THE TWO EXPEDITIONS TO MALAGEAH, 1854 AND 1855.
The troops that had been despatched
from Sierra Leone and the Gambia for the relief of
Christiansborg, returned to Sierra Leone, in H.M.S.
Prometheus, on the 25th of November, 1854, and
in consequence of the hostile attitude assumed by
the chiefs of the Mellicourie and Scarcies Rivers,
and the outrages committed by natives on mercantile
factories in those rivers, the Governor of Sierra
Leone decided to detain the contingent which had been
sent from the Gambia, in order to have a sufficient
force to overawe the chief of Malageah, the principal
offender, and compel him to sign a treaty of trade.
With this view, accordingly, detachments of the 1st,
2nd, and 3rd West India Regiments, numbering in all
401 officers and men, under the command of Captain
Rookes, 2nd West India Regiment, embarked in H.M.S.
Prometheus and Dover, on the 2nd of
December, and sailed for the Mellicourie River, on
which the town of Malageah is situated. The officers
of the 1st West India Regiment who accompanied the
expedition were Captain R.D. Fletcher, Lieutenant
Connell, Lieutenant Strachan, and Ensign Anderson.
On December 4th, the expedition arrived
off Malageah, and the river-banks having been reconnoitred,
Captain Heseltine, of H.M.S. Britomart, who
had been appointed diplomatic agent with powers to
negotiate, directed a landing to be made. The
troops disembarked, and meeting with no opposition,
advanced on the town, seizing and occupying the mosque
and the king’s house, while a second body took
possession of all the approaches to the town.
By these means, a party of some 200 chiefs and Marabouts,
who filled the mosque, were surrounded.
In the meantime, the 1st Division,
under Captain R. D’Oyley Fletcher, 1st West
India Regiment, had proceeded to a creek to the eastward
of the town, which they ascended in the boats of the
Britomart, and then crossing by bye-paths through
the swamp and bush to the back of the town, where
they dispersed a body of 150 natives armed with rifles
and muskets, they joined the main body before the
mosque.
Negotiations were opened by the diplomatic
agent, and continued for about half-an-hour; when,
as it was noticed that the Marabouts were gradually
leaving the mosque and all going in one direction,
a reconnoitring party of ten men, under Lieutenant
F.J. Connell, 1st West India Regiment, was sent
to the northern side of the town. Lieutenant
Connell, on reaching the town gate, found from 1800
to 2000 natives armed with fire-arms, spears, bows
and arrows, formed in a semicircle, from eight to
ten deep, facing the small picket that had been there
posted. The whole of the main body, with the seamen
and marines, was at once ordered up, and took up a
position on the plateau to the north of the town,
facing the natives, while a detached party occupied
the walls and gates. At first there was a disposition
on the part of the natives to resist this movement,
but it was so rapidly executed that they were taken
by surprise, and, losing cohesion, they soon after
gradually dispersed.
The king, Bamba Mima Lahi, now signified
his desire to come to terms, promised to comply with
all demands, and to pay one thousand dollars as a
fine for his offences. The force accordingly re-embarked,
the object of the expedition having been effected
without bloodshed, and returned to Sierra Leone on
December 6th. The following letter may be of
interest:
“H.M.S.
BRITOMART,
“Sierra
Leone, December 6th, 1854.
“SIR,
“In bringing back the troops that
have been embarked on board the Prometheus
and landed at Malageah, and who, whilst afloat, have
been under my command, I beg to bear testimony
to their quiet, orderly, and zealous conduct,
both afloat and ashore, where, had it not been
for the above good qualities, collision would have
been inevitable.
“To Captains Rookes, Mockler,
and Fletcher, and the officers of the force, I
beg to return my sincere thanks for their zealous and
active co-operation; further comment on my part
would be presumptuous.
“A.
HESELTINE,
“Commander
and Senior Naval Officer.
“Lieutenant-Colonel Foster,
“Commanding troops.”
On the 14th of December, the Gambia
contingent sailed for the Gambia in the Colonial steamer
Dover, and the garrison of Sierra Leone remained
at its ordinary strength of three companies.
In May, 1855, as the King of Malageah
had not observed the stipulations of the treaty that
had been forced upon him, and had not paid the fine
of one thousand dollars, the Acting Governor of Sierra
Leone, a gentleman of colour, determined to take steps
for his punishment. On the 21st of May, accordingly,
he sent for Captain R. D’Oyley Fletcher, 1st
West India Regiment, who was then in command of the
troops, and informed him that it was his intention
to send a force of 150 men, that very day, to burn
the town of Malageah, and, if possible, capture the
king. He added that the troops would proceed
in H.M.S. Teazer, then lying in the harbour.
Captain Fletcher, in reply, said that
he could not approve of the proposed arrangements;
that since a force of 400 men had been deemed necessary
to extract a promise from the king, it was, to say
the least, injudicious to endeavour to force him to
fulfil that promise with only 150 men. He stated
that at the last expedition more than 2000 armed natives
had been seen, and he considered it inadvisable to
proceed to actual hostilities without a force proportionate
to the duty to be performed. He further suggested
that the expedition should be delayed for two or three
days, so that the detachments of the 2nd West India
Regiment might be brought in from Waterloo and the
Banana Islands, and the whole garrison employed on
the duty. The Acting Governor overruled these
objections, insinuated that Captain Fletcher was actuated
by fears for his personal safety, and finally peremptorily
ordered the force he had mentioned to embark.
In consequence, on the evening of
May 21st, Captain Fletcher, Lieutenant Strachan, Lieutenant
Wylie, and 69 men of the 1st West India Regiment,
with Lieutenants Keir and Beazley and 79 men of the
3rd West India Regiment, embarked on board the Teazer.
Lieutenant Vincent, 2nd West India Regiment, was attached
to the 1st for duty, and Deputy-Assistant-Commissary-General
Frith and Surgeons Marchant and Bradshaw accompanied
the troops.
The Teazer arrived off Benty
Point, at the mouth of the Mellicourie River, on the
morning of May 22nd, and, after a delay of a few hours,
in consequence of the difficulty in crossing the bar,
the expedition arrived off Malageah.
Lieutenant-Commander Nicolas, of the
Teazer, and Mr. Dillet, the Acting Governor’s
private secretary, had been appointed commissioners,
and, by their direction, the troops disembarked about
10 a.m. A flag of truce was flying on the king’s
house, and, as he showed a disposition to come to
terms, the commissioners determined to depart from
their instructions, and make an attempt to settle
the affair without having recourse to force.
They accordingly informed the king that if he would
pay the fine his town would be spared; and they granted
him one hour for this purpose, warning him that if
at the expiration of that time the money was not forthcoming,
the town would be shelled.
Two hours having passed without any
communication having been received from the king,
the Teazer at noon opened fire, and the troops
advanced on the town, covering their flanks with skirmishers.
This advance would have been unnecessary had the Teazer
been supplied with rockets; but there being none,
the men were obliged to set fire to the houses.
It would be difficult to imagine a worse-planned expedition.
The troops gained the central square
of the town, and, in compliance with the written instructions,
set fire to the mosque, the king’s house, and
other principal buildings; and ultimately the whole
town appeared to be in flames. The left division,
under Lieutenant Vincent, was exposed to a desultory
fire, during the whole of these operations, from the
enemy concealed in the bush; and large numbers of natives
were observed gathering on the plateau to the north
of the town. As it seemed impossible that any
portion of the town could escape the conflagration,
and as the heat from the burning buildings was intense,
the troops retired to the river bank, and embarked
in the Teazer’s boats. Scarcely
had the seamen dipped their oars into the water, to
pull out into the stream, than a volley was poured
into the boats from the dense bush which grew close
down to the edge of the water; and the ambushed enemy
then commenced firing rapidly, but fortunately with
so little precision that the troops succeeded in reaching
mid-stream with a loss of only five wounded.
The boats continued their course to
the ship, and the troops re-embarked. The town
was still in flames, but they were gradually subsiding,
and before nightfall were entirely extinguished, leaving
a considerable portion of the town still unconsumed.
The commissioners, upon this, decided, as it was too
late to land again that day, to drop down the river
as far as Benty Point for the night, and to return
next morning to complete the work of destruction.
Captain Fletcher then objected to any second landing
being made, pointing out that the whole country was
now alarmed, and that the people of Malageah would
be reinforced by those of Fouricariah (a populous
town further up the river), and that quite enough
had been done to punish the king. The commissioners
agreed with his views, but decided that their orders
were so peremptory that they could not, without running
the risk of censure, leave the river until the entire
town had been destroyed.
At 5.30 a.m. on May 23rd, the Teazer
left Benty Point, and steaming up the river, anchored
off Malageah, in which the ruins were still smouldering.
The vessel was so ill-provided with munitions of war
that hardly any shell remained from the previous day.
What little there was, was thrown amongst the houses
to endeavour to fire them, and the attempt being unsuccessful,
it became necessary to land the men. The dense
bush around the town having been well searched with
grape and canister to clear it of any lurking enemy,
the troops, 135 in number, were landed on the bank
of the mangrove creek running inland towards the town,
and no enemy appearing, they advanced to set fire
to the buildings that had hitherto escaped destruction.
The advanced guard of thirty men,
with whom were Lieutenant-Commander Nicolas and Mr.
Dillet, who had landed to point out which houses it
was most important to thoroughly destroy, had only
advanced some two hundred yards from the bank of the
creek, when they were received with a murderous discharge
of musketry from the enemy concealed in the bush.
Almost the whole of the advanced party were shot down
in this one volley, twenty men being killed on the
spot, and Lieutenant-Commander Nicolas and Mr. Dillet
severely wounded. The main body, seventy-five
in number, under Captain Fletcher, at once hurried
up to prevent the wounded falling into the hands of
the barbarous natives, and behaved with great gallantry,
for though falling thick and fast under the tremendous
fire which the concealed enemy to the number
of several hundreds poured into them from
a distance of ten or twelve yards, they held their
ground until the wounded had been safely conveyed to
the boats.
Scarcely had this been accomplished
than the rear-guard of thirty men, under Lieut.
Keir, 3rd West India Regiment, was attacked by a large
number of natives who had moved through the bush, and
actually succeeded in cutting off our men from the
boats. The enemy advanced with great determination
into the open, thinking to overwhelm this small party,
and they were only driven back into the bush by repeated
volleys and a final charge with the bayonet.
By this time fully one-third of the
men who had landed having been killed, and a great
number wounded, the order was given to retire, which
was done steadily, the ground being contested inch
by inch. At this time Company Sergeant-Major
Scanlan, of the 3rd West India Regiment, and six men
who were covering the retreat, fell, the former mortally
wounded; and some of the bolder of the natives, rushing
out of their concealment, seized Deputy-Assistant-Commissary
Frith, and dragged him away into the bush, where he
was barbarously murdered in cold blood. Scanlan
was lying in the narrow path, his chest riddled with
bullets, when the chief fetish priest of the place,
to encourage the natives to make further efforts,
sprang upon a ruined wall in front of him, and began
dancing an uncouth dance, accompanying it with savage
yells and significant gestures to the dying man.
He paid dearly for his rashness, however, for Scanlan,
collecting his strength for a last supreme effort,
seized his loaded rifle, which was fortunately lying
within reach, and discharged it at the gesticulating
savage, who threw up his arms and fell dead. The
next moment Scanlan was surrounded by a horde of infuriated
barbarians, and his body hacked into an undistinguishable
mass.
The troops, sadly diminished in number,
at last reached that portion of the mangrove creek
where they had left the boats. Of these there
had been originally but two, and one having at the
commencement of the action been used to convey Lieutenant-Commander
Nicolas and Mr. Dillet, under the charge of Surgeon
Bradshaw, to the ship, one only remained for the men
to embark in. The tide having fallen, this was
lying out near the entrance of the creek, separated
by an expanse of reeking mud from the shore.
The men, seeing their last chance of safety cut off,
threw themselves into the mud, in which many sank
and were no more seen. Some few, however, succeeded
in floundering along, half wading and half swimming,
until they reached her, and climbed in. She was,
however, so riddled with bullets, that she filled
and sank almost immediately.
Captain Fletcher, Lieutenant Wylie,
Lieutenant Strachan, and Lieutenant Vincent, with
some thirty men, endeavoured to make a last stand upon
a small islet of mud and sand, near the left bank
of the creek; but Lieutenant Wylie was shot dead almost
at once, and Lieutenant Vincent, being shot through
the body, jumped into the water, to endeavour to swim
to the ship. In a few seconds seventeen men had
fallen out of this devoted band, and the survivors,
plunging into the creek, swam down towards the river.
The natives lined the banks in crowds, keeping up a
heavy fire upon the men in the water; and Captain Fletcher
and Lieutenant Strachan, who were the last to leave
the shore, only reached the Teazer by a miracle,
they having to swim more than half a mile to reach
her.
As the last of the survivors gained
the vessel, the natives, between two and three thousand
in number, lined the banks of the river, brandishing
their weapons and uttering shouts of defiance; and
the heads of several of the killed, horribly mutilated,
were held out towards the ship on spears, amidst cries
of exultation. All the ammunition for the Teazer’s
guns having already been expended in shelling the town
and clearing the bush, it was impossible to reply
to the enemy, and the vessel proceeded slowly down
the river, returning to Sierra Leone next day.
The casualties of this day were as
follows: The 1st West India Regiment, out of
62 men who landed, lost 38 killed and 3 wounded.
The 3rd West India Regiment, out of 73 men who landed,
lost 46 killed and 8 wounded. Total, 95 killed
and wounded, out of a force of 135 men.
The casualties amongst the officers
were nearly equally heavy. Out of the ten Europeans
who were under fire, three, namely Lieutenant Wylie,
1st West India Regiment, D.A.C.G. Frith and C.S.M.
Scanlan were killed; and three, Lieutenant Vincent,
2nd West India Regiment, Lieutenant-Commander Nicolas,
and Mr. Dillet, severely wounded.
It was learned afterwards that the
reason so large a force was assembled at Malageah
was that it was the time for the annual gathering of
the river tribes, to hear the laws read by the Alimani.
This circumstance ought of course to have been known
to the Acting Governor, who was well acquainted with
the customs of the people. The Imperial Government
held him responsible for this defeat, and, in November,
1855, he was relieved of his post, and charged “with
having, when Acting Governor, on the 21st of May,
1855, without authority, and upon insufficient grounds,
sent an expedition against the Moriah chiefs in the
Mellicourie River, beyond the Colony, with orders
to burn or destroy the town of Malageah, planned without
foresight or judgment, disastrous in its termination,
and disgraceful to the British power,” and was
suspended from his office of Queen’s Advocate
and from his seat at the Council Board.