VITTORIA, 21
June 1813
The year of 1812 had positively
glowed with success but it was to end inauspiciously with the failure to
take the castle of Burgos, besieged by Wellington in September and October
1812. The Allied siege operations provided one of the more unhappier sides
to the campaign in the Peninsula but at least the army was successful on
three occasions, albeit after some tremendous bludgeoning which cost the
lives of hundreds of British soldiers. At Burgos, however, the operation
was flawed from the start and a combination of bad weather, inadequate
siege train and plain bad mismanagement caused a despondent Wellington to
abandon the dreary place on October 19th.
The outcome of the whole sad episode
was a retreat which, to those who had survived it, bore too many shades of
the retreat to Corunna almost four years earlier. Once again the
discipline of the army broke down, drunkenness was rife and hundreds of
Wellington's men were left floundering in the mud to die or be taken
prisoner by the French. It was little consolation to Wellington that while
his army limped back to Portugal Napoleon too was about to see his own
army disintegrate in the Russian snows. The retreat to Portugal finally
ended in late November when the Allied army concentrated on the border,
close to Ciudad Rodrigo. The year had thus ended in bitter disappointment
for Wellington but nothing could hide the fact that taken as a whole 1812,
the year of Ciudad Rodrigo, Badajoz and Salamanca, had seen the army
achieve some of its greatest successes and once it had recovered it would
embark on the road to even greater glory.
During the winter of 1812-13
Wellington contemplated his strategy for the forthcoming campaign. His
army received reinforcements which brought it up to a strength of around
80,000 men of whom 52,000 were British. The French believed that any
Allied thrust would have to be made through central Spain, an assumption
Wellington fostered by sending Hill, with 30,000 men and six brigades of
cavalry, in the direction of Salamanca. Wellington, in fact, accompanied
Hill as far as Salamanca to help deceive the French further. The main
Allied advance, however, would be made to the north, by the left wing of
the army, some 66,000-strong, under Sir Thomas Graham, who would cross the
Douro, march through northern Portugal and the Tras-o-Montes before
swinging down behind the French defensive lines. The advance would be
aimed at Burgos before moving on to the Pyrenees and finally into southern
France. If all went well Wellington would be able to shift his supply
bases from Lisbon to the northern coast of Spain and in so doing avoid
over-extending his lines of communication.
The advance began on May 22nd 1813
and as the Allied army crossed the Portuguese border into Spain Wellington
is reputed to have turned and waved his hat in the air, exclaiming,
"Farewell, Portugal, for I shall never see you again." He was
right.
Wellington left Hill's force on May
28th and joined Graham the following day. By June 3rd his entire force,
numbering around 80,000 men, was on the northern side of the Douro, much
to the surprise of the French who began to hurry north to meet them. Such
was the speed of Wellington's advance that the French were forced to
abandon Burgos, this time without any resistance, and the place was blown
up by the departing garrison on June 13th. Wellington passed the town and
on June 19th was just a short distance to the east of Vittoria which lay
astride the great road to France.
The battlefield of Vittoria lay
along the floor of the valley of the Zadorra, some six miles wide and ten
miles in length. The eastern end of this valley was open and led to
Vittoria itself while the other three sides of the valley consisted of
mountains although those to the west were heights rather than mountains.
The Zadorra itself wound its way from the south-west corner of the valley
to the north where it ran along the foot of the mountains overlooking the
northern side of the valley. The river was unpassable to artillery but was
crossed by four bridges to the west of the valley and four more to the
north.
Wellington devised an elaborate plan
of attack which involved dividing his army into four columns. On the
right, Hill, with 20,000 men consisting of the 2nd Division and Morillo's
Spaniards, was to gain the heights of Puebla on the south of the valley
and force the Puebla pass. The two centre columns were both under
Wellington's personal command. The right centre column consisted of the
Light and 4th Divisions together with four brigades of cavalry, who were
to advance through the village of Nanclares. The left centre column
consisted of the 3rd and 7th Divisions which were to advance through the
valley of the Bayas at the north-west corner of the battlefield and attack
the northern flank and rear of the French position. The fourth column,
under Graham, consisted of the 1st and 5th Divisions, Longa's Spaniards
and two Portuguese brigades. Graham was to march around the mountains to
the north and by entering the valley at its north-eastern corner was to
severe the main road to Bayonne.
Joseph's French army numbered 66,000
men with 138 guns but although another French force under Clausel was
hurrying up from Pamplona they would not arrive in time and Joseph was to
fight the battle with about 14,000 fewer men than Wellington.
On the morning of June 21st
Wellington peered through his telescope and saw Joseph, Marshal Jourdan
and General Gazan and their staffs gathered together on top of the hill of
Arinez, a round hill that dominated the centre of the French line. It was
a moist, misty morning and through the drizzle he saw, away to his right,
Hill's troops as they made their way through the Heights of Puebla. It was
here that the battle opened at about 8.30am when Hill's troops drove the
French from their positions and took the heights.
Two hours later, away to the
north-east, the crisp crackle of musketry signalled Graham's emergence
from the mountains as his men swept down over the road to Bayonne, thus
cutting off the main French escape route. Hereafter, Graham's troops
probed warily westward and met with stiff resistance, particularly at the
village of Gamara Mayor. Moreover, Wellington's instructions bade him to
proceed with caution, orders which Graham obeyed faithfully. Although his
column engaged the French in several hours of bloody fighting on the north
bank of the Zadorra, it was not until the collapse of the French army late
in the day that he unleashed the full power of his force upon the French.
There was little fighting on the
west of the battlefield until at about noon when, acting upon information
from a Spanish peasant, Wellington ordered Kempt's brigade of the Light
Division to take the undefended bridge over the Zadorra at Tres Puentes.
This was duly accomplished and brought Kempt to a position just below the
hill of Arinez and while the rest of the Light Division crossed the bridge
of Villodas Picton's `Fighting' 3rd Division stormed across the bridge of
Mendoza on their right. Picton was faced by two French divisions supported
by artillery but these guns were taken in flank by Kempt's riflemen and
were forced to retire having fired just a few salvoes. Picton's men rushed
on and, supported by the Light Division and by Cole's 4th Division, which
had also crossed at Villodas, the 3rd Division rolled over the French
troops on this flank like a juggernaut. A brigade of Dalhousie's 7th
Division joined them in their attack and together they drove the French
from the hill of Arinez. Soon afterwards, what was once Joseph's vantage
point was being used by Wellington to direct the battle.
It was just after 3pm and the 3rd,
7th and Light Divisions were fighting hard to force the French from the
village of Margarita. This small village marked the right flank of the
first French line and after heavy fighting the defenders were thrust from
it in the face of overwhelming pressure from Picton's division. To the
south of the hill of Arinez Gazan's divisions were still holding firm and
supported by French artillery were more than holding their own against
Cole's 4th Division. However, with Margarita gone the right flank of the
French was left unprotected.
It was a critical time for Joseph's
army. On its right, D'Erlon's division was being steadily pushed back by
Picton, Dalhousie and Kempt, whose divisions seemed irresistible. Away to
his left, Joseph saw Hill's corps streaming from the heights of Puebla
whilst behind him Graham's corps barred the road home. Only Gazan's
divisions held firm but when Cole's 4th Division struck at about 5pm the
backbone of the French army snapped. Wellington thrust the 4th Division
into the gap between D'Erlon and Gazan, as a sort of wedge, and as the
British troops on the French right began to push D'Erlon back Gazan
suddenly realised he was in danger of being cut off. At this point Joseph
finally realised that he was left with little choice but to give the order
for a general retreat.
The resulting disintegration of the
French army was as sudden as it was spectacular. The collapse was
astonishing as every man, from Joseph downwards, looked to his own safety.
All arms and ammunition, equipment and packs were thrown away by the
French in an effort to hasten their flight. It was a case of every man for
himself. Only Reille's corps, which had been holding engaged with Graham's
corps, managed to maintain some sort of disorder but even Reille's men
could not avoid being swept along with the tide of fugitives streaming
back towards Vittoria. With the collapse of all resistance Graham swept
down upon what units remained in front of him but there was little more to
be done but round up prisoners who were taken in their hundreds. The
French abandoned the whole of their baggage train as well as 415 caissons,
151 of their 153 guns and 100 waggons. 2,000 prisoners were taken.
More incredible, however, was the
fantastic amount of treasure abandoned by Joseph as he fled. The
accumulated plunder acquired by him in Spain was abandoned to the eager
clutches of the Allied soldiers who could not believe what they found.
Never before nor since in the history of warfare has such an immense
amount of booty been captured by an opposing force. Ironically, this
treasure probably saved what was left of Joseph's army for while
Wellington's men stopped to fill their pockets with gold, silver, jewels
and valuable coins, the French were making good their escape towards
Pamplona. Such was Wellington's great disgust at the behaviour of his men
afterwards that he was prompted to write to the Earl of Bathurst. It was
the letter in which he was to use the famous expression, `scum of the
earth'.
The Allies suffered 5,100 casualties
during the battle while the French losses were put at around 8,000. The
destruction of Joseph's army is hardly reflected in this figure, however,
and the repercussions of the defeat were far reaching. News of
Wellington's victory galvanised the Allies in northern Europe - still
smarting after defeats at Lutzen and Bautzen - into renewed action and
even induced Austria to enter the war on the side of the Allies. In
England, meanwhile, there were wild celebrations the length of the country
while Wellington himself was created Field Marshal. In Spain, Napoleon's
grip on the country was severely loosened and there was now little but a
few French-held fortresses between Wellington's triumphant army and
France.
We'd like to thank Ian Fletcher, renowned
military author on the Peninsula and Waterloo, for his contribution to our
website.