wounded, by 10:45.
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| Starting position, from the Spanish side |
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| That's the way to do it - the terminal retreat flag can be ignored, given enough support among the guerrilleros |
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| El Banquero - first time in the field - he did OK |
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| Don't get captured by these fellows - actually, one of them is a woman...? |
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| The decisive attack of Combined Arms, which finished things... |
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| ...looks like plenty of dice, but the single blue symbol is what counted |
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| Only here for the drink? - some kind of mirage on the horizon |
Once again, my thanks to my staff photographer - Nick - for his customary idiosyncratic work.
Saturday, 5 October 2013
Eggmuhl Giveaway - Results
I got a total of 13 expressions of interest, if I include a couple of strange pieces of related spam and a threat.
Pleased to announce that Gary Amos wins the battlefield guide (not entirely because of the blackmail attempt), and Bart Vetters wins the German-language version.
If these two gentlemen could contact me with postal addresses I'll get the books to you.
You can email via the address on my Blogger profile or - and maybe better, since I fear that BtInternet may have screwed up my email accounts again - send a comment to this blog post which I won't publish.
Thanks to anyone who sent an "entry", and thanks to anyone who was interested enough to follow my humble adventures on the Danube.
Pleased to announce that Gary Amos wins the battlefield guide (not entirely because of the blackmail attempt), and Bart Vetters wins the German-language version.
If these two gentlemen could contact me with postal addresses I'll get the books to you.
You can email via the address on my Blogger profile or - and maybe better, since I fear that BtInternet may have screwed up my email accounts again - send a comment to this blog post which I won't publish.
Thanks to anyone who sent an "entry", and thanks to anyone who was interested enough to follow my humble adventures on the Danube.
Solo Campaign - Week 31
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| Our artist's impression of Arnedillo |
My compliments to Francis, who pointed out that the map for week 30 had the wrong counter for Clauzel - should have been I, not H as shown. Francis, you really should get out more and, no, there is no prize.
This week we have two fights coming up between the Spaniards and the French, both near Soria. I hope to get them fought out next week.
Week 31
Random Events and Strategic Notes
The severe rain has ceased – ground conditions have returned
to normal, though river levels are unseasonably high, and fords are
unpredictable.
Giron’s enlarged and well-equipped Spanish army at Calatayud
is causing the French great concern. He has no siege train (though Aigburth is
going to bring forward the Anglo-Portuguese one from Ciudad Rodrigo), and is
thus unable to do much about the fortress towns which dominate the supply routes
from France, but he has enough troops to mask Burgos and possibly Pamplona,
which would be a serious problem for the French. He also has more than enough
capability to sweep the second-line French troops out of Tudela.
King Joseph is desperately concerned about this, and wants
something done about the Spaniards very quickly. King Joseph’s estimate of
Giron’s strength is wildly high, confused by the large numbers of Aragonese
irregulars who are currently attached (but are very unlikely to be allowed to leave
Aragon).
Aigburth and the Spanish high command have agreed that Giron
should avoid conflict with the main French field armies, but should move on
Tudela, Lodosa and Vittoria – occupation of these three areas will stop French
supplies to Marmont, Clauzel and Joudan, regardless of the status of the
fortresses at San Sebastian, Pamplona and Burgos.
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| Apparently you can get a Jourdan shirt too - tacky... |
Joseph is aware of the risk, and intends to destroy Giron in
battle before these moves take place.
Madrid is now occupied by the troops of the Junta de Castilla,
and battalions of milicias urbanas are to be raised from the populace.
Housekeeping
The 3D3 activation throws give the Allies 5 and the French
4. The Allies opt to move first.
Moves
Allies (5 allowed)
1 – Sp B (Giron, at Calatayud) splits off most of his
irregulars (new force Sp I), who will remain in Navarra…
2 – … and marches his main army into Soria
3 – D (Framlingham, with the Allied siege train), marches
from Ciudad Rodrigo to Salamanca
4 – Sp E (Mira, around Ocana) marches into Madrid with some
5000 irregulars
5 – Plans are put in motion to raise a number (possibly 4)
battalions of militia in Madrid – timescale uncertain…
[Intelligence step -
- No new information.]
French (4 allowed)
1 – K (Jourdan/Joseph, at Aranda) splits off the siege train
and the baggage train (with the Madrid ‘loot’) as new force U…
2 – … this new force U marches to the fortress at Burgos…
3 – … while force K marches from Aranda into Soria with
11700 men to attack Giron
4 – R (Paquerette’s brigade of about 4500 Garde Nationale)
marches from Tudela into Soria, to attack the irregulars under “El Banquero”
(Sp G) and prevent their joining with Giron
[Intelligence step –
- No new information.]
Supplies and Demoralisation
All units are in supply, nobody is Demoralised.
Contacts
On Friday 21st August, Paquerette’s untried
reservists meet the irregulars of El Banquero near the convent of Nostra Senora
de Penalba, at Arnedillo, on the River Cidacos, Not far from Calahorra.
Paquerette has 5 battalions of reservist infantry plus a battery of foot
artillery. El Banquero has about 3800 light infantry from the Junta de Vizcaya,
no artillery and a tiny force of cavalry. The field is hilly but fairly open,
and Paquerette is optimistic…
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| Vinuesa |
The following day, Marshal Jourdan, with Darmagnac’s large
division of the Armee du Centre plus the cavalry of the Armee du Nord, makes a
determined assault on Giron’s main army at Vinuesa, west of Soria. Giron is estimated to have 11
line battalions, 9 of voluntarios, 5 regiments of cavalry and about 18 guns in
4 batteries. Jourdan has 16 battalions (Confederation and Italians) and 5 units of
cavalry, but is relatively weak in artillery – he has one Italian foot battery
and one French horse battery – 14 guns in total. The Spanish force was
surprised by the speed with which the attack developed, so their defensive
position is improvised (with a few dice throws in there).
The customary map and army returns will appear once the
actions at Arnedillo and Vinuesa have been fought.
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