Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Battle of Belmont (1899)

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
8,000
  
2,000

Date
  
23 November 1899

200
  
slight

Result
  
British victory


Location
  
Orange Free State, South Africa

Combatants
  
United Kingdom, Orange Free State

Similar
  
Second Boer War, Battle of Modder River, Battle of Ladysmith, Battle of Kraaipan, Battle of Vaal Krantz

The Battle of Belmont is the name of an engagement of the Second Boer War on 23 November 1899, where the British under Lord Methuen assaulted a Boer position on Belmont kopje.

Methuen's three brigades were on their way to raise the Boer siege of Kimberley. A Boer force of about 2,000 men had entrenched on the range of Belmont kopje to delay their advance. Methuen sent the Guards Brigade on a night march to outflank the Boers, but due to faulty maps the Grenadier Guards found themselves in front of the Boer position instead.

The Guards, the 9th Brigade and the Naval Brigade assaulted the Boers over open ground, suffering about 200 casualties. Before the British came to use their bayonets, the Boers retreated by pony and re-formed in another entrenched position at Graspan, where the pattern was repeated with the British suffering another 197 casualties: one sailor reporting that "at 200 yards we fixed bayonets, and we just saw their heels; they didn't wait when they heard the rattle".

References

Battle of Belmont (1899) Wikipedia