4.0 out of 5 stars
Highland Warriors..., December 29, 2010
This review is from: WELLINGTON'S HIGHLAND WARRIORS: From the Black Watch Mutiny to the Battle of Waterloo (Hardcover)
Stuart Reid's 2010 "Wellington's Highland Warriors" is a highly readable, engaging survey of the Highland infantry regiments of the British Army, from the inception of the Black Watch in 1739 through the Battle of Waterloo in 1815. Along the way, Reid does some interesting mythbusting. The title, by the way, is a bit of a misnomer. Arthur Wesley, later Wellesley, still later the Duke of Wellington, started his military career as an ensign in 1787 in the 73rd Highlanders, but his presence in the book is aperiodic; it happens that Highland Regiments were present at his major battles.
The first two thirds of the book is a rather lengthy account of the raising of the so-called Highland Regiments. The people of the Highlands were popularly supposed to have the martial qualities needed by a British Army expanding to fight the various wars with 18th Century France. As Reid makes clear, the Highlands lacked the population density to support the Army's needs, which led to unseemly competition for recruits and to fillers from Lowland Scotland and elsewhere in the British Isles.
The last third of the book gets the Highland Regiments finally into battle, in Ireland, India, the Iberian Peninsula, and finally the Waterloo Campaign. Reid's approach to the various battles is anecdotal rather than systematic, but enjoyable nonetheless. Especially interestig is his explanation of the famous "Scotland Forever" charge of the Scottish Greys at Waterloo, with soldiers from the Gordon Highlanders clinging to their stirrups. In a wistful epilogue, Reid notes the fate of the Highland Regiments in the most recent consolidation of British Army infantry battalions.
"Wellington's Highland Warriors" is highly recommended to students of the history of the British Army and especially of its Scottish regiments.
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