Saturday 4th of February 2012     You are here - Home History The 93rd Sutherland Highlanders India, 1857 - 1880

Argylls

India, 1857 - 1880



The Charge of the 93rd at Cawnpore, S Cummings, 1858Bagpipes used during the Relief of Lucknow, 1857Feather bonnet badge, c 1856 - 1881
   
In 1855 the S.S. Mauritius, carrying 1,070 of the 93rd, berthed at Calcutta. The new Commander-in-Chief in India,  Sir Colin Campbell, came on board to be greeted with rapturous cheers.

Though a Black Watch man, Sir Colin seems always to have had a particular affection for the Sutherland Highlanders. When he set off on his desperate venture to relieve Lucknow with only 4,000 men to meet four times that number of well-trained and desperate mutineers who had no choice but to win or die, the Governor-General Lord Canning wrote to cheer him on his way. "You have your beloved 93rd."

The campaign reached its crisis on 11 November 1857, when the army faced the two great fortresses of the Sikanderbargh Gate and, behind it, the Shah Najaf, both solidly built, strongly manned, and heavily gunned. When his own gunners had knocked a hole no more than three feet square in the Sikanderbargh wall, Sir Colin ordered a drummer of the 93rd to sound the advance, and the Regiment swept forward to the tune of The Haughs of Cromdell. Nine officers and men got through the hole, including Colonel Ewart in command and the 14 year-old drummer boy, who was killed.

Fighting fiercely hand-to-hand and helped by some of the loyal 4th Punjabis, they got the gate open.

There remained the still more formidable Shah Najaf; and as evening fell Sir Colin delivered another of his characteristic addresses to the 93rd: "Soldiers," he said, "I had no intention of employing you again today, but the Shah Najaf must be taken this evening. The artillery cannot drive the enemy out, so you must, with the bayonet and I will lead you myself." And so, for the last time in history, a Commander-in-Chief rode, sword in hand, among the pipers at the head of his leading infantry. They fought all night and lost a great number of men. But at dawn Sir Colin was able to order them to uncase their tattered Colours and fly them from the tower to show the hard-pressed defenders of the Residency that relief was at hand This provoked a furious burst of fire from the enemy; and the epic ended with a twelve-year-old drummer who was with the Colour party defiantly playing Cock o' the North on his pipes. The 93rd won six Victoria Crosses before breakfast.

To the credit of Sir Colin and his troops, 1,000 wounded, 600 women and children, the King of Oudh with his household and treasure, £250,000 of government money and all the remaining stores, were brought out of the Residency without a shot being fired at them.

The 93rd had still ten years of Indian soldiering before they at last got back, in 1870, to their native Scotland. There they happily stayed until 1879, when they were sent for two years to Gibraltar; and then, in 1881, were amalgamated with the 91st - a very successful union. But the old 93rd, as Sir Colin knew them, ceased to exist.

Continued: The Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders, 1881 - Present

 

Research Enquiries

Research Enquiries

Do you have a geneological or historical enquiry? 

The Museum's extensive archive has personal and official material which reflects the history of the Regiment. For more information and to submit an enquiry, please visit our "Research Enquiries" page.

Find out more... 


Museum - Articles

Mauser Rifle and Drum c 1901 

Museum - Articles, General

Recent Articles

"Hot Sun and no Pudding - the Boer War" - 31st July 2011

"Campaign Maps" - 10th December, 2010

"Their Past Your Future" - 2nd September, 2010


Object of the Month

Object of the Month

Miniature Portrait of John Currie Lauder, 1914 - 1918

Son of the world famous music hall entertainer Sir Harry Lauder.

Read more...


Did You Know?

The final draft to join the 93rd in India, included 13 women and 9 children, they left Aberdeen on 17th January 1868, and did not reach the Regiment until 30th November 1868, nearly 11 months later.