IX

THE SIEGE OF BADAJOZ, MARCH 15-APRIL 6, 1812

(A) STRENGTH OF THE FRENCH GARRISON ON MARCH 15

[See the Tables in Belmas, iv. pp. 364-5 and in Jones, i. p. 229.]

Staff     25  
Infantry:        
3/9th Léger officers and men 580  
1/28th Léger 597  
1/58th Ligne 450  
3/88th Ligne 600  
3/103rd Ligne 540  
64th Ligne (2 companies) 130  
Hesse-Darmstadt (2 batts.) 910  
Juramentados     54 = 3,861 infantry.
Cavalry     42  
Artillery     261  
Engineers and Sappers     260  
Sick in Hospital     300  
Civil Departments, non-combatants, &c. 254  
      5,003  

A report of the governor at noon on April 5, found among his papers after the storm, gave the following as surviving under arms (sick excluded)—infantry 3,403, artillery 282, engineers 217, cavalry 50, Juramentados 86. This report, printed in Jones, i. p. 230, implies a higher original total than Belmas allows—the artillery and Juramentados are actually more numerous on April 5 than on March 15! And the infantry are only 458 less, despite of losses of a considerably higher figure, for another paper of the commandant shows (Jones, i. p. 230)—Sortie of March 19: killed 30, wounded 287=317[769]. Storm of Picurina Fort: killed or prisoners, 8 officers, 278 men = 286. We have thus 603 casualties in these two affairs only, beside the ordinary wear and tear of the siege.

Noting the considerable number of ‘round figures’ in Belmas’s table, I am inclined to think that the total of the garrison must have been a few hundreds over what he allows.

(B) LOSSES AT STORM OF BADAJOZ, APRIL 6, 1811

[From the Returns at the Record Office.]

  Killed. Wounded. Missing.  
  Officers. Men. Officers. Men. Officers. Men. Total.
General Staff 1 16 17
Royal Artillery 1 6 1 9 17
Royal Engineers 2 3 5 10
Assistant Engineers 3 3
Third Division.
Kempt’s Brigade:
1/45th Foot 6 19 8 64 97
3/60th Foot 1 4 4 26 35
74th Foot 12 7 33 2 54
1/88th Foot 3 28 7 106 144
J. Campbell’s Brigade:
2/5th Foot 1 11 3 28 43
77th Foot 3 11 14
2/83rd Foot 1 22 7 39 69
94th Foot 1 12 1 51 65
Total 3rd Division 13 108 40 358 2 521
Fourth Division.
Kemmis’s Brigade:
3/27th Foot 4 37 12 132 185
1/40th Foot 2 51 13 170 236
Bowes’s Brigade:
1/7th Foot 5 44 12 119 180
1/23rd Foot 3 22 14 92 20 151
1/48th Foot 3 32 16 122 173
Total 4th Division 17 186 67 635 20 925
Fifth Division.
Hay’s Brigade:
3/1st Foot
1/9th Foot
2/38th Foot 2 37 7 88 42
Walker’s Brigade:
1/4th Foot 2 40 15 173 230
2/30th Foot 38 6 86 130
2/44th Foot 2 37 7 88 134
Total 5th Division 5 127 31 373 536
Light Division:
1/43rd Foot 3 74 15 249 341
1/52nd Foot 5 53 14 248 320
1/95thd Foot 3 27 10 154 194
3/95th Foot 4 9 4 47 64
Total Light Division 15 163 43 698 919
Brunswick Oels, dispersed in companies in 4th and 5th Divisions 7 2 26 35
Total British loss 54 597 206 2,104 22 2,983
Portuguese 8 147 45 500 30 730
General Total 62 744 251 2,604 52 3,713
Losses during previous operations 10 219 54 661 13 957

The total loss during the siege and storm would therefore appear to have been 4,670.