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  • Medal Singles Pre 1914

  • Waterloo – 3rd Battalion Grenadier Guards.

Waterloo – 3rd Battalion Grenadier Guards.

$37.41 $45.64
Description Waterloo – 3rd Battalion Grenadier Guards. Waterloo, John Mitchell. 3rd Batt. Grenad. Guards. (NOTE: The BA of Batt has been re-engraved  over the top of the original naming, the rest of the naming is perfectly correct as issued) John Mitchell was from Lancaster, born about 1789. Served 25th November 1803 to 24th August 1821 3rd Battalion Grenadier Guards: In 1809, the battalion joined the ill-fated Walcheren Expedition in the Netherlands. The 3rd Battalion was soon reconstituted and sent back to the Peninsula. They saw significant action at the Battle of Barrosa in 1811, where their steadfastness under fire earned them high praise.  Under the Duke of Wellington, the battalion became a reliable instrument of maneuver and grit. They fought through the Pyrenees and into southern France, participating in the Siege of San Sebastián and the Battle of the Nive. Waterloo: He would  have fought at Quatre Bras on 16 June, when the 3rd Battalion, part of Maitland’s 1st Guards Brigade, expelled the French from Bossu Wood and tipped the scales in Wellington’s favour. The Guards arrived at a critical time: Halkett’s 5th Brigade had just been caught in line by Kellerman’s Cuirassiers, the 69th Foot losing their King’s Colour. Halkett’s Brigade fled for the safety of Bossu Wood, Jérôme’s Division in hot pursuit. The Guards counter-attacked and retook the wood with heavy loss, stalling the French advance.  At the battle of Waterloo on 18 June, the 2nd and 3rd Battalions of the 1st Foot Guards were deployed on the reverse slope of the Mont St. Jean ridge, forming the centre-right of Wellington’s line. Meanwhile their Light Companies, under Lord Saltoun, held the orchard adjacent to Hougoumont farm and were pivotal to its defence. At 4 p.m. the 2nd and 3rd Battalions formed square to repel a succession of charges by elite French cavalry regiments, notably the Red (Dutch) Lancers of the Imperial Guard. The 1st Foot Guards faced their greatest challenge at 8 p.m., when Napoleon committed his formidable Imperial Guard Infantry in a last bid for victory. The Imperial Guard had never been beaten before: when the French army saw their famous bearskins, they felt sure that Wellington’s line would collapse.  As the Imperial Guard ascended the ridge, Wellington gave Maitland the famous order “Now Maitland, now’s your time!”, whereupon both battalions of the 1st Foot Guards sprang up from their prone positions and delivered a series of devastating volleys. The Imperial Guard faltered for the first time in its proud history. Its battalions attempted to form line in order to return fire (for this purpose they had advanced in square, not column as widely believed), but a perfectly-timed flanking movement by the British 52nd (Oxfordshire) Light Infantry broke their formation. A battery of Dutch Foot Artillery meanwhile poured canister into the wavering mass. The order “La Garde recule!” went round, followed by cries of “sauve qui peut!” as the French Army’s morale collapsed. The Allied pursuit did not stop until Paris was reached.  For their part in defeating the Imperial Guard, the 1st Foot Guards were awarded the title ‘Grenadier Guards’ by the Prince Regent. As such they are the only British Regiment whose name derives from a feat achieved in battle. After Waterloo the 1st Foot Guards became entirely Grenadiers, wearing bearskins with distinctive white plumes. It is a myth, however, that they defeated the Grenadiers of the Imperial Guard, for Napoleon had sent his elite Grenadiers to defend Plancenoit against the Prussians. Instead the 1st Foot Guards fought the Imperial Guard Chasseurs, who also wore bearskins. In all the smoke and confusion, the Chasseurs were mistaken for Grenadiers. Condition – GVF, note replacement ring and suspension, and engraving over the BA of Batt.
Medal Singles Pre 1914

Medal Singles Pre 1914

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