Myself, Surjit and Ian turned up at Posties yesterday ( a small turnout but some people were on holiday and some weren't allowed out!) to play a game of 28mm ECW to try out his new home grown rules "By God or by might we will prevail", one thing became clear was that it was way too fecking hot to play an effective wargame but a game is a game!
Postie started with a speech........
"Somewhere in the midlands near Lichfield King Charles I with an advance force has managed to get too far ahead of his main force which is at least a days ride away. Local Parliamentarian spies have sent word of the Kings advance to the Earl of Essex who is not too far away with a collection of various units under his command.
The Earl has advanced rapidly to intercept the King, could the war be over in the next few hours, will Essex be victorious or the King triumphant?
Thus the scene is set as the two armies prepare for battle, the King has hurriedly sent messages to his main army to hasten their advance".
A very brief history of the conflict.....
The English
Civil War (1642–1651)
was a series of armed conflicts and political problems
between Parliamentarians (Roundheads)
and Royalists (Cavaliers).
The first (1642–46)
and second (1648–49)
civil wars pitted the supporters of King Charles I against
the supporters of the Long Parliament,
while the third war (1649–51)
saw fighting between supporters of King Charles II and
supporters of the Rump Parliament.
The Civil War ended with the Parliamentary victory at the Battle of Worcester on
3 September 1651.
The
English Civil War led to the trial and execution of Charles I,
the exile of his son, Charles II, and replacement of the English monarchy with,
first, the Commonwealth of England (1649–53),
and then with a Protectorate (1653–59),
under Oliver Cromwell's personal rule. The monopoly of the Church of England on
Christian worship in England ended with the victors consolidating the
established Protestant Ascendancy in
Ireland. Constitutionally, the wars established the precedent that an
English monarch cannot govern without Parliament's consent, although
this concept was legally established only with the Glorious Revolution later
in the century.
The initial set up with the Royalists on the right and Parliamentarians on the left, a small village can be seen at the bottom of the table (the village would later cause an unknown at the time problem), both sides had the exact same make up of forces, 7 cavalry units, 4 infantry units and two artillery pieces each...........
I know little of the period and this was my first time to game it as well, Parliamentarian horse with myself (Earl of Denby) in command advance.......
A unit of cavalry (Trotters) James Mauleveners part of the 1st Horse Brigade, Parliamentarian horse could fire before charging into combat but Royalist horse (Gallopers) were better in melee............
My medium gun but could only fire every second turn, full turn to reload or limber/unlimber, not the game changer that artillery would become, better for sieges........
Royalist horse advance under Lord Digby to meet my boys
William Sydenham horse in the red and veteran class........
The Royalist forces on the hill across from us........
The Earl of Essex command stand........
Ian (King Charles I) shows Surjit a new way to keep his infantry regiments straight........
3 of our infantry regiments, Lord Brookes in front on the left, Samuel Jones to their right and the Earl of Essex's regiment behind........
Contractual Postie shot, we think he was thinking but with Postie it's doubtful........
Royalist and Parliamentarian horse brigades line up........
Now this is our religious hanger on and can be added to any unit and if you roll a six he gives a plus one to all rolls including morale, Surjit nailed the six and he joined our raw unit, he saved the units hide many times......
On our left Surjit (Essex) has for some reason positioned his cavalry forces strangely and decided not to charge but just shoot (helping test the rules he called it, I had a whole other word for it)........
The Denzil Holles regiment (raw) with god on their side, "God wills it!" was now been shouted on both sides especially with the dice rolling........
A unit of clubmen emerge from the village unhappy with what's going on and are deciding which side to join depending on factors on the battlefield and Postie rolling a dice every turn, on the last turn they chose my side but too late and I asked Postie could I burn their village down.......
Casualties mount on the Royalist side..........
King Charles I.........
Another view of the Royalist lines, they would not move until near the end.......
The Royalist view of a Parliamentarian infantry regiment, Parliamentarian regiments had less pike but more muskets (2 to 1,made them better at firing) and the Royalist had more pikes to muskets (50/50,better melee factor).........
I was taking an aerial shot when I noticed shenanigans between Surjit and Postie, another nail attack maybe......
Little feckers kept getting in the way, hotpot anyone.......
The horse brigades clash, 3 regiments per side, undetermined skill levels, the multicolour pipe cleaners denote the start of charges and the possibility of pursuit charges........
The first one has gone bad, real bad for me, the numbers denote casualties.......
On going melee going a little better for me.........
but on the other side, it's not going well at all..........
Parliamentarian casualties are mounting.........
Ian is sulking because he's been caught moaning ( rashly admitted it) but the real problem is that the tattooed gobshite has farted constantly all day in the crotch scorching heat (gag a dead maggot was one of the outbursts), did I mention the day was fecking hot......
"God wills it!"............
I've had to bring on the Earl of Essex's Lifeguard to stop a little rout...........
This was the final melee of the game, all three units are at breaking point, leaders have attached themselves to units and after the smoke cleared.......
....this is all that was left, I was dead and so was nearly everything else and the game was called, a minor victory to the Royalists on points!
The infantry slog in the middle but inconclusive, pike and musket regiments do not manoeuvre well.........
Figures were mainly a mixture of Dixon and Foundry and apart from the meat and two veg crippling heat it was a good game and a good day...........
......and then the political and military discussion can was opened!
God wills it Ian!
I blame the heat, must have warped my dice............