Nearly four years may have passed, but to our historical
participants in The Great Swedish Invasion of England it has been but a few
days. And as the autumn of 1643 winds
its way into winter the Swedes must take stock of their failures. Their unexpected defeat and rough handling by
the forces of the English at the Battle of Little Pontefract has knocked their
myth of invincibility, and shaken their tree of certainty. The dose of a combination of Charles, Rupert,
Cromwell and Fairfax was too hard a pill to swallow and they have choked. Even worse they have discovered that their
100 year lease on that sheep farm in Cumbria is a forgery. The situation is dire.
Breaking into several large columns and falling back upon
their supply lines they begin the relatively short march towards the coast and
the great university city of Hull. There
they expect to meet their fleet laden with enough household goods to enable to
regroup and really settle down and make their home in Yorkshire while they plot
their next diabolical move. However,
Hull, apart from its great university, is also known for its high city walls
and its armoury, and the governor of the city proves a hard man to bargain with
despite the bulk of the Swedish army being now camped outside. Indeed, while the Swedish envoys are still
negotiating the price of the cities surrender news comes of the English
army. Charles has given way to Rupert
and Cromwell’s demands to press their advantage, and they are on the move and
closing in.
There is no time for further negotiation. The Swedes require the port, the rum, and the
docks at Hull, and the ammunition in the armoury wouldn’t go amiss either. There isn’t time to make a run further up the
coast, and the English now outnumber them.
The ordinance opens up on the walls of Hull, and the storming parties
ready their ladders, but the English are closer than they imagined, and on the
edges of their main camp at the fabulously named village of Swanland the
muskets are already sounding as they find themselves fighting on two fronts….
For those needing a background to such events, it can be
found here:
The Scenario
The Dastardly Swedish:
General Ian ‘Sven’ Nilsson
Lord Of Horse Chris ‘I’ve Brought A Horse’ Johansson
General Paul ‘The Bringer of Many Men’ Karlsson
Stormer of Castles Earl Michael ‘Gustavus Adolphus’ Olsson
The defeat at Little Pontefract used up much of the Swedes
ammunition and supplies. They need to
capture a port for their ships to bring much needed supplies from the continent
and to provide shelter from the harsh English winter. They also need to secure the surrounding
villages and fortify them to give their troops a base while they rebuild their
strength ready to retake the offensive in the Spring of 1644. Gaining the ammunition stores of the arsenal
of Hull would also go some way to making good their consumption so far! Life would be so much easier if all the
columns of troops had managed to make it to Hull, but they must fend off the
stronger English with what they have….
Wesselton and the Swedes of General Paul. |
Swanland and the Swedes of Lord Nilsson. |
The Brave, Heroic, Salt of the Earth English:
Lord Aidan ‘Wheres The Tea?’ Stanley-Matthews
Earl Neville Chamberlain – known as Ben to his friends
Laid Mcflurry – also known as Ben
City Governor Rick ‘Save me!’
General of Dragoons Red ‘The Ghost’
The cowardly foreign invaders are fleeing to the sea! Now is the time to press the advantage and
destroy the Swedish field army before they can regroup. They must not be allowed to rest and fortify
the surrounding countryside, or claim the city of Hull, with which they could
prolong this dreadful war, distracting from the more important questions such
as the colour scheme of the new pray book.
The English are stronger, and the main aim must be the destruction of the
Swedish army, but to do so they will need to deny them the city of Hull, and
any opportunity to regroup.
The Swedish centre. |
First glimpse of the walls of Hull. |
The Battle
And so the story begins, although it will be a shorter story
than many I have publicised previously because when all is said and done my
free time is not what it was. So to open
the ball 8 men and a boy unwittingly named after a British Prime Minister took
to the battlefields around the city of Hull to do, um, battle. The main conflict took place upon a field
measuring 6ft by 16ft, with the Swedish garrisoning the two villages of
Swanland (by the river) and Wesselton further inland. Further Swedish forces laid siege to that
great university city of Hull on a 6ft by 4ft board, hoping to capture its
walls, and the arsenal within, a matter of some urgency because unlike their
English counterparts the Swedes had limited powder. Troops could be moved between the boards, but
on this occasion didn’t.
Swanland by the river. |
All the Swedish commmanders on their left were caught short in the tavern in Swanland when the battle begins. |
The Opening Moves
On the English left the ghost division began what would be a
long march towards Windmill Hill, with elements also trading long ranged fire
with the numerous Swedes in Wesselton.
No such manoeuvring niceties from Lord Stanley-Matthews, as his battalia
advanced directly upon Wesselton, pike and musketeers clashing in the
outskirts. General Paul of the Many Men
held the Swedish right flank, and his troops gave fire and fought bravely.
Swedes. |
In the centre horse battalia’s from both the Ben’s went
piling towards Lord Of The Horse Chris and his many Swedish horse
regiments. A massed brawl erupted
immediately, with many charges, counter charges, and casualties on both
sides. On the English, or should I say
Scottish, right all was quiet however.
General Nilsson’s Swedish troops in Swanland remained untroubled because
the Scottish had, quite clearly, forgotten to turn up. Nearer the city of Hull the Swedes under
Michael began their trudge forwards, ladders tucked under their arms, while
ordinance blasted the towers ahead of them.
Lord Chamberlain and Earl Mcflurrys horse on the offensive for the English. |
Lord Stanley-Matthews battalia attacking into the Swedish held village of Wesselton. |
Wesselton. |
The view from Windmill hill. |
English garrison on the walls of hull. |
Whatever comes through that gate.... |
The first ladders about to be raised at Hull. |
Petards! |
The Middle Bit
The Ghost Battalia swept over Windmill Hill, and charged
into the enemy horse, who were clearly so surprised they fell back – dragoon on
dragoon mounted action a rare thing indeed.
Unfortunately, the rest of Red’s English infantry were slower to move
up, being distracted by the sight of some cows in a field, obviously inner city
regiments who’d never seen such beasts close up before. They remained close enough to the Swedes on
the West side of Wesselton to continue to exchange musketry and ordinance fire
across the wagonway. Lord Stanley-Matthews
men continued their implacable advance into Wesselton, pushing back the Swedish
pike, and capturing several houses in the Western half of the village. General Paul could only watch with concern as
his men gave ground gradually in the village, and the horse of Lord Chris
disintegrated on his left.
Swanland and Swedes. |
That swirling horse melee in the centre continued with the
horse regiments of both Bens finally being sent packing by Lord Chris’ significantly
bigger Swedish hard nuts. However, this
only opened up the space for Lord Stanley-Matthews horse to charge, and with
the damage already done the Swedish horse could take no more and retired from
the field.
The initial English horse charge is exhausted, but Stanley-Matthews horse are about to take over. |
Wesselton and the Swedes under pressure. |
The ghost battalia of the English army sweeping around Windmill Hill. |
On the English…ahem….Scottish right the Scots, under Laid
McFlurry (complete with music) finally arrived, brought onto the field the only
way it was ever going to happen; by a blunder.
They shook themselves off, accepted an order for the first and last time
that day, and charged into the edge of the village of Swanland, assisted by Earl
Chamberlains foote regiment and storming party who had been hanging around
waiting for such backup to arrive.
General Nilsson, never one to quibble when the fight came to him, left
his men to defend their cheval de fries while he dealt with a more pressing
issue – with near 35 pieces of ordinance on the battlefield, some double
shotted, the Swedes were running out of powder!
No such concerns troubled Earl Michael as his guns continued
to pound the Hull city walls to not very much effect. To one side, furthest from the gate, several
units of musketeers already had their ladders up and were exchanging blows with
the English musketeers defending the walls, while the English pikemen waited
below, watching on anxiously. Towards
the river more musketeer ladder parties had stalled under a galling fire from
the towers. The Swedes trump card was
being revealed close to the gate however, as three storming parties had broken
cover, petards in hand, and were racing for the gatehouse, the English musketry
seemingly powerless to stop them.
Now, who brought the matches? |
Hull from the riverside - note the large building at the end of the wall; the arsenal which the Swedes are striving to capture. |
Dragoon on dragoon action around the base of Windmill Hill. |
Stanley-Matthews horse sweep away the remains of Lord Chris' men. |
The End Of All Things
And so we come to it.
The finally countdown. The big
reveal. Except the battle had somewhat
slowed in places. Lord Stanley-Matthews
had got the better of General Paul in Wesselton, holding 4 houses to the Swedes
3, sufficient to claim he had captured the village, and his horse had driven
away the remains of Lord Chris’ men to the East of the village, but was faced
with several pike blocks, and had no infantry support to deal with them. The ghost battalia had a nasty shock, as a
new Swedish column arrived on their flank, but fortunately for the English most
of the enemy horse failed to arrive in time to make a difference. A counter charge by some of General Paul’s
horse however saw them move up onto Windmill Hill, denying the English control
of it.
The two Ben’s; Laird Mcflurry and Lord Chamberlain, provided
a pyrotechnically exclamation mark for the fighting around the village of
Swanland when Lord Chamberlains storming party used a petard to blow several
cheval de frise, most of a house, a hedgerow, and a number of quite unhappy
Swedes, several dozen feet in the air.
Despite this, and the loss of a further number of musketeers, General Nilssons
men held firm, assisted, as always, by the Scottish failure to pass any form of
command check. Swanland remained in
Swedish hands.
Add caption |
With broken battalia few in number the outcome, it seemed,
would be decided at the walls of Hull, where the Swedes were struggling to get
men to the walls, struggling to get their ladders up against the walls, and
struggling to bring down any of the towers.
The initial fight on the walls furthest from the gate was still in the
balance as the English defenders gallantly held on, while towards the river the
attackers couldn’t sort their feet out and continuous disorder results held
them back. Two large explosions were
inbound however – firstly Earl Michaels storming parties went O.T.T and dumped
two petards by the gate, which lasted as long as a snowflake in a pizza
oven. Then the corner tower, defending
musketeers long since dead or fled, finally collapsed under sustained mortar
fire. First into the ruins of the gate
however were the English pikemen, and try as they might the Swedish musketeers
couldn’t shift them.
Night was falling, and teatime wasn’t as far away as it had
been, and the Swedish attempt to capture Hull and build a stronghold by the
Humber had failed by a whisker.
The gate blows - destroyed by 2 petards, which was a slight overkill but when the Swedes commit to doing a job they really commit. |
The ladders never quite made it up under concentrated musket fire from the defenders. |
Debating who will be first through the gateway, but the English pike get there first and hold on - just. |
On the Northern ramparts the English musketeers are under great pressure, and night comes just in time. |
Postscript
The armies drew apart as night fell, and in the morning all
that was left of the Swedish forces were some mdf and cold camp fires; they had
withdrawn to the North in the night hoping to meet up with their ships and find
refuge and possibly aid further afield.
The English, equally battered, and in need of sustenance marched to York
to regroup, believing their enemy vanquished.
What will happen when a Scottish-backed and replenished Swedish army
emerges from Northumberland, nobody knows.
We may have to wait four more years to find out.
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