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No unit that served during the Boer War is
as well known to Australians as the Bushveldt Carbineers. Not because
of the many great deeds they performed in battle, but by the infamous
deeds of some of its members. This has overshadowed the many fine
actions in which the unit was involved.
Background
As the great battles of 1899-1900 came to a close, the defeated
Boers chose to continue the struggle by hit and run raids which were
more to their character than large set piece battles. Lord Kitchener
was forced to disperse his forces over the Orange Free State and the
Transvaal and, to cover the many gaps which were created, he formed
a variety of irregular units. One of those was the Bushveldt Carbineers.
The Regiment was formed on the 21st February 1901 in the Northern
Transvaal by Maj. R.W. Lenehan (an Australian) with a maximum complement
of 350 men. The recruiting base was at Durban and between February
1901 and June 1902, 660 men had attested, of which 43% were Australian,
31% English and the rest native South Africans, Americans, New Zealanders,
Canadians and even a German.
Actions
In March 1901, the Regiment began to muster at Pretoria where
it became part of General Plumer's column of 1300 men which was preparing
to advance and capture Pietersburg, 180 miles north of Pretoria. The
column left on 26th March and followed the Pietersburg-Pretoria railway
track until they reached the Pienaars River where there was a running
fight with the Boers. During this time, the Bushveldt Carbineers were
tasked to ensure General Plumer's supply trains were able to run as
the Boers continued to attempt to blow up all trains on the Pietersburg-Pretoria
Railway Line.
After one such train had been attacked, the Carbineers took
some local Boers prisoner. These prisoners were placed in the second
carriage of the next train and told that if they did not reveal the
location of further demolitions on the line they would be blown up
with the train. When the prisoners would still not talk, the Carbineers
ran the train until the first wagon was blown up. With that, the Boers
revealed the position of all mines.
With Pietersburg's capture on the 14th April, the Regiment
moved into that location to establish its headquarters. Lt Col Hall
took command of the Regiment. A Sqn, under Capt J.H. Robertson, was
assigned the area of Louis Trichardt at Fort Edward, North of Pietersburg
and B Sqn, under Lt H.H. Morant, was camped at Strypoort, south of
Pietersburg. From these positions they conducted a series of raids
and patrols along the Zoutpansburg District and Pretoria-Pietersburg
Railway.
By April the Regiment was making its presence felt. On 5th May, one
patrol under Lt H. Morant captured five Boers at Chuniespoort and
on 11th, another five were captured at Marsfontein. It was during
this time that the only man to receive a decoration in the Bushveldt
Carbineers was mentioned in Lord Kitcheners dispatches. On hearing
of 23 Boers, Sgt C.A.B. Forbes (an Australian) marched 80 miles, surprised
and captured them. A further 100 men, under Commandant Rensburg, surrendered
to the Carbineers at Pietersburg towards the end of the month.
Some notable captures were in April. They included 42 Boers
at Commissie Drift, 47 at Klip dam and during May, 150 surrendered
in the Louis Trichardt area. In June 44 men under Veldt Cornet Preez
surrendered and Capt Taylor captured 20 more on 18th August. Perhaps
the most notable capture occurred on 30th September when, after a
wild ride across the veldt, Lt Morant and a small party took Veldt
Cornet Kelly and 10 men.
In mid July, after some misconduct in A Sqn, its commander,
Capt Robertson was dismissed and Capt Hunt assumed command. Lt Morant
and 60 men were sent to Fort Edward to "sort A Sqn out".
The next month, A Sqn was again out on patrol and 18 Boers were captured
with 500 cattle and 15 wagons.
On 6th August Capt Hunt and 17 men went to the Viljoen farmhouse
to capture Veldt Cornet Viljoen, who was reported to be hiding there
and in the following action, Capt Hunt and Sgt Eland were killed by
Viljoen and 35 Boers of his Commando.
From August to September many prisoners were taken but few
were sent back to Pietersburg. In October,seven officers of the Bushveldt
Carbineers were involved in a court of inquiry into the shootings
of prisoners and, as a consequent, the Bushveldt Carbineers were reformed
into the New Pietersburg Light Horse, the name they kept until the
disbanding of the Regiment in June 1902 with the end of the war.
During February and March 1902, Commandant Beyers and his Commando
seized the Fort Edward area, from where he was able to send out raiding
forces as far away as Pietersburg. Col Colenbrander, the local British
Commander, was sent with a mixed force of regular and irregular units
(which included the Pietersburg Light Horse) to retake the area. Between
25th March and the 21st April, the Light Horse distinguished itself
in a number of actions. Two members received decorations, Capt S.
Midgeley (an Australian) was awarded the Distinguished Service Order
and Sgt J.R. Gray (also an Australian) was awarded the Distinguished
Conduct Medal.
With war's end in June, the Pietersburg Light Horse was disbanded.
Since its creation, the Regiment had enlisted 660 men of which eight
were killed in action, three died of disease and four were severely
wounded.
The Shootings
Those arrested in October 1901 were mostly Australians but
perhaps there has been too much emphasis on their nationality. The
officers were Maj Lenehan (Aus), Capt Taylor (Eng), Lts Morant, Hancock,
Witton, Hannam (all Aus) and Lt Picton (Eng). Lt's Morant and Hancock
were subsequently found guilty and executed.
There were six known charges brought against the seven officers
at the court of enquiry:
1. 2nd July shooting of six Boer prisoners
2. 4th July shooting of Tpr Van Buuren BVC
3. 11th August shooting of a prisoner named Visser
4. 23rd August shooting eight prisoners and one
missionary
5. 5th September shooting into wagons killing two
children, and
6. on 7th September shooting two prisoners and boy.
1st Charge - On 2nd July six Boers were captured by Capt Robertson
who had Capt Taylor shoot them. (This happened before Lt Morant's
detachment arrived at Fort Edward).
2nd Charge - Tpr Van Buuren was a local who had enlisted in
the Bushveldt Carbineers. On witnessing the above shootings, he told
their families who were also locals. Lt Hancock took Tpr Van Buuren
out on patrol from which only Hancock returned. Lt Hancock stated
that Tpr Van Buuren was shot by Boers.
3rd Charge - The prisoner named Visser was captured at the
Waterburg by Lt Morant's patrol after the death of Capt Hunt. Morant
had him court martialled and shot for wearing a British coat. The
court of inquiry was told it was Capt Hunt's jacket (it was in fact
a British warm jacket). The fatal shot was administered by Lt Picton.
4th Charge - On 3rd August, eight Boers surrendered to Lt Morant's
patrol. Rev Heese rode in to comfort these men and was told to depart
by Morant. He then had them shot. Lt Witton shot one man as he attempted
to escape. Afraid that the Reverend would tell, Lt Hancock went out
and shot him. Unfortunately for Hancock, he was seen by two Kaffir
boys and the local storekeeper.
5th Charge - On 5th September, Lt Hannam came upon three wagons
containing four men with women and children. They were called upon
to surrender which they did but Hannam ordered his men to shoot into
the wagons. After 250 rounds were fired, he advanced to the wagons
finding two little boys killed and one little girl wounded.
6th Charge - On 7th September, Maj Lenehan who was at Fort
Edward on an inspection, sent Lt Morant to take two Boers and one
boy aged 14 prisoner. Morant had all three shot, all with Maj Lenehan's
full knowledge.
The result of these crimes was the eventual execution of Lts
Morant and Hancock. Lt Witton was sentenced to penal servitude for
life, Lt Picton was cashiered, Maj Lenehan was reprimanded and discharged
and all charges were dismissed against Capt. Taylor.
Lt Hannam was not brought to trial. Capt Robertson having already
been discharged for his actions on 2nd July, turned prosecution evidence
and no charges were laid against him.
All officers were brought to trial from the evidence taken
from 15 NCO's and soldiers from the Bushveldt Carbineers who were
sickened by the actions which they were forced to partake. With evidence
from other soldiers, Morant's and Hancock's fates were sealed. All
seven officers were charged with real crimes, despite the innuendoes
of the movie 'Breaker Morant'. The facts in all the proceedings were
that all seven were guilty of the shootings either by direct action
or by complicity. The charges brought against these men meant that
the great service of their Regiment was spoilt but this does not detract
from the contribution of the Bushveldt Carbineers to the final victory
in South Africa.
Tpr S.M. Becker
Courtesy of "Fortune & Valour", the Journal of 12th/16th
Hunter River Lancers.
Justice or Murder
Just before dawn on February 27th 1902 Morant and Handcock were shot
by a detachment of Cameron Highlanders as the sun rose in the eastern
sky. The debate over the rights and wrongs of their executions has
raged on for a century through countless articles, papers, books and
a movie that turned them into cult heroes. Ironically, it is the perception
that war criminals have been made into heroes, rather than an objective
examination of the evidence against them, that now prevents their
rehabilitation.
Morant and Handcock were found guilty of murdering twelve Boers in
the Spelonken region of northern Transvaal during August and September
1901. They were part of an irregular unit fighting a brutal guerrilla
war in which atrocities had been committed on both sides. Kitchener
responded to the wearing of khaki by Boers, abuses of the white flag
and the blowing up of trains and subsequent murder of survivors by
issuing orders to "take no prisoners". These orders were
clearly circulating in the Bushveldt Carbineers even prior to Morant's
arrival at Fort Edward - a fact admitted by the subsequent court of
inquiry. Six Boers and a Boer member of the BVC, thought to be a spy,
were all shot before Morant arrived - a fact conveniently overlooked
by Morant's detractors. After his arrival Morant cheerfully ignored
orders to take no prisoners given to him by his best mate and superior
officer, Captain Percy Hunt. He was even reprimanded for bringing
them in.
All that changed, however, on the night of August 5th 1901 when Hunt
led an attack on a Boer farmhouse at the ominously named Duwielskloof
(Devils Claw). Hunt was wounded during the action, but witnesses testified
that when they retreated he was still alive. However, when they returned
the next day they found his naked body battered and mutilated. On
hearing of the outrage Morant, now the de facto leader of the BVC,
led a patrol in hot pursuit of those responsible. Following a dawn
raid they captured a Boer who was using Capt. Hunt's trousers as a
pillow. Following a "drum- head", or field court martial,
Morant ordered him shot.
Two other groups of eight and three Boers were shot on Morant's orders
in the following weeks. Although headquarters were informed of each
action no action was taken. However, when the simultaneous death of
a missionary Rev. Daniel Heese, who saw the bodies of the eight executed
Boers, and the appointment of a civilian commissioner for native affairs
threatened to bring the killings to light, Kitchener had the BVC officers
arrested.
The subsequent court of inquiry and courts martial singled out Lieutenants
Morant, Handcock and George Witton as the guilty parties. Morant and
Handcock admitted shooting prisoners, but claimed they did so on the
orders of Army HQ. Despite a plucky defence by Tenterfield lawyer,
Major JF Thomas, Morant, Handcock were sentenced to death and Witton
to life imprisonment.
News of the executions were received in Australia with both shock
and horror. With no Australian correspondents in the field details
were obtained through the British Army and newspaper dispatches. However,
the certain feeling that they must be guilty began to evaporate as
returning soldiers revealed that key witnesses were shipped off to
India without testifying and the officers who ordered the first seven
killings had escaped punishment. Stories of other units who carried
out the same orders with impunity also came to light. These issue
of their innocence or guilt has been debated ever since. During the
five years of research I did for my new book on Morant, "Shoot
Straight You Bastards!" I discovered evidence that pointed to
the courts martial being anything but a fair and impartial.
Morant, as it turned out, did receive orders to take no prisoners.
Kitchener was notorious for never writing anything down, hence the
absence of an order, but his Chief of Police, Provost Marshall Robert
Poore did. On hearing of their arrest for the killing of Boer prisoners
he remarked that: "
if they had wanted to shoot Boers they
should not have taken them prisoner first".
The order to shoot Boers clearly not only existed, but was sanctioned
at the highest level. It would appear that Morant and Handcock's real
crime was to shoot Boers already taken prisoner, rather than shooting
Boers before they surrendered. Witton commented in his book "Scapegoats
of The Empire": "
This I later discovered was the
correct interpretation of the order to take no prisoners".
Poore's diary also revealed that orders did exist to shoot Boers
wearing khaki, which was denied by the prosecution when it was argued
that the first Boer Morant executed was wearing khaki. He noted: "...
Most of De Wet's men were dressed in our uniform, so Lord K. has issued
an order to say that all men caught in our uniform are to be tried
on the spot and the sentence confirmed by the commanding officer."
Regimental records and diaries belonging to members of Kitchener's
Fighting Scouts, The Gordon Highlanders and The Canadian Scouts revealed
that Morant's Bushveldt Carbineers were by no means the only unit
shooting Boers. "Two wrongs don't make a right" argued the
Judge Advocate, but trying one person for a crime whilst turning a
blind eye to similar indiscretions is hardly justice either.
But would any of this new evidence have made a difference at the
time and should it make a difference now? The trouble with historians
is that they are not legal experts - even though they are quick to
pass judgement. Barrister and human rights advocate, Geoffrey Robertson
generously gave me the following legal opinion, "
Examples
abound in military courts of wrongful convictions - from Dreyfus to
General Yamashita - and of wrongful acquittals (eg of Col Medina over
the My Lai massacre). "Breaker" Morant's trial was a particularly
pernicious example of using legal proceedings against lower ranks
as a means of covering up the guilt of senior officers and of Kitchener
himself, who gave or approved their unlawful 'shoot to kill' order.
Morant may have been all too happy to obey it, of course, in which
case he deserved some punishment. But it was wrong to use him as a
scapegoat for an unlawful policy. I regard the convictions of Morant
and Handcock as unsafe."
Robertson's view is also shared by the ex- Chief Justice of South
Australia, Dr Howard Ziller, who maintained in a 1988 letter to "The
Adelaide Advertiser" that the case "wouldn't last five minutes"
in an appeal court. Melbourne QC John Francis recently commented that
the case was "wrong in law" - as Kitchener did not apply
the principle of condonation which should have seen Morant and Handcock
cleared of all charges after they were pressed into service to defend
their prosecutors when Pietersburg was attacked during the trial.
By all accounts they led the defence with distinction, but Thomas'
pleas for the charges to be quashed fell on deaf ears. The age- old
custom was established by Wellington who described his men as "scum
of the earth", but in failing to apply it, or even mention it
in his telegram to Barton, Kitchener obviously thought less of his
men than Wellington. Yet, Baden- Powell had had no difficulty in extending
this custom to a British officer accused of murder during the siege
of Mafeking.
However, despite the evidence and legal opinions of eminent lawyers,
the word of that British court martial is still good enough for both
Veteran Affairs Minister Dana Vale, the RSL and the Australian War
Memorial. Seeing the historical battle lost they have now retreated
behind the 1946 Nuremberg precedent that "I was only following
orders" is no longer a defence against war crimes - as though
it were some definitive moral standard. This ignores the inconvenient
fact that in 1902 - superior orders were a legitimate defence and
if it could have been proved that Kitchener gave the orders, he, and
not Morant and Handcock would have been held ultimately responsible.
Nuremberg is now redundant the standard proof of guilt now being "beyond
reasonable doubt". A sensible measure given then number of major
convictions quashed in recent years, which have shown British justice
to be anything but infallible. Modern standards of justice demand
that a verdict be overturned if the original evidence is not safe.
It will not bring back the dead, but at least sets the historical
record straight.
However, this would mean calling into question the sanctity of the
ANZAC myth, the reputation of a "God" of the British Empire
and discrediting those court martials before the British have done
so themselves. It would also mean conceding that popular sentiment
has been right all along. Therefore, it is for reasons of pride and
nothing else that Morant and Handcock must continue to be "scapegoats",
but not just of the British Empire. The time has come to ask if these
venerable institutions are really interested in reflecting history
accurately or just defending their own political line?
Nick Bleszynski
Author of book " Shoot Straight You Bastards"
A Question of Justice
In my first edition of "Shoot Straight You Bastards!", released
a year ago, I confirmed what many had long suspected - that Morant and
Handcock were not the only ones in the Bushveldt Carbineers or the British
Army acting on Kitchener's orders to "take no prisoners" and
that those orders did indeed exist. Yet, they were the only colonial
or British soldiers executed during the Boer War. The personal diary
of Major Robert Poore confirmed that if Morant and Handcock had wanted
to shoot prisoners they should not have taken them prisoner first. In
other words, the order meant literally what it said - shoot them before
they can surrender. Unfortunately, being irregulars with no knowledge
of military law, they didn't make this fine distinction and were made
"scapegoats" by the devious Kitchener once his murderous policy
threatened to become public knowledge. Britain's damaged international
reputation would not have withstood revelations that Boers were being
shot on Kitchener's orders.
History has turned on much less evidence, but instead of the suggested
public debate the "coalition of the unwilling" (RSL, War
Memorial and Department of Veteran's Affairs) rushed to maintain the
establishment line that the courts martial were fair and the sentences
justified. The War Memorial held an in-house review behind closed
doors, acted as both judge and jury and used its own publication,
Wartime, to dismiss it out of hand.
When my publisher, Random House, decided they would release "Shoot
Straight, You Bastards!" in paperback in 2003, I decided to follow
a new avenue of research into the much- maligned courts martial, which
had been opened up by the work of Colonel Barry Caligari (Retd.).
Our detailed exploration of the courts martial, which is contained
in an Appendix in the new edition, revealed new depths of political
connivance in the so- called "Morant Affair".
As I've said before, Morant did wrong and deserved some punishment,
no question, but documentary evidence exists that he was indeed following
Kitchener's orders to "take no prisoners." Those orders
were enshrined in the British Manual of Military Law, were issued
verbally by Kitchener and in writing by Broderick, the Secretary of
State for War.
There are also countless documented cases of Boers being shot under
these orders, names that never appeared in the House of Commons Blue
Books where the details of all trials and executions should have been
recorded. Their names were never recorded because they were executed
without trial - as per Kitchener's instructions. In fact, the Blue
Books record the shooting of only four Boers for wearing khaki during
the whole war. The one surviving court martial record, involving Kitchener's
brother, Walter, was legally flawed and shows there was no difference
between his actions and Morant's. Had all this evidence been produced
at the courts martial, British military law (or the later Nuremberg
Charter) would have demanded Kitchener take ultimate responsibility.
There is also proof that Kitchener manipulated evidence and the
witnesses in order to secure a guilty verdict and there were serious
flaws in the courts martial procedures. Most notably, after the accused
had performed "a duty of honour" in defending the fort against
a Boer attack a plea of condonation, which would have seen all charges
quashed, was denied. I have it on the authority of a Melbourne QC,
who is something of an expert in this area, that on this point alone
the courts martial would never stand up to judicial scrutiny. But
will anyone from the "coalition of the unwilling" step forwards
to right this and other wrongs? Not on your life.
But should our politicians and institutions ever have an attack
of conscience, or find the courage to do what New Zealand did in a
similar situation and hold an independent judicial review, there are
compelling legal grounds for doing so.
- Three officers (Colonel Hall, Captain Taylor and Captain Robertson),
apparently "guilty" of similar crimes, were given Kitchener's
protection and not prosecuted, or not prosecuted to the full extent
of the law, to the prejudice of the accused.
- The conduct of the "investigation" phase of the legal
process was prejudicial to the accused because of the process itself
and the unwarranted use of Rules of Procedure 104, which denied
the accused the right of developing a defence and a formal "summary
of evidence."
- Contrary to the courts view, the Manual of Military Law did sanction
summary execution of prisoners.
- The verdicts in the trials are no longer "beyond reasonable
doubt" because of the withheld evidence such as removal of
at least one vital witness, non disclosure of Kitchener's telegram
admitting he had prisoners summarily executed and his order to ignore
the display of the "white flag" and shoot any Boers attempting
to surrender (making a mockery of Colonel Hamilton's denial that
"no prisoners were to be taken alive" and the judge advocate's
view that "two wrongs do not make a right" without due
regard to authorized reprisals).
- The judge advocate erred in the rules of procedure by allowing
a sentence to each "guilty" verdict which was adversely
commented on by the senior legal officer who questioned the "safety"
of most of the verdicts.
- Should the verdicts remain the same regardless of the withheld
evidence then the death sentences should have been commuted in accordance
with the recommendation to mercy as required by military law.
- The trials should not have proceeded if a plea in bar of trial
on the grounds of condonation had been entered at the same time
as the general plea or, at the very least, a pardon granted.
- The necessary Crown concurrence in the verdicts and sentences'
as required by Kitchener's Royal Warrant, was not properly obtained
because it violated the correct legal procedure and resulted in
a flawed and questionable decision.
- The traditional right of officers to petition the monarch when
considered wronged was denied to the prisoners on promulgation of
the verdicts and sentences.
For the historical record, full transcripts of the evidence and
an open letter will be sent to the RSL, the War Memorial and Veteran's
Affairs Minister Danna Vale. We await their replies with interest.
Nick Bleszynski
Author: "Shoot Straight, You Bastards!"
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