La Haye Sainte
La Haye Sainte | |
---|---|
General information | |
Location | N5 road (Belgium), near Waterloo, Belgium |
Coordinates | 50°40′40″N 4°24′43″E / 50.677906°N 4.412066°E |
Owner | Private |
Technical details | |
Material | Sandstone and red brick |
Known for | Battle of Waterloo |
La Haye Sainte (named either after Jesus' crown of thorns or a nearby bramble hedge[1]) is a walled farmhouse compound at the foot of an escarpment near Waterloo, Belgium, on the N5 road connecting Brussels and Charleroi. It has changed very little since it played a crucial part in the Battle of Waterloo on 18 June 1815.
La Haye Sainte was defended by about 400 King's German Legion troops during the Battle of Waterloo. Being greatly outnumbered by attacking French forces, the defenders held out until the late afternoon when they retired as their ammunition had run out. If Napoleon Bonaparte's army had captured La Haye Sainte earlier in the day, he would have almost certainly broken through the allied centre and defeated the Duke of Wellington's army.[2]
The capture of La Haye Sainte in the early evening then gave the French the advantage of a defensible position from which to launch a potentially decisive attack on the Allied centre. However, Napoleon was too late—by this time, Blücher and the Prussian army had arrived on the battlefield and the outnumbered French army was defeated.
History
[edit]La Haye Sainte was originally built before 1536. Much of the complex was rebuilt in the 1700s.[3]
Battle of Waterloo
[edit]The road leads from La Belle Alliance, where Napoleon had his headquarters on the morning of the battle, through where the centre of the French front line was located, to a crossroads on the ridge which is at the top of the escarpment and then on to Brussels. The Duke of Wellington placed the majority of his forces on either side of the Brussels road behind the ridge on the Brussels side. This kept most of his forces out of sight of the French artillery.
Both Napoleon and Wellington made crucial mistakes about La Haye Sainte as it was fought over and around during most of the day. Napoleon failed to allocate enough forces to take the farm earlier in the day while Wellington only realized the strategic value of the position when it was almost too late.[4]
Defensive preparations
[edit]Wellington ordered the 2nd Light Infantry Battalion of the King’s German Legion, commanded by Major Georg Baring, to garrison La Haye Sainte the evening before the battle. Upon arriving at 19:30 amidst heavy rain, Baring ordered the men to begin fortifying the farm complex for defence, in anticipation of an attack the next morning.[3]
Defensive preparations began again before dawn, however it was found the main door to the courtyard of the farm was removed for use as firewood by the occupying troops during the night. In addition, there were few suitable tools to construct defences and Baring's pioneers had been sent to aid the fortification of the nearby Hougoumont farmhouse. This meant that the strengthening of the farm’s defences would have to be largely improvised.[3][5]
The majority of the King's German Legion troops were armed with the Baker rifle with rifled barrels, as opposed to the standard smoothbore Brown Bess musket of the British Army. The French troops also used muskets which were quicker to load than the Baker rifle but the latter was more accurate and had about twice the range of a musket.[6]
French attacks
[edit]At 13:00, the French Grand Battery of heavy artillery opened fire before d'Erlon's Corps (54th and 55th Ligne) marched forward in columns. The French managed to surround La Haye Sainte and despite taking heavy casualties from the garrison, they attacked the centre left of Wellington's line. As the centre began to give way and La Haye Sainte became vulnerable, Picton's division was sent to plug the gap.[7] As the French were beaten back from La Haye Sainte, the heavy cavalry brigades under Somerset and Ponsonby attacked.[8] This action relieved the pressure on the fortress farm.
At 15:00, Napoleon ordered Marshal Ney to capture La Haye Sainte.[9] While Ney was engaged in the glorious but futile 8,000-man cavalry attack, unsupported by infantry or cannon, on Allied squares on the Brussels side of the ridge, he failed to take La Haye Sainte.[10] During the battle, the KGL were supported by the 1/2 Nassau Regiment and the light company of the 5th Line Battalion KGL.
At 17:30, Napoleon re-issued orders for Ney to take La Haye Sainte.[11] The French had worked up close to the buildings by this time.
French capture and final assault
[edit]At 18:00 Marshal Ney, heavily supported by artillery and some cavalry, took personal command of an infantry regiment (13th Legere) and a company of engineers and captured La Haye Sainte with a furious assault. "The light battalion of the German Legion, which occupied it, had expended all its ammunition" and had to retreat.[12]
Allied forces were unable to counterattack immediately as they were in squares over the ridge. The French brought up guns to fire from its cover however British riflemen of the 1/95 in the "sand pit" to the east of the farm picked off all the gunners, so the guns were ineffective.
At 19:00, thanks to the French garrison in La Haye Sainte, the Imperial Guard was able to climb the escarpment and attack the Allies on the Brussels side of the ridge. This final attack was beaten back and became a rout around 20:10 as the French forces realised that with the arrival of the Prussians from the east, they were beaten. During the French retreat, La Haye Sainte was recaptured by the Allies,[13] some time before 21:00, when Blücher met Wellington at La Belle Alliance.
Modern La Haye Sainte
[edit]La Haye Sainte has changed very little since the Battle of Waterloo.[3] Today it is privately owned.[14] On the walls are memorials to the King's German Legion and the French. Opposite the house is a monument for the officers and the soldiers of the KGL.
-
Plaque embedded in 1847 in honour of the King's German Legion and all those who died in the battle
-
Plaque for the KGL on the outer wall of La Haye Sainte
-
Monuments next to La Haye Sainte - the one on the left, the Monument aux Hanovriens, is for the KGL while the one on the right, the Gordon Monument, is dedicated to Wellington's ADC.
See also
[edit]References
[edit]This article includes a list of general references, but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations. (June 2015) |
- ^ Simms, Brendan (2014). The Longest Afternoon, The Four Hundred Men who Decided the Battle of Waterloo. Allen Lane. p. 2. ISBN 978-0-241-00460-9.
- ^ Simms, Brendan (2014). The Longest Afternoon, The Four Hundred Men who Decided the Battle of Waterloo. Allen Lane. pp. 63–64. ISBN 978-0-241-00460-9.
- ^ a b c d Hough, Jonny (3 June 2018). "Struggle for La Haye Sainte". The Waterloo Association. Retrieved 14 May 2024.
- ^ Simms, Brendan (2014). The Longest Afternoon, The Four Hundred Men who Decided the Battle of Waterloo. Allen Lane. p. 64. ISBN 978-0-241-00460-9.
- ^ Buttery, David. "The Fall of La Haye Sainte". Erenow. ISBN 9781783035137. Retrieved 14 May 2024.
- ^ Simms, Brendan (2014). The Longest Afternoon, The Four Hundred Men who Decided the Battle of Waterloo. Allen Lane. pp. 26–27. ISBN 978-0-241-00460-9.
- ^ Houssaye, Henry (1900). Euan-Smith, A. (ed.). 1815, Waterloo. Translated from the 31st edition by Arthur Emile Mann. London: Adam and Charles Black. p. 196. LCCN 05004776.
- ^ Houssaye, Henry (1900). Euan-Smith, A. (ed.). 1815, Waterloo. Translated from the 31st edition by Arthur Emile Mann. London: Adam and Charles Black. pp. 197–199. LCCN 05004776.
- ^ Houssaye, Henry (1900). Euan-Smith, A. (ed.). 1815, Waterloo. Translated from the 31st edition by Arthur Emile Mann. London: Adam and Charles Black. p. 202. LCCN 05004776.
- ^ Houssaye, Henry (1900). Euan-Smith, A. (ed.). 1815, Waterloo. Translated from the 31st edition by Arthur Emile Mann. London: Adam and Charles Black. pp. 211–215. LCCN 05004776.
- ^ Houssaye, Henry (1900). Euan-Smith, A. (ed.). 1815, Waterloo. Translated from the 31st edition by Arthur Emile Mann. London: Adam and Charles Black. p. 216. LCCN 05004776.
- ^ Coppens, Bernard; Courcelle, Patrice (2000). La Haie-Sainte. Waterloo 1815 - Carnets de la Campagne (in French). Les Éditions de la Belle-Alliance. pp. 30–32. ASIN B00B26XYRC.
- ^ Coppens, Bernard; Courcelle, Patrice (2000). La Haie-Sainte. Waterloo 1815 - Carnets de la Campagne (in French). Les Éditions de la Belle-Alliance. p. 35. ASIN B00B26XYRC.
- ^ "Visitor Guide to Waterloo". The Waterloo Association. Retrieved 14 May 2024.
- Barbero, Alessandro (2005), The Battle of Waterloo, Walker and Company, ISBN 0-8027-1453-6
- Chappell, Mike (2000), The King's German Legion (2) 1812–1815, Botley, Oxford: Osprey Publishing, ISBN 1-85532-997-2
- Hofschröer, Peter (1999), The Waterloo Campaign – The German Victory, London: Greenhill Books, ISBN 1-85367-368-4
- Ludlow, Beamish, N. (1997) [1832–1837], History of the King's German Legion, vol. 2 (reprint ed.), Naval and Military Press, ISBN 0-9522011-0-0
{{citation}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
Further reading
[edit]- Media related to King's German Legion at Wikimedia Commons
- Beamish, North Ludlow (1832), History of the King's German Legion, vol. 1, Thomas and William Boone
- Beamish, North Ludlow (1832), History of the King's German Legion, vol. 2, Thomas and William Boone
- Liethen, Dr., "Kings German Legion", King´s German Legion (in German), retrieved 21 June 2015
- In the King's German legion. Memoirs of Baron Ompteda, colonel in the King's German legion during the Napoleonic wars, H. Grevel & Company, 1894