CAMERONE

Started by Frenchie, October 29, 2006, 11:16:11 PM

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Frenchie

CAMERONE

On 29 April 1863 Colonel Jeanningros asked Captain Danjou to organize a company as escort to a major convoy leaving Vera Cruz for Puebla, Mexico. It was the 3rd Company's duty tour, but noting that all its officers were sick Danjou proposed that he should command it. To assist him in his task he took the standard bearer, Second Lieutenant Maudet, and the paymaster, Second Lieutenant Vilain.

The column left at one o'clock in the morning on the 30th intending initially to reach Palo Verde. Meanwhile the Mexicans, having learned of the passage of the convoy, organized a force of 800 cavalry and three battalions of infantry – about 2,000 all told – to attack it.

At about five o'clock Danjou's company stopped for a brief rest. After posting sentries the men set about making coffee, which was well under way when sentries announced approaching cavalry. In a few moments the coffee was thrown away, the mules were re-loaded and the company was moving to the outskirts of the village of Camerone, whence rang out the first shot of the battle, that of a nervous Mexican sentry. The first cavalry charge quickly followed and was as quickly broken up and repulsed by well-controlled fire and by use of the thick scrub into which Danjou had moved his force. In the hubbub the mules took fright, broke loose and disappeared with the rations, water and spare ammunition.

The sixty-five men had about sixty rounds each. Danjou decided to stand and fight, thus distracting the enemy's attention from the valuable convoy, and rapidly moved his force to a defensive position in the nearby hacienda, where they were to hold for the next ten hours. By nine o'clock the sun was already high. The legionnaires had no water, no food. Colonel Milian, commanding the Mexicans, called on the legionnaires to surrender. They replied that they had ammunition and had no intention of surrendering.

The legionnaires promised Danjou that, come what may, they would fight to the bitter end. He was killed at about eleven o'clock. At this moment the three battalions of Mexican infantry arrived on the scene and again the legionnaires were called upon to surrender. They replied "Merde!". The situation worsened. The Mexicans had broken into various rooms of the hacienda, killed the legionnaire occupants and set fire to the rooms. For the wounded there was intense heat, dust, smoke and no water. The battle continued. Vilain was killed just before two o'clock and Maudet took command, but by five o'clock he had only twelve men in a state to fight.

Again Milian called on the legionnaires to surrender – they did not deign to reply – and a fresh attack was launched against them. Maudet was by now alone with a corporal (Maine) and four legionnaires (Leonhard, Catteau, Wenzel and Constantin).

Their cartridge boxes were empty. They fired a final volley, left their shelter and charged the Mexicans with their bayonets – all fell before reaching them. Maudet received two bullets. Legionnaire Catteau, who had thrown himself in front of his officer to protect him, was hit nineteen times. They were the last. It was six o'clock. The battle was over.

Of the sixty-five strong company, two officers and twenty-two legionnaires were dead, one officer and eight men mortally wounded, and nineteen soon died of their wounds in captivity; twelve others, all wounded, were captured. The Mexicans had  lost more than 300. 

Maine, Wenzel and Constantin, although wounded, were still able to walk. When called upon to surrender they said they would not do so unless they were allowed to keep their arms and tend the wounded; Colonel Milan said, "One can refuse nothing to men like you."

The Emperor Napoleon III had the name "Camerone 1863" inscribed on the banners of the 1st Regiment and decreed that the names of Danjou, Vilain and Maudet would be engraved in golden letters on the walls of Les Invalides in Paris.

In 1892 on the site of the battle a monument was raised on which is inscribed:

Ils furent ici moins de soixante
Opposés à toute un armée
Sa masse les écrasa
La vie plutôt que le courage
Abandonna ces soldats français
Le 30 Avril 1863
A leur mémoire la Patrie éleva ce monument


They were here less than sixty
Opposed to all of an army
Its mass crushed them
But life rather than courage
Abandoned these French soldiers
30 April 1863
To their memory the nation built this monument

Mexican soldiers pass by the monument at Present Arms.

Each year on April 30th every unit of the French Foreign Legion celebrates the anniversary of Camerone. At Legion headquarters in Aubagne, Captain Danjou's wooden false hand, recovered from the battleground, is paraded in a grand ceremony.

Should a Legionnaire find himself in prison during Camerone a Legion tradition may come into force: he may be granted amnesty if there are fewer than ten days remaining in his sentence on Camerone Day.
Yours, &c.,

Guy 'Frenchie' LaFrance
Vous pouvez voir par mes vêtements que je ne suis pas un cowboy.

US Scout

While recuperating on sick leave, I watched a four-episode "reality" program on the Military Channel where some 12 Brits signed on for a month of French Foreign Legion training (conducted by three former Legion NCOs).  Typical format of placing unsuspecting (or over-confident) subjects under brutal treatment and seeing how they respond, and how quickly they begin to quit

I will admit that I would not have enjoyed subjecting myself to such training (and I've been through various Marine and Army training programs), but it was very insightful to see how the Legion views training, discipline, team-work, and motivation.

One of the highlights of their training was to commemorate Cameron was evening at an old Legion fort after being suitably instructed into what the significance of that event was to the Legion.  I don't think it was done on April 30 - probably done to instill some of the esprit de corps of the Legion into the "recruits." 

US Scout
Bvt Brig Gen, GAF



Grapeshot

Not to take anything away from the Legionnaires at Camerone, but, "Remember the Alamo!"
Listen!  Do you hear that?  The roar of Cannons and the screams of the dying.  Ahh!  Music to my ears.

Fox Creek Kid

When I lived in Mexico I always wanted to visit Cameron but alas never did, but I knew someone who had & there is nothing there except a small building. Very few Mexicans even know of this battle, not unlike people here today & Gettysburg.  :'(

Guns Garrett

I will always remember:

The Alamo
Sand Creek
The Sunken Road
Marye's Heights
Sayler's Creek
Custer's Last Stand
Wounded Knee
Samar
Wake Island
Corregidor
Bataan
Bastogne
Au Shau Valley
Khe Sahn
Beirut

and now ...

CAMERONE

Let us give honor to our Fallen, and stand in salute to the courageous survivors.
"Stand, gentlemen; he served on Samar"

GAF #301

Books OToole

22-23 January 1879. 

Isandlwana & Roark's Drift

"The British army does not allow two disasters in one day.  It looks bad in the papers and upsets the civilians at their breakfast."


Books
G.I.L.S.

K.V.C.
N.C.O.W.S. 2279 - Senator
Hiram's Rangers C-3
G.A.F. 415
S.F.T.A.

Frenchie

Books, I love quotes like that. So veddy, veddy British.

Humming "Rule, Britannia" now...
Yours, &c.,

Guy 'Frenchie' LaFrance
Vous pouvez voir par mes vêtements que je ne suis pas un cowboy.

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