Saturday, 3 September 2022

For King and Parliament

 Friday night saw a gathering to play a game with our collective toys. A pike and shot game using For King and Parliament rules.

Keith and I took on the other three. I commanded four units of Dutch cavalry while Keith had five units of foot and two guns.



Above, Keith’s initial deployment and below, my deployment to his right.



The fighting started on the right, where the Swedish cavalry attacked my cavalry. They managed to disorder, but not break me.





I managed to hold on and eventually destroyed the Swedes and rallied back. When the Swedish cavalry withdrew to reform my troopers gallantly rode forward, catching the Swedes in the the rear.


But when I failed to score any hits, the Swedes turned and destroyed me.

On the opposite flank the enemy cavalry was rampant and destroyed Keith’s guns and a unit of pike (I didn’t manage to get any images of that fight but doubtless Keith has a bunch of pictures on his blog). In the centre the infantry battled it out.




In the end we won…only because we had one coin left in our stack and they had lost all their coins. But the result didn’t really matter…five of us had a fun evening of banter, food and drink…and moved a few toys around a table












Saturday, 27 August 2022

1st and 3rd Virginia Regiments

I am doing four Virginia regiments for my AWI Americans and these are the last two, the 1st and 3rd Regiments. 

Both regiments had a relatively similarly service life. The 1st was authorised in August 1775 as Virginia State troops and was formed of eight companies in October 1775 at Williamsburg. The Third was organised in February 1776 at Alexandria and Dumfries in ten companies raised from Prince William, Fauquier, Stafford, Louisa, Fairfax, King George, Loudoun, and Culpeper Counties. Both were assigned initially to the Southern Department and transferred to the Main Army in mid-1776.

The 1st Regiment

In 1777, after the rigours of campaign, both regiments were consolidated - the 1st with the 9th Regiment and the 3rd with the 5th, but kept their original titles. The 1st was transferred back to the Southern Department in December 1778 and the 3rd followed it in 1779. 

The 3rd Regiment

Both regiments fought at Chesapeake Bay, the battles around New York, then though Northern New Jersey, Trenton, Princeton, Monmouth, Brandywine, Germantown and the defence of Philadelphia. Both surrendered at Charleston in May 1780 and were formally disbanded in 1783. 

And so my whole Virginia contingent takes to the parade ground.






Next in this collection will be a couple of New Hampshire regiments.

Tuesday, 23 August 2022

More Prussians…

 Finished last week is this the Second Battalion, 77th Infantry Regiment.





Only four battalions left in this project now.

Sunday, 21 August 2022

A Spot of Napoleonic Gaming and Another New Unit

Today, on a rare sunny day at the end of a miserably wet and windy week, we gathered to play a rather large Napoleonic game, where a Franco-Bavarian force of around 30 battalions, 13 cavalry regiments and 12 batteries took on a Russo-Austrian force of 32 battalions, 11 cavalry regiments and 14 batteries.

Looking down the table at the start of the game with the Russio-Austrians on the right and the Franco-Bavarians on the left.

My Russian infantry division deployed

The guns go into action…

…and the cuirassiers prepare to engage

The Austrians are to my right



The Russo-Austrians begin their advance

The Russian horse artillery swings into action

The Pavolgrad Hussars charge and break two Bavarian units before being driven off themselves

The Allied artillery is dominant 


The Russians and Austrians surge forward, the Russian cuirassiers (forward, centre left) form up…

…they charge…

…and suffer the shame of being routed and destroyed by…HUSSARS

The Austrian Cuirassiers move forward 



At the other end of the field an Austrian force supports the other Russian division

To my left the Bavarians are moving to secure the river crossings
In the centre the battle develops.


The French cavalry are confronted by a wall of Russian bayonets…


The Austrian advance is stalling

In the end the battle was ruled a draw, favouring the Franco-Bavarians.

I am sure that Keith will have a view from his side of the table…at the other end of the field from me.

Wednesday, 17 August 2022

1st South Carolina Infantry Regiment

This unit is the 1st South Carolina Regiment, the second of the two South Carolina regiments I am doing for this AWI collection.

Organised in the summer of 1775 at Charleston to consist of ten companies from eastern South Carolina it was adopted into the Continenal Army in November. It served the majority of the war in the Southern Department (that part of the colonies south of the Virginia/Maryland border). It fought at Charleston in 1775 and 1776, in Florida in 1778 and at Savannah and Charleston in 1780. In addition to that one company served in the Caribbean in 1778.


The regiment was consolidated with the 5th South Carolina Regiment in early 1780, but retained the 1st South Carolina title. It surrendered with the rest of the southern army at Charleston in May 1780 by the British Army. Reformed in December 1782 it was disbanded in November 1783.  




I am really enjoying working on these figures. I particularly like the variety the casual poses provide where some figures don’t have a bayonets fixed, or some are marching with muskets over the right shoulder instead of the left and some, not in this unit, have their muskets inverted.