The Battle of Spion Kop (Afrikaans: Slag van Spioenkop) was fought about 38 km (21 miles) west-south-west of Ladysmith on the hilltop of Spioenkop(1) along the Tugela River, Natal in South Africa. The battle was fought between Boer and British forces from 23-24 January 1900 as part of the Second Boer War, and resulted in a famous British defeat during the Boer War.
With the dawn of the new day the British discovered that they had the smaller and lower part of the hilltop of Spion Kop, while the Boers occupied higher ground on three sides of the British position, so the bloody fight for the hill began. The Boers had watched the British all night and waited for the fog to lift, and at the sight of the British the Boers proceeded to devastate the British with deadly rifle fire from their Mausers into the British positions. The Boers brought their artillery to bear on the British position, dropping shells at a rate of ten rounds per minute. From Aloe Knoll of Spion Kop Commandant Henrik Prinsloo with 88 men attacked the Lancashire Fusiliers and left seventy of them dead with bullet holes on the right side of their heads. Major General Woodgate was killed in action at this point. Colonel Malby Crofton took charge and asked for reinforcements, but got none. The British position was to hold Spion Kop at all costs. The Boers proved to be sharpshooters in an enfilade position against the British, and anyone who did not find cover in time was shot dead or wounded.
In the chaos General Buller recommended a new commander for the fight on Spion Kop, and General Warren promoted Thorneycroft to Brigadier General and gave him operational control of the battle. Thorneycroft's first operational command was to stop a surrender on Spion Kop declaring there shall be no surrender. There were still some surrenders, but it was against orders and the British line held. Winston Churchill was a journalist stationed in South Africa and he was commissioned an officer at the rank of Lieutenant of the South African Light Horse by General Buller during the Boer War after his prisoner-of-war prison escape. Churchill acted as a courier to and from Spion Kop and General Buller's HQ and made a statement about the scene: "Corpses lay here and there. Many of the wounds were of a horrible nature. The splinters and fragments of the shells had torn and mutilated them. The shallow trenches were choked with dead and wounded." The battle was chaos littered with bodies and dead messengers, so the fog of war left little understanding of the overall situation except for the bloody conflict to control the hill.
After sixteen days into the campaign Brigadier General Thorneycroft ordered a retreat after reporting that the soldiers have no water, and ammunition is running short, and the hill cannot be held at the current casualty rate for another night. The casualties result of the battle were nearly 400 British dead left buried on Spion Kop and 1,400 British wounded or captured. The Boers had 58 dead and 140 wounded with Commandant Prinsloo taking a loss of 55 out of his 88 men.
Ladysmith would be taken by the British on another day.
The name Spionkop originates from Dutch instead of Afrikaans. Spion (and not Spioen) is the Dutch word for "spy". Until the 1920's Dutch was still the official language of the Boers, especially in its written form.
Similarly, in places like Australia there are numerous hills bearing the name "Spion Kop", presumably because of their perceived resemblance to the location of the battle in the eyes of returned servicemen.
"The Battle of Spion Kop" was an episode of the Goon Show, broadcast on 29th December 1958
Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi was a British stretcher-bearer at the battle.
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Battle of Spion Kop".
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