Wednesday, 31 August 2016

The Defence of La Haye Sainte





Having done my research on La Haye Sainte, I have decided to populate my model with troops.  The scene shows the farm at about the time of its fall to the French.

In addition to 2nd Light Battalion, KGL, the garrison has been reinforced by the 1st Light Battalion, who have taken up position in the garden.  Within the farm itself, the 2nd Battalion under Major Baring has been reinforced by the Light Company of 5 KGL and by the Light Company of 1st Battalion 2nd Nassau Regiment.

The French assault comes from three directions: through the west barn door (which had been burnt the night before); over the south wall by the pond; and at the main gate.  The farm is scratch built.  I haven't yet done the orchard.


The garden - 1st Light Battalion KGL.  The officers are Qualicast.




Riflemen on the roof.  The prone figure is Hagen.  The man with the ammo box is Esci.


French Line Voltigeur Company - west side of the farm.  Mostly Zvezda, but some Les Higgins and Hagen.


Door from the garden.  This lot seem very calm given the mayhem through the window.
















French casualties - all sorts!



Interior of the farm - Light Company 5 KGL and 1/2 Nassau reinforce.


French voltigeurs enter from the west barn door.  The French are Zvezda and Hagen.



Looking south towards the barn.  The Nassauers are Kennington.

Defence of the gate - before I added the French.

The road with French casualties.

French Light Infantry come in from the south side.

With French attackers added


Leg up over the wall - I often wondered where this Strelets figure could go, or is he HYTTY?



Roof of the piggery


Courtyard interior

West barn door

Garden - defenders along hedge



Reserve platoon in garden


Barn door - voltigeurs rush the door

Volley fire

Garden wall

Up the ladder


Tough fight around the gate

The abatis



Frenchman bayonetted as he comes through door.  You can just see the Atlantic trio doing the bayonetting.

Defenders fire from farmhouse widows.  For some reason the light makes the roof look gold when it's grey.

Up and over the roof.  Airfix Mountain troops.







The figures are a mix of Italieri, converted Strelets from the Crimean War, Qualicast, some Emhar, Art Miniaturen, Hagen and many conversions.

Hope you like it!

After note: Heinrich has asked about the layout of the west side of the farm.. I now believe it was extended sometime after 1815 and that during the battle it looked like this:



Wednesday, 17 August 2016

The Field of Waterloo




The Duke visits the battlefield in old age.  The Lion's Mound is visible rear right. - Edward Landseer


Wellington deplored the damage done to the battlefield by the Dutch in erecting the Lion's Mound.  One does wonder though whether this was less to do with environmental concerns than with a sense that the Dutch King (and former Prince of Orange) was appropriating some of the glory.
JMW Turner's scene of the field of Waterloo shows casualties the day after the battle.  It also shows the open nature of the landscape just north of the sandpit looking south towards La Haye Sainte in the near distance.

This post examines the contemporary evidence for what the battlefield looked like.  The best sources are of course the two Siborne models.  Siborne not only studied the topography but also the crop types.

This photograph on the National Army Museum model looks south towards Hougoumont.  The field system is clearly delineated.




These photographs below show the layout of Plancenoit and the surrounding field system.  It's not surprising that the fight around Plancenoit was so hard fought.





Aerial view of Plancenoit

The Leeds model shows the high crops - mostly rye which would have been close to harvesting in June.  This rye was of a much taller variant than modern types.

These French troops of D'Erlon's corps can be shown making their way through the crop.
As this photograph above shows, with the reverse slope and smoke obscuration, the height of the crop would have further concealed the Allies from the French.
But it is evident that in certain areas the ground was bare.



A second good source of information is a set of water colours produced days after the battle by Thomas Stoney, an Irishman who visited Waterloo and Quatre Bras and painted the pictures on 20 and 21 June 1815.
This picture looks like the village of Waterloo.  A Highlander can be seen next to the carriage.
This scene of Quatre Bras shows the ghostly image of casualties stripped bare in the foreground.
I am not sure whether this is part of Plancenoit or somewhere else.

Waterloo field systems
Quatre Bras
Plancenoit Church


This scene shows the view towards Rossomme

The church at Plancenoit
The above picture by Denis Dighton shows casualties among the crops a day or two after the battle.  One might have expected all the crops to have been flattened by the movement of troops.


I like this set of George Jones pictures of Waterloo which give a nice, if slightly accentuated sense of the ground:


  • The first looks south to Hougoumont 
  • The second looks towards La Haye Sainte and south to La Belle Alliance
  • The third shows from left to right: La Haye Sainte, Plancenoit; La Belle Alliance and the observatory
  • The fourth seems to look east, with a glimpse of La Haye Sainte and then perhaps Papelotte in the distance
  • The fifth shows La Belle Alliance
  • and the final picture shows Hougoumont.