Two Years on Trek: Being Some Account of the Royal Sussex Regiment in South Africa. Louis Eugène Du Moulin
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Louis Eugène Du Moulin
Two Years on Trek: Being Some Account of the Royal Sussex Regiment in South Africa
Published by Good Press, 2019
EAN 4064066173241
Table of Contents
CHAPTER II. THE 21ST BRIGADE. THE TREK BEGINS.
CHAPTER IV. THE FIGHT AT ZAND RIVER.
CHAPTER VIII. DIAMOND HILL, FIRST DAY.
CHAPTER IX. DIAMOND HILL, SECOND DAY.
CHAPTER XIV. TO THE BOER LAAGER.
CHAPTER XVIII. THE RAILWAY NEEDS REPAIR.
CHAPTER XXIII. THE RAISING OF THE MOUNTED COLUMN.
CHAPTER XXVII. ABRAHAM'S KRAAL.
CHAPTER XXVIII. NORTHWARDS—AND THE END.
CHAPTER XXIX. THE THIRD BATTALION.
PREFACE.
Louis Eugène du Moulin was of French descent. By birth he was a New Zealander. He passed through Sandhurst and entered the army in 1879, joining the 107th Regiment—now the Second Battalion of the Royal Sussex Regiment. With this battalion all his service was spent, until his promotion in 1899 as second in command of the First Battalion Royal Sussex Regiment (the old 35th).
He served in the Black Mountain Campaign of 1888, in the Chin-Lushai and Manipur expeditions of 1889–91, and in the Tirah Campaign of 1897–98. Alike among the dark pine woods of the Himalayas, in the dense jungle of Manipur, or on the bleak, stony ridges of the Hazara country the name of du Moulin became a byword in the Regiment, and far beyond the Regiment, for restless energy, never-failing resource and cool daring. He became known all over India as a musketry expert. Many of his ideas were adopted, and are in universal use by those who may never have heard his name.
Perhaps his real genius was for organization. This quality came conspicuously into notice in South Africa during the war. Many men who served in the 21st Brigade under General Bruce Hamilton had reason to bless the forethought and unstinted labour of the man who carried out so thoroughly the idea of the Brigade commander, and supplied the Brigade with those welcome additions to bully beef and biscuit which were obtainable at the Brigade Canteen. Often after a hard day's march and a tough fight have I admired the unselfish spirit in which, disdaining fatigue, he would set to work with his coat off to open stores and arrange the wagons lighted with "dips," which served as a "coffee shop" for famishing Tommy.
A tall, spare man, with keen, dark eyes, a courageous nose and a harsh-toned voice—such was the outward du Moulin. Feared not a little, loved greatly by those under him, afraid of no one, despising precedent and precaution, dependent only on his own iron will and keen intellect, he had a brilliant career before him when he fell gloriously at Abraham's Kraal on January 28th, 1902. He had gone through the campaign from the advance to Pretoria of Lord Roberts' army, down to the pursuit of De Wet and of the broken commandos after De Wet's time, without a wound, and, as far as I can remember, without a day's sickness—and with very few days' rest from marching and fighting.
He always knew