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Major Frederick Russell
Burnham |
Frederick
Russell Burnham
In collecting material on B-P for the Pine Tree Web, I
became interested in the life and adventures of Major
Frederick Russell Burnham, an American military scout who
served with B-P in the Matabele Campaign of 1896. Burnham
was a classic Victorian adventurer, and in that tradition
looms a bit larger than life. A frontier and Indian Scout
in the Southwest, he offered his services to Cecil Rhodes
and the British South Africa Company as they built the
British Empire in Southern Africa. He distinguished
himself as Chief of Scouts to Lord Roberts, Commander in
Chief in South Africa at the beginning of the Boer War.
For his services he was honored with the Distinguished
Service Order and, by courtesy of King Edward VII, held
the rank of Major in the British Army without having to
relinquish his American citizenship.
Eleven years before the camp at Brownsea Island,
Baden-Powell and Frederick Russell Burnham would talk
beside a campfire on the African veldt in what is today
western Zimbabwe. In a few short days, they had come to
respect each others professional accomplishments and
scouting skills.
"Burnham was a scout. He combined his
extraordinary natural abilities, with the teachings
of an old Indian scout who had served under and
learned from men like Kit Carson and John C. Fremont.
He became a priceless, silent, invisible eyes and
ears for both the American and British military
during some of our Indian and their Matabele and Boer
Wars."
Ross Seyfreid, in the "Introduction" to the
1994 reprint of Frederick Russell Burnham, Scouting
on Two Continents, Prescott, Arizona: The Wolfe
Publishing Company, 1994.
From Frederick Russell Burnham, Scouting on Two
Continents, 1926
Extract from a letter from Lt. Gen Sir Robert
Baden-Powell, K.C.V.O., K.C.B., written from
Africa to his mother in 1896:
"12th June, 1896…. Burnham is a most
delightful companion … amusing, interesting, and
most instructive. Having seen service against the Red
Indians he brings quite a new experience to bear on
the Scouting work here. And while he talks away
there’s not a thing escapes his quick roving eye,
whether it is on the horizon or at his feet."
From William Hillcourt, Baden-Powell: The Two
Lives of a Hero, 1964
"Before losing Burnham’s services, Sir Frederick
decided that the American should take his chief of
staff into the Matopos to acquaint him with the
territory.
"Their reconnaissance turned into a three-day
expedition on horseback during which Burnham and
Baden-Powell climbed in among the kopjes that
commanded a view of the enemy’s positions and of the
Matopos in general (‘Awful country—weird,
jumbled mass of bush and boulders and jagged
mountains’). Baden-Powell spent much of the time
drawing maps and making panoramic field sketches of
the landscape, indicating enemy caves and
strongholds. For the rest, he picked up from Burnham
a number of scouting tricks the American had used in
the 1893 war against the Matabele and as a U.S. Army
scout fighting in the Apache Indian wars.
"The two men found they had much in common and
struck up a firm friendship. For hours they shared
their experiences and innermost thoughts as they lay,
after a day’s reconnaissance, beside a tiny concealed
camp fire under the stars of the African sky, before
turning in for a few hours’ sleep on what B-P
considered the best of beds: ‘the veld tempered with
a blanket and a saddle’.
"Baden-Powell had hoped to do much further
scouting with Burnham but never had the chance.
Within a few days B-P was back at his desk and
Burnham had left for his special assignment."
From Robert
Baden-Powell, The Matabele Campaign, 1896:
"13th June.–At 4 a.m. we were off again,
Burnham and I and Trooper Bradley of the Mounted
Police, who knew this part of the country well….
"We got on well together, and he much approved
of the results of your early development in me of the
art of ‘inductive reasoning’–in fact, before we had
examined and worried out many little indications in
the course of our ride, he had nick-named me
‘Sherlock Holmes’. [P.S.–We had planned to do much
scouting together in the future, but, unfortunately,
it never came off, as he was soon afterwards
compelled, for domestic reasons, to go down
country.]"
The ribbon
at the left displays the colors of the Distinguished Service Order. The D.S.O. was
awarded to Major Burnham in recognition of his service as
Chief of Scouts to Lord Roberts (Commander-in-Chief South
Africa) during the Boer War, 1899-1902. The photograph of
Major Burnham was taken after his service in the South
African War. It shows him in British uniform wearing the
Distinguished Service Order, the Queen’s South African
Medal and the British South Africa Company Medal for the
Matabele Campaign.
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Burnham’s
account of
Scouting
with B-P in the Matopo Hills during the
Matabele Campaign.
From Frederick Russell Burnham, Taking
Chances, 1944 |
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Richard Harding Davis was an
American author of romantic novels and short stories and the
best known war correspondent of his generation. He was one of
the most famous and idolized men of his time. Known for his
fiction and plays, Davis also wrote about real people in
Real
Soldiers of Fortune, originally published in 1910. Frederick Russell Burnham was one of his
subjects. |
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Burnham’s
speech and account of the
Dedication of Mount Baden-Powell
in the Sierras in 1931.
A copy of B-P’s letter of thanks is included.
From Frederick Russell Burnham, Taking
Chances, 1944 |
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Baden-Powell
Photo Gallery:
Early
Years and Military Years |
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Please write to: Lewis P. Orans
Copyright
© Lewis P. Orans, 1997
Last Modified: 10:10 AM on May 18, 1997


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