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•^^IQ. 1855. 1 THE LEADER. 125
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INCIDENTS. Shooting at the Emperor or Ru...
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PRO MOTION FOR SERGEANTS. The following ...
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CONTINENTAL NOTES. On tho 26th of Januar...
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
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Notes Of The Siege. Despatch F11om Loud ...
the Adjutant-General too , ' and put the men on the waggons ; but novices didn't like to do this . " ifis gratifying to be able to state that the latest " accounts announce some satisfactory changes . The Jf " hefay , thus adverts to the supplies received : - "I rejoice heartily to think that before f ^/ re cold sets in again the army will be prepared to meet it with better chance of success than before . Warm clothing is arriving in great quantities , and the remnant of our army will soon be all comfortably clad , or it will be their own faults It is difficult to distribute it , as the mere work of carrying it up to the camp must give way to the ^ more urgent necessity of supplying the army with food and fuel There is this sad consolation , that the reduced numbers of our army place the duty of feeding and curing it more within the grasp of the various departments charged -with its execution . . " The greatcoats , boots , jerseys , and nuts furnished by the Government to officers and men are of excellent quality , and the distribution , though late , is most liberal . A fur cloak , a pea jacket , a fur cap , a pair of boots , two jerseys , two pair of drawers , and two pair of socks are to he given to each officer , and several of them have received the boon already . Still it is a fact that at this moment there is but one hospital marquee in the whole of the Second Division camp , unless my eyes quite deceived me when last I visited it . There is no hospital hut whatever The sick and wounded were and have been in ordinary tents , and , though the weather is bearable now , it may be imagined what sick and wounded men have endured under such protection in the piercing winds and cold days and nights now past . " . PROMOTION FOR THE ZOUAVES . "The Zouaves are in great delight at the high honour paid them by the Emperor . - He has ordered that fourty Sicked men out of each company shall be selected to form a body to be called ' Zouaves of the Imperial Guard , and the regiments are to be eligible henceforth to serve in France . The excitement of the men while the selection was going on , the delight of the chosen , the despair of the rejected , were , I am told , beyond all description . NEWS OF THE ROADS . " Major Fellowes is now off on his expedition to organise a waggon and transport train at Constantinople or elsewhere , but it will be rather late in the day , I fear , ere his work is done . The railway will be equally behind the time , for the road-making is at last progressing . However , the surveys for the railway have been nearly completed , but Mr . Campbell finds the gradients will be more heavy than he was led to expect . The ground rises not less than 630 feet from the head of the harbour of Balaklava to the outskirts of the camp near headquarters . " THE FATE OF DESERTERS . " Desertions have taken place to the enemy both from the French and from our own ranks , but there is a great disposition to exaggerate them . The deserters from the French have generally belonged to the Foreign Legion ; the deserters from the English have generally been from the young draughts and from regiments just sent out . I have already mentioned the case of a man in the 93 rd , who was killed by the enemy as he approached thenpickets , in the act of desertion . A soldier of the 19 th was since killed by his own comrades as he was escaping to the Russians from the third parallel . He had hinted to one of his friends in the same company that it would be a good thing to go over to the Russians . His suggestion was received by a threat , ' If you attempt to run , 111 shoot you , as sure as you are a living man . ' The fellow watched his opportunity , and , slipping across the parapet , made towards the Russian lines , but his friend had perceived the man , and called on his comrades to fire . They did 80 , and missed him , and he neared the Russian picket . Here goes for you now , according to promise , exclaimed his Achates ; and , taking a long aim , he stopped the career of the deserter and dropped him , writhing and bleeding , in front of the Russian vedettes . " ROUTINE AND CINDERS . " From Balaklava wo hear , numbers of largo steambra come in hero every week and . shoot into the sea excellent roadstuff , in the shape of cinders . It has been suggested that the captatns of those steamers should be ordered to keep as much of these cinders as possible , and to send them on shore in their boats , where a few men could easily lay them down , but no one is ' responsible' for carrying out the suggestion , and every day one hcos tho cinders of tho newly-arrived steamers shot into tho harbour , within a few yards of tho spot where ho is standing over the nnkles in mud . " HOW THE RUSSIANS O 11 TA 1 N RKLIKF . " About four p . m . yesterday , nearly 2000 Russians won ueen marching into Sebastopol , and about the fmmo number going . out . It was probably one party relieving th < other . They wore on tho opposite Bide of tho harboui ' from our camp . There seems to bo a continual changi of troops on the part of tho enemy , from the town t < their camp , and vice versd . . They have thus an advan
tage over the Allies , who are compelled to remain without relief . . . " Yesterday a large convoy , apparently of provisions , entered Sebastopol by the north side of the harbour in mid-day . It consisted of light carts , which were drawn principally by two horses , and in some instances by one only .. There were also a few sledges . " ; results ' versus expectations . ' "I have just read the following : — 'If the Crimean Army Fund progresses as it has begun , our brave fellows before Sebastopol will spend a jolly Christmas . ' Ah me ! I made my dinner that day of a 21 b . loaf purchased in the French camp for 2 s . 8 d . " THE NAVY AGAIN . " Her Majesty ' s ship Highflyer and the Curlew have come in . The former has been cruising off Odessa , but the officers say they did not attempt to stop any ships in or out as they had no orders to blockade the port ! They boarded a vessel inwards , laden with cotton , which the captain said was intended to be manufactured by the Russians , as the Manchester goods were not sent to them now At a little place called Ekmetchete ' , north of Cape Tarkan , the Highflyer exchanged some shots-with a body of Russians within a small fort ; they soon silenced the Russian fire , and drove the enemy out . They landed a party , blew up the Round Tower of the place , and received a good supply of provisions from the Tartar inhabitants ;" The correspondent of the Daily News says : — " Captain Mitchell , of the Grenadier Guards , and some hrother officers saw a Russian steamer leaving the harhour and standing out for the open sea . One of the allied ships went in chase , and after some hard steaming came within range of the Russian . A cannonade ensued , the Russian all the while endeavouring to escape . The chase was watched with intense interest , but the result remained a mystery , for the two ships , steaming hard and exchanging shots , disappeared at last on the verge of the horizon . The officers who saw the affair made all inquiries as to the facts and the final result of the engagement , but to no purpose . We have all got so accustomed to hard knocks , that a partial affair makes no impression and usually excites no curiosity whatever ; and it is only by chancing to fall in with one of the men actually engaged , that a vague account of particulars can be obtained . " .-.. - ¦¦ THE IMPERIAL GUARD . " Since the departure of the last mail , 4000 of the Imperial Guards have arrived in the Bosphorus ; and during to-day and yesterday groups of these splendid fellows were to be met in almost every street in Pera and Stamboul . Their physique is quite equal to that of the choicest household troops , and the uniform ( the half-Glengarry sort of undress cap excepted ) shows it off to the best advantage . French human nature has seldombeen exampled abroad by such stalwart and unobjectionable specimens of the genus homo . Our Life Guardsmen have the advantage in height , but in compactness and symmetry of frame their Gallic rivals will suffer nothing by comparison . , Their very physical excellence , however , adds to the sorrow with which one reflects upon how few of these picked-men of France will ever look , upon the minarets of Stamboul again . "
•^^Iq. 1855. 1 The Leader. 125
•^^ IQ . 1855 . 1 THE LEADER . 125
Incidents. Shooting At The Emperor Or Ru...
INCIDENTS . Shooting at the Emperor or Russia . —Private W . Gibson and Private W . Gallahar , of the 99 th Regiment , were tried by district court-martial at Chatham , for the offence of making away with their ammunition in shooting at the Emperor of Russia , whom they had drawn on the barrack table with chalk . A most severe , and , as we think , unnecessary , sentence has been passed upon them—that of Gibson to fifty-two days with hard labour , and Gallahar to 162 days' hard labour in tho military prison , Fort Clarence . Two Thousand Police Officeus for the Crimea . —Sir Richard Maync has called iipon the superintendents of police to report to him , and recommend any inspectors , sergeants , and private constables who may feel inclined to volunteer and form a transport corps in tho Crimea . The body is to consist of a quartermaster , sergeants , or superintendents , drivers , and corporals . Tho strength of tho whole is to be 2 , 000 . Port for the French . —A personage belonging to one of the hig hest families in Portugal , who desires to prosorvo a strict incognito , has placed 10 , 000 bottles of port wine at the disposal of tho French Government for tho army in tho Crimea . MOHTALITV AT THE MlI / ITAuY HOSPITALS IN Turkey . The following painful statement is published by a French contemporary , on tho authority of a correspondent at Constantinople : — " Tho difference , in fact , between tho deaths' in tho two nations is enormous . In tho French hospitals there is only one death out of 271 cuwes , whilst in the English hospitals there is ono out of 88 . " The American Press . —Tho Washington correspondent of tho New York Herald says : —" Tho services of ono of your largo newspaper sheets havo been bought up for a considerable amount , by an Englinh nobleman , during tho continuance of tho war in tho East . Tliia explains tho cause for that disinterested energy which
has , within the month or two past , so distinguished that sheet in support of England and France , and in hostility to Russia and Russian success . " A Library , consisting of nearly three hundred volumes of books , has been fitted up on board the hospital ship Severn , which is about to proceed to the Black Sea , This library i 3 intended" for the invalids oh the passage between Balaklava and Scutari . The idea . of this library originated with Messrs . Forbes and Marshall , the . booksellers of Southampton , who gave a number of books towards it . The rest of the books were given by the ladies and gentlemen of Southampton and its neighbourhood . Candle Stoves for the Hospital .: —Messrs . Price writes to the Times . — " Sir , —Will you give us room to state , for the information of many who take an , interest in the sending out the candle stoves to the army , that Government has given an order for 250 of them , and 2 , 000 boxes of their fuel , for hospital use in the Crimea and at Scutari and Smyrna ?" The C * ar at Sebastopol . —A letter from the Emperor to Prince Menschikoff , contains the following passage : — " I am very anxious to push on the campaign , in the Crimea as rapidily as possible , and to bring it to a satisfactory conclusion . If facts do not correspond to my expectations , I think , God willing , that I shall myself visit you and my dear army . " Life in the Trenches . — " When we are m the trenches , if it be in our turn to be "in the first parallel , i . e ., farthest from the enemy , we walk about as much as possible to keep ourselves warm , and if a shot comes , which is often the case , we bob our heads to let the rascal pass over us . In the second parallel we walk about as in the first , but almost double ; and in the third , if you so much as show your little finger above the parapet , you find twenty rifle bullets whizzing about it immediately . "
Pro Motion For Sergeants. The Following ...
PRO MOTION FOR SERGEANTS . The following is from the London Gazette . — War-Office , Feb . 6 . To be Cornets , without purchase :- — 4 th Regiment of Dragoon Guards — Regimental Sergeant-Major George Price . . 5 th Dragoon Guards—Regimental Sergeant-Major Hobart Evans Fitzgerald . _ 71 st Dragoons—Regimental Sergeant-Major John Lee . 2 nd Dragoons—Sergeant David Gibson . 4 th Dragoons—Reg imental Sergeant-Major Henry G Dragoons—Troop : Sergeant-Major _ WilUam HaU . 8 th Light Dragoons—Troop Sergeant-Major Henry Harrison . ,, . m t > 11 th Light Dragoons—Troop Sergeant-Major T . B . 13 th Light Dragoons—Sergeant-Major Francis Levison Michael . . T 17 th Light Dragoons—Troop Sergeant-Major James Duncan . To be Ensigns , without purchase : — lstliegimentof Foot—Quartermaster-Sergeant Thomas C . Brown . -. ., 4 th Foot—Quartermaster-Sergeant Thomas Burndge . 7 th Foot—Colour ^ Sergeant Adrian Bennet—17 th Foot —Sergeant-Major John Lee . 19 th Foot—Sergeant Frederick Arthur . 20 th Foot—Colour-Sergeant Patrick Geraghty . 21 st Foot—Sergeant-Major Thomas Vauxden . 28 th Foot—Sergeant-Major Jonathan Twaites . 30 th Foot—Sergeant-Major John Moon . 33 rd Foot—Quartermaster-Sergeant John Thompson . 34 th Foot—Quartermaster-Sergeant Robert Reay . 38 th Foot—Sergeant-Major John Evans . 41 st Foot—Sergeant James Baird . 42 nd Foot—Sergeant-Major William Lawson . 46 th Foot—Sergeant-Major Andrew Witten . 47 th Foot—Sergeant-Major Thomas Young . 49 th Foot —Sergeant-Major Edward Mackay . 50 th Foot—Sergeant-Major James Lamb . 55 th Foot—Quartermaster-Sergeant James Scott . 57 th Foot—Colour-Sergeant Thomas Grace . 62 nd Foot—Quartermaster-Sergeant William Dnng . 63 rd Foot—Sergeant-Major Walter Samuel Marson . 68 th Foot—Sergeant-Major Joseph Thompson . 77 th Foot—Colour-Scrgeunt William Minister . 79 th Foot—Quartermaster-Sergeant William M (*» L 88 th Foot—Quartermaster-Sergeant John Frederick Grier . 93 rd Foot— Colour-Sergeant John Gordon . 95 th Foot—Colour-Sergeant John Sexton . 97 th Foot—Quartermaster-Sergeant Isaac Harmonu . Rifio Bri gade—Sergeant-Major James Smgcr .
Continental Notes. On Tho 26th Of Januar...
CONTINENTAL NOTES . On tho 26 th of January M , Drouyn do Lhuys add ^ scd a despatch to tho diplomatic agents <* *?»** ™ £ _ manv Tho following in a tmccmct aualyHirt oi the uocu ? ' \ ft , V < . vm « ssW regret that tho crisis so long ES £ rf . « « t Z abo \ . t tt break out , stating tho obeTof the policy of tho Western Powers :-to constrain j " u ! ila to « lim « lon her aggressions , , and to unite all 1 ro c again « t tho common aggressor : tho despatch SoS tlmt when tho timo'cauie for proceeding from con-
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Citation
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Leader (1850-1860), Feb. 10, 1855, page 5, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/l/issues/cld_10021855/page/5/
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