Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image

A PARALLEL IN HISTORY

CRAUFURD’S LIGHT DIVISION GENERAL FREYBEBG’S TRIBUTE TO NEW ZEALANDERS "The 2nd N.Z.E.F. is second to none, and when the history of the period comes 1 to be written, even if the division were not to fight again, we will, 1 feel, be referred to in a hundred years' time in much the same way. as Craufurd’s Light Division in the Peninsular War,” said Lieutenant-General Sir Bernard Freyberg, V.C., at the civic welcome extended to hl|n at Wellington. “Looking back, it seems to me as if the division was always astride some vital place at a vital time—in Crete, which has homes so much fruit at such a cost, in the Libyan desert, the dash back from Syria to stop Rommel's headlong advance on Alexandria, the grim battles for the Ruweisat ridge, and the final assault on the Mareth Line, when the Germans were hurled back in disorder. All this has been achieved by the division, and I feel that, just as Mr Churchill’s words have inspired the United Nations, so the New Zealanders by their deeds have provided a counterpart.”

General Robert Craufurd (1764-1812). third son of a Scottish baronet, has been described as unquestionably the finest commander of light troops to serve in the Peninsular War. In October, .1807, he sailed from Britain for the Peninsula, in command of fhe light brigade of the corps which had been ordered to go to the assistance of Sir John Moore. This corps joined Moore’s army at Mayorga on December 20, and Craufurd’s brigade was perpetually engaged. Craufurd later returned to England, but in 1809 he was again ordered to the Peninsula, to take command of the light brigade, consisting of the 43rd, 52nd, and one battalion of the 95th Regiment. When on his way to join Sir Arthur Wellesley (later created Duke of Wellington) he met with stragglers who reported that a great battle had been fought, and that the general had been killed. Craufurd at once determined to make a forced march to live front and reached the army on the day after the battle of Talavera, after marching 62 miles in 26 hours in heavy fighting order, a feat then unparalleled in modem warfare. From this time, says the Dictionary of National Biography, the career of the light brigade and its leader was one of exceptional brilliance; Craufurd was an unequalled commander of light troops, his officers and men believed in him and trusted him implicitly, and he remained continually in advance of the allied army in the very faco-of the overpowering number of the rrench.

During the retreat from Torres Vedras the light division which Craufurd by this time commanded, covered the retreating army, a task of much difficulty, and at Busaco it drove back and charged down the corps of Ney, which had formed a lodgment upon the English line of heights. In the battle of Fuentes de Onoro on May 5. 1811, the light division played a distinguished part and covered the extraordinary change of position which Lord Wellington found it necessary to make in the very face of the enemy. The division remained under the command of Craufurd until the siege of Ciiidad Rodrigo was formed in January, 1812. When the breaches were declared open, the light division was directed on January 19 to attack the smaller breach. Craufurd led on the stormers. and at the very beginning of the assault he was shot through the body. He lingered in great agony until January 24. when he died, and was buried in the breach itself.

This article text was automatically generated and may include errors. View the full page to see article in its original form.
Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/CHP19430628.2.46

Bibliographic details

Press, Volume LXXIX, Issue 23985, 28 June 1943, Page 4

Word Count
594

A PARALLEL IN HISTORY Press, Volume LXXIX, Issue 23985, 28 June 1943, Page 4

A PARALLEL IN HISTORY Press, Volume LXXIX, Issue 23985, 28 June 1943, Page 4