MALCOLM’S ROYAL RANGERS THE EVACUATION OF ST. LUCIA, 1795.
In the commencement of the year 1795,
a new corps was raised in the West
Indies, which was sometimes called Malcolm’s
Corps, sometimes Malcolm’s
Rangers, and at others the Royal Rangers. It
first appears in the
“Monthly Return of His Majesty’s Forces
in the Windward, Leeward, and
Caribee Islands,” dated the 1st of May, 1795,
as follows:
Royal rangers, commanded
by captain Malcolm, 41st regiment.
A: Capt. Commandant.
B: Captains.
C: 1st Lieutenants.
D: 2nd Lieutenants.
E: Sergeants Present.
F: Drummers Present.
G: Present fit for Duty.
H: In Hospital.
I: In Quarters.
This officer is mentioned by Bryan
Edwards, “Lieutenant
Malcolm, of the 41st Grenadiers, was appointed Town
Major” (of St. Pierre, Martinique, in 1794)
“in consideration of his distinguished conduct
and active services at the head of a body of riflemen,
which was composed of two men selected from each company
of the 1st Battalion of Grenadiers. We shall
have occasion to mention this officer afterwards.”
This body of riflemen, raised during
the operations in Martinique, in March, 1794, must,
if the above statement of its formation be correct,
have been European, for there were no black troops
employed in the reduction of that island, except the
Carolina Corps. The corps of riflemen is not
shown in any return, and it is probable that at the
termination of the active operations the men rejoined
their respective battalions. The Royal Rangers,
shown in the return of the 1st of May, 1795, were
black; for Sir John Vaughan, in a letter dated Martinique,
April 25th, 1795, which gives an account of the operations
in St. Lucia in that month, says: “The
flank companies of the 9th Regiment and the black
corps under Captain Malcolm were the troops engaged.”
These Royal Rangers, then, were almost certainly entirely
distinct from the “body of riflemen,”
and the success which had attended Captain Malcolm’s
efforts with the first body probably led to his being
employed in raising the second, about February or
March, 1795. In the month of April, 1795, one
company of this corps, numbering 121 of all ranks,
was in St. Lucia, and the other company, 112 strong,
in Martinique.
Victor Hugues, having succeeded in
ousting the British from Guadaloupe, commenced, early
in 1795, active measures for the recovery of the other
islands that had been wrested from France in the previous
year, and the plan which was first ripened appears
to have been that against St. Lucia. “No
official and scarcely any other accounts of the event
are to be found, but the invasion of this colony appears
to have been effected about the middle of February....
Nor can the strength of the invading force be now
ascertained. That force was probably few in number,
and stolen into the island in small bodies, and under
cover of the night. Aided, however, by an insurrection
of the slaves, people of colour, and democratical
whites, it was sufficient to wrest from us the whole
of the colony, with the exception of the two posts
of the Carénage and the Morne Fortune."
Affairs remained in this situation
till about the middle of April, when Brigadier-General
Stewart resumed active operations, in the hope of
recovering the lost ground. On the 14th of that
month, he suddenly disembarked near Vieux Fort, with
a force consisting of a portion of the 6th and 9th
Regiments, the company of the Carolina Corps which
had remained in the island since its capture in 1794,
and one company of the new corps of Malcolm’s
Rangers; and, after two days’ skirmishing, that
town was abandoned by the French on the 16th, and immediately
taken possession of by the British, the enemy falling
back upon Souffriere, their chief stronghold.
“Resolved to follow up his blow,
General Stewart advanced against Souffriere.
Undismayed, however, by their recent defeats, the
Republicans had collected together a very formidable
force, for the defence of their main position.
On his march, the British general was suddenly attacked
by a division which had been placed in ambush, and
it was not till after a severe struggle that the enemy
were driven back.”
Sir John Vaughan, in a despatch dated
Martinique, April 25th, 1795, says: “He
was attacked by the enemy upon his march on the 20th
instant, who had formed an ambuscade. The flank
companies of the 9th Regiment, and the Black Corps
under Captain Malcolm, were the troops engaged.
The enemy, after a severe conflict, were driven back.
Captain Malcolm, and Captain Nesbitt of the 9th, were
wounded, after behaving in a most gallant manner.”
On the 22nd of April, the troops reached
the neighbourhood of Souffriere, near to which, on
the mountainous ground, the attack was made.
The contest continued warmly for seven hours, and though
the greatest exertions were made by the British, they
were finally compelled to retreat to Choiseul, with
a loss of 30 killed, 150 wounded, and 5 missing.
In the four days’ fighting between the 14th and
the 22nd of April, Malcolm’s corps lost 48 out
of a total of 121. At Choiseul the troops embarked
and returned to Vieux Fort, and thence to Morne
Fortune and the Carénage, which General Stewart
considered his force strong enough to hold until the
arrival of reinforcements.
Two months passed away without the
occurrence of any event worthy of notice. Sickness,
in the meantime, was making great ravages amongst the
British, one-half of whose force was generally unfit
for service. The enemy, on the other hand, were
daily gaining fresh accession of strength. From
Guadaloupe arms and other supplies were frequently
transmitted; and though some of the vessels fell into
the hands of the British cruisers, many more of them
reached their destination in safety. The French
now began to act decisively. They first reduced
Pigeon Island, and, on the 17th of June, made themselves
masters of the Vigie. On this last post
the communication between the Carénage and Morne
Fortune depended, and the enemy now prepared for a
general assault upon the latter. As, in the weak
condition of the garrison, it would have been imprudent
to await the meditated attack, Brigadier-General Stewart
determined to evacuate the position; and, on the evening
of the 18th, the whole of the troops embarked on board
H.M.S. Experiment, undiscovered by the enemy,
and proceeded to Martinique.