The soldier's accoutrements can
provide clues as to date, regiment and rank. For example, in the Border Mounted
Rifles, a Natal
permanent volunteer corps, up to 1896 ammunition was carried in a pouch with a
brown leather crossbelt. Later, what was derogatively known as the ‘Royston
Entanglement’ was adopted - a combined rifle sling and bandolier used by NCO's
and troopers. Officers and Warrant Officers of the unit wore the Sam-Browne
sword belt. Incidentally, the Alexandra Mounted Rifles, which evolved to become
the Border Mounted Rifles in 1894, adopted the use of khaki for its field
service uniform in 1874. This is the
earliest recorded military use of khaki in South Africa, a possible exception
being the 2nd Highland Light Infantry (74th Highlanders)
who, in the 8th Frontier War 1850-1852, fought in doublets of that
colour.
As family historians know to their cost, names, dates and
places are notoriously absent from the back of photographs. In Anglo-Boer War
groups badges and insignia may not be visible or easily identifiable; it could
be worth asking for specialist advice. If you’re fortunate enough to own a
medal awarded to the ancestor, engraved on the rim will be his name, rank and
unit, which is an excellent start.
Most men serving in the Anglo-Boer War were
eligible for one or both of the two campaign medals – the Queen’s South Africa and the King’s South Africa.
This topic, including the use of the medal rolls for tracing Anglo-Boer War
ancestry, was covered in detail in David Barnes’s article “The British Army in
the Anglo-Boer War”, in the 6th edition of The Family and Local
History Handbook. Several
published medal rolls are available: D R Forsyth's ‘Defenders of Kimberley
Medal Roll’, and S M Kaplan's ‘Medal Roll of the Queen's South Africa Medal
with Wepener Bar’, and ‘Medal Roll of the Queen's South Africa Medal with Bar
Relief of Mafeking’.
THE COLONIAL VOLUNTEERS
Some of the most interesting departures from standard
uniform were seen among the colonial volunteer regiments. It was not unknown
for certain of these to take to the field in their shirtsleeves, which
deplorable habit occasioned much comment from more conventional echelons.
However, the colonials were valuable and courageous troops, well-suited by
experience to the conditions which they faced in South Africa. This is particularly
true of the colonial mounted regiments – they formed two-fifths of the entire
mounted force participating in the war.
Should an ancestor have been among the colonials, there
are numerous possibilities as to the regiment in which he may have served. On the outbreak of the war, thousands of
troops from the overseas colonies were sent to South
Africa from Canada,
India, Ceylon, Australia
and New Zealand.
In South Africa
itself, there were permanent regular forces including the Natal Police, Cape
Mounted Police and Cape Mounted Rifles. These should not be confused with the
permanent volunteer units which had been in place for some years, such as the
Natal Carbineers, Durban Light Infantry, Diamond Fields Artillery and Diamond
Fields Horse, Border Mounted Rifles, Kaffrarian Rifles, Cape Town Highlanders,
the Kimberley Regiment and others.
Also, certain corps were raised at the beginning of the
war and specifically for service in that conflict. These ‘irregulars’ carried
an aura of glamour and nonconformity: Brabant’s Horse, Thorneycroft’s Mounted
Infantry, Roberts’s Horse, the Imperial Light Horse, the Imperial Light
Infantry, Steinaecker’s Horse are all names to conjure with.
They were the stuff of legend and a typical
tale is that of Major C B Childe who led 300 South African Light Horse (like
the ILH largely composed of Uitlanders) at the taking of Bastion Hill from the
Boers in January 1900. Major Childe is said to have had a premonition on the
day before the battle that he would be killed, and asked fellow officers to
ensure that a biblical quotation would be engraved on his tombstone. Taken from
the second book of Kings 4.26, it read: ‘Is it well with the child? and she
answered, it is well’. As he’d foreseen, Childe fell at Bastion Hill and his
request was duly honoured.