1745 05 11 Fontenoy 1245 h ‘Plugging the gap’ – Sean O’Brogain
With the French infantry shattered by British volleys, and needing to buy time and slow down the enemy advance, Saxe had only one card to play and that was to throw his cavalry brigades at the Anglo-Hanoverian column. If the troopers could break into the enemy formation it would be all well and good, but the priority was to delay the redcoats and prevent them from exploiting what was seemingly an inevitable victory. After several unsuccessful charges had been made against the Anglo-Hanoverian column, and the battered cavalrymen withdrawn, it was now the turn of the Regiment Royal de Carabiniers, the elite of the line cavalry, to take their turn in the attack. The Carabiniers were truly an elite unit, re-formed by Louis XIV in 1690, at Fontenoy; they comprised ten squadrons organized into five brigades and mounted on coal black horses, the rank and file carrying a rifled carbine and bayonet. Unlikeappointment and promotions by merit, which meant that the Carabiniers stood outside the normal purchase system. Believing that the British line was on the point of collapse, the French cavaliers charged “en fourage”, a slightly open order, intending to force a breach in red-coated ranks with pistol fire. Coming up against the Royal Scots, the senior line infantry regiment of the British Army, the result was a one-sided affair with the Frenchmen being forced to retire and re-form. Aware that they need to maintain their cohesion or face disaster, the officers of the Royal Scots push men back into line, ensuring that no gaps open in the line, that the enemy is always presented a threatening rank of bayoneted muskets. To the right of the Royal Scots, the corner of the open square is occupied by the men of the 2nd Foot Guards, who are from the Bois de Barry. It is at this point that the French cavalry will indeed break into the Allied formation, but the success will be short lived with the entire 1 st squadron of the Regiment de Noailles either becoming casualties or being taken prisoner. Eventually the sheer weight of French cavalry will force the Anglo-Hanoverians to halt and then, as fresh infantry are committed, they are forced to conduct a fighting retreat towards their starting positions around Vezon.
1745 05 11 Fontenoy 1315 h ‘God save Ireland’ – Sean O’Brogain
Having reorganized his forces for what should have been a decisive attack upon the Allied column, Saxe had to go through the anguish of seeing his plan founder because of an unauthorized attack by the Comte d’Apcher whose men had compromised tee passage of the Irish Brigade.Their path finally clear and led by the Viscount Clare and Count Thomond, the sh charged forward, crashing into the ranks of the enemy Guards who had earlier swept aside the French front line – nicluding the Gardes Françaises and the Gardes Suisses and threatening the Armée de Flandres with defeat.As the Irishmen surged forward, tradition has it that a cry went up from their ranks ‘Cuimhínigí ar Luimneach agus ar fheall na Sasanach!’ which translates as ‘Remember Limerick and the Saxon perfidy’, a potent reminder of what many believed to have been a deliberate breach of the treaty that ended the Williamite War in 1690. Attacking in two divisions; the first comprising the regiments of Berwick, Lally and Rooth and the second those of Bulkeley, Dillon and Clare, the Irishmen crashed into the British line, the fierce scrum being an almost immediate stalemate with neither side being able to gain the advantage.The fighting was fierce, and here we see Colonel James Dillon being killed instantly by a musket ball to the head, his men scarcely breaking ranks as they close with the foe. The Irish attack serves to pin the British Guardsmen in position, thereby achieving Saxe’s aim of stopping the column dead in its tracks, and giving him the chance of committing other units to the combat at other points on the Allied perimeter, a series of hammer-blows designed to crack the Anglo-Hanoverian ranks and allow the French to convert a retreat into a rout.

The Irish Brigade suffered some 500 casualties on the day while capturing 15 cannon, a sergeant of Bulkeley captured a colour from the Coldstream Guards and the attack of the Irish compelled the British Guards to retire
Gardes Françaises Battle of Fontenoy
The Duke of Cumberland, victorious upon the field of Culloden.

Blowing to bits a bunch of half starved hillbilly’s take a lot of beef!
The Duke of Cumberland, victorious upon the field of Culloden.

Blowing to bits a bunch of half starved hillbilly’s take a lot of beef!
Emile Jean Horace Vernet (1789 – 1863)-
Battle of FontenoyThe Battle of Fontenoy, 11 May 1745, was a major engagement of the War of the Austrian Succession, fought between the forces of the Pragmatic Allies – comprising mainly Dutch, British, and Hanoverian troops under the command of the Duke of Cumberland – and a French army under Maurice de Saxe, commander of King Louis XV’s forces in the in the Low Countries.
There is no finer reserve than six battalions of Wild Geese!
Marshal Saxe
Emile Jean Horace Vernet (1789 – 1863)-
Battle of FontenoyThe Battle of Fontenoy, 11 May 1745, was a major engagement of the War of the Austrian Succession, fought between the forces of the Pragmatic Allies – comprising mainly Dutch, British, and Hanoverian troops under the command of the Duke of Cumberland – and a French army under Maurice de Saxe, commander of King Louis XV’s forces in the in the Low Countries.
There is no finer reserve than six battalions of Wild Geese!
Marshal Saxe







