Cape Town

Roberts Arrives

Field Marshal Lord Roberts arrived at Cape Town on 10 January 1900 and assumed supreme command of British forces in South Africa. He travelled aboard the Dunottar Castle with Lord Kitchener, who became his chief of staff. Their appointment followed the defeats of “Black Week,” when British reverses at Stormberg, Magersfontein and Colenso exposed serious weaknesses in command, intelligence and battlefield preparation. Roberts received a formal welcome at the harbour, but the ceremony could not conceal the gravity of his task. British garrisons remained besieged, casualties were rising and reinforcements arriving from across the Empire required organisation.

Battalion Arrives

The 1st Battalion of the Royal Irish Regiment reached the Cape aboard the troopship Gascon on 7 January, completing a voyage that had begun on 14 December. Its arrival formed part of Britain’s accelerating military reinforcement of South Africa after the serious reverses suffered during the opening months of the war. The soldiers disembarked into an unfamiliar summer climate after spending more than three weeks at sea, carrying rifles, uniforms, personal kit and the expectations of a campaign whose duration remained uncertain. Their landing transformed the battalion from a home-based regiment into an active component of Britain’s expanding field army.

Now Sharing: Articles (154) Images (259) Total Items Archived (413)
Our Mission: 100,000 Items Total Percentage Achieved (0.41%)