<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_III_III" id="CHAPTER_III_III">CHAPTER III.</SPAN></h2>
<h3>GREAT BRITISH VICTORY.</h3>
<p>The following despatch from the war correspondent of
the "Times" with Lord Byfield was received on the morning
of October 5, but was not published in that journal till
some days later, owing to the German censorship, which
necessitated its being kept secret:—</p>
<div class="right">
"<span class="smcap">Willesden</span>, <i>October</i> 4 (Evening).</div>
<p>"After a bloody but successful combat lasting from
early dawn till late in the afternoon, the country to the
immediate west of the metropolis has been swept clear
of the hated invaders, and the masses of the 'League
of Defenders' can be poured into the West of London
without let or hindrance. In the desperate street fighting
which is now going on they will be much more formidable
than they were ever likely to be in the open<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[251]</SPAN></span>
field, where they were absolutely incapable of manœuvring.
As for the Saxons—what is left of them—and Frölich's
Cavalry Division, with whom we have been engaged all
day, they have now fallen back on Harrow and Hendon,
it is said; but it is currently reported that a constant
movement towards the high ground near Hampstead
is going on. These rumours come by way of London,
since the enemy's enormous force of cavalry is still strong
enough to prevent us getting any first-hand intelligence of
his movements.</p>
<p>"As has been previously reported, the XIIth Saxon
Corps, under the command of Prince Henry of Würtemberg,
had taken up a position intended to cover
the metropolis from the hordes of 'Defenders' which,
supported by a small leaven of Regulars, with a proportion
of cavalry and guns, were known to be slowly
rolling up from the west and south. Their front, facing
west, extended from Staines on the south, to Pinner on
the north, passing through Stanwell, West Drayton, and
Uxbridge. In addition they had a strong reserve in
the neighbourhood of Hounslow, whose business it was
to cover their left flank by keeping watch along the
line of the Thames. They had destroyed all bridges
over the river between Staines and Hammersmith. Putney
Bridge, however, was still intact, as all attacks on it
had been repulsed by the British holding it on the south
side. Such was the general state of affairs when Lord
Byfield, who had established his headquarters at Windsor,
formed his plan of attack.</p>
<p>"As far as I have been able to ascertain, its general
idea was to hold the Saxons to their position by the
threat of 300,000 Defenders that were assembled and
were continually increasing along a roughly parallel
line to that occupied by the enemy at about ten miles'
distance from it, while he attacked their left flank with
what Regular and Militia regiments he could rapidly
get together near Esher and Kingston. By this time the
southern lines in the neighbourhood of London were all
in working order, the damage that had been done here
and there by small parties of the enemy who had made
raids across the river having been repaired. It was,
therefore, not a very difficult matter to assemble troops
from Windsor and various points on the South of London
at very short notice.</p>
<p>"General Bamford, to whom had been entrusted the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[252]</SPAN></span>
defence of South London, and who had established
his headquarters at the Crystal Palace, also contributed
every man he could spare from the remnant of the
Regular troops under his command.</p>
<p>"It was considered quite safe now that the Germans
in the City were so hardly pressed to leave the defence
of the Thames bridges to the masses of Irregulars who
had all along formed the bulk of their defenders. The
risk that Prince Henry of Würtemberg would take the
bull by the horns, and by a sudden forward move
attack and scatter the inert and invertebrate mass of
'Defenders' who were in his immediate front had, of
course, to be taken; but it was considered that in the
present state of affairs in London he would hardly dare
to increase the distance between the Saxon Corps and
the rest of the German Army. Events proved the correctness
of this surmise; but owing to unforeseen circumstances,
the course of the battle was somewhat different
from that which had been anticipated.</p>
<p>"Despite the vigilance of the German spies our plans
were kept secret till the very end, and it is believed
that the great convergence of Regular troops that began
as soon as it was dark from Windsor and from along the
line occupied by the Army of the League on the west,
right round to Greenwich on the east, went on without
any news of the movement being carried to the enemy.</p>
<p>"Before dawn this morning every unit was in the
position to which it had been previously detailed, and,
everything being in readiness, the Royal Engineers began
to throw a pontoon bridge over the Thames at the point
where it makes a bend to the south just above the site
of Walton Bridge. The enemy's patrols and pickets
in the immediate neighbourhood at once opened a heavy
fire on the workers, but it was beaten down by that
which was poured upon them from the houses in Walton-on-Thames,
which had been quietly occupied during the
night. The enemy in vain tried to reinforce them, but
in order to do this their troops had to advance into a
narrow peninsula which was swept by a cross-fire of
shells from batteries which had been placed in position
on the south side of the river for this very purpose.</p>
<p>"By seven o'clock the bridge was completed, and the
troops were beginning to cross over covered by the fire
of the artillery and by an advance guard which had
been pushed over in boats. Simultaneously very much<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[253]</SPAN></span>
the same thing had been going on at Long Ditton, and
fierce fighting was going on in the avenues and gardens
round Hampton Court. Success here, too, attended the
British arms. As a matter of fact, a determined attempt
to cross the river in force had not at all been anticipated
by the Germans. They had not credited their opponents
with the power of so rapidly assembling an army and
assuming an effective and vigorous offensive so soon
after their terrible series of disasters.</p>
<p>"What they had probably looked for was an attempt to
overwhelm them by sheer force of numbers. They
doubtless calculated that Lord Byfield would stiffen his
flabby masses of 'Defenders' with what trained troops
he could muster, and endeavour to attack their lines
along their whole length, overlapping them on the flank.</p>
<p>"They realised that to do this he would have to sacrifice
his men in thousands upon thousands, but they knew
that to do so would be his only possible chance of success
in this eventuality, since the bulk of his men could neither
manœuvre nor deploy. Still they reckoned that in the
desperate situation of the British, he would make up his
mind to do this.</p>
<p>"On their part, although they fully realised the possibility
of being overwhelmed by such tactics, they felt
pretty confident that, posted as they were behind a perfect
network of small rivers and streams which ran
down to join the Thames, they would at least succeed
in beating off the attack with heavy loss, and stood no
bad chance of turning the repulse into a rout by skilful
use of Frölich's Cavalry Division, which would be irresistible
when attacking totally untrained troops after
they had been shattered and disorganised by artillery
fire. This, at least, is the view of those experts with
whom I have spoken.</p>
<p>"What, perhaps, tended rather to confirm them in
their theories as to the action of the British was the
rifle firing that went on along the whole of their front
all night through. The officers in charge of the various
units which conglomerated together formed the forces
facing the Saxons, had picked out the few men under
their command who really had some little idea of using
a rifle, and, supplied with plenty of ammunition, had
sent them forward in numerous small parties with general
orders to approach as near the enemy's picket line as
possible, and as soon as fired on to lie down and open fire<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[254]</SPAN></span>
in return. So a species of sniping engagement went
on from dark to dawn. Several parties got captured or
cut up by the German outlying troops and many others
got shot by neighbouring parties of snipers. But, although
they did not in all probability do the enemy much damage,
yet they kept them on the alert all night, and led them
to expect an attack in the morning. One way and
another luck was entirely on the side of the patriots that
morning.</p>
<p>"When daylight came the British massed to the westward
of Staines had such a threatening appearance
from their immense numbers, and their fire from their
batteries of heavy guns and howitzers on the south
side of the river, which took the German left flank in,
was so heavy that Prince Henry, who was there in
person, judged an attack to be imminent, and would
not spare a man to reinforce his troops at Shepperton
and Halliford, who were, numerically, totally inadequate
to resist the advance of the British once they got across
the river.</p>
<p>"He turned a deaf ear to the most imploring requests
for assistance, but ordered the officer in command at
Hounslow to move down at once and drive the British
into the river. So it has been reported by our prisoners.
Unluckily for him this officer had his hands quite full
enough at this time; for the British, who had crossed
at Long Ditton, had now made themselves masters of
everything east of the Thames Valley branch of the
London and South-Western Railway, were being continually
reinforced, and were fast pushing their right
along the western bank of the river.</p>
<p>"Their left was reported to be at Kempton Park, where
they joined hands with those who had effected a crossing
near Walton-on-Thames. More bridges were being built
at Platt's Eyot, Tagg's Eyot, and Sunbury Lock, while
boats and wherries in shoals appeared from all creeks
and backwaters and hiding-places as soon as both banks
were in the hands of the British.</p>
<p>"Regulars, Militia, and, lastly, Volunteers, were now
pouring across in thousands. Forward was still the word.
About noon a strong force of Saxons was reported to be
retreating along the road from Staines to Brentford.
They had guns with them, which engaged the field batteries
which were at once pushed forward by the British to
attack them. These troops, eventually joining hands<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[255]</SPAN></span>
with those at Hounslow, opposed a more determined
resistance to our advance than we had hitherto encountered.</p>
<p>"According to what we learned subsequently from
prisoners and others, they were commanded by Prince
Henry of Würtemberg in person. He had quitted his
position at Staines, leaving only a single battalion and
a few guns as a rearguard to oppose the masses of the
'Defenders' who threatened him in that direction, and
had placed his troops in the best position he could to
cover the retreat of the rest of his corps from the line
they had been occupying. He had, it would appear,
soon after the fighting began, received the most urgent
orders from Von Kronhelm to fall back on London and
assist him in the street fighting that had now been
going on without intermission for the best part of two
days. Von Kronhelm probably thought that he would
be able to draw off some of his numerous foes to the
westward. But the message was received too late.
Prince Henry did his best to obey it, but by this time
the very existence of the XIIth Corps was at stake on
account of the totally unexpected attack on his left rear
by the British regular troops.</p>
<p>"He opposed such a stout resistance with the troops
under his immediate command that he brought the
British advance to a temporary standstill, while in his
rear every road leading Londonward was crowded with
the rest of his army as they fell back from West Drayton,
Uxbridge, Ruislip and Pinner. Had they been facing
trained soldiers they would have found it most difficult,
if not impossible, to do this; but as it was the undisciplined
and untrained masses of the League of
Defenders lost a long time in advancing, and still longer in
getting over a series of streams and dykes that lay between
them and the abandoned Saxon position.</p>
<p>"They lost heavily, too, from the fire of the small rearguards
that had been left at the most likely crossing-places.
The Saxons were therefore able to get quite
well away from them, and when some attempt was being
made to form up the thousands of men who presently
found themselves congregated on the heath east of
Uxbridge, before advancing farther, a whole brigade of
Frölich's heavy cavalry suddenly swept down upon them
from behind Ickenham village. The <i>débâcle</i> that followed
was frightful. The unwieldy mass of 'Leaguers'<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[256]</SPAN></span>
swayed this way and that for a moment in the panic
occasioned by the sudden apparition of the serried
masses of charging cavalry that were rushing down on
them with a thunder of hoofs that shook the earth. A
few scattered shots were fired, without any perceptible
effect, and before they could either form up or fly the
German Reiters were upon them. It was a perfect
massacre. The 'Leaguers' could oppose no resistance
whatever. They were ridden down and slaughtered with
no more difficulty than if they had been a flock of
sheep. Swinging their long, straight swords, the cavalrymen
cut them down in hundreds and drove thousands
into the river. The 'Defenders' were absolutely pulverised
and fled westwards in a huge scattered crowd.
But if the Germans had the satisfaction of scoring a
local victory in this quarter, things were by no means
rosy for them elsewhere. Prince Henry, by desperate
efforts, contrived to hold on long enough in his covering
position to enable the Saxons from the central portion
of his abandoned line to pass through Hounslow and
move along the London road, through Brentford.</p>
<p>"Here disaster befell them. A battery of 4.7 guns was
suddenly unmasked on Richmond Hill, and, firing at a
range of 5,000 yards, played havoc with the marching
column. The head of it also suffered severe loss from
riflemen concealed in Kew Gardens, and the whole force
had to extend and fall back for some distance in a
northerly direction. Near Ealing they met the Uxbridge
brigade, and a certain delay and confusion occurred.
However, trained soldiers such as these are not difficult
to reorganise, and while the latter continued its march
along the main road the remainder moved in several
small parallel columns through Acton and Turnham
Green. Before another half-hour had elapsed there came
a sound of firing from the advanced guard. Orders to
halt followed, then orders to send forward reinforcements.</p>
<p>"During all this time the rattle of rifle fire waxed
heavier and heavier. It soon became apparent that
every road and street leading into London was barricaded
and that the houses on either side were crammed
with riflemen. Before any set plan of action could be
determined on, the retiring Saxons found themselves
committed to a very nasty bout of street fighting. Their
guns were almost useless, since they could not be placed<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[257]</SPAN></span>
in positions from which they could fire on the barricades
except so close as to be under effective rifle fire.
They made several desperate assaults, most of which
were repulsed. In Goldhawk Road a Jäegar battalion
contrived to rush a big rampart of paving-stones which
had been improvised by the British; but, once over,
they were decimated by the fire from the houses on
either side of the street. Big high explosive shells from
Richmond Hill, too, began to drop among the Saxons.
Though the range was long, the gunners were evidently
well informed of the whereabouts of the Saxon troops
and made wonderfully lucky shooting.</p>
<p>"For some time the distant rumble of the firing to
the south-west had been growing more distinct in their
ears, and about four o'clock it suddenly broke out comparatively
near by. Then came an order from Prince
Henry to fall back on Ealing at once. What had happened?
It will not take long to relate this. Prince
Henry's covering position had lain roughly between East
Bedfont and Hounslow, facing south-east. He had contrived
to hold on to the latter place long enough to allow
his right to pivot on it and fall back to Cranford
Bridge. Here they were, to a certain extent, relieved
from the close pressure they had been subjected to by
the constantly advancing British troops, by the able and
determined action of Frölich's Cavalry Brigade.</p>
<p>"But in the meantime his enemies on the left, constantly
reinforced from across the river—while never
desisting from their so far unsuccessful attack on Hounslow—worked
round through Twickenham and Isleworth
till they began to menace his rear. He must abandon
Hounslow, or be cut off. With consummate generalship
he withdrew his left along the line of the Metropolitan
and District Railway, and sent word to the troops on
his right to retire and take up a second position at Southall
Green. Unluckily for him, there was a delay in transmission,
resulting in a considerable number of these
troops being cut off and captured. Frölich's cavalry
were unable to aid them at this juncture, having their
attention drawn away by the masses of 'Leaguers' who
had managed to get over the Colne and were congregating
near Harmondsworth.</p>
<p>"They cut these up and dispersed them, but afterwards
found that they were separated from the Saxons by a
strong force of British regular troops who occupied<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[258]</SPAN></span>
Harlington and opened a fire on the Reiters that emptied
numerous saddles. They, therefore, made off to the
northward. From this forward nothing could check the
steady advance of the English, though fierce fighting
went on till dark all through Hanwell, Ealing, Perivale,
and Wembley, the Saxons struggling gamely to the last,
but getting more and more disorganised. Had it not
been for Frölich's division on their right they would have
been surrounded. As it was, they must have lost half
their strength in casualties and prisoners.</p>
<p>"At dark, however, Lord Byfield ordered a general
halt of his tired though triumphant troops, and bivouacked
and billeted them along a line reaching from Willesden on
the right through Wembley to Greenford. He established
his headquarters at Wembley.</p>
<p>"I have heard some critics say that he ought to have
pushed on his freshest troops towards Hendon to prevent
the remnant of our opponents from re-entering
London; but others, with reason, urge that he is right
to let them into the metropolis, which they will now
find to be merely a trap."</p>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<p>Extracts from the diary of General Von Kleppen,
Commander of the IVth German Army Corps, occupying
London:—</p>
<div class="right">
"<span class="smcap">Dorchester House, Park Lane</span>, <i>Oct.</i> 6.</div>
<p>"We are completely deceived. Our position, much as
we are attempting to conceal it, is a very grave one. We
believed that if we reached London the British spirit
would be broken. Yet the more drastic our rule, the
fiercer becomes the opposition. How it will end I fear
to contemplate. The British are dull and apathetic, but,
once roused, they fight like fiends.</p>
<p>"Last night we had an example of it. This League
of Defenders, which Von Kronhelm has always treated
with ridicule, is, we have discovered too late, practically
the whole of England. Von Bistram, commanding the
VIIth Corps, and Von Haeslen, of the VIIIth Corps, have
constantly been reporting its spread through Manchester,
Leeds, Bradford, Sheffield, Birmingham and the other
great towns we now occupy; but our Commander-in-Chief
has treated the matter lightly, declaring it to be a
kind of offshoot of some organisation they have in England,
called the Primrose League....</p>
<p>"Yesterday, at the Council of War, however, he was<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[259]</SPAN></span>
compelled to acknowledge his error when I handed
him a scarlet handbill calling upon the British to make
a concerted attack upon us at ten o'clock. Fortunately,
we were prepared for the assault, otherwise I verily believe
that the honours would have rested with the populace
in London. As it is, we suffered considerable reverses
in various districts, where our men were lured into
the narrow side-streets and cut up. I confess I am
greatly surprised at the valiant stand made everywhere
by the Londoners. Last night they fought to the very
end. A disaster to our arms in the Strand was followed
by a victory in Trafalgar Square, where Von Wilberg
had established defences for the purpose of preventing
the joining of the people of the East End with those
of the West...."</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
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