Battle of Cropredy Bridge

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Battle of Cropredy Bridge
Part of the English Civil War
Date June 29, 1644
Location Cropredy, near Banbury, Oxfordshire
Result Royalist victory
Belligerents
Parliamentarians Royalists
Commanders
Sir William Waller King Charles
Strength
5,000 horse
4,000 foot
(only part engaged)
5,000 horse
4,000 foot
(only part engaged)
Casualties and losses
700
11 guns captured
unknown

The Battle of Cropredy Bridge was a battle of the English Civil Wars, fought on 29 June 1644 between a Parliamentarian army under Sir William Waller and the Royalist army of King Charles. After a Parliamentarian attack on the Royalists was repulsed, Waller's army became demoralised and ineffective, allowing the King to retrieve the Royalists' fortunes after other defeats during the earlier part of the year.

Contents

[edit] Background

In the early part of 1644, the Royalists suffered several setbacks. Two field armies were defeated at Nantwich and Cheriton, and a Scottish Covenanter army invaded the north of England, driving the Royalists there into York, where they were besieged.

King Charles held a council of war in Oxford, his wartime capital, between April 25 and May 5. It was agreed that while the King remained on the defensive in Oxford, protected by several outlying fortified towns, Prince Rupert of the Rhine (the foremost Royalist field commander) would proceed to retrieve the situation in the north.

After Rupert departed, the King's council changed this policy. To find reinforcements for the West Country where Prince Maurice was besieging Lyme, they ordered the fortress of Reading, Berkshire to be abandoned. This did indeed release 2,500 foot soldiers for service elsewhere, but it also allowed the Parliamentarian armies of the Earl of Essex and Sir William Waller to concentrate against Oxford. On May 19, they began advancing from Reading. On May 25, the Royalists abandoned Abingdon in the face of Essex's advance. Essex occupied the town and then crossed the Thames to capture bridges over the Cherwell north of Oxford, while Waller passed south of Oxford to capture a crossing over the Thames to the west at Newbridge.

Charles was in imminent danger of being surrounded and besieged in Oxford and forced to surrender. On June 3 Charles made a feint towards Abingdon to induce Waller to draw back, and then marched westward at night towards Worcester with a force mainly composed of cavalry. With Essex and Waller in pursuit, he was still in danger, but on June 7, the two Parliamentarian generals (who disliked each other) conferred at Stow on the Wold, and agreed that Essex would march westward to relieve the siege of Lyme Regis, while Waller shadowed the King.

This allowed the King to return to Oxford and collect reinforcements. He made another feint, which convinced Waller he was about to march northward, and then moved back south by carrying his foot soldiers down the Avon in commandeered boats. Waller, having failed to intercept the King, went to Gloucester for provisions. On June 24 he marched from Gloucester to Stow on the Wold, where he received intelligence that the King was marching eastward into the Parliamentarian-held eastern counties, and soon received orders to pursue him. By June 27 Waller had reached Hanwell Castle on high ground to the west of the Cherwell, the King being just five miles away in Edgecote. On June 28 the King moved to Banbury. He was resolved to offer battle, but Waller held the advantageous position.

[edit] Battle

On Saturday June 29, Charles's army began marching north along the east side of the River Cherwell. Waller's forces proceeded to shadow the king's movements on the other side of the river, the two armies little more than a mile apart and in sight of each other, but neither prepared to cross under the fire of enemy guns.

As they approached Cropredy, Charles ordered a small detachment of dragoons to seize the bridge there. At this point, he received a warning that 300 additional horsemen were approaching from the north to join Waller's army, so he ordered his army to hasten its march to cut off this detachment. The Royalist army became strung out. The vanguard and main body had crossed a stream at Hay's Bridge (near the present-day village of Chipping Warden), leaving a rearguard of only two cavalry brigades under the Earl of Cleveland and twenty-year old Earl of Northampton, with some infantry, south of Hay's Bridge.

Waller, seeing his opportunity, sent Lieutenant General John Middleton across Cropredy Bridge with two regiments of horse and nine companies of foot to isolate the Royalist rearguard, while he himself led 1,000 men across Slat Mill Ford, a mile to the south of the bridge, to catch the Royalist rear in a pincer movement.

The Royalist dragoons holding Cropredy Bridge were soon overpowered. As Middleton's force streamed towards Hay's Bridge, they themselves became strung out and vulnerable. At Hay's Bridge, Middleton's cavalry was checked by Royalist musketeers who had overturned a cart to block the bridge, while the Earl of Cleveland charged the Parliamentarian foot and artillery behind them. Meanwhile, Northampton's brigade charged downhill against Waller's men, and forced them back across the Slat Mill Ford.

The King was alerted that his rearguard was engaged, and ordered his army to turn about. He also sent his own Lifeguard of Horse under Lord Bernard Stewart back across Hay's Bridge to aid Cleveland. With their help, Cleveland made a second charge which forced Middleton back across Cropredy Bridge, abandoning eleven guns. (Waller's Major General of Ordnance, Sir James Wemyss, was also captured).

The bridge itself was held by two Parliamentarian regiments of foot, Colonel Ralph Weldon's Kentish Regiment and the Tower Hamlets regiment. The Royalists tried to recapture the bridge but were repulsed. Waller's artillery continued to fire from their vantage point on Bourton Hill, forcing the Cavaliers to fall back from the river.

[edit] Aftermath

By evening, the two armies still faced each other across the River Cherwell. Charles took opportunity in the lull to dispatch his Secretary of War, Sir Edward Walker, to parley with Waller with a message of grace and pardon, but the Parliamentarian replied that he had no power to treat.

At length, after receiving further intelligence of additional Parliamentarians nearby, and as the king's train was low in food and supplies, the Royalists slipped away under the cover of night, taking Waller's guns with them. While the Royalists had suffered few casualties, Waller had lost 700 men, many having deserted immediately after the battle.

Waller's army shortly became demoralised and immobilised by desertions and mutinies by men unwilling to serve far from their homes. Charles could afford to ignore Waller and march into the West Country after Essex, forcing Essex's army to surrender at Lostwithiel.

[edit] References

  • Margaret Toynbee and Peter Young, Cropredy Bridge, 1644: the campaign and the battle, Roundwood Press, Kineton, 1970, ISBN 0-900-09317-X

[edit] External links

[edit] Music

The song Red and Gold by Ralph McTell relates the story of the battle as told by a non combatant. Versions of the song by various artists exist.

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