The Battle of La
Coruna - 16th January 1809
Battle: Battle
of La Coruna or Corunna
The reason The
Highlanders wear black buttons on their spats is in memory of
Sir John Moore, the Commanding General who died at Corunna.
This tradition was started by the Gordon Highlanders and
continues with The Highlanders today.

Brigadier General Craufurd with 95th Rifles, 43rd and 52nd Light
infantry during the retreat to Corunna
Size of the
armies: Sir John Moore’s army, with Sir David Baird’s corps from
Corunna numbered 35,000 men. The Emperor Napoleon’s army numbered
153,000. From Astorgas Napoleon left the pursuit of Moore’s army
Soult whose corps numbered around 35,000 men.
Uniforms, arms and
equipment: Uniforms, arms, equipment and training:
The British infantry wore red waist jackets, white trousers, and
stovepipe shakos. Fusilier regiments wore bearskin caps. The two
rifle regiments wore dark green jackets.
The Light Dragoons wore light blue. The Royal Artillery wore blue
tunics.
Highland regiments wore the kilt with red tunics and tall black
ostrich feather caps.
The British Hussar regiments wore the traditional Hungarian Hussar
uniform of shabrach, dolman and fur busby.
The King’s German Legion, which comprised both cavalry and infantry
regiments wore black, as did other German units in the British
service.
The French army wore a wide variety of uniforms. The basic infantry
uniform was dark blue.
The French cavalry comprised Cuirassiers wearing heavy burnished
metal breastplate and crested helmet, Dragoons largely in green,
Hussars in the conventional uniform worn by this arm across Europe
and Chasseurs à Cheval also dressed as hussars.

Sir John Moore, the British
commander in chief at Corunna
The
French artillery dressed in uniforms similar to the
infantry, the horse artillery in hussar uniform.
The
standard infantry weapon across all the armies was the
musket. It could be fired at three or four times a
minute, throwing a heavy ball inaccurately for only a
hundred metres or so. Each infantryman carried a bayonet
which fitted the muzzle of his musket.
The four
British rifle battalions (60th and 95th Rifles) carried
the Baker rifle, a more accurate weapon but slower to
fire, and a sword bayonet.
Field
guns fired a ball projectile, by its nature of limited
use against troops in the field, unless closely formed.
Guns also fired case shot or canister which fragmented,
but was effective only over a short range. Exploding
shells fired by howitzers, as yet in their infancy were
of particular use against buildings. The British had the
secret development in this field of ‘shrapnel’.
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Winner: The
French although the British Army was evacuated after a fighting
withdrawal from Central Spain.
British Regiments:
7th Hussars, later the Queen’s Own Hussars and now the Queen’s Royal
Hussars
10th Hussars, later the Royal Hussars and now the King’s Royal
Hussars
15th Light Dragoons, later the 15th Hussars, then the 15th/19th
King’s Royal Hussars and now the Light Dragoons
18th Hussars, later 13th/18th Royal Hussars and now the Light
Dragoons
3rd Light Dragoons, King’s German Legion
1st and 3rd Battalions, the 1st Foot Guards, now the Grenadier
Guards*
1st Foot, the Royal Scots*
2nd Foot, the Queen’s Regiment, now the Princess of Wales’s Royal
Regiment*
3rd Foot, the Buffs or East Kent Regiment, now the Princess of
Wales’s Royal Regiment
4th Foot, the King’s own Royal Regiment now the King’s Own Royal
Border Regiment*
5th Foot, the Northumberland Fusiliers, now the Royal Regiment of
Fusiliers*
6th Foot, the Royal Warwickshire Regiment, now the Royal Regiment of
Fusiliers*
9th Foot, the Norfolk Regiment, now the Royal Anglian Regiment*
14th Foot, the West Yorkshire Regiment, now the Prince of Wales’s
own Regiment of Yorkshire*
20th Foot, the Lancashire Fusiliers, now the Royal Regiment of
Fusiliers*
21st Foot, the Royal Scots Fusiliers, now the Royal Highland
Fusiliers
23rd Foot, the Royal Welch Fusiliers*
26th Foot, the Cameronians or Scottish Rifles (disbanded) *
28th Foot, the Gloucestershire Regiment, now the Royal
Gloucestershire, Berkshire and Wiltshire Regiment*
32nd Foot, the Duke of Cornwall’s Light Infantry, now the Light
Infantry*
36th Foot, the Worcestershire Regiment, now the Worcestershire and
Sherwood Foresters Regiment*
38th Foot, the South Staffordshire Regiment, now the Staffordshire
Regiment *
42nd Highlanders, the Black Watch (the Royal Highland Regiment) *
43rd Foot, the Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry, now
the Royal Green Jackets*
50th Foot, the Queen’s Own Royal West Kent Regiment, now the
Princess of Wales’s Royal Regiment*
51st Foot, the King’s Own Yorkshire Light Infantry, now the Light
Infantry*
52nd Foot, the Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry, now
the Royal Green Jackets*
59th Foot, the East Lancashire Regiment, now the Queen’s Lancashire
Regiment*
62nd Foot, the Wiltshire Regiment, now the Royal Gloucestershire,
Berkshire and Wiltshire Regiment
71st Highlanders, the Highland Light Infantry, now the Royal
Highland Fusiliers*
76th Foot, the Duke of Wellington’s Regiment*
79th Highlanders, the Queen’s Own Cameron
Highlanders, later the Queen’s Own Highlanders and now the
Highlanders*
81st Foot, the Loyal Regiment, now the Queen’s Lancashire Regiment*
92nd Highlanders, the Gordon Highlanders,
now the Highlanders*
95th Foot, the Rifle Brigade, now the Royal Green Jackets*
1st Bn King’s German Legion,
2nd Bn King’s German Legion.
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Royal
Artillery:
Bean’s brigade of artillery 6 pieces.
Drummond’s brigade of artillery 6 pieces.
Wilmot’s brigade of artillery 6 pieces.
Carthew’s brigade of artillery 6 pieces.
Dowman’s and Evelin’s troops of horse artillery, 12 pieces.
Corunna is a battle honour for the regiments marked *.
British
order of battle:
First Division: Lieutenant General Sir David Baird: 81st
Foot, 26th Foot, 1st Foot, 50th Foot, 42nd Highlanders, 4th
Foot, 1st and 3rd Battalion of the 1st Guards. Bean’s
brigade of artillery 6 pieces.
Second Division: Lieutenant General Sir John Hope: 76th
Foot, 59th Foot, 51st Foot, 92nd Highlanders, 71st
Highlanders, 36th Foot, 32nd Foot, 14th Foot, 5th Foot, 2nd
Foot. Drummond’s brigade of artillery 6 pieces.
Third Division: Lieutenant General McKenzie Fraser: 79th
Highlanders, 38th Foot, 3rd Foot, 43rd Foot, 23rd Foot, 9th
Foot, 6th Foot. Wilmot’s brigade of artillery 6 pieces. |
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Map of the
Battle of Corunna 16th January 1809
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First Flank Brigade: Colonel R. Craufurd: 2nd/95th Foot, 2nd/52nd
Foot, 1st/43rd Foot.
Reserve: Major
General E. Paget: 21st Foot, 28th Foot, 1st/95th Foot, 62nd Foot,
20th Foot. Carthew’s brigade of artillery 6 pieces.
Second Flank Brigade: Brigadier General C. Alten: 1st Bn King’s
German Legion, 2nd Bn King’s German Legion.
Cavalry: Lieutenant General Lord Paget: 3rd LD KGL, 15th Light
Dragoons, 10th, 18th, 7th Hussars. Dowman’s and Evelin’s troops of
horse artillery, 12 pieces.
Artillery parc and reserve: Colonel Harding: 5 brigades and 30
pieces.
Account:
At the end of October
1808 the Emperor Napoleon, at the head of a large French army
assembled in the northern Spanish city of Vitoria, prepared to place
his brother Joseph on the throne of Spain by force.
Several Spanish
armies gathered to resist him and the British corps in Portugal was
ordered to advance to Burgos and assist the Spanish. With the
departure to England of Generals Burrard and Dalrymple and Sir
Arthur Wellesley to face the enquiry into the Convention of Cintra
which had enabled Junot and his army to escape from Portugal after
the Battle of Vimeiro, command of the British army fell on Sir John
Moore. Moore commanded 23,000 troops in Lisbon and expected 10,000
reinforcements to arrive at Corunna under Sir David Baird.
As Moore proudly
declared, “No British general had commanded so many soldiers since
the time of Marlborough”.
Moore sent his
infantry by the northern route through Coimbra, Celerico and Badajoz
to Salamanca in Spain. Late anxieties about the state of that road
caused him to divert his artillery and cavalry by the southern
Ciudad Rodrigo road.
Arriving at
Salamanca, Moore learnt that Napoleon had defeated the Spanish
armies and was already in Burgos, Moore’s intended destination. Soon
afterwards the French entered Madrid. The British army, outnumbered
by some two to one, was now heavily threatened. Nevertheless Moore
felt reluctant to abandon the Spanish and advanced on Soult’s corps
in Valladolid.
But Moore had
lingered within striking distance of the large French forces for too
long. Napoleon was coming after him and it was imperative that the
British army retreat with all speed to Corunna in the North West
Galician corner of Spain for evacuation by the fleet.
It was late in the
year and the retreat was one of great hardship. From Astorgas
Napoleon left Marshal Soult to conduct the pursuit. The British
rearguard comprising General Paget’s reserve brigade, Colonel
Craufurd’s brigade and the Cavalry seized every opportunity to hold
off the French. A skilful holding action was conducted by the
cavalry at Benevente and by the whole army at Lugo.
Other than for the
rearguard the discipline of many of the British regiments of foot
disintegrated and the troops ravaged the countryside and villages
through which they passed. A notorious incident took place at
Bembibre where 200 British soldiers became so drunk in a cellar that
they had to be left for the French (the figure is officially
recorded in a return).
The army marched into
the port of Corunna on the night of 11th January 1809, many of the
troops in a state of exhaustion. The French were some distance
behind but the fleet was not in harbour. The transports did not
reach Corunna from Vigo until 15th January 1809.
Moore formed his army
south of Corunna between the village of Elvina and the sea. Soult’s
corps carried out a frontal attack on the British line with the
emphasis on the British right flank at Elvina. The French took
Elvina but were driven out by the 42nd Highlanders and the 50th
Foot. They counter-attacked and recaptured the village. Short of
ammunition, the two regiments returned to the assault led by Moore
and the French were driven out again at the point of the bayonet. At
the moment of victory Sir John Moore was struck by a round shot and
fatally injured. Lying stricken, Sir John enquired as to the state
of the battle and was reassured that the French had been beaten
back. The French attack along the British line faded away, Paget’s
reserve division driving back a late incursion around the open right
flank.
The next day the army was embarked on the transports. One of the
last duties of the 9th Foot was to bury Sir John Moore on the city
ramparts.
Casualties:
The British casualties were 4,000 from the retreat of which 800
were casualties from the Battle of Corunna. The French casualties at
the battle were 1,500.
Follow-up:
The British army arrived in England in a terrible state. But by
May 1809 it was back in Portugal under the command of Sir Arthur
Wellesley. It finally left over the Pyrenees into France in 1814.
Charles Wolfe wrote this poem entitled: “The burial of Sir John
Moore at Corunna”.
NOT a drum was heard, not a funeral note,
As his corse to the rampart we hurried;
Not a soldier discharged his farewell shot
O'er the grave where our hero we buried.
We buried him darkly at dead of night, 5
The sods with our bayonets turning,
By the struggling moonbeam's misty light
And the lanthorn dimly burning.
No useless coffin enclosed his breast,
Not in sheet or in shroud we wound him; 10
But he lay like a warrior taking his rest
With his martial cloak around him.
Few and short were the prayers we said,
And we spoke not a word of sorrow;
But we steadfastly gazed on the face that was dead, 15
And we bitterly thought of the morrow.
We thought, as we hollow'd his narrow bed
And smooth'd down his lonely pillow,
That the foe and the stranger would tread o'er his head,
And we far away on the billow! 20
Lightly they'll talk of the spirit that 's gone,
And o'er his cold ashes upbraid him—
But little he'll reck, if they let him sleep on
In the grave where a Briton has laid him.
But half of our heavy task was done 25
When the clock struck the hour for retiring;
And we heard the distant and random gun
That the foe was sullenly firing.
Slowly and sadly we laid him down,
From the field of his fame fresh and gory; 30
We carved not a line, and we raised not a stone,
But we left him alone with his glory.
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