During
These Operations Hamilton Had The Two Formidable De Wet Brothers In
Front Of Him, And Suffered Nearly A Hundred Casualties In The
Continual Skirmishing Which Accompanied His Advance.
His right
flank and rear were continually attacked, and these signs of forces
outside our direct line of advance were full of menace for the
future.
On May 22nd the main army resumed its advance, moving forward
fifteen miles to Honing's Spruit. On the 23rd another march of
twenty miles over a fine rolling prairie brought them to Rhenoster
River. The enemy had made some preparations for a stand, but
Hamilton was near Heilbron upon their left and French was upon
their right flank. The river was crossed without opposition. On the
24th the army was at Vredefort Road, and on the 26th the vanguard
crossed the Vaal River at Viljoen's Drift, the whole army following
on the 27th. Hamilton's force had been cleverly swung across from
the right to the left flank of the British, so that the Boers were
massed on the wrong side.
Preparations for resistance had been made on the line of the
railway, but the wide turning movements on the flanks by the
indefatigable French and Hamilton rendered all opposition of no
avail. The British columns flowed over and onwards without a pause,
tramping steadily northwards to their destination. The bulk of the
Free State forces refused to leave their own country, and moved
away to the eastern and northern portion of the State, where the
British Generals thought - incorrectly, as the future was to
prove - that no further harm would come from them.
Enter page number
PreviousNext
Page 499 of 842
Words from 133341 to 133608
of 225456