Monday, 15 April 2019

My visit to Chillianwallah Battlefield year 1996


15-04-2019
It was year, 1996; when, I first time visited Chillianwallah with a school trip. I have some of amazing memories of that place in my mind. At that time Lahore to Islamabad motorway was not constructed and we have to go through GT road.


at chillianwallah  Monument,  1996

Delightful drive through the beautiful countryside of Pakistan’s Punjab province brings you to the site of one of the most appalling battles in Britain’s history in India, Chillianwala. It was fought on 13th January 1849 between the Sikhs and an invading British army under the irascible General Sir Hugh Gough. Both armies were highly professional and had fought a number of brutal encounters over the previous few years. But nothing would quite match Chillianwala which was contested in gathering darkness in jungle so thick in places that the enemy was only rarely seen. Volleys of musket fire and artillery barrages through patches of heavy vegetation shredded hundreds of men on both sides. Although the British declared it a victory, in truth neither side won.

However the regiment which suffered the most debilitating casualties, Her Majesty’s 24th Foot, buried most of their dead elsewhere. The 24th had only just arrived in India and had been in the thickest of the fighting. They were further disadvantaged because they advanced too fast and got ahead of their supporting units but also due to an extraordinary order delivered by Brigadier Campbell that “There must be no firing, the bayonet must do the work”. Out of a thousand men the 24th lost 204 killed, 278 wounded and 38 missing; a casualty toll of 50 percent. The regiment also suffered the indignity of losing the Queen’s Colour (the other standard, the Regimental Colour, was saved and is now in Brecon Cathedral in South Wales).
The foundations of this monument were laid by Richard Southwell Bourke, the 6th Earl of Mayo, the Viceroy and Governor General of India, in 1871. 

AROUND THIS TOMB WAS FOUGHT THE SANGUINARY BATTLE OF CHILLIANWALLAH, 13TH JAN., 1849 ; BETWEEN THE BRITISH FORCES, UNDER LORD GOUGH, AND THE SIKHS, UNDER RAJAH SHER SINGH; ON BOTH SIDES DID INNUMERABLE WARRIORS PASS FROM THIS LIFE, DYING IN MORTAL COMBAT. HONOURED BE THE GRAVES OF THOSE HEROIC SOLDIERS! TO THE MEMORY OF THOSE WHO FELL IN THE RANKS OF THE ANGLO-INDIAN ARMY, THIS MONUMENT HAS BEEN RAISED, BY THEIR SURVIVING COMRADES, AT WHOSE SIDES THEY PERISHED: COMRADES WHO GLORY IN THEIR GLORY, AND LAMENT THEIR FAIL.



The Chillianwallah Battle was fought in almost the same area where Porus, with his elephants, chariots and archers had fought Alexander the Great’s cavalry.

Both armies held their positions at the end of the battle and Sher Singh withdrew to the north.
The repulse of the British, together with the loss of several guns and the colours of the 24th and two other regiments, and the rout of the 14th Light Dragoons, dealt a blow to British morale and is testament to the tenacity and martial skill of the Sikh army.

Chillianwallah bears similarities to the Battle of Ferozeshah (First Anglo Sikh War) where the British Empire hung in the balance.