An after action report for
the Campaign of Nations.
General Barclay de Tolly had miscalculated and now had to force march as much of his army as possible to catch up with and, if possible, force into battle the retreating French before they crossed the Elbe River at Meissen.
|
Charpentier
had to deploy his 36th Division so as to delay the pursuing force
enough yet still allow some of his men to escape north. |
Only the vanguard of de Tolly's force was actually able to catch up with a trailing division of French, the 36th under Charpentier.
|
the field of battle as seen from the west (green enhanced areas are woods) |
|
Lissanevitch had Uhlans riding in support of de Tolly's pursuit force |
|
Wittgenstein was tasked with cutting off the French and forcing them to stand long enough for the pursuit force of infantry to come into battle |
|
a sense of scale for the miniatures, with a man's hand deploying them |
|
the French columns looking from the head back south towards the line of Russians with de Tolly |
|
same view looking south, lower to the ground ... that tiny line in the distance are the Russians |
|
Pahlen III and his Hussars were supporting Wittgenstein, tasked with the hard duty of stopping the French retreat and forcing them to stand and fight |
|
looking northward into the columns of Simmer's brigade |
|
de Tolly's view looking north ... the tiny white spots are the French infantry battalion flags |
|
also coming onto the field were the leading elements of Second Reserve Corps under Prince Wurttemberg, seen here with the artillery of the Corps which, being horse-drawn, had managed to force-march at a better pace than the plodding Russian foot battalions, some two hours march behind ... |
The stage was set for a pursuit intercept battle, the Russians needed to break six French units, early on so did the French have to break six Russian units, though over time more would be coming; turn 4 eight would be needed, turn 8, 11 breaks would have to happen before the Russians would call off the battle; and by turn 18, 13 squadrons or battalions would have to be broken.
|
Wittgenstein had a large HQ escort, containing mostly Cossacks and a vital force of Russian Dragoons |
|
early French action was to range artillery (here with sappers forming a guard) |
|
by turn three most of the active forces were 'visible' seen here with labels to identify units |
|
de Tolly also had Cossacks for his HQ and he released them early to keep the pressure on the retreating French, hoping to force them into squares so as to have them halted |
|
in a great photo, the Hussars of Schufanov's brigade ride hard to get in front of the French |
|
desperate to get the French halted, Wittgenstein sent off all of his HQ escort cavalry |
|
the early battle was all about maneuver |
|
massive divisions of horse were bearing down on the infantry only 36th Division |
Maneuvers were quick on the Allied part, for if they were to ever intercept the French then they must get ahead of the moving columns of foot.
|
pursuing Russian artillery was starting to get shots on the fleeing French columns |
|
Russian Uhlans (on the right) are catching up with the French of Meunier's brigade |
|
these Uhlans would sweep-in close enough to force the French into squares ... which were then blasted by the attached horse battery |
|
Meunier had to choose a battalion to halt, form square and face off the pursuit force while pressing all the other battalions north |
|
here the Uhlans can be seen from Charpentier's HQ position |
|
meanwhile Wittgenstien's HQ escort had combined with Rudinger's brigade of Hussars |
|
the HQ escort included a force of Dragoons, the most powerful unit in this battle |
Maneuvers continued, with the French sacrificing a battalion to busy the Uhlans and also setting up a full foot battery with sappers as guards to face off against the wall of horseflesh appearing in the west.
|
looking south from the French leading columns the huge wall of horsemen can be seen on the right of this image, along with the de Tolly pursuit force in the distance center top |
|
other sappers and the rest of the Divisional artillery were busy moving north |
|
the first big cavalry clash as a Hussar squadron hits a fresh French Leger square, the results were not good for the Rudinger Hussars |
|
getting out to maximum range on his command, Count Wittgenstein decided to move closer to the battlefront |
|
cossacks press home on a square defending artillery, while behind the square French columns are marching to safety |
|
closer view, this time showing the Uhlans also engaging the French on the rear quarter |
|
Prussians arrived, on the flank of Wittgenstein, though behind the main French positions now... |
|
the scale of the tabletop comes into view as you see the players standing on the field (or kneeling - during deployment and movement) |
|
Commander of the Prussian 12 Brigade (though more of a division in strength) |
|
all Russian artillery continued to roll forward in preparation to catch some French in square, in range if possible |
|
finally hits were taking down units, the Allies had lost three this turn, here the Prussians are running in columns to keep up with the fleeing French |
|
the Colonel in change of Wittgenstein's HQ escort, just before a critical moment ... |
|
both the escort commander and the staff of Wittgenstein's HQ were aghast as a French infantry battalion in column crashed though both of their positions. The colonel was killed and Wittgenstein was mortally wounded ... |
|
the die roll for survival of the Russian command were going terrible this day! |
|
now retreated further west (past where they started) the command of the flank force would be in disarray for some time |
|
meanwhile French squares continued to stave off the horse assaults, though now they would be stationary large targets for Russian batteries |
|
Prussians in column continue to march |
|
though taking losses, de Tolly knew that the imminent arrival of a brigade of Russian foot would soon stave off any chance of defeat |
|
at the north end of the battlefield the Schufanov brigade of Hussars were finally ahead of the French, ready to attack |
|
the former French battery, now only the wounded and disordered sappers remained, assaulted on three sides by Cossacks, Prussians and the powerful Russian Dragoons |
|
arriving were the leading formations of Second Reserve Corps, Ivanov's brigade |
|
|
A turn of artillery fire and another charge of cavalry saw off the battalions covering the French retreat, while the head of the column was now having to halt and form squares, still though a force of infantry were in columns running for the escape behind the cover of these squares ...
|
a lone French square of Meunier's brigade, facing down an army ... |
|
command was becoming almost impossible for the battered 36th Division, though Meunier managed to keep his brigade from fleeing ... |
|
now Simmer's brigade was coming under fire from the flank force of Hussars ... battle was everywhere one looked on the French lines |
|
Prussians ready to fire ... |
|
Prussian Horse artillery setting up |
|
the ascendant Russian Dragoons had killed 1/2 of a French foot battery, and two battalions of French foot |
|
still the french square held on in the rear |
|
watching 6 times their numbers marching forward |
|
with their officers at the head ... a huge Russian brigade advances |
|
the cost of forcing the squares was high, as this was all that remains of Rudinger's Hussars |
|
a wider view of the pursuit and the fourth assault by the Russian Dragoons onto a French square |
|
Russian artillery were limbered up again as the pursuit resumed |
|
de Tolly was pleased with the progress, though if the French could just be halted in the north, then a complete rout could be effected |
Grim times for Charpentier, now faced with having to surrender 1/2 of his division just to have the hope of escape. More Russian infantry could be seen coming in from the south, if 36th Division were to have any survivors then they would have to break out to the north.
|
overview of the situation, Ivanov's brigade was part of Schachafskoy's command |
|
that Russian brigade was massive - you can see the orange cone - the finish line for the French in the distance |
|
one last attempt made to close the escape route |
|
French foot and guns fleeing north, covered by trailing skirmishers |
|
Urged on by Pahlen III himself, Schufanov threw his tired Hussars into one more charge |
|
the mass of Russian foot now crossing where the French had started the battle |
|
still with more ground to cover before the full strength of Russian arms could be brought to bear |
|
a last line of French stands and does not break against the furious cavalry charge |
|
the Hussars were thrown back with losses, into the view of a half-battery of cannon ... |
|
again the horsemen charged - again they were thrown back - here Russian and Prussian horse combine on a steady French line - no attempt at square, just a brutal bayonet battle |
|
further south, a French square stands as it is attacked by Cossacks and Uhlans on all four sides! |
Some of the French had now escaped north, though not enough to fill a brigade, still more units had a chance to escape, so Charpentier stayed to urge them on ...
|
Ivanov's brigade surged forward, past the start point of the cavalry |
|
now conscript battalions were having to hold the line |
|
one last artillery supported square, would it hold on long enough to get the others out? |
|
Barclay de Tolly, informed that the French had scattered in the north, as the sixth kill was registered ... the battle was over |
|
Rudinger's Hussars had finally rallied, after nearly 8 turns in confusion |
|
Russian horse batteries had delivered the final kill |
|
the Horse batteries did great work in 'flying' to keep up with the fleeing French |
|
the last square did not hold, as it took too many casualties from point blank artillery fire |
|
another French square was overrun by Russians and the attached half-battery was captured |
|
utterly exhausted the French in the last square simply lay down arms and surrendered to Ivanov's equally tired brigade |
The gamble to catch the retreating French had not resulted in a major field battle ... though it did shatter the 36th Division; in the process of doing that the Russians lost a wing commander, his HQ escort and a Hussar Division and the remaining Russian foot troops would be trailing in for days after the scattering effects of the forced march at nearly 4x normal march speed.
|
de Tolly's main body was still in tact with an extra few French guns captured |
|
the French 36th Division was no more |
|
Prussians were just tired, no appreciable losses |
|
the command of Wittgenstein was no more and Pahlen III's Hussars would be broken up |
Game was played out using SHAKO (version 1 with mod's) rules, using double scale distances, for all things like movement, shooting, etc.
5 comments:
Nice report and splendid sunny photos!
Who needs big tables when you can play outside? Great stuff!
I love your Garden Wars! A great and espirited game
Thanks for sharing
Regards
Rafa
Thank you Gents,
Yes it was a great sunny day, with a family that came to visit and another good friend got out the Prussians to march them in pursuit.
The scale of the battle was the correct one from the three engagements active in the Campaign of Nations turn right now, though I suspect that the players would have preferred a more classic stand and fight, the puzzle of both having to stop the fleeing French and manage the pursuing Russians was unusual for most players.
I am continuing to like the look of the miniatures in the garden and how much I learn from the wider deployment and both the need for keeping to plan and when to make changes.
The BIG table of the yard permits so much more to happen.
Great looking game and report David. It was a real 'turkey shoot' wasn't it?
Post a Comment