Natal Border Guard

The Natal Border Guard (also known as the River Guards) was an auxiliary force levied for the defence of the Colony of Natal during the Anglo-Zulu War of 1879. British military commander Lord Chelmsford had intended to raise a large auxiliary force to support his invasion of Zululand but was opposed by the civilian government of the Colony of Natal, led by its governor Henry Ernest Gascoyne Bulwer, who would have to finance the unit. Bulwer eventually allowed a smaller force (of 2,800 men) to be raised with the stipulation that it not be deployed outside of Natal. This unit was to serve only on a part-time basis, receive no training and fight with the traditional weapons of spear and shield.

Natal Border Guard
Natal Border Guard of district VI at White Rock Drift
Active20 December 1878 – 1879
CountryColony of Natal
AllegianceBritish Empire
TypeAuxiliary
RoleBorder guard
Size7,700 men
EngagementsAnglo-Zulu War

Following the defeat of the British force during the Battle of Isandlwana the Border Guard was strengthened and equipped with a limited number of firearms. The unit saw action by guarding the border during British raids and defending against Zulu counter-raids. One of the Border Guard commanders was responsible for negotiating the surrender of a number of Zulu chiefs in the border region towards the end of the war.

Origin

The British High Commissioner for Southern Africa Sir Henry Bartle Frere had ambitions to form a confederation of all the British possessions in Southern Africa. Tt further this, he planned the annexation of Zululand, which was opposed by King Cetshwayo and led to the Anglo-Zulu War of 1879.[1] As part of preparations for this war the British military commander in Southern Africam,Frederic Thesiger (who later became Lord Chelmsford and is more commonly known by that name), implemented defensive measures in the British Colony of Natal, which neighboured Zululand.[2]

Natal's border with the Zulu Kingdom lay along the Mzinyathi (Buffalo) and Thukela (Tugela) rivers. Natal was split into seven defensive districts of which three directly bordered Zululand. In order to defend this border Chelmsford sought to raise a 6,000-strong auxiliary force. This would supplement the existing Natal Native Contingent (NNC) which was under military control and expected to participate in the forthcoming invasion.[2] The existing Natal volunteer military units were insufficient to ensure defence of the colony as many had been earmarked to form part of the invading force.[3]

Formation

The Natal government would have to pay the costs of any force raised specifically for the defence of the colony. They were unwilling to finance the auxiliary force proposed but did agree to fund a border guard unit of reduced scope.[2] The Natal Border Guard was subsequently raised from 20 December 1878 by a levy on the African men residing in each defensive district. Officers were provided by white volunteers, resident in the border areas.[4][5] The unit initially numbered some 2,800 men who rotated between active service and reserve duty.[6] Those on reserve were allowed to return home to tend to their crops and livestock, a measure that limited costs by reducing the need for the government to provide food, shelter and clothing.[7] The men initially received no formal training, uniform or weapons and were expected to fight in their traditional tribal style with spears and shields.[7] The units were organised on tribal lines under the leadership of local chiefs. Recruitment was slow; there was little enthusiasm as payments due to the chiefs were delayed and the population was demotivated by the recent implementation of a hut tax. Some units of the Border Guard were still not fully formed by April 1879.[8]

Chelmsford commenced his invasion of Zululand in January 1879 and intended that the campaign would be over with the submission of the Zulu people before the rivers fell low enough to permit a Zulu counter invasion of Natal.[6] The Natal Border Guard was formally under the control of the civilian government of the colony but Governor Henry Ernest Gascoyne Bulwer conceded that operational control lay with Chelmsford.[6]

At the outset of the war the Border Guard were posted to fixed points at or near fordable points (known locally as drifts) on the border rivers at points where no British or colonial garrison was provided. These posts were typically 300–350 strong.[4] The Border Guard were nominally commanded by the commandants of each defensive district.[9] Due to their deployment and expected duties the unit was also known as the "River Guards".[10]

Service

First invasion

The British invasion force crossed into Zululand on 11 January 1879 in three columns.[11] At the outset of the war the Border Guard in the Sand Spruit Valley near to Umsinga were under the command of British Colonel Anthony Durnford who was tasked with defending the border at this location.[12] Durnford was soon, however, ordered to move up to the border crossing at Rorke's Drift in support of Chelmsford's no. 3 column. On 22 January he was ordered to bring his men (not including the Border Guard) to the British camp at Isandlwana, within Zululand. Durnford and his men were wiped out in the British defeat at the Battle of Isandlwana later that day.[13]

The same day as the battle, the Klip River Border Guard district commandant was told by the leader of the unit stationed 8 miles (13 km) downstream from Rorke's Drift that a large Zulu force was massing at the Mangeni Valley to raid into Natal. The district commandant doubted this intelligence which came from a Natal native and was passed on by a farmer acting in a temporary capacity as a stand-in for a Border Guard officer. The district commandant gathered his Border Guard on the Natal side of the river to counter the threat but, after a reconnaissance concluded that the informant had mistaken men of Chelmsford's 3rd Regiment of NNC for Zulu forces. They later assisted the men of the 2nd NNC under Harcourt Mortimer Bengough to cross the river. Bengough's battalion withdrew after learning of the British defeat and together with the Border Guard took steps to defend Natal.[9]

Interim period

Following the defeat at Isandlwana the Border Guard was strengthened with additional levies from the interior regions of Natal.[14] A contingent at Weenen, formed from men from the disbanded 3rd Regiment NNC and the Newcastle Scouts – an African mounted unit numbering some 50 men – was used to support the Border Guard.[15][16] A number of Zulu-speaking interpreters were posted to the unit on detachment from the Royal Durban Rifles.[4] In April the unit received an issue of obsolete Pattern 1853 Enfield rifled muskets, sufficient to arm one quarter of the men.[4][8] Some units of the Border Guard were reinvigorated by the receipt of firearms and requested to be able to join British forces on raids into Zululand.[8] Chelmsford was in favour of this but opposition from Bulwer and Frere confined the Border Guard to Natal.[14] By May 1879 the expanded unit numbered some 7,700 men.[14]

The Border Guard had acted in support of a British raid into Zululand in March by garrisoning the drifts on a 60-mile (97 km) stretch of river. Later in the month a unit was ordered by British Major Twentyman to cross the river and burn some Zulu homesteads but refused to do so, in accordance with their standing orders – the Border Guard did exchange fire with a Zulu force across the river. Twentyman protested to the colonial authorities to relax the restrictions but this was to no avail.[17] In April the Border Guard took possession of a fort – known as Fort Montgomery – at the Middle Drift that had been constructed by the NNC to support a raid in Zulu territory. During this time there were also Border Guard units at Mgonweni Dirft, Kwelbomvu Drift, Shushu, Ngubana Drift and Mpisi Drift.[18] Other Border Guard posts were Fort Lucas and Thring's Post Fort in the sixth defensive district.[19][20] A fallback position for the Border guard was established at Hullett's Stockade in Kearsney on the northern portion of the Natal coast.[21]

A reprisal raid carried out by the Zulu in June at the Middle Drift may have demonstrated the wisdom of Bulwer's original non-antagonistic defensive strategy for the border.[22] A unit of African Amangwani Scouts formed part of the Border Guard reserve until April 1879 when they were brought under military control to augment the cavalry of the second invasion force.[23]

Second invasion

The British second invasion began on 31 May 1879.[24] The Border Guard may have taken possession of Fort Bengough, between Greytown and Helpmekaar, from the 2nd Regiment NNC who took part in the invasion.[25] In July some men of the Border Guard were drafted into an unarmed carrier corps to provide logistical support for the British column. However the men proved less efficient than the previous method of ox wagon transport and the unit was soon disbanded.[26] The Border Guard at the Middle Drift proved unable to effectively confront a Zulu raid there in July.[3]

The dispute between Bulwer and Chelmsford over the deployment of the Border Guard came to an end on 15 July 1879 when Garnet Wolseley assumed the role of supreme British civil and military commander in the region.[27][28] In August 1879 Henry Fynn, who had raised the Border Guard of the Umsinga region, negotiated the surrender of the Zulu chiefs along the Mzinyathi River.[21] The Natal Border Guard was disbanded following the end of the war, there is no record of the date this occurred but the NNC disbanded in September and the related Natal Pioneers in October.[29]

References

  1. Knight 2008, p. 5
  2. Castle 2003, p. 14
  3. Laband 2009, pp. 18-19
  4. Laband 2014, p. 204
  5. Laband 2009, p. 29
  6. Laband 2014, p. 205
  7. Laband 2014, pp. 204-205
  8. Thompson 2006, p. 87
  9. Thompson 2006, p. 66
  10. Laband 2009, p. 240
  11. Knight 2000, p. 292
  12. Thompson 2006, p. 24
  13. Snook 2010, p. 53
  14. Laband 2014, p. 248
  15. Laband 2009, p. 303
  16. Dutton 2010, p. 115
  17. Thompson 2006, p. 108
  18. Thompson 2006, p. 109
  19. Laband 2009, p. 93
  20. Laband 2009, p. 285
  21. Laband 2009, p. 101
  22. Laband 2009, p. 314
  23. Laband 2009, p. 4
  24. Laband 2009, p. 32
  25. Laband 2009, p. 88
  26. Laband 2009, pp. 33-34
  27. Laband 2009, p. 33
  28. Laband 2009, p. 41
  29. Thompson 1997, p. 369

Bibliography

  • Castle, Ian (2003). Zulu War: Volunteers, Irregulars & Auxiliaries. Oxford: Osprey Publishing. ISBN 9781841764849.
  • Dutton, Roy (2010). Forgotten Heroes Zulu & Basuto Wars including Medal Roll 1877–8–9. Infodial. p. 115. ISBN 9780955655449.
  • Knight, Ian (2000). The Anglo-Zulu War, 1879. Archival Publications International. ISBN 9781903008003. Retrieved 1 April 2019.
  • Knight, Ian (2008). Companion to the Anglo-Zulu War. Pen and Sword. ISBN 9781844158010.
  • Laband, John (2009). Historical Dictionary of the Zulu Wars. Scarecrow Press. ISBN 9780810863002.
  • Laband, John (2014). Zulu Warriors: The Battle for the South African Frontier. Yale University Press. ISBN 9780300206197.
  • Thompson, Paul Singer (1997). The Natal native contingent in the Anglo-Zulu War, 1879. University of Natal. ISBN 9780620215244.
  • Thompson, P. S. (2006). Black Soldiers of the Queen: The Natal Native Contingent in the Anglo-Zulu War. University of Alabama Press. p. 24. ISBN 9780817353681.
  • Snook, Colonel Mike (2010). How Can Man Die Better: The Secrets of Isandlwana Revealed. Frontline Books. ISBN 9781473815353. Retrieved 1 April 2019.
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