I see that it is only three and a half weeks or something since I finished restoring the troopers for my two late-war dragoon regiments, but my painting mojo fell into a trough of some sort after that, and it's only now that I've finished the command figures to complete the units. Anyway, it's done, and I'm pleased with them.
These originally were part of Eric Knowles' vast collection. They were a single regiment, but I use smaller unit sizes than Eric did, so I have split them into two. Here, then, are the 1st (Royal) and 3rd (King's Own) Dragoons, which, as far as I can tell (courtesy of Mr Franklin's book), were pretty much identical. The only slight issue was that I came upon a trumpeter of the Royals in reversed colours in one of the plates in Commandant Lachouque's Waterloo, but that seems unlikely enough by this late date for me to disregard it.
The troopers are Hinton Hunt one-piece castings (OPC), catalogue no BN 40. There were no matching command figures, so my solution was to mount SHQ/Kennington officers and trumpeters on Hinton Hunt horses (BNH3). Everything went pretty well - a lot of carving was needed to get the castings to fit, but it was an easy enough job, and they look fine. In fact the separate HH horses are very slightly taller than the OPC jobs. I thought of filing down the bases a bit, but these are very old HH castings, and the alloy is very soft anyway, so I left them. They are fine.
I have now placed them safely in The Cupboard, and can move on to the next challenge with a light heart!
Napoleonic & ECW wargaming, with a load of old Hooptedoodle on this & that
Tuesday, 21 July 2020
Saturday, 18 July 2020
Sir William Ponsonby
Over the last few weeks, my soldier painting has just dried up altogether. I was doing really rather well, but we've had some family problems, which have been a major distraction, and I seem to have just lost motivation. I'm trying to pick it up again this weekend. I hope to finish off the two British dragoon regiments I was working on - they only lack their command figures, and they are coming along now.
Since these dragoons are in the Waterloo period uniform, I decided it would be pleasing to paint up their brigade commander at Waterloo, Sir Wm Ponsonby, to go with them. I was very lucky in that Goya donated a repaired Hinton Hunt figure (thank you again, sir), and he is now ready for action.
I had a HH Ponsonby some years ago - it wasn't a great casting, and it got cleared out when I had a sudden rush of blood to the elbow and decided to replace all my 20mm generals with 25mm ones - an idea that must have lasted all of six months. My previous Ponsonby had a light tan riding coat - I didn't have access to Marcus's painting instructions in those days. This new one is a much better casting, and I've painted him as Uncle Marcus would have wished.
This is not just a one-hit Waterloo special - I shall use the figure to represent John Gaspard Le Marchant in an earlier period (he didn't last long either, come to think of it). I can ditch my current Le Marchant figure, which is an S-Range conversion of mine that I have never liked. In fact, given that his uniform is more or less invisible, this new chap can serve as any odd British commander. Useful.
Anyway - here we have Hinton Hunt BN257, painted and everything - he should have a brigade to command by Sunday night.
Since these dragoons are in the Waterloo period uniform, I decided it would be pleasing to paint up their brigade commander at Waterloo, Sir Wm Ponsonby, to go with them. I was very lucky in that Goya donated a repaired Hinton Hunt figure (thank you again, sir), and he is now ready for action.
| Sir Wm Ponsonby, MP for Londonderry 1812-15. He is riding one of his second-string horses, a fact which he must have regretted when the lancers got after him at Waterloo. Damn bad luck. |
This is not just a one-hit Waterloo special - I shall use the figure to represent John Gaspard Le Marchant in an earlier period (he didn't last long either, come to think of it). I can ditch my current Le Marchant figure, which is an S-Range conversion of mine that I have never liked. In fact, given that his uniform is more or less invisible, this new chap can serve as any odd British commander. Useful.
Anyway - here we have Hinton Hunt BN257, painted and everything - he should have a brigade to command by Sunday night.
Friday, 17 July 2020
Vauban's Wars - more evidence
This may be old news (I hope it isn't fake news), but Eric Burgess's long awaited siege game rules, Vauban's Wars, are scheduled to be released first week in August. It is hard to sustain actual excitement for 9 years, or whatever it is, but I really am quite excited. I've been waiting for this since it was called Coehorn's Wars (before the takeover?).
Here's a completely unauthorised snapshot of the back cover (regard it as an advert, if you will), borrowed from the Piquet and Field of Battle Facebook page - final proof-check should be next week. I've been following the playtesting on the Piquet site and on Eric's and Gonsalvo's blogs, and it all looks good.
Here's a completely unauthorised snapshot of the back cover (regard it as an advert, if you will), borrowed from the Piquet and Field of Battle Facebook page - final proof-check should be next week. I've been following the playtesting on the Piquet site and on Eric's and Gonsalvo's blogs, and it all looks good.
Wednesday, 15 July 2020
Wargame Pioneers - pictures from the archives
A friend passed me this - remarkable - it shows early trials of The Portable Wargame, in Leningrad in 1924.
[Editor's Note: this is, in fact, a lie. The occasion depicted is obviously a game of very large chess, though the date and place are correct. It was a demonstration game played between two Masters of the day, Peter Romanovsky and Ilya Rabinovich. Why? - I don't know - I'm just the bloody editor - maybe because they could? Observe that the rooks/castles have artillery, which must have been a handy thing to whip around the board in a hurry. Presumably you could stop your clock while the guns were limbering up. Are the pawns expected to clean up after the knights, I wonder.]
Reluctantly, I must add a couple more photos:
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| And they did make their moves by telephone! Also megaphone, as you see. That may be Romanovsky on the right. Right background is the Alexander I monument. |
Here's a more recent bash at the same idea:
Featherstonia: ACW Rules
Once again with sincere thanks to Albannach, today we have Donald Featherstone's American Civil War Rules, as marketed by Wargamer's Newsletter, back when real men carried roundshot bouncesticks.
We're going to slow down the publication rate now - this just to whet the appetite and get things started! Many thanks, Iain - Nobel Prize nomination is being worked on.
***** Late Edit *****
At the end of these rules Don makes reference to the morale effect of having a Fife & Drum band handy on the table (Airfix, converted), to cheer up the troops. This is interesting - you don't suppose Don happened to have such a band available, do you? To set the mood appropriately, here's some Fife & Drum music from the ACW [Google kindly suggested I was looking for Drum & Bass].
I'm interested in this aspect of wargaming - I have been known to discomfit visiting players by subjecting them to my mp3 collection of Napoleonic marches and fanfares during games. While I'm on this digression, I keep meaning to get more seriously involved in putting together companion collections for other nations. I think the Austrian and Prussian material is probably available - British music is a problem - most collections of British Napoleonic marches are played by modern military bands, which probably means saxophones [aargh] and other unacceptable anachronisms, and usually means that you get the Dam Busters in there at some point.
If anyone has any clues on this (off-)topic, please get in touch!
*********************
We're going to slow down the publication rate now - this just to whet the appetite and get things started! Many thanks, Iain - Nobel Prize nomination is being worked on.
***** Late Edit *****
At the end of these rules Don makes reference to the morale effect of having a Fife & Drum band handy on the table (Airfix, converted), to cheer up the troops. This is interesting - you don't suppose Don happened to have such a band available, do you? To set the mood appropriately, here's some Fife & Drum music from the ACW [Google kindly suggested I was looking for Drum & Bass].
I'm interested in this aspect of wargaming - I have been known to discomfit visiting players by subjecting them to my mp3 collection of Napoleonic marches and fanfares during games. While I'm on this digression, I keep meaning to get more seriously involved in putting together companion collections for other nations. I think the Austrian and Prussian material is probably available - British music is a problem - most collections of British Napoleonic marches are played by modern military bands, which probably means saxophones [aargh] and other unacceptable anachronisms, and usually means that you get the Dam Busters in there at some point.
If anyone has any clues on this (off-)topic, please get in touch!
*********************
Sunday, 12 July 2020
Featherstonia: An Occasional New Series?
I was very pleased with the reaction to the posting of the programme for the 1965 Military Festival at the Duke of York's HQ. As a result of this, Iain (The Mighty Albannach, no less) has offered to make some more of his personal collection of old documents available for sharing in this way, which is not only very generous, but also suits me very well for a number of reasons, since my painting efforts have stalled for the moment, and actual wargames are likely to be few and far between for a while. Thus I am delighted to take him up on his kind offer.
We'll see how this goes, but he has a good collection of wargames rules (by a number of authors) and of historical and wargaming notes, all of which were available as "handbooks" and could be ordered through Donald Featherstone's Wargamer's Newsletter back in the day. It is possible that some of this material has been collected into more modern publications, but at least you can be confident that the original documents posted here will have been proof-read at some time, which is not always the case elsewhere.
First off, then - appropriately enough - is DFF's very own Rules for Napoleonic Wargames. I believe the rules employed at the 1965 Waterloo game were a cut-down version of these. Please enjoy them, and please treat them with the respect they (and Albannach, and I!) are due. Potentially, there are some real goodies in the pipeline!
Thanks again, Iain!
We'll see how this goes, but he has a good collection of wargames rules (by a number of authors) and of historical and wargaming notes, all of which were available as "handbooks" and could be ordered through Donald Featherstone's Wargamer's Newsletter back in the day. It is possible that some of this material has been collected into more modern publications, but at least you can be confident that the original documents posted here will have been proof-read at some time, which is not always the case elsewhere.
First off, then - appropriately enough - is DFF's very own Rules for Napoleonic Wargames. I believe the rules employed at the 1965 Waterloo game were a cut-down version of these. Please enjoy them, and please treat them with the respect they (and Albannach, and I!) are due. Potentially, there are some real goodies in the pipeline!
Thanks again, Iain!
Thursday, 9 July 2020
Zoom: Battle of Kluis (Vorpommern), 12th Sept 1808
There was a remote wargame hosted here today - a special treat for anyone who likes alternative history...
Outline scenario: The skeleton of this has some bits of actual
history in it, if you look for them. Following the French Victory at Vimeiro, and the [much misunderstood] Convention of Cintra, by the terms of which the British Army was evacuated from the
Peninsula, attention turns away from Spain for the moment.
There
is already a British force in the Baltic, commanded by Sir John Moore
and Lord Edward Paget. The original intention was a collaboration with
the Swedes to recapture Vorpommern, until recently Swedish Pommerania (next
to Mecklenburg), on the Baltic coast. [After the French captured
Stralsund in 1807, Vorpommern, the former Swedish Pommerania, has now joined the
Confederation of the Rhine, as the new-fangled Duchy of Stralsund-Rügen.]
The original Allied plan was for a joint Anglo-Swedish invasion of the (large)
island of Rügen. Planning for the joint invasion did not work out - the
Swedish King, Gustav IV Adolf, was obsessed with the idea of using the
combined force to capture Finland from the Russians instead.
The
British are now going ahead with the Rügen invasion without Swedish
support. Moore has under his command British and KGL troops - approx 25
units and Leaders. His army includes a rocket battery, which was used
with some success at Copenhagen the previous year.
Word
of the British plans has, unfortunately, appeared in The Times, and
Bernadotte, whose VIII Corps are based in the Hamburg area (having
recently been involved at Kolberg and the siege of Stralsund), has been
ordered to send a force to intercept the invaders. This army, commanded by Marshal Brune, comprises
French and Confederation troops, with a contingent from the Marquis de
Romana's Spanish force, also based at Hamburg. Overall, the
French army is very slightly larger than the British - the Spanish and
Confederation troops are not wonderful, however.
This is an encounter, in open country; the armies will bump into each
other on the moors near the village of Kluis. Moore is hurrying across
the island to take station opposite Stralsund, to
co-ordinate with the Royal Navy, who will bombard the port. The British
are not expecting to meet any French force so soon, and the French have
little idea of the nature of the invading force.
The
only reason you've never heard of this little campaign is the usual one
- Napoleon wasn't there, and therefore nobody is interested.
Spoiler: the British/KGL force won fairly decisively, though there was heavy fighting on the British left and in the centre. A narrative of some sort should emerge from the pictures...
| Initial set-up, with the British/KGL forces on the left, French Allies on the right |
| British left, with the KGL boys at the far end |
| Same moment, from the French left - Kluis on the far side of the field, Pansewitz in the foreground |
| Inevitably, the light cavalry of the Duchy got twitchy as the day progressed - Brigadier-General Leberknödel in command... |
| ...and had a bash at the British cavalry opposite... |
| ...this produced a series of lively fights, with a lot of to-and-fro, but the cavalry largely cancelled each other out |
| General view from the French right, as Brune puts together his main attack |
| British infantry (all right - with anachronistic uniforms) in the village of Kluis. They gave the place a very nice write-up on TripAdvisor. |
| The big French attack was suddenly falling back - the big line more or less disappeared... |
| By this stage there is a big hole in the middle of the field |
| The British have plenty of troops left - one of the KGL light battalions has been pulled back out of the firing line, with a lot of white loss counters |
| On the British right, the troops are still watching each other very carefully |
| The action has slackened elsewhere as the French fall back |
| Another look at the Nature Park - the Spaniards had no losses; in fact they were not involved at all, though their field battery scored a couple of long range hits |
| The victory requirement was 8 Victory Points - the British had won 9-4 |
| The British left flank - still holding the ridge next to the pond, as Brune organises his retreat |
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