Waterloo...
The Battle of Waterloo
On June 18, 1815, Napoleon
Bonaparte received a crushing military defeat on the fields near the
Belgian village of Waterloo, about 9 miles (14 kilometers) south of
Brussels. Napoleon's defeat ended 23 years of recurrent warfare between
France and the other powers of Europe. The battle between Napoleon's
forces, which included 72,000 troops, and a combined Allied army of
113,000 British, Dutch, Belgian, and Prussian troops was fought so hard
that either side might have won. A heavy rain the evening before the
battle forced Napoleon to delay his attack. The delay cost him the
battle.
Only three months before, Napoleon had slipped away from his island
prison of Elba off the western coast of Italy. When he returned to
France his veteran soldiers flocked to rejoin him. He hurried
northward, hoping to defeat his enemies before they could unite against
him.
Napoleon's plan was to get between the British and Dutch, who were
grouped near Brussels, and the Prussians, who were east of the road
from Charleroi to Brussels. On June 16 French Marshal Michel Ney
engaged the British at Quatre Bras, while Napoleon crushed--as he
thought--Field Marshal Gebhard L. von Blucher's Prussians at Ligny.
After these battles Napoleon ordered Marshal Emmanuel de Grouchy to
follow the Prussians, and Napoleon turned his attention to the British.
Blucher, however, marched northward to the assistance of the duke of
Wellington, the British commander, while Grouchy wasted valuable time
looking for the Prussians east of Ligny. It was at this point that
Napoleon's plans began to fall apart. The essence of his original
strategy was surprise. The battle of Ligny was indecisive because
Marshal Ney had failed to send reinforcements that could have crushed
the Prussian army. Then Napoleon made the false assumption that Blucher
would retreat to the northeast instead of heading northwest to link up
with Wellington. Lastly, the element of surprise was completely lost
when Napoleon wasted the night of June 16 and the morning of the 17th
without giving battle. By the time he started, Wellington was ready for
him.
The British, meanwhile, retreated from Quatre Bras to the village of
Waterloo. Napoleon overtook them late on June 17. Because of the heavy
rain that night, he could not attack until the next morning. His
artillery could not move until the ground dried. He delayed the attack
until 11:00 AM. The ensuing battle raged for ten hours.
Napoleon repeatedly threw his cavalry against the bayonet-wielding
British infantry. During one furious cavalry charge the French overran
all the British artillery. Had the guns been destroyed or at least made
unusable at that time, the French cavalry might have won the battle.
For a time it looked as though the British ranks would give way under
the onslaught.
Wellington eagerly awaited the help the Prussians had promised.
Finally, late in the afternoon, Blucher and his men arrived. Those few
hours of delay in the morning had been decisive. The French made a last
desperate attack but were slowly overcome. By 9:00 PM the French defeat
had become a rout. Napoleon lost 25,000 men killed and wounded and
9,000 captured. Wellington's casualties were 15,000 and Blucher's about
8,000.
On June 22, 1815, four days after the battle of Waterloo, Napoleon
signed his second abdication in Paris. This ended his rule in France
forever
The Inniskillings won undying fame at Waterloo in 1815 when they saved
Wellingtons right without giving an inch of ground. The regiment was
cut to ribbons and took the full brunt of a French Cavalry charge, Of
the 15 Officers present 14 were killed and 498 of the 670 other ranks
were either killed or wounded. An adjoining regiment offered to lend
the 27th some officers to which Major Hare refused, saying "the
sergeants liked to command the companies, and I would be loathe to
deprive them of such honour". Waterloo Day is celebrated every year on
the 18th June with a parade commanded by the SNCOs.

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