The Objection To This Plan, Which Did Not
Apparently Suggest Itself To General Shafter, Was That An Army Of
Twelve Thousand Men, Sleeping Within Five Hundred Yards Of The
Enemy's Rifle-Pits, Might Not Unreasonably Be Expected To Pass A Bad
Night.
As we discovered the next day, not only the five hundred
yards, but the whole basin was covered by the fire from the rifle-
pits.
Even by daylight, when it was possible to seek some slight
shelter, the army could not remain in the woods, but according to the
plan it was expected to bivouac for the night in those woods, and in
the morning to manoeuvre and deploy and march through them to the two
flanks of San Juan. How the enemy was to be hypnotized while this
was going forward it is difficult to understand.
According to this programme, Capron's battery opened on El Caney and
Grimes's battery opened on the pagoda-like block-house of San Juan.
The range from El Poso was exactly 2,400 yards, and the firing, as
was discovered later, was not very effective. The battery used black
powder, and, as a result, after each explosion the curtain of smoke
hung over the gun for fully a minute before the gunners could see the
San Juan trenches, which was chiefly important because for a full
minute it gave a mark to the enemy. The hill on which the battery
stood was like a sugar-loaf. Behind it was the farm-house of El
Poso, the only building in sight within a radius of a mile, and in it
were Cuban soldiers and other non-combatants.
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