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Sir
Baker Creed Russell
13th Hussars
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B-P’s first Commanding
Officer,
Lieutenant-Colonel Sir Baker Creed Russell,
13th Hussars.
C. R. B. Barrett, History of
the XIII Hussars, 1911
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Baden-Powell
writes about Sir Baker Russell:
"Sir Baker Russell used to say
that the duty of cavalry
was to look smart in time of peace and to get killed
in war."
Sir
Baker Russell, who was a Major in the 13th Hussars
soon after I joined, and later became our Colonel,
had made a great name for himself as a fighting man,
both in the Mutiny, where he began as a Cornet of the
Carabineers, and afterwards in Canada, in Ashanti,
and in the Egyptian Campaign. Of a very striking and
commanding figure, with a strong, determined face and
a tremendous voice, he was the beau ideal of a
fighting leader. Personally I know that if he had
ordered me to walk over a cliff or into a fire I
would have done so without hesitation, and I believe
that officers and men would have followed him
anywhere. He had a magnetic attraction which would
have led men to do anything that he commanded. He had
a fierce exterior, but a warm and kindly heart
beneath it, and I never knew a better friend. He used
to say of himself that up till twelve in the morning
he was a devil, after which he was an angel. This was
very true, except that the temper of the devil was
short and quick and not malignant.
On
one occasion we arrived wet and weary at a
camp-ground where the commissariat officer of the
district was supposed to have arranged to have a camp
all ready pitched for us, with rations and forage
prepared also. But when we got there we found no
preparation of any kind for our arrival, and we had
to make the best of it under the circumstances. Next
day, when we were trying dry our clothes in the wind,
and were making some sort of arrangements for feeding
the men and grazing the horses pending the arrival of
supplies, one of our men fell dead in a fit. The
Colonel was not slow to make capital of this, and he
telegraphed to the General of the district expressing
his opinion of the want of organization in the place,
and in alluding to the hardships which men and horses
were suffering he pointed out that already one man
was dead of exposure.
Within
a few hours a young gentleman in plain clothes
strolled into our camp and went jauntily up to the
Colonel, asked him how he was, and then said that he
was a commissariat officer and had come to see how we
were getting on. The Colonel replied he was getting
on very nicely, thank you, and so was the regiment
and were grateful for his kind enquiries. "You,
sir, are only a civilian, that is evident by your
dress, but by G–! if the commissariat officer should
ever dare to show his d—- nose within a mile of my
camp, I should have him in arrest and shoved in the
guard-room, not only as incompetent and unfit to be
an officer, but as little better than a murderer. If,
as you say, you are a commissariat officer, go back
to your quarters, put on your uniform at once,
consider yourself under arrest, and come back here
and tell me why the h— , etc., etc."
On
parade, if his feelings got the better of him, over
some error or stupidity on the part of an officer, he
would look at him for a moment with withering glance,
then invariably he would jam his helmet down on his
head and ride for that officer as hard as he could
go. If he had collided the results would have been
disastrous to the man charged. It was therefore usual
either to meet him or to evade him. On one occasion I
remember well his suddenly going for my comrade,
"Ding" MacDougal, at full gallop. When he
was within a yard of that unfortunate officer,
MacDougal jammed one spur into his horse and made it
leap to one side, which resulted in the Colonel
missing him completely and charging into the ranks
behind him. Here he knocked over a man, Corporal
Bower, and his horse, heavily shaking up the poor
unfortunate rider. In a moment the Colonel was off
his horse, supporting the Corporal across his knee
and saying: "My poor, dear man, I am sorry. I
didn’t mean to hurt you." Feeling rather pleased
that his charge had not been altogether without
success, he had lost his rage and, turning round (I
can see him now), he shook his fist good humouredly
at MacDougal, saying: "Ding, you devil, why did
you get out of the way?"
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Riding down a
delinquent.
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Ding explained to him later, during
lunch, that he had become so accustomed to seeing a
boar coming at him in just the same way (and Sir
Baker, with his huge moustache and eager rush, was
not altogether unlike the vision of a boar with his
tushes charging towards one) that he had merely
dodged him from sheer force of habit, to save himself
and horse.
Sir
Baker Russell was not an orthodox colonel. He was in
no way guided by the drill book, and knew little and
cared less for the prescribed words of command; but
he had a soldier’s eye for the country and for where
his men ought to be in a fight, and he led them there
by his own direction rather than by formal formations
as laid down in the book.
On
one occasion we were inspected by a General whose
life had been passed at infantry work. Sir Baker
hoped, in making the regiment march past, to impress
him by its steadiness. Therefore when it came to our
galloping by in a succession of squadrons he meant us
to go at a steady canter, each squadron in rigid
formation. So he turned to his trumpeter and cried:
"Sound the canter." Well, there is no
trumpet call laid down for the canter, and the
trumpeter therefore sounded the next best to it,
which was the gallop. We in the regiment, anxious to
make a good show, pressed forward at once at a sharp
gallop. The Colonel, seeing this from his post
alongside the General, shouted to his trumpeter,
" Sound the canter ! " The trumpeter again
sounded the gallop. Hearing the gallop repeated we
imagined that it meant we were not going fast enough,
and therefore we just let ourselves go, and by the
time we reached the saluting point opposite the
General and Sir Baker, the whole regiment was a
rushing tornado of men and horses in a whirl of dust,
and we dashed past in a dense, confused mob. The
Colonel, however, was not at a loss, and turned to
the General with a well-assumed smile, and puffing
out his chest, said: "There, sir! You never saw
a regiment gallop past like that before. That is
something like." The General, being completely
ignorant on the subject, took his cue from the
Colonel and said: "No, that is splendid; I never
saw anything so good in my life," and reported
upon it accordingly.
Sir
Baker was beloved of the men. The regiment, being the
13th Hussars, was nicknamed "The Baker’s
Dozen." He practiced many things which in those
days were looked upon as heresy, but are recognized
to-day as producing the highest efficiency, that is,
regard for and development of the human side and the
individuality of the men themselves. Thus when we
paraded for a field-day we generally did so at a
rendezvous some two or three miles from barracks, and
each man made his own way to the spot individually,
instead of being marched there, and one of the
standing orders in the regiment was this: "It is
as great a crime for a hussar to be before his time
as after it." This entailed strict punctuality
on the part of the men in being at the appointed
place at the appointed time. They had to judge for
themselves how long it would take them to get there
without hustling their horses, and they took their
own line of country and used their own senses in
arriving at the place properly and up to time.
On
one occasion the Colonel had to lecture one of his
men for some minor misbehaviour. The man was a
splendid type of old soldier, a wonderful boxer,
swordsman, rider, and marksman, but he was very fond
of his mug of ale. When he was brought up for having
had a drop too much, the Colonel remarked to him:
"My good man, I only wish I could drink as much
as you do and keep as good a nerve. Tell me how you
manage it and I will let you off." Ben Hagan,
for that was the fellow’s name, explained his secret.
It was to fill a hand-basin with beer every night
before turning in and to pace it underneath his bed.
Then his first act on waking in the morning was to
pour it down his throat. He believed that the only
way to preserve health and nerve was to take big
doses of really stale beer the first thing in the
morning.
That
idea of Sir Baker Russell’s of letting men make their
own way to parade, etc., was acted upon by me in
after years by making it imperative for every man to
go a ride by himself of about one hundred and twenty
miles, and to take a week in doing it. This tended to
make men self-reliant, reliable, intelligent, and
smart. At first it was feared that many of them,
finding themselves away from all regimental
restraint, would break out and make an orgy of it;
but I have never heard a single complaint of the men
on this head. They knew they were trusted to carry
out this duty of riding off to report on some distant
object, whether a railway station, a bridge, or a
piece of country, and they took a pride in themselves
and their horses while away, because they knew that
the good name of the regiment was in their hands. We
found it in practice the very best reformer for a
stupid man that could be devised. He had no one to
lean upon for advice or direction, he merely had his
plain, simple orders, which he had to exercise his
intelligence in carrying out.
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Joseph
Chamberlain and the policeman.
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This same practice I carried out also
with the South African Constabulary after the Boer
War. The men were generally sent out in pairs on long
patrols of two to three hundred miles: but if a man
were really a stupid fellow he was sent out alone. I
remember well, when conducting Mr. Joseph Chamberlain
on trek through the Transvaal, that we saw a solitary
constable riding across the veldt. Mr. Chamberlain
asked me what might be the duty of such a man, and I
replied that he was probably a stupid man sent out to
develop his own intelligence. We signaled the man to
us and on enquiry we found that it was so. He had
been ordered on a three hundred miles ride to pick up
information at various spots, but with strict orders
that he was not to have the help of any other
constable.
From Baden-Powell, Indian Memories,
1915
"…
Sir Baker Russell gave responsibility and trusted his
officers. Also gifted with quick intuition he made
quick decisions and, whether right or wrong, carried
them through with a bang…."
From: Baden-Powell, Lessons from
the Varsity of Life, 1933
Sir Baker Russell’s military career is summarized in the History
of The XIII. Hussars:
RUSSELL,
Sir BAKER CREED, G.C.B., K.C.M.G.
Cornet, 6th Dragoon Guards, 2nd 1855;
Lieutenant, do., 1st August 1856;
Captain, unattached, 18th February 1859;
do., 7th Foot, 25th March 1859;
do., 13th Hussars, 3rd October 1862
Brevet Major, 24th January 1865;
Major, 13th Hussars, 15th July 1878;
Brevet Lieut.-Colonel, 13th Hussars, 1st April 1874;
Lieut.-Colonel, 13th Hussars, 29th September 1880;
Brevet Colonel (army), 18th February 1880;
Major General, 1st April 1889;
Lieut.-General, 20th January 1897;
General, 19th December 1903;
Colonel, 13th Hussars, 20th January 1894.
INDIAN
MUTINY. On the outbreak of the mutiny, Sir Baker
Creed Russell was at Meerut with the 6th Dragoon
Guards. He was at Kurnaul when Colonel Gerrard was
killed. Was with Seaton’s Movable Column at the
battle of Gungaree, where on the death of his three
senior officers he commanded the squadron and a
detachment of the 8th Lancers. On December 17, 1857,
he commanded the cavalry at Putteali (mentioned in
dispatches) Commanded the cavalry at Mynpooree, and
was present at the capture of Bareilly; present at
relief of Bareilly; relief of Shahjehanpore; capture
of the Fort of Remai and pursuit with destruction of
the Fort of Mabundee, the action of Bunkagaon, the
operations in Oude, actions of Mohudepore and
Russoolpore, attack and capture of Fort Mitoulee,
actions of Alligunge and Biswa, and served with the
Agra Field Force in Central India in pursuit of
Tantia Topee (medal with clasp).
FIRST
ASHANTI WAR. At the Gold Coast with Sir Garnet
Wolseley in September 1873 on special service. Organised the native " Russell’s Regiment,"
and commanded it throughout the Ashanti War of
1873-74. Commanded the defending forces during the
repulse of the Ashanti army at Absakampra on November
5 and 6. His regiment, with Lord Gifford’s Scouts,
formed the advance-guard of the army from the river
Prah to the north-side of the Adansi Hills. Commanded
the regiment now forming part of the advance-guard
(augmented) under Colonel McLeod at the attack and
capture of Adubrassie, the battle of Amoaful, the
attack and capture of Becquah, the advance-guard
engagement of Jarbinbah, and the skirmishes and
ambuscade affairs between Adwabin and the river
Ordah, the battle of Ordahsu and capture of Coomassie
(mentioned in dispatches several times, Brevet of
Lieut-Colonel, Companion of the Bath, medal with
clasp).
ZULU
WAR. In 1879 accompanied Sir Garnet Wolseley to South
Africa and commanded the forces in the operations
against Sekukuni, the storming of the stronghold and
subjugation of the tribe (mentioned in dispatches
K.C.M.G., A.D.C. to the Queen, medal with clasp).
EGYPTIAN
WAR. Served in the Egyptian War of 1882, first as A.A.G. for Cavalry and afterwards in command of a
Brigade of Cavalry; present at El Magfar and
Tel-el-Mahuta, the two actions at Kassassin, the
battle of Tel-el-Kebir and the capture of Cairo
(mentioned in dispatches K.C.B., medal with clasp,
2nd class of Medjidie, and Khedive’s star).
C. R. B. Barrett, History of The
XIII. Hussars, William Blackwood and Sons,
Edinburgh and London, 1911
SUBSEQUENT CAREER. Appointed Colonel of the 13th Hussars on 20th
January 1894 with the rank of Major-General. Promoted to General in
1903.
From: Stephen Luscombe,
Sir Baker Creed Russell. British Empire Website
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B-P’s
first Commanding Officer, Sir Baker Creed Russell, 13th
Hussars. He had a distinguished career, serving in the Indian
Mutiny, the 1st Ashanti War, the Zulu War, the Egyptian War, and
the South African War. Stephen Luscombe’s "The
British Empire" provides a short biography of Russell
including details of his miltary service. |
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Sir
Baker Russell was Commanding Officer of the 13th Hussars when B-P
was posted to the regiment in India. The 13th
were a cavalry regiment with a long tradition,
perhaps best known for their part in the Charge
of the Light Brigade before the guns at Balaclava
in the Crimean War. The regiment continues today
as part of The Light
Dragoons, an armored regiment of the
British Army that saw service in Desert Storm. |
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It was at the
Siege and Defense of Mafeking during the South African
(Anglo-Boer) War that Baden-Powell made his name and first gained
public recognition. 1999-1902 marks the Centennial of the War. Developed as part of that
observance, Perspectives on the South African War
provides a collection of links to original and contemporary sources on the South
African War. |
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Last Modified: 10:30 PM on August 15, 2002

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