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A.D. 1855.1

THE ALLIES PARTIALLY SURPRISED.

Valley notified by the semaphore that he had troops in front of him, or rather that his patrols had discovered bodies of the enemy moving down into the Valley of Chouliou. Signal lights flashed from Mackenzie to Inkermann, and from Inkermann to Sebastopol. An ostentatious gathering of troops in rear of the Redan and Malakoff was discovered from the tops of our menof-war, and at the same time a suspicious movement of Russians towards Inkermann. All the commanders were warned, and orders were issued to be more than usually vigilant; General La Marmora directing his brigades to get under arms before daylight the next morning.

Prince Gortschakoff had, indeed, resolved to surprise, if he could, if not, to force, the line of the Tchernaya. His reinforcements consisted of the 4th, 5th, and 7th divisions of infantry. To these he was able to add the 17th, 12th, 6th, and 11th; of these the 11th, 12th, and 17th had long been in the Crimea, and had fought at the Alma and Inkermann; but the 4th, 5th, 6th, and 7th were fresh troops, which had arrived recently from Poland and Bessarabia. In fact, as soon as it was certain that Austria did not mean to fight, the Czar put in motion all the troops that could be spared from the Austrian frontiers. Had all these divisions been in full strength, Prince Gortschakoff could have brought into line 78,000 infantry alone. But long marches had weakened some regiments, and others had suffered great losses in the field and the trenches; and instead of 78,000, he could only dispose of 50,900 infantry. To support them he had 7,200 cavalry, chiefly regulars, and 262 guns; in all about 60,000 men.

The plan of the Russian general was to move the bulk of his force, on the night of the 15th, by the roads leading from the Mackenzie Heights into lower ground, while two divisions marched from Korales down the Valley of Chouliou, and joined the left of the main body above Tchorgoun. The right column he entrusted to General Read. It consisted of the 7th and 12th divisions, and sixty-two guns. The left was under the orders of Liprandi, and was composed of the 5th, 17th, and 6th, and some ninety cannon. The 11th and 4th were in reserve, and remained so. General Liprandi led the way. On quitting the defile he was to move to his left, and before daylight drive the Sardinian outposts from the Mamelon, occupy that hill, and also the heights above Tchorgoun and Karlovka. The object of this was to give the Russians a good site, whence they might cannonade Mount Hasfort, and cover an infantry attack on that position. While Liprandi formed on the Sardinian Mamelon, Read was to bring his two divisions into line, but out of range; hold himself prepared to storm the Fedoukine heights, but not to make that attempt until he got orders to do so from Prince Gortschakoff. Hence it is inferred that the Russian commander designed, first, to carry Mount Hasfort, by throwing his left rapidly over the river at Karlovka and below it, and then, having driven the Sardinians into the plain, and cut off the French and Turks in the Valley of Baidar and about Alsou, give the signal to Read to attack the

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Fedoukine heights in front, while the guns from Mount Hasfort took them in flank and rear. If this were the plan of the Russian general, it failed; and although he imputes the loss of victory to that failure, it was, perhaps, fortunate for him that General Read's impatience did not allow of its execution.

All night on the 15th the Russian columns were moving silently down the steep road from Mackenzie, along the wooded valley of Chouliou, spreading out over the slopes, and pushing nearer and nearer to the outposts and patrols of the allies. Each man carried four days' rations, and men were appointed to bear portable plank bridges, to facilitate the passage of the river and canal. The cavalry and artillery had with them forage for four days, and there was a good supply of wagons for knapsacks and of ambulances for the wounded, with each division. While this formidable host was approaching, the allied soldiers were asleep, and only the usual guards were under arms, and the usual patrols were moving across the front. Before daylight, however, the Sardinians got under arms; but the French do not appear to have turned out earlier than usual. Long security had bred confidence, and no doubt they relied upon their advanced posts, and not without reason. A thick fog hid everything in the valley, and hung heavily over the low meadows on both sides of the Tchernaya. Under cover of this, Prince Gortschakoff had got his troops into the positions he had designed them to occupy. Read had deployed out of cannon shot opposite the stone bridge, called the Bridge of Tracktir, or Bridge of the Inn. Liprandi had crowned the heights above Tchorgoun and Karlovka, and had placed cannon in battery, so as to sweep the rear of the Sardinian outpost on the entrenched Mamelon. Three heavy columns, supported by artillery, were silently moving upon the front of the Italians; but as yet, except in the Sardinian camp, not a soldier of the allies, save the sentries, was stirring.

But these sentries were on the alert. There was a splutter of musketry in front of the bridge-a French patrol had stumbled in the fog upon the skirmishers of Read! Then a few reports near the Sardinian outpost, followed by a quick fire of musketry. General La Marmora, with ready promptitude, sent a support across the Tchernaya to aid the riflemen on the Mamelon in delaying the advance of the enemy, while he made his final preparations. Liprandi had, while it was still dark, brought up such a heavy force, that although the Sardinians stood their ground with great gallantry, they were so pressed on all sides as to be forced out of their entrenchments, and were retiring down the hill as the support came up. The whole then gave ground before the enemy, and fell back upon the rocky elevation in front of the left of the Sardinian line, whence they were not expelled.

In the meantime the guns of Liprandi and Read were both in action; and the whole line of the allies began to seize their arms and form. Morris's Chasseurs d'Afrique, 2,400 strong, formed between the left of the Sardinians and the right of the French, one regiment being at the head of the defile leading to the bridge. Saviroux's

Sardinian cavalry, 300 men, came up on their right; and General Scarlett, turning out the British cavalry, a splendid force, 3,000 strong, moved them across the plain, and drew up in rear of the French and Italian squadrons. The Turkish and Sardinian guns were answering the fire of Liprandi's artillery; and two French batteries were ready to engage Read. So thick was the fog that the enemy's troops were still invisible, and pending the development of their attack, Generals La Marmora and Herbillon simply reinforced their outposts. Prince Gortschakoff has stated that about this time he had ridden on to the Sardinian Mamelon to survey the ground, and proceed with the execution of his original plan. While he was meditating and trying to pierce through the fog, he heard a violent fire of musketry on his right. General Read, without orders, as his superior officer avers, had begun the attack, and frustrated the whole scheme. From this moment the battle of the Tchernaya was a battle mainly between the French and Russians; the former, however, being assisted by the deadly fire of the British and Sardinian guns.

The Russian cannonade had thoroughly roused the French, but uncertain from what quarter the real attack of the enemy would come, the brigades were kept drawn up near their camp3, ready to move in any direction. The soldiers in the bridge-head and the outposts on the river had been supported by battalions detached for that purpose; and for half an hour the French had remained expectant, and shrouded, like the enemy, in clouds of mist and smoke. Suddenly dark masses were seen dimly through the mist moving down on the Tchernaya. They came on with great resolution, and very fast. At one and the same moment a column from the 12th Division assailed the bridge, and another from the 7th attacked the French left. The onset was so impetuous that the French outposts were at once thrust away from the river all along the line, and forced over the aqueduct. The troops in the bridge-head, indeed, kept their post with constancy, but when they saw the enemy over the river above and below, when they beheld their supports giving way before the impetuous charges of the increasing enemy, they too yielded, and the Russians, dashing over the earthwork, pressed after them as they fled to the shelter of the aqueduct. The advance of the 7th Division had been equally successful. Issuing from the fog, boldly passing the river, closing in from all sides on the French, the latter, outnumbered, were compelled to retire with all speed up the slopes of the Fedoukine hills. Thus along the whole line the enemy had swept everything before him, had carried the bridge, and had crossed the two great obstacles, the river and the aqueduct. His guns on the high ground fired over the heads of the columns moving in the valley, and the Russian commander might well, for one brief moment, believe that he was about to win. They had not succeeded so far without suffering considerable losses. The French troops had fought well, and had been well fought by their officers, and the battalions obliged to give way had been effectively covered

in their retreat by the supports. Now the tide of combat was going to change.

In crossing the aqueduct the Russians had lost their regular formation, and they had to recover it as well as they could under a heavy fire. Thus their charge was stopped at the moment when victory depended upon its continuance; and while the troops in their front kept them in play, the French generals were executing movements intended to effect a bloody counterstroke. The column of the 7th Division fell first under this calamity. They had crossed the river and aqueduct with comparatively little opposition, apparently only that of the outposts and the supports. They were advancing up the hill, when General Wimpfen, who commanded a brigade of General Camou's division, sent the 3rd Zouaves to check them. This brought the Russians to a stand. The heavy column, growing vaster as the men scrambling over the aqueduct came up, gave and received a telling fire, but did not advance. All this time, by the orders of Wimpfen, a battalion of the 82nd Regiment was rapidly coming down the hill to the aid of the Zouaves. As soon as the 82nd appeared, the French attacked with the bayonet. The Zouaves went headlong into the right, the 82nd into the left flank of the enemy. The outward ranks were lifted off their feet by the violence of the shock, and the column loosening at the rear, turned and hurried, in dreadful confusion, back over the aqueduct. A battery of artillery on the left of the line of attack poured grape into the flying mass, and augmented the slaughter. Soon the track of the charge was marked by heaps of dead and wounded, while the aqueduct and its banks were covered with mangled forms of what were men. The French soldiers were not allowed to cross the aqueduct in pursuit, and the Russians rallying, and being supported by a strong body of horse and several batteries, reformed and began a duel of musketry with the French, who lined the banks of the aqueduct.

So far the attack on the left had been repelled, but the beaten troops were still at hand to take advantage of any success which might fall to the share of their comrades, who had carried the bridge and were assailing the centre and right.

The Russians had poured over in three irregular columns. Those who crossed by the bridge formed the centre; what may be called the wings had forded the river and the aqueduct. Each column was bravely encountered and overthrown. When General Wimpfen saw that his Zouaves and one battalion of the 82nd were sufficient to deal with the Russian extreme right, he sent the whole of the 50th, with the remainder of the 82nd, as a reserve, to fall upon the central Russian columns. Thus, while the battalions of Herbillon's division assailed the centre, the 50th, moving obliquely down the hill, came upon the flank of the Russian column which had passed the aqueduct on the Russian right of the bridge. Exposed to such an assault, the Russians were unable to stand, and, after a brief musketry fight, they turned and sought shelter beyond the aqueduct and the Tchernaya. At the same time, General de Failly, in the centre, had

A.D. 1855.]

THE BATTLE OF THE TCHERNAYA.

charged, and the effect of the combined movement was to sweep the enemy over the river. The mass of the French were kept behind the aqueduct; but Colonel Danner, with portions of the 97th and 95th, was sent over to re-occupy the bridge-head. On the other side of the road to Balaclava the Russian column had proved too strong for the 19th Chasseurs; and after driving them up the eastern hillock, had, regardless of the tearing flank fire of the Sardinian artillery on Mount Hasfort, sought to deploy and storm the height. They were just moving up when the 2nd Zouaves came over the

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divisions of Lévaillant and Dulac, under Pélissier in person, were descending to the scene of action. General Herbillon had called down Sercier's brigade. Sefer Pasha was moving from Kamara with a brigade of Turks. Trotti's division, the left of the Sardinian line, had approached the opening between Mount Hasfort and the Fedoukine heights. The French were moving five batteries up to the front. The cavalry of the three armies were blazing on the morning sunshine on the plain, and waiting eagerly and hopefully for the cheering bugle sound which precedes the charge. The fog

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crest. The Russians began, to fire, but the Zouaves continued to march forward, and then, with loud shouts and levelled bayonets, they went down the hill at a charging pace, and literally lifting the Russians off their legs, drove them pell-mell over the aqueduct.

The battle had endured two hours. The French had been partially surprised; nevertheless, assailed with unusual fury, they had established their superiority along the whole line. Their front was now upon the aqueduct, their supports on the hills in rear, and their outposts were again on the bridge-head. From the heights before Sebastopol the Imperial Guard, and the

VOL. VIII.-No. 391.

had lifted, the sun was shining brightly, and only the smoke of battle obscured a view of the field, for now above a hundred guns were in action on both sides of the valley.

Princo Gortschakoff had heard the beginning of tho attack upon the French left. He was, ho says, astonished. General Read had frustrated his design of first driving the Sardinians from their entrenchments, and taking himself a solid grasp of Mount Hasfort. To effect this object he had in hand four divisions of infantry, and he was preparing to hurl his bolt when the uproar of Read's untimely onset broke upon his ear. At once he

suspended the movement of these divisions, and changed the whole tide of his battle. He felt that he must support the troops of Read, for he could not be sure that the allies would not assume the offensive, and, by good luck, they might interpose between him and the Mackenzie heights, and throw the bulk of his army upon the hills and narrow valleys towards Aitodor and Chouliou. Wherefore he directed the cavalry to move up, and, should the infantry be repulsed, hold themselves in readiness to charge or to cover the retreat of the 7th and 12th Divisions, and enable them to rally. At the same time he directed the 5th Division to move by its right into the plain and assail the French at and above the bridge. The 17th Division was ordered to descend the Sardinian Mamelon and cross the river, and strive to penetrate through the open space between Mount Hasfort and the most eastern slopes of the Fedoukine heights. The 6th Division moved up to guard the ground opposite the Sardinians above Karlovka and Tchorgoun, and the 4th Division remained in the rear up the valley of Chouliou

as a reserve.

The early movements of the 5th and 17th were not visible to the allies. The great dark columns wound along concealed under the double curtain of a thick fog and the folds of the hills. But the distance they both had to march was considerable. Before they reached the river the fog rolled up, the rays of the sun were seen to sparkle on the points of the bayonets; and, what was more, the attacks of the 7th and 12th had failed. These two divisions were assembling and falling into line once more behind their horsemen and cannon, when the 5th and 17th began to cross the river, and try their mettle against the French.

The 5th came first. This fine division had marched from Poland, and was about to fight its first battle with the French. The Russians advanced in three columns; one arrived at the bridge, the others moved to the left and right. The onset was simultaneous; not so the repulse. The column which crossed above the bridge suffered so severely from the 2nd Zouaves lying along the banks of the aqueduct, and from the French and Sardinian guns smiting them in front and flank, that they were speedily forced to re-cross the river.

The centre and right column fared better. They drove the French from the aqueduct, and forced them, after a bitter combat, to yield the bridge, and pressed them back up the slope of the hills. The conflict was very hot, for the Russians were stubborn. But General Herbillon, seeing the progress made by the enemy, threw the whole of Sencier's brigade, except one battalion, into the fight; thus furnishing a strong support at a critical moment.

Colonel Danner, who had been driven out of the bridge, was the first to turn the tide. He brought his troops down at the charge. In an instant, with that promptitude so characteristic of their impulsive mode of fighting, the regiments on his right and left imitated the movement, and the whole line hurtled upon the front and flanks of the Russian columns, giving them

so rude a shock that they reeled down the hill-side, and tumbled by scores into the canal. All this time the artillery, now in great force, was rending the rear of the columns, crowded between the river and the foot of the hills, and splitting them up with shell, roundshot, and grape. Increasing in ardour as they went, the French fell furiously on the broken enemy, and in a short time the 97th and 95th once more stood behind the ramparts of the bridge-head. The Russian infantry were now over the river, and hastily seeking the shelter of their guns and cavalry on the higher ground beyond.

But the enemy would not yet own himself beaten. The 17th Division had arrived on the right bank of the Tchernaya. It was formed of regiments which had met the allies at the Alma and Inkermann. Undismayed by defeat, determined to risk another throw of the dice, Prince Gortschakoff ordered a brigade, composed of three regiments-that is, twelve battalions-supported by a large body of cavalry, to cross the river, and push in between the French and Sardinians. The march of these troops had been seen by the allies. General Herbillon had reinforced the right by three regiments of Cler's brigade and part of Sencier's brigade, and General la Marmora had directed Mollard's brigade of Trotti's division to descend from Mount Hasfort, and crossing the valley support the French right. The support, as it happened, was not needed, but it would have been most timely and effectual had the French been overmatched. As it was, the Russians crossed the river and the aqueduct, pushing the French before them, and partly turning their right. They moved with striking resolution, for their columns were struck by the fire of a powerful artillery in flank. A French battery, disregarding the shot and shell poured upon it by the Russian guns on the opposite hills, devoted all its might to the injury of the enemy's infantry. These were now smitten on all sides except their right. For when they saw the deep masses of cavalry facing the gorge into which they had entered, and when they felt the Sardinians on the left of their line of advance, they turned to the right and made a desperate attempt to crown the hillock. The first column which reached the crest was immediately assailed in flank by a French regiment of Cler's brigade, and driven helplessly into and over the aqueduct. But the other deep columns now filling the whole space between the aqueduct and the river still came on with unfaltering resolution, and flung themselves into a focus of fire. But they could make no way. The guns and musketry were too much for them. In vain their officers ran out and waved their swords and showed the way. In vain the columns tried to get along. Presently they fell into confusion; then turned and hurried back over the river, pursued by volleys of musketry and flights of grape and roundshot.

The Russians brought up into line a number of batteries to cover the retreat of the infantry, and their splendid-looking cavalry drew up in glittering lines out of range to protect the guns. But the heavy English pieces in the Sardinian earthworks, opening on the

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enemy's artillery, soon made them move further away. It was about eight o'clock. The battle was won.

General Pélissier had arrived soon after seven, just in time to witness the defeat of the 17th Division. At one moment he seemed disposed to use part of the immense force of cavalry at his disposal, but he refrained. The French infantry moved down to the bank of the river, and the Sardinians did the like, some of their riflemen crossing it.

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reason for shelling the riflemen, but not for shelling the wounded. For two days the bodies of the dead on the ground beyond the French lines lay unburied. General Pélissier had offered to permit their burial by the enemy, but the Russians did not avail themselves of the permission until the 18th.

In this action the allies lost 1,747 men killed and wounded, of whom only 196 were killed. The Sardinians lost one general officer, the Count Montevecchio. But the Russian loss was awful. The French buried upwards of 2,000 bodies; the Russians more than 1,000. There were 2,250 prisoners in the hands of the French, some wounded, some whole. General Read and two other generals of his corps were among the dead; and among the wounded were eight generals and ten colonels. The Russian loss altogether could not have been less than 15,000 men.

General Pélissier now showed a mass of fresh troops, the greater part of the Imperial Guard and the two divisions of Dulac and Levaillant; so that the Fedoukine Heights were crowded with troops. In the meantime Prince Gortschakoff had rallied his men and had formed a new line of battle, well out of range. He had massed the greater part of his cavalry on the right, covering the 7th and 12th Divisions of infantry; in the centre were the 5th and 17th, with batteries massed in The battle of the Tchernaya was, in many respects, a front; and on the left the 6th Division of infantry, having striking action; but it did not enhance the reputation of in its front a brigade of Dragoons in columns of squad- Prince Gortschakoff as a general. Allowing that General rons. General la Marmora, with praiseworthy prompti-Read marred his plan by abruptly attacking the French tude, at once re-occupied the Mamelon over the river left, and thus preventing a combined onset at dawn, it abandoned by his troops early in the morning. Cialdini is plain that Prince Gortschakoff was quite unable to crossed the river at Karlovka, and took up a position above Tchorgoun, and three battalions of Turks marched down into the valley as a support. The Russian infantry were now retiring up the road to the Mackenzie Heights, or filing away to the north-east by the valley of Chouliou. Seeing this, General la Marmora, taking four squadrons, crossed the Tchernaya, and, moving in a north-westerly direction, went up the hills as far as one of the old redoubts constructed by the enemy in the winter of 1854. Thence, a short distance before him, he saw a fine array of regular cavalry, fifty squadrons, supported by horse artillery. These horsemen did not fall back until the whole of the infantry and guns had disappeared.

As soon as the actual fighting was over, the French moved out to collect the wounded. The field presented the most horrible spectacle, because the men were killed and mangled chiefly by round shot, shell, and grape, which tear poor frail human beings in pieces; whereas the bullet and bayonet kill and wound without leaving such bloody traces. All along the embankment of the aqueduct and near the river, and in the meadows over which the square columns of the enemy had moved up to the attack, the dead and wounded lay thickly on the grass.

The French began to collect both their friends and foes, and to place them near the road, so that the ambulances might bear them away to the hospital. The Russians on the heights saw this. They knew that their comrades were being succoured. Nevertheless, they suddenly opened fire with shell, firing repeated volleys right into the groups, scattering the French, and killing them and their own wounded. It was a most barbarous act. Not content with this, after a slight cessation, they re-opened fire with round shot. General Pélissier very properly complained to Prince Gortschakoff, who could only excuse the conduct of his gunners by alleging that they had been fired at by French riflemen: a good

devise a new scheme or to repair the hole made in the old one. The attacks which he ordered, those of the 5th and 17th, were given one after the other, and deprived of unity, they were deprived of everything but the mere stubborn valour of the troops. It is not good generalship to throw in column after column to be beaten in detail, and pounded to pieces in the advance and retreat by a heavy artillery. Yet this is exactly what the Russians did. The bearing of the troops under such circumstances was magnificent; the conduct of the general suggests only despair or a superior order from St. Petersburg as the motive. Throughout the day Prince Gortschakoff kept two entire divisions out of range and out of the action. Why? Because he knew what immense reserves were in the hands of General Pélissier, and what efficient aid the British could have lent to General la Marmora. It is quite possible that had the Russians carried Mount Hasfort, he would have been even more disastrously defeated; for his right wing would have been crushed by the French, and his whole army, cut off from the Mackenzie Road, would probably have been driven into the mountains in disorder. The French and Sardinian troops were very well handled. The reserves were advanced without hurry and used at the right moment. But there can be no doubt that tho crushing flank fire from the British and Sardinian guns helped to prepare the enemy for defoat, and tripled his loss. Some think that the allied cavalry, so fine and strong, should have been sent across the Tchernaya, especially towards noon, when the Russian infantry were climbing the heights, and the cavalry were alone with a few guns. General Pélissier did not think so; and no one but a sharp-eyed cavalry officer, who saw the field and the chances it offered, can tell whether he was right or wrong in his opinion. As it was, the enemy was very severely punished. The loss of the battle of the Tchernaya sealed the fate of Sebastopol.

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