Battle of Congella

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According to South African history, in the mid 1820s King Shaka (Timeline of South African history) swooped through the countryside now known as KwaZulu-Natal, almost killing the entire native population of bushmen. King Shaka (Chaka) then founded the massive Zulu Empire within the countryside. A few years later, the English colonists living on the coastal areas of Port Natal requested to be officially recognised by the Cape Government as a dependency of Britain. This was rejected, resulting in the colonists beginning to trade and settle with the Zulu's.

However, the Afrikaner Boers, who had recently been forcefully evicted from the Cape Colony by the British Government settled in the area of Natal (later known as KwaZulu-Natal) and began their farming lifestyles. King Shaka decided to wage attacks against these new settlers, resulting in the Boers needing to fight to protect their very lives. Eventually the Cape Government heard news about this unofficial Boer republic and the subsequent attacks on white folk in Natal, and these attacks were starting to approach the Cape Colony. The Governor of the Cape, Benjamin D'Urban (the colony in Port Natal was later named Durban in his honour) sent a regiment to take possession of Natal from the Boers and to settle the Zulu attacks. It was, however, D'Urban's successor, Governor Napier, who dispatched Captain Charlton Smith (who had served at the Battle of Waterloo)

Smith arrived and settled in Port Natal on the 4th May 1842, much to the vehement demands from the Boers that the British should leave. Capt Smith decided to attack the Boers, before they could arrange the extra support they were expecting. At midnight on 23/24 May, the British forces attacked the well defended village of "Kongela". The attack failed dismally, and the official history of the Regiment (Regimental History of the Royal Inniskilling Fusiliers, 1688-1914, published by Constable) relates the story effectively:

'For a time all went well. Not a Boer was seen: not a shot fired, until, half a mile from their objective, they had to skirt a dense thicket of mango-bush, which proved to be held by an advance party of burghers who opened a heavy fire upon them. This fire the Inniskillings returned, but with nothing to aim at except the flashes from the scrub, while, as they stood up in the bright moonlight to reload, they offered to the Boers a target such as every marksman dreams of but very seldom sees. When the guns lumbered into action their projectiles checked the Boer musketry but only for a moment and, when the enemy’s bullets began to find their billets among the oxen, the beasts broke loose, upset the limbers, dashed among the soldiers and threw them into confusion... The moment the Boers had silenced the light guns they turned their musketry again upon the infantry who fell so fast that Charlton Smith realised that the attack had failed and retired, pursued by the burghers who for two or three hours fired hotly into his camp . . . In the retreat he was forced to leave behind him the two light guns and sixteen dead, also thirty-one wounded men. Three more men were drowned in crossing a river: this disastrous night attack caused fifty casualties, or nearly thirty-six per cent of the one hundred and thirty-nine combatants who took part in it. Three officers fell: Lieut. Wyatt, R.A., was shot dead, Capt. J. F. Lonsdale and Lieut. B. Tunnard were severely wounded. The latter had an extraordinary escape. He was hard hit in the thigh and, in the retreat, collapsed into the river. In the confusion his fall was unnoticed and he was reported missing until next day, when he was brought up to the camp by some Good Samaritans who had found his apparently lifeless body stranded on the bank.’

The Boers won a major battle, and Capt Smith had lost many of his men. Smith realised he needed to urgently request reinforcements from the Cape Colony, which was 600 miles of untamed wilderness away. But how could he get news to the Cape about his request? An English trader and colonist volunteered and changed history. Dick King volunteered to ride horseback to Grahamstown where reinforcements could be dispatched. Slipping through the Boers under the cover of the night, King and his native assistant escaped and began their seemingly impossible mission. The history of the Regiment continues:

'The Boers lost no time in following up their first success. A sergeant and twenty men of the Regiment were guarding an eighteen-pounder gun and a quantity of stores which had recently arrived in Cape Colony. Two of these guns had been landed but luckily one had been dragged safely into camp before dawn on May 26th when a hundred burghers stalked the party and from cover poured so heavy a fire upon them that the sergeant was forced to surrender, but not before five of his men were killed or wounded. By this fresh mishap twenty-one combatants, a valuable gun and an equally valuable supply of provisions were lost. To make good his deficiencies in food Charlton Smith made forced requisitions among the non-combatant inhabitants of the settlement who, though they professed loyalty to the British flag, protested loudly at this procedure. Captain Smith now saw that it was time to call in outposts and concentrated the remnant of his command in the camp which he had fortified as well as his limited resources would allow...’

The history continues, saying that the Boers extended a flag of truce proposing that the women and children should be removed from the rustic fort to safety aboard the schooner Mazeppa which was then in port. This chivalrous offer was accepted and 28 people were sent to safety aboard the Mazeppa. Captain Lonsdale captured the Boers attacks in a letter to his Mother in England:

‘I was lying in my tent . . . down with fever. We were doing all we could to fortify the camp... Just before sunrise we were saluted by a six-pound shot which passed through the officer’s mess tent, knocking their kettles and cooking apparatus in all directions. Everyone, of course, went to his station in the ditch, and the Boers then kept up an incessant fire from four pieces of artillery and small arms, never ceasing for a moment during the whole day till sunset. During the whole day Margaret and Janet [Capt Lonsdale’s daughter.] were lying on the ground in the tent, close by me. James*... was lying in my other tent on the ground, with his legs on the legs of a table, when a six-pound shot cut off the table legs just above him, and the splinters struck him in the face. When the attack was over, the officers came to our tents, expecting to find us all dead. I said if they attacked us the next morning we should all have to go into the trench. Margaret then got up and put on a few things, and assisted me in putting on something. I had scarcely got on my trousers when we were again attacked. Margaret and the children ran immediately to the trench, and I was carried into it, and we all lay down or sat up. The fire continued all day, as on the day before. About the middle of the day the children were getting very hungry. Jane said there was a bone of beef in the tent, and she would go for it; but we did not wish her, as she might have been shot; but before I knew much about it she was back with the bone. We all slept in the trench this night. Next morning we were awakened by a shot from one of the great guns passing just over our heads. Shortly after a flag of truce came in, and Margaret and the children went on board the Mazeppa in such a hurry that they had not a change of clothes.’ (*James, his son, eventually became Mayor of King Williamstown, in which his name is perpetuated in a national monument. Capt Lonsdale settled in King Williamstown after buying himself out from the Army shortly after these events.)

Fortunately, Dick King made the famous horseback journey in 14 days, 10 days quicker than the normal journey's length and reinforcements were immediately sent. Thirty one days after Captain Smith recruited King, the reinforcements arrived at Port Natal by ship, aboard the Conch and the South Hampton. The reinforcements relieved Captain Smith and the surrounding Boers soon dispersed. The Mazeppa was brought back (it sailed to Delagoa Bay to escape the fighting) and the women and children safely returned.

A detailed study of the battle is contained in: Theal, G.M. History of the Boers in South Africa, 3rd ed. Cape Town, C. Struik, 1973, pp 156-1 65. (originally published 1887).