Episode 84 - Captain Phillipps frets about Tommy Atkins & New Zealanders learn a Maori War Cry
The Anglo-Boer War28 Huhti 2019

Episode 84 - Captain Phillipps frets about Tommy Atkins & New Zealanders learn a Maori War Cry

This week, we’ll track a Londoner who rode with Rimington’s Tigers then there’ll be a quick story about a Maori who arrived in South Africa during the war to fight, but also carried a Violin. At the same time, information began to circulate about the British Concentration Camps where tens of thousands of Boer women and children were interned. And the information was worrying. Slowly the numbers began to be squeezed out of the British Government. There were 21,105 people in Transvaal camps in April, 19,680 in Orange River Colony and 2,524 in Natal . The number of deaths was equally difficult to discover because of censorship. Yet these numbers were leaking and they were not good news for those who believed this war to be honourable. Nor was it clear if the figures included the black inmates. We now know they did not. A second strategy launched along with the Concentration Camps was Lord Kitchener’s policy of great drives some over 80 kilometres long. These were his strategy to cope with the guerrillas and finish the war. He understood that he could not catch or destroy the remaining commandos without placing strict limits on their freedom of movement before sweeping them from the veld. This policy was not as clinical in practice as it sounded in theory. The sweeps were often accompanied by looting as well as destruction. Some of the British officer which had been based in South Africa for more than 18 months fighting the Boers had run out of patience and used these drives as an excuse to loot. For some of the soldiers under their command it became a kind of sport. Writing at the time, Captain L March Phillipps who was an officer in the Rimington Guides or Rimington Tigers as they were known began to have serious doubts about the nature of these veld clearing operations. The Tigers had been created by Major Mike Rimington and they were known Rimington’s Tigers due to the leopard skin hatbands worn on their slouch hats. They were also known as the Night Cats because of their many night marches and stealth. In January 1901 the force was reorganised as Damant's Horse under Major Frederic Damant, Rimington's second-in-command, but many continued to call this feared unit the Rimington Tigers. Captain Phillipps looked on exasperated at times during the Great Drives period of this war, March through September 1901. In one of his letters he writes about the British Soldier who was now known as Tommy Atkins. This generic title Tommy Atkins was used from at least 1743. There’s a great deal of debate about the exact origin of the title has been used as a generic name for a common British soldier for many years. The origin of the term is a subject of debate, but a letter sent from Jamaica about a mutiny amongst the troops says in 1743 includes the line "except for those from N. America ye Marines and Tommy Atkins behaved splendidly”. However, our letter writing Captain Phillipps is not as enamoured by Tommy Atkins during the great Drives across the Veld in 1901.

Jaksot(143)

Episode 95 - A Concentration Camp Commission & Maxwell has a brush with dynamite under a skirt

Episode 95 - A Concentration Camp Commission & Maxwell has a brush with dynamite under a skirt

It’s mid July 1901 and it's a Southern Winter. We will also hear how the commanding officer in Pretoria, General Maxwell, meets a Petticoat commando member Johanna van Warmelo who unknown to him, is c...

14 Heinä 201920min

Episode 94 - The British break a Boer code and President Steyn is forced to flee wearing a nightcap

Episode 94 - The British break a Boer code and President Steyn is forced to flee wearing a nightcap

It’s the first week of July 1901 and the British are about to break the code both the Boers and the Dutch have been using which has meant London’s military planning at times has been beset by guess wo...

7 Heinä 201920min

Episode 93 - The ruinous war costs 1.25m pounds a week & Lord Kitchener receives a telegram

Episode 93 - The ruinous war costs 1.25m pounds a week & Lord Kitchener receives a telegram

The winds of war have been blowing cold across the veld, shrivelling the corpses that lie across hundreds of kilometres in all directions. It is the beginning of July 1901. Emily Hobhouse was so e...

30 Kesä 201919min

Episode 92 - Methods of barbarism and Magistrate Kidwell signs an oath of neutrality

Episode 92 - Methods of barbarism and Magistrate Kidwell signs an oath of neutrality

This week we spend some time in England as the political fallout caused by the Anglo-Boer war grows, and meet an unusual man called Magistrate Kidwell. But first, Emily Hobhouse finally presented her...

23 Kesä 201919min

Episode 91 -  Women are caught in an artillery barrage and a deadly blizzard sweeps across the veld

Episode 91 - Women are caught in an artillery barrage and a deadly blizzard sweeps across the veld

It’s mid June 1901. Winter in the Southern Hemisphere and in the Highveld or high plains of South Africa that means bitterly cold nights where the temperature can dip well below freezing. As I write, ...

16 Kesä 201922min

Episode 90 -  Casualties, alcohol, prostitutes and a skirmish at an overgrazed Free State farm

Episode 90 - Casualties, alcohol, prostitutes and a skirmish at an overgrazed Free State farm

This week we’ll focus on the British troops and discuss how British army tactics had changed, and the role that alcohol and prostitution played in the three year war. There were more 65 000 English ...

9 Kesä 201923min

Episode 89 -  Emily Hobhouse pricks English consciousness & Reitz eats pork

Episode 89 - Emily Hobhouse pricks English consciousness & Reitz eats pork

IT’s June 1901 and there’s trouble brewing like a north sea storm around the British Isles. The main force behind this political hurricane is a diminutive but loud woman called Emily Hobhouse. While...

2 Kesä 201918min

Episode 88 - Reitz chases Mustangs on the plains and Jan Smuts becomes pessimistic

Episode 88 - Reitz chases Mustangs on the plains and Jan Smuts becomes pessimistic

Its the end of May and the guerrilla war has turned nasty as the coldest winter of living memory has started - bringing gusts of freezing wind which whipped through the Concentration Camps with their ...

26 Touko 201919min

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