AFFAIRS IN HONDURAS, 1874 THE
SHERBRO EXPEDITION 1875 THE ASHANTI EXPEDITION,
1881.
While the regiment had thus been engaged
on the Gold Coast, the detachment left at Orange Walk
had, in January 1874, had a narrow escape of a brush
with the Santa Cruz Indians. On the 2nd of that
month, in accordance with a requisition from the magistrate
at Orange Walk, Captain F.B.P. White and Lieutenant
J.R.H. Wilton, with forty men of the 1st West
India Regiment, left that station about noon for Albion
Island, in the River Hondo, distant about twelve miles,
to demand the restitution of a woman who had been
abducted by an armed party of Santa Cruz Indians from
a place called Douglas, in British territory.
The Hondo was reached about 4.30 p.m., and Captain
White, finding a number of Santa Cruz Indians cutting
bush, as if for an encampment, on the British side
of the river, directed them to accompany him; and crossing
to the island in their boats, sent them to tell the
chief that he had a message to deliver to him.
On landing on Albion Island it was
found that the public ball-room of San Antonio, a
large, open, shed-like building peculiar to these
Spanish-Indian towns, which was situated on a small
hill, was occupied by an armed force of the Indians,
about seventy strong. Opposite to them, on the
nearest rising ground, the detachment was at once formed
up, partly covered by a chapel.
After some time the chief of the Santa
Cruz came over to Captain White’s party, and
inquired what was wanted of him; when he was told that
no message could be delivered to him as long as he
had an armed party on British soil, and that he must
surrender his arms. After some little discussion
the chief agreed to do so, provided that they were
returned when his men left the island; and, on these
terms, ten or eleven rifles were brought in; but while
this was being done, a trumpet sounded in the public
ball-room, and the Santa Cruz, quickly gathering together,
began to load their rifles. The chief, being
asked for an explanation of this sudden change, replied
that his braves were only cleaning their guns, but
at the same moment a sub-chief came up, and loudly
declared that the Santa Cruz would not give up their
arms.
The troops were rapidly posted in
advantageous positions, and Captain White then informed
the chiefs that if their men would not lay down their
arms they must leave San Antonio at once, first handing
over the woman who had been abducted. Some discussion
ensued, but Captain White remaining firm, the chiefs
agreed to go, and moved their men down to the boats.
At the last moment, however, it was discovered that
the woman, who was the cause of the expedition, was
in one of the boats, and their departure was stopped
until she was landed, and given in charge of the troops.
The Santa Cruz now refused to stir,
but remained in their boats, which were moored to
the bank. It being feared that the Indians were
only delaying for reinforcements, thinking to overpower
the British in the darkness, Captain White sent Lieutenant
Wilton with ten men to give them a peremptory order
to push off within a quarter of an hour. The Indians
received the message with laughter, asking, “What
will you do, if we do not go?” It was now rapidly
becoming dark, and the country, wild and savage in
itself, was entirely strange to both officers and men.
After ten minutes had elapsed, without the Indians
giving any sign of departure, Captain White had the
“close” sounded, drew in his sentries,
and descended towards the boats with fixed bayonets.
Upon this the Indians pushed off, and were soon lost
to sight in the darkness. The detachment remained
under arms all night at San Antonio, and next morning,
it having been ascertained that the Indians had retired
across the frontier, the troops returned to Orange
Walk.
The following letter was forwarded upon this subject:
“HORSE
GUARDS, WAR OFFICE,
“17th
March, 1874.
“SIR,
“The Field-Marshal Commanding-in-Chief
has perused the report which you forwarded to
the Adjutant-General on the 29th of January, of the
proceedings of the troops at Orange Walk, in British
Honduras, who were called out in aid of the civil
power against a band of Santa Cruz Indians in
January last, and I am to request that you will cause
Captain White, 1st West India Regiment, by whom they
were commanded, to be informed that His Royal
Highness considers that the discretion and firmness
displayed by him in the performance of this difficult
duty is very commendable to that officer.
“I
have, etc.,
(Signed)
“R.B. HAWLEY,
“Asst.
Mil. Sec.”
In July, 1874, the head-quarters of
the regiment were moved from the Gold Coast to Sierra
Leone, one company being left in garrison at Cape
Coast Castle, and one at Elmina. As in June the
two companies stationed in Honduras had, with the
one left in Jamaica, been removed to Demerara, the
distribution of the regiment in July, 1874, was:
Head-quarters and four companies (A, B, C, and H)
at Sierra Leone, two (E and G) on the Gold Coast,
and three (D, F, and I) in Demerara.
In July, 1875, disturbances once more
broke out in British Sherbro. The inhabitants
of the town of Mongray, on the river of the same name,
in that month made a raid upon Mamaiah, a town on
the British frontier, plundered several factories
there, and carried off thirty-three British subjects
as slaves. Fresh outrages were committed later
on, and, on the 8th of October, 1875, Lieutenant-Governor
Rowe, C.M.G., with forty men of the 1st West India
Regiment, under Sub-Lieutenant G.V. Harrison,
and sixty armed police, left Sierra Leone in the colonial
steamer Lady of the Lake. The detachment
was landed at Bendoo in Sherbro next day. Negotiations
were at once opened with the Mongray chiefs, resulting
in the surrender of the captives on the 15th, and
on the 25th the party returned to Sierra Leone.
Almost immediately after, fresh disturbances
broke out in another portion of Sherbro, on the Bargroo
River, and, on the 15th of November, Lieutenant-Governor
Rowe left Freetown in the colonial steamer Sir A.
Kennedy, with Captain A.C. Allinson, Lieutenants
J.H. Jones, and A.S. Roberts, and ninety
men of the 1st West India Regiment, fifty armed police,
a 4-2/5-inch howitzer, and a rocket-trough. The
disturbance arose from a raid of Mendis upon villages
in British territory, thirteen of which they plundered
and destroyed, afterwards erecting a “war-fence”
at a place called Paytaycoomar, in British Sherbro.
Here the Commandant of Sherbro, Mr. Darnell Davis,
attacked them with a few policemen, and was repulsed
with a loss of three killed and several wounded, himself
severely.
The expedition, on arriving at Sherbro,
established a camp at Tyama Woroo in Bargroo, and
all preparations for an advance being completed by
the 27th of November, the troops marched on that day,
occupying Mosangrah on the 30th. On the 3rd of
December, Lowarnar, a town to the eastward, was entered,
and on the 5th a move was made on the stockaded town
of Gundomar, which was abandoned by the enemy on the
approach of the force. The dead body of one of
the captives taken from British Sherbro, recently
strangled, was found in the stockade, and the town
was accordingly burned.
On the 6th the force advanced on Moyamba,
which was also found to be evacuated by the enemy,
and was burned. On the 9th the troops left Moyamba
and marched to Yahwi-yamah, which was also destroyed,
with the outlying stockaded villages of Mocorreh,
Bettimah and Mangaymihoon. On the 10th Modena
was destroyed, and the force marched through Mowato
and Geeavar to Sennehoo, arriving there on the 16th.
To this latter town several of the chiefs came in
to treat, bringing 212 of the captives with them,
and on the 18th a treaty of peace was arranged, the
Mendis promising to pay a fine of 10,000 bushels of
rice. The troops returned to Sierra Leone on
the 24th of December.
The country through which the detachment
of the 1st West India Regiment had marched was most
difficult. It consisted of dense forest, through
which the only advance could be made along narrow paths,
wide enough only for the passage of men in single
file, and obstructed by fallen trees, swamps, and
unbridged streams. Numerous swamps, black and
full of malaria, had to be crossed, and, though the
noon-day sun was excessively hot, the nights, owing
to excessive damp, were very cold. Heavy showers
of rain fell almost daily, and from sunset till an
hour after sunrise the whole country was buried in
an impenetrable fog.
The stockades were of the same character
as those found at Mongray, but were here in some instances
further fortified by mud walls, fifteen feet high,
and about twelve feet thick at the base. Inside
the walls were ditches about six feet wide and eight
feet deep. In some of the towns, mâchicoulis
galleries had been constructed over the gates,
and the entrances further protected by semicircular
mud bastions.
In March, 1877, the 1st West India
Regiment was relieved on the West Coast of Africa
by the 2nd West India Regiment, E and G Companies
embarking in H.M.S. Simoom, at Cape Coast Castle,
on the 24th of February, and the head-quarters, with
A, B, C, and H Companies, at Sierra Leone on the 3rd
of March. On arriving at the West Indies the
regiment was thus distributed: Head-quarters,
with A, D, E, and I Companies, at Jamaica, C and F
at Honduras, G and H at Barbados, and B at Nassau.
During its three years’ tour
of West African service the regiment had suffered
very heavy loss amongst the officers. In addition
to the eight deaths that occurred in 1874, directly
after the Ashanti war, Captain W. Cole died in Ireland
of fever contracted on the Gold Coast; Lieutenant-Colonel
Strachan and Sub-Lieutenant Turner in England; and
Sub-Lieutenants S.B. Orr and G.V. Harrison
at Sierra Leone in 1876.
The regiment remained without change
in the West Indies until December, 1879, when the
head-quarters and six companies embarked in H.M.S.
Tamar for West Africa, leaving D, E, and I Companies
at the depot at Demerara. The head-quarters and
four companies disembarked at Sierra Leone on the
17th of January, 1880, and the two remaining companies
proceeded to Cape Coast Castle.
In February, 1880, there being some
slight disturbance in the neighbourhood of the Ribbie
River, a small party of the 1st West India Regiment
proceeded thither as an escort to the Governor, with
Lieutenants Madden and Tipping. The whole returned
to Sierra Leone without any casualty, after an absence
of a few weeks.
On the 28th of January, 1881, news
was received at Sierra Leone that the Ashanti king,
Mensah, had threatened an invasion of the Gold Coast
Colony, and a reinforcement was urgently demanded.
In consequence, Captain H.W. Pollard, 1st West
India Regiment, commanding the troops on the West
Coast of Africa, despatched to Cape Coast Castle next
day in the mail steamer Cameroon letter B Company,
under Captain Ellis, and letter H Company, under Lieutenant
Garland. These two companies arrived at their
destination on the 2nd of February, and on the 9th
the former proceeded to Anamaboe. This rapid
arrival of reinforcements induced the king to repudiate
the action of his envoys, but affairs were still in
a very critical situation, and much alarm prevailed
in the colony. Early in March, Lieutenant-Colonels
Niven and Smith and Major White arrived from England,
bringing with them letter A Company from Sierra Leone.
On the 18th of March, five companies of the 2nd West
India Regiment arrived in the hired transport Humber.
Negotiations were protracted till April, when an embassy
arrived from Coomassie, and the difficulty was finally
settled. On the 2nd of May, the head-quarters,
with A, F, and G Companies, returned to Sierra Leone,
leaving B, C, and H at Cape Coast Castle and Anamaboe.
In February, 1882, C Company also proceeded to Sierra
Leone.
It was intended at the termination
of the African tour of the regiment, in January, 1883,
to reduce the garrisons in West Africa from six to
three companies, and the steamship Bolivar was
chartered to carry out the relief in two trips.
That vessel, however, was wrecked off the Cobbler’s
Reef, at Barbados, and H.M.S. Tyne was sent
in her place. The latter embarked H Company at
Cape Coast Castle on the 6th of February, 1883, and
F and G Companies at Sierra Leone on the 14th, all
three proceeding to Jamaica under the command of Major
C.J.L. Hill. On the return of the Tyne
to West Africa with three companies of the 2nd West
India Regiment, the head-quarters and remaining three
companies of the 1st West India Regiment, at Cape
Coast Castle and Sierra Leone, were embarked on the
1st and 11th of April respectively, and sailed for
Jamaica under the command of Captain Ellis, arriving
at their destination on the 28th of April. On
the 5th of May, B, G, and F Companies embarked in
the Tyne, the first two for Honduras and the
third for Nassau. On the conclusion of the inter-island
trooping, the Tyne proceeded with the head-quarters
and three companies of the 2nd West India Regiment
to West Africa, the Government having, in consequence
of threatened complications with Ashanti, abandoned
their scheme of reducing the African garrisons.
The distribution of the 1st West India
Regiment is now (May, 1883): Head-quarters and
three companies (A, C, and H) at Jamaica, two (B and
G) in Honduras, one (F) in Nassau, and three (D, E,
and I) in Demerara.