THE PLAN OF THE ALLIES
If the reader will look at the map
opposite he will see in what disposition the armies
of the allies were, at the end of April and the first
days of May 1794, to carry into effect the plan which
I proceed to describe.
There, in its triangle or advanced
wedge, with a base stretching across Lille and an
apex at Courtrai, lay the exposed French division,
Souham’s.
Clerfayt was to the north of that
wedge. The French, in pushing their wedge up
to Courtrai, had thus separated him from the rest of
the allies. Clerfayt lay with his command round
about the district of Roulers; he attempted to return
and oust Souham, but he failed, and to the north of
the French wedge, and separated from the rest of the
allies by its intervening thousands, he remained up
to, throughout, and after the great battle that was
to follow.
Right away down south, nearly sixty
miles as the crow flies, lay the bulk of the Austrian
army, Coburg’s command, round the town which
it had just captured, Landrecies. The Duke of
York’s command, detached from this main army
of Coburg, had been ordered north, and was, by May
3rd, at Tournai. To the east lay the Prussian
forces together with a small body of Hanoverians,
about 4000 in number, which last could be brought up
on to the Scheldt River when necessary.
It will thus be seen that the allies,
at the moment when the plan was about to be formulated,
lay on either side of the French wedge, and that any
scheme for cutting off that wedge from the main French
line must consist in causing a great force of the
allies to appear rapidly and unexpectedly between
Courtrai and Lille.
In order to do this, it was necessary
to get Clerfayt to march down south to some point
where he could cross the River Lys, while
the rest of the allies were marching north from their
southern positions to join hands with him.
When this larger mass of the allies
coming up from the south and the east should have
joined hands with Clerfayt, all the great French body
lying advanced in the valley of the Lys round
Menin and Courtrai would be cut off.
Now the success of such a plan obviously
depended upon two factors: synchrony and surprise.
That is, its success depended upon the accurate keeping
of a time-table, and upon carrying it out too quickly
and unexpectedly for Souham to fall back in time.
Clerfayt’s force coming down
from the north, all the rest of the allies coming
up from the east and the south must march with the
common object of reaching “R,” a fixed
rendezvous, agreed upon beforehand, and of meeting
there together at some appointed time. If any
considerable body lagged behind the rest, if part
of the great force marching up from the south, for
instance, failed to keep in line with the general advance,
or if Clerfayt bungled or delayed, the junction would
be imperfect or might even not take place at all,
and the number of men present to cut off the French
when a partial and imperfect junction had been effected,
might be too small to maintain itself astraddle of
the French communications, and to prevent the great
French force from breaking its way through back to
Lille.
So much for synchrony: and as
for surprise, it is obvious that for the success of
this plan it was necessary to work both rapidly and
secretly.
Here was Souham with a body of men
which recent reinforcement had raised to some 40,000,
lying much too far ahead of the general French line
and in peril of being cut off. Pichegru was foolish
to maintain him in that advanced position, but, though
that was an error, it was an error based upon a certain
amount of calculation. Pichegru, and Souham under
his orders, kept to their perilous position round
Courtrai, because it did after all cut the allies
in two, and because they knew that they could deal
with Clerfayt’s force upon the north (which was
only half their own), while they also knew that the
bulk of their enemies were tied down, far away to
the south, by the operations round Landrecies.
If Souham at Courtrai got news in
time of the march northward of that main southern
force, he had only to fall back upon Lille to be saved.
It was not until the 10th of May that
the plan was elaborated whereby it was hoped to annihilate
Souham’s command, and this plan seems to have
occurred first to the Duke of York upon the evening
of that day, after a successful minor action between
his troops and the French just outside Tournai.
The Duke of York had been at Tournai
a week, having come up there from Landrecies after
the fall of that fortress, though the mass of the
Austrian forces still remained away in the south.
The week had been spent in “feeling” the
south-eastern front of the French advanced “wedge,”
and it was by the evening of the 10th that the Duke
of York appears to have decided that the time was
ripe for a general movement.
At any rate, it was upon the morrow,
the 11th, that the English Prince sent word to Clerfayt
that he intended to submit to the Emperor, who was
the ultimate authority upon the side of the allies,
a plan for the general and decisive action he desired
to bring about. On the next day, the 12th, a
Monday, the Duke of York wrote to Clerfayt that he
hoped, “on the day after the morrow” (that
is, upon the Wednesday, the 14th), “to take a
decisive movement against the enemy.” And
we may presume that the Duke had communicated to the
Emperor the nature of his plan. For on the 13th,
the Tuesday, the Emperor was in possession of it,
and his orders, sent out upon that day, set out the
plan in detail. That plan was as follows:
Clerfayt, with his force, which was
rather less than 20,000 all told, was to march south
from Thielt, his headquarters for the moment, and advance
upon the little town of Wervicq upon the River
Lys. Here there was a bridge, and Clerfayt
was also in possession of pontoons wherewith to pass
the stream. Meanwhile, the southern mass of the
allies was to concentrate upon the Scheldt in the
following manner:
The few thousand Hanoverians, under
Bussche, were to take up their position at Warcoing,
just upon and across that river. Two miles further
south, Otto, with a larger Austrian force accompanied
by certain English cavalry (the numbers will follow),
was to concentrate at Bailleul.
The Duke of York’s own large
force, which had been at Tournai for over a week,
was to go forward a little and concentrate at Templeuve.
Five miles to the south of Templeuve, at Froidmont,
a column, somewhat larger than the Duke of York’s,
under Kinsky, was to concentrate.
There were thus to be concentrated
upon the south of the French wedge four separate bodies
under orders to advance northward together.
The first, under Bussche, was only
about 4000 strong, the Hanoverians and Prussians;
the second, under Otto, from about 10,000 strong; the
third, under the Duke of York, of much the same strength,
or a little less; and the fourth, under Kinsky, some
11,000.
These four numbered nearly, or quite,
35,000 men, less than the “nearly 40,000”
at which certain French historians have estimated their
strength.
To these four columns (which I will
beg the reader to remember by their numbers of first,
second, third, and fourth, as well as by the names
of their commanders, Bussche, Otto, York, and Kinsky)
a fifth must be added, the appreciation of whose movements
and failure is the whole explanation of the coming
battle.
The fifth column was a body of no
less than 16,000 men coming from the main Austrian
body far south, and ordered to be at St Amand upon
the Scheldt somewhat before the concentration of the
other four columns, and to advance from St Amand to
Pont-a-Marcq. Upon reaching Pont-a-Marcq this
fifth column would be in line with the other four at
Warcoing, Bailleul, Templeuve, and Froidmont, and
ready to take its part in the great forward movement
towards the north.
In order to appreciate the way in
which the issue was bound to depend upon this fifth
column, I must now detail the orders given to all six,
the five columns in the valley of the Scheldt, and
the sixth body, under Clerfayt, north of the Lys;
for it is these orders which constitute the soul of
the plan.
Bussche, with his small body of 4000
Hanoverians, the first column, had the task of “holding”
the apex of the French wedge when the attack should
begin. That is, it was his task to do no more
with his inferior forces than send one portion up
the road towards Courtrai, so that the advanced French
troops there should be engaged while another part of
his small command should attack the little town of
Mouscron, which the French held, of course, for it
was within their wedge of occupation. It was obviously
not hoped that this little body could do more than
keep the French occupied, prevent their falling back
towards Lille, and perhaps make them believe that
the main attack was coming from Bussche’s men.
The second column, under Otto, was
to advance upon Tourcoing, in those days a little
town, now a great manufacturing city.
The third column, that under the Duke
of York, was to march side by side with Otto’s
column, and to make for Mouveaux, a village upon a
level with Tourcoing upon this line of advance, and
to be reached by marching through Roubaix (now also
a great manufacturing town, but then a small place).
None of these advances, Bussche’s,
Otto’s, or York’s, was of any considerable
length. The longest march through which any of
these three columns had to fight its way was that
of the Duke of York from Templeuve to Mouveaux, and
even this was not eight miles.
The fourth column, under Kinsky, had
a harder task and a longer march. It was to carry
Bouvines, which was in the hands of the French and
nearly seven miles from Froidmont (Kinsky’s
point of departure), and when it had done this it
was to turn to the north with one part of its force
in order to shelter the march of the Duke of York
from attacks by the French troops near Lille, while
another part of its force was to join with the fifth
column and march up with it until both came upon a
level with York and Otto in the neighbourhood of Tourcoing
and Mouveaux.
Now it was to this fifth column, the
16,000 men or more under the Arch-Duke Charles, that
the great work of the day was assigned. From
Pont-a-Marcq they must attack a great French body quite
equal to their own in numbers, even when part of Kinsky’s
force had joined them, which French force lay in the
camp at Sainghin. They must thrust this force
back towards Lille, pour up northward, and arrive
in support of Otto and York by the time these two
commanders were respectively at Tourcoing and Mouveaux.
In other words, the fifth column,
that of the Arch-Duke Charles, was asked to make an
advance of nearly fourteen miles, involving heavy fighting
in its first part, and yet to synchronise with columns
who had to advance no more than five miles or seven.
Supposing all went well, Clerfayt crossing
the Lys at Wervicq at the same hour which saw
the departure of the five southern columns from Warcoing,
Bailleul, Templeuve, Froidmont, and Pont-a-Marcq respectively,
was to advance southward from the river towards Mouveaux
and Tourcoing, a distance of some seven miles, while
the others were advancing on the same points from
the south.
If the time-table were accurately
kept and this great combined movement all fitted in,
Clerfayt would join hands with the second, third, fourth,
and fifth columns somewhere in the neighbourhood of
Tourcoing and Mouveaux, a great force of over 60,000
men would lie between the French troops at Lille and
Souham’s 40,000 in the “advanced wedge,”
and those 40,000 thus isolated were, in a military
sense, destroyed.
Such being the mechanism or map of
the scheme, we must next inquire the exact dates and
hours upon which the working of the whole was planned.
The Duke of York, as we have seen
when he was arranging the business and writing to
Clerfayt and the Emperor, had talked of moving upon
the 14th, by which presumably he meant organising
the attack on the 14th, and setting the first columns
in motion from their places of rendezvous in the early
hours of that day, Wednesday, before dawn.
If that was in his mind, it shows
him to have been a prompt and energetic man, and to
have had a full appreciation of the place which surprise
occupied in the chances of success. If, indeed,
the Emperor got the Duke of York’s message in
time on the 12th, if he had at once accepted the plan,
and had with Napoleonic rapidity ordered the bulk of
his forces (which were still right away south and
east) to move, he might have had them by forced marches
upon and across the Scheldt, and ready to execute
the plan by the 14th, or at any rate by the morning
of the 15th.
But from what we know of the family
to which the Duke of York belonged, it is exceedingly
improbable that this younger son of George III. had,
on this one occasion only, any lightning in his brain;
and even if he did appreciate more or less the importance
of rapid action, the Emperor did not appreciate it.
He committed the two contradictory faults of delaying
the movement and of asking too much marching of his
men, and it was not until the morning of the Wednesday,
May the 14th, that the bulk of the Austrian army,
which still lay in the Valenciennes and Landrecies
district, broke up for its northward march, to arrive
at the rendezvous beyond the Scheldt, and to carry
out the plan.
It was not until Thursday the 15th
of May that the Emperor joined the Duke of York at
Tournai, and very late upon the same day the Arch-Duke
Charles had brought up the main body of the Austrian
forces from the south to the town of St Amand.
We shall see later what a grievous
error it was to demand so violent an effort from the
men of the Arch-Duke Charles’ command. From
Landrecies itself to St Amand is 30 miles as the crow
flies; and though, of course, the mass of the troops
which the Arch-Duke Charles had been thus commanded
to bring up northward in such haste were most of them
well on the right side of Landrecies when the order
to advance reached them, yet the average march undertaken
by his men in little more than twenty-four hours was
a full twenty miles, and some of his units must have
covered nearer thirty. I will not delay further
on this point here; its full importance will appear
when we come to talk of the action itself.
The Arch-Duke Charles being only as
far as St Amand on the evening of Thursday the 15th,
and his rendezvous, that of the fifth column in the
great plan, being Pont-a-Marcq, a further good sixteen
miles north-westward, it was evident that the inception
of that plan and the simultaneous advance of all the
five columns from their five starting-points of Warcoing,
Bailleul, Templeuve, Froidmont, and Pont-a-Marcq,
could not begin even upon the 16th. It would take
the best part of a day to bring the Arch-Duke Charles
up to Pont-a-Marcq; his men were in imperative need
of rest during a full night at St Amand, and it is
probable, though I have no proof of it, that he had
not even fully concentrated there by the evening of
the 15th, and that his last units only joined him
during the forenoon of the 16th.
The whole of that day, therefore,
the 16th, was consumed so far as the first, second,
third, and fourth columns were concerned, in merely
gathering and marshalling their forces, and occupying,
before nightfall, the points from which they were
to depart simultaneously in the combined advance of
the morrow. They had to wait thus for the
dawn of the 17th, because they had to allow time for
the fifth column to come up.
The time-table imposed upon the great
plan by these delays is now apparent. The moment
when all the strings of the net were to be pulled
together round Souham was the space between midnight
and dawn of Saturday the 17th of May. And the
hour when all the six bodies of the allies were to
join hands at “R” near Tourcoing was the
noon of that day.
Before day broke upon the 17th, Clerfayt
was to find himself at Wervicq upon the River
Lys and across that stream, while of the five
southern columns the Arch-Duke Charles was to be attacking
the French troops just in front of Pont-a-Marcq with
the fifth column at the same moment; Kinsky, with
the fourth, was to be well on the way from Froidmont
to Bouvines where he was to attack the French also
and cross the bridge; the Duke of York, with the third,
was to be well on the way from Templeuve to Lannoy;
Otto, with the second, was to be equally advanced upon
his line, somewhere by Wattrelos in his march upon
Tourcoing; while Bussche, with his small first column,
on the extreme north, was to be getting into contact
with the French posts south of Courtrai, which it
was his duty to “hold,” impressing upon
Souham the idea that a main attack might develop in
that quarter, and so deluding the French into maintaining
their perilously advanced stations until they were
cut off from Lille by the rest of the allies.
The morning would be filled by the
advance of Clerfayt from Wervicq southward upon Mouveaux
and Tourcoing, while the corresponding fighting advance
northward upon Mouveaux and Tourcoing also, of Otto,
York, Kinsky, and the Arch-Duke Charles, should result
somewhere about noon in their joining hands with Clerfayt
and forming one great body: a body cutting off
Courtrai from Lille, and the 40,000 under Souham from
their fellows in the main French line.
With such a time-table properly observed,
the plan should have succeeded, and between the noon
and the evening of that Saturday, the great force
which Souham commanded should have been at the mercy
of the allies.
Such was the plan and such the time-table
upon which it was schemed. Its success depended,
of course, as I have said, upon an exact keeping of
that time-table, and also upon the net being drawn
round Souham before he had guessed what was happening.
The second of these conditions, we shall see when
we come to speak of “The Preliminaries of the
Action,” was successfully accomplished.
The first was not; and its failure is the story of
the defeat suffered by the Duke of York in particular,
and the consequent break-down of the whole strategical
conception of the allies.
But before dealing with this it is
necessary to establish a disputed point.
I have spoken throughout of the plan
as the Duke of York’s. Because it failed,
and because the Duke of York was an English prince,
historians in this country have not only rejected
this conclusion, but, as a rule, have not even mentioned
it. The plan has been represented as Mack’s
plan, as a typical example of Austrian pedantry and
folly, the Duke of York as the victim of foolish foreigners
who did not know their business, and it has even been
hinted that the Austrians desired defeat! With
the latter extravagant and even comic suggestion I
will deal later in this study; for the moment I am
only concerned with the responsibility of the Duke
of York.
It must, in the first place, be clearly
understood that the failure of the plan does not reflect
upon the judgment of that commander. It failed
because Clerfayt was not up to time, and because too
much had been asked of the fifth column. The
Duke came of a family not famous for genius; he was
exceedingly young, and whatever part he may have had
in the framing of this large conception ought surely
to stand to his credit.
It is true that Mack, the Austrian
General, drafted details of the plan immediately before
it was carried into execution, and our principal military
historian in this country tells us how “on the
16th, Mack prepared an elaborate plan which he designed."
Well, the 16th was the Friday.
Now we know that on the 11th of May,
the Sunday, the Emperor and his staff had no intention
of making a combined attack to cut off Souham from
Lille, for orders were given to Clerfayt on that day
to engage Souham along the valley of the Lys
for the purpose of holding the attention of the French,
and in the hope of recovering Menin the
exact opposite of what would have been ordered if
a secret and unexpected attempt to cut off Souham
by crossing further up the river had been intended.
It was at the same moment that the Duke of York was
sending word to Clerfayt on his own account, to the
effect that he intended to submit a plan to the Emperor,
and it is worth noting that in the very order which
was sent to Clerfayt by the Emperor he was told to
refer to the Duke of York as to his future movements.
The archives of the Ministry of War
at Vienna have it on record that the Duke of York
made a definite statement of a plan to Clerfayt, which
plan he intended to submit to the Emperor immediately,
and a letter dated upon the Monday, the 12th four
days before there is any talk of Mack’s arranging
details, York writes to Clerfayt telling
him that he hopes to make his decisive movement against
the enemy on the Wednesday, the 14th.
On the 13th, Tuesday, the orders of
the Emperor to both Clerfayt and the Duke of York
(which are also on record) set down this plan in detail,
mentioning the point Wervicq at which Clerfayt was
expected to cross the river Lys, and at
the same time directing the Duke of York to march
northward with the object of joining Clerfayt, and
thus cutting off the French forces massed round Courtrai
from their base. Further, in this same despatch,
the initiative is particularly left to the Duke of
York, and it is once more from him that Clerfayt is
to await decisions as to the moment and details of
the operation.
The same archives record the Duke
of York sending Lieut.-Colonel Calvert to Clerfayt
upon the 14th, to tell him that he meant to attack
upon the morrow, the 15th, and they further inform
us that it was on the English Prince’s learning
how scattered were Clerfayt’s units, and how
long it would therefore take him to concentrate, that
action was delayed by some thirty-six hours.
Evidence of this sort is absolutely
conclusive. The plan was not Mack’s; it
was York’s.