Thursday, 6 July 2017

Battle of Towton 29th March 1461


The Game of Thrones TV series is great entertainment but in my opinion the fictitious struggle for power it depicts pales in comparison to the drama of the exploits of the characters that led the factions in the bitter struggle that characterised the Wars of the Roses and that created the inspiration for the fiction.

There were perhaps no more bitter encounters and probably no larger, than the dramatic clash between the houses of York and Lancaster on the bloody, snow-covered field of Towton on Palm Sunday 1461.


The battle is billed as the largest and bloodiest fought on English soil and certainly during the Wars of the Roses with modern estimates of around 25,000 combatants on each side and a death toll estimated at around 28,000 men.

As outlined in my post about Marston Moor, Carolyn and I are enjoying a week's holiday in York and, as part of that time, I planned to take a look at some nearby battle sites of which there are several in this historically important strategic part of the country and Towton is one of them.

In 1461 the conflict between the two Royal houses of York and Lancaster was entering the sixth year of a bubbling war that had effectively kicked off into open hostilities with the Yorkist victory at the First Battle of St Albans in May 1455, another six significant actions followed over the intervening years with the score running at four victories to the Yorkists and three to the Lancastrians culminating in their victory at the Second Battle of St Albans on 17th February 1461.


The conflict was starting to polarise areas of the country in support of one faction or the other and so when Edward Earl of March and the Earl of Warwick entered London two weeks after St Albans they were welcomed enthusiastically and Edward was offered and accepted the title of King of England.


However Edward did not take the crown, being well aware that King Henry VI and his determined Queen, Margaret of Anjou were still very much in the game and needing to be dealt with before he could feel secure on the throne.

Thus Edward quickly prepared his campaign to confront his enemies in the north, ordering the Duke of Norfolk to raise his forces and meet him on the road together with Warwick's forces, at Coventry, eventually bringing his army together at Doncaster.

The map taken from the information board showing the approach marches taken by the armies to Towton.

Following their victory at St Albans, but knowing that Warwick had escaped the battle with most of his army, and regrouped in London where, with the support of Norfolk and Edward and a leaning towards the Yorkist cause in the south east generally, they faced a powerful Yorkist threat that required a large Lancastrian army to be created to deal with it.

They naturally fell back to York and the area that offered the best support for their cause, with King Henry and Margaret taking up residence in the city whilst their army was built.

Meanwhile Edward marched his combined army to Pontefract Castle some twenty miles from York, detaching John Radcliffe, Lord Fitzwalter to seize and secure the crossing point on the River Aire at Ferrybridge, just a couple of miles away.

As Edward moved on Pontefract Castle, The Duke of Somerset led out the Lancastrian army from York heading to Tadcaster and then down the London Road to the little village of Towton, picking the area of high ground just south of the village as a good area to make a stand whilst ordering Lord Clifford to take his force to scout down to the River Aire and the crossing point at Ferrybridge.

The air photo of the battlefield on one of the information boards provides a good map for the route we took and the positions where we photographed the battlefield - north is the top of picture.

In essence the Battle of Towton began at the Ferrybridge crossing as the two sides encountered each other there and with the Yorkists eventually turning the Lancastrian position on the river, began a rapid pursuit back to Towton with many of the Lancastrians being cut down on that pursuit.

Point 1 -The Rockingham Arms is the first significant building seen on entering Townton from the north and York just as the Lancastrians under Somerset would have done - I wonder if he called in for a quick half!

By mid morning the two armies faced off on the high plateau that forms the Towton battlefield dropping away on the eastern and western flanks and with a shallow valley separating the northern and southern heights. On the western edge the plateau drops away more sharply leading down to the steep banked stream, Cock Beck.

Point 1 - When Carolyn and I first saw this we both exclaimed "that looks old!" - The stable block at Towton Hall

The battle was fought out on a cold windy winter day with snow falling and with the wind blowing it into the faces of the Lancastrians.

The Yorkists took full advantage of the weather to make up for the fact that they were slightly outnumbered and still waiting the arrival of the Duke of Norfolk's contingent left behind at Pontefract castle, when their leader developed a sudden illness. He was to follow on as soon as he could bringing forward any late reinforcements.

Using the snowfall and wind to cover their approach and extend the range of their bow fire the Yorkists are said to have loosed of one volley of arrows that stung the Lancastrians into a full on response back.

Point 1 - I hope the owners didn't mind a photo of this now famous landmark - Towton Hall

The Lancastrians were unable to judge the distance accurately and could not tell that the bulk of their arrows were falling short.

When their firing subsided due to their use of arrows, the Yorkists returned the fire in full measure advancing to collect the Lancastrian arrows and return them with interest. The damage caused had the effect to cause the Lancastrian line to move forward rapidly in the hope of settling matters close up and hand to hand.

Towton Hall was the scene of discovery of several skeletons relating to the battle now interred in Saxton Chuch. It may also be the site for Richard IIIs lost chapel dedicated to the battle.

The two sides came to grips along the Towton Vale with the Lancastrian right flank having the initial success in driving the opposition back up the slope. This is where the controversy over the possible Lancastrian ambush party joining the fight on this flank comes into the story, although modern accounts seem to dismiss this event happening at all.

Point 2 - Lord Dacre's Cross, acts as memorial marker for the battle alongside the B1217

However the battle deciding event was the arrival of Norfolk's troops who reinforcing the Yorkists right flank drove in the Lancastrian left flank and caused the two lines to almost rotate anticlockwise pushing the Lancastrians back on a line leading to the Cock Beck.

28th March 1461

The Yorkist push continued and when the collapse came the rout down to the stream heralded the mass slaughter that this battle is infamous for and seems confirmed by the burial mounds discovered in the field known as Bloody Meadow.

The head of the cross lay for many years in the nearby hedgerow
but was finally put back as it is today in 1928

The battle saw the characteristic brutality of nobles murdering one another that so typified this conflict and although the senior Lancastrians made good their escape to Scotland, many of the others were lost in and after the fighting including leaders such as the Earl of Northumberland and Lord Dacre.

Point 2 - The view out to the south and south east from Dacre's Cross, The Lancastrian line was set up from the road in front out to the left of picture 

The description of Lord Dacre's death describes the Lancastrian leader exhausted by the fight taking off his helmet to take a drink. Close by ran a line of elder trees from which a youth in the Yorkists ranks fired his bow putting an arrow through Dacre's neck and killing him.

The story includes tales of revenge on Dacre for having already killed the young man's father, which seems fanciful but it seems that Dacre was killed by an arrow.


Point 2 - Looking to the south west from the cross towards Castle Hill Wood where the Lancastrian ambush party lay in wait 

The other interesting aspect of this story is that Lord Dacre was said to have been buried upright astride his horse.

Poppies on a battlefield as we headed across the fields to Point 3

In the middle of the eighteenth century his tomb was partly opened and Lord Dacre's skeleton was discovered to have been buried in an upright position. In 1861 the ground adjacent to the tomb was disturbed revealing the skull of a horse and vertebrae in situ and extending downwards towards the Dacre burial. Great story! What did I say about this being more interesting than all that dragon stuff!

The view along the track to Dacre's Cross as we walked to Point 3 on the map

The battlefield of Towton is not the easiest to get access to and the Towton Battlefield Society, Natural England and the Royal Armouries are to be congratulated for having created a walk with some excellent guide panels illustrated in this post.

There was nothing like this when I visited over thirty years ago and it was a pleasant surprise.

Point 3 - In recent times these very helpful and interesting information boards have been set up around the field. Many however are not in parts of the field most of us would want to head for!

I guess my criticism, and I am sure the ridiculous laws we have in England restricting access to so much of our countryside by the public, that would like to enjoy it, probably has something to do with this, has the walk taking you away from the area of the fighting with a route along the Cock Beck back towards Towton and along the road to the Dacre monument!!

Point 3 - The view from here shows the dip in the ground known as Towton vale, to the centre right and it opening out to the Cock Beck

So as before I have adapted the information panel map and given you the route I chose to follow that led across the battlefield from Towton to Saxton taking in viewing points that allowed me to get the pictures illustrated with a description of what you are looking at.

Point 3 - Here the escarpment is quite clear as it drops off to the south west and the Cock Beck below. Point 4 or  'Bloody Meadow' is visible centre right of picture with a close up in the next but one picture below.

The features described in the accounts of the battle are easily discernible and the nature of the ground easily explains why the battle was fought the way it was, excepting that I wasn't standing on that plateau in a blinding blizzard thank goodness.

Point 3 - Looking west down the steep slope to the Cock Beck

The strongest impression I got was the steep fall away from the high ground down to Cock Beck and indeed the steep banks along the stream, all of which would have made desperate men in a hurry to get off the battlefield many clad in gear not exactly suited to rapid mobile movement more likely to be caught and butchered or be killed in the shallow water falling and being trampled on by their comrades not in the mood to stop and help.

Point 4 - With the arrival of Norfolk's force reinforcing the right flank of the Yorkist line, the effect was to turn the battle anticlockwise causing the broken Lancastrian army to flood down the slopes from left of picture in a desperate attempt to put the Beck between them and their pursuers. No quarter was given .

The other impression is that the open plateau was a perfect place to run a battle making full use of the longbow, with excellent views of the opponents lines from one side of the Towton vale to the other.

Thus we come to the deciding effects of visibility, wind velocity and direction that made the key difference between the two sides before Norfolk's fresh reinforcements arrived to seal the fate of the Lancastrian army.

Point 5 - Looking north, north-east from the Yorkist line with the Lancastrians coming over the ridge-top left to right centre.
Extreme right is where Norfolk would have arrived to reinforce the Yorkist line

I walk battlefields to inform my hobby and I have a mind to play Wars of the Roses scenarios going forward and it seems to me that a rule set that captures and models these aspects that typified Towton and other battles of this period are key to getting that simulation aspect into the game.

Point 5  - Looking east along the field line along  which the Yorkists would have met the Lancastrians

Point 5 - Looking out from the western end of the Yorkist line towards Castle Hill wood and the direction from which the Lancastrian ambush party attacked, if it actually did!

Towton battlefield is one of those battle sights that carries a gloomy aura about it and I was certainly conscious of it whilst walking among its fields.

Point 5 - Looking north up the road towards Towton with the Towton vale clearly visible leading down to the Cock Beck on the left of picture

In recent times more has been discovered about the battle with a forensic look at the effects of battle on the skeletons of men killed in the fighting together with a better understanding of the ages and health of those men up to the time they died. Having seen the pictures and descriptions of the horrific wounds they suffered the descriptions of the brutal nature of this battle really don't do the nature of these soldiers deaths full justice.

Point 6 - Lord Dacre's tomb at All Saints Church, Saxton

Some of those soldiers remains were newly discovered and were later interred in the cemetery of All Saints Church in Saxton alongside the tomb of Lord Dacre

The Dacre coat of arms barely visible after the intervening centuries

Dacre's Tomb is badly eroded by the centuries of weather, but some of the Latin inscription is still visible and because my Latin is a little rusty I understand it to be;

"Here lies Ralph, Lord of Dacre and Gilsand , a true soldier, valiant in battle in the service of King Henry VI, who died on Palm Sunday, 29 March 1461, on whose soul may God have mercy."

A more recent burial from the battle marking the interred remains of the dead discovered at Towton Hall in 1996

"Here lie the remains of unknown soldiers found at Towton Hall and killed at the Battle of Towton
Palm Sunday 29th March 1461 erected by the Towton Battlefield Society 23-4-2005.
Remember and pray for all those who died."
So next up we are off to the tumultuous campaign of 1066 and the battles of Fulford and Stamford Bridge, before moving on to look at some of the great things to see in York.

Tuesday, 4 July 2017

Battle of Marston Moor 2nd July 1644 - 373rd Anniversary of the Battle

'Whitecoats Defiant' by Graham Turner
http://www.britishbattles.com/english-civil-war/battle-of-marston-moor/
http://www.battlefieldstrust.com/resource-centre/civil-war/battleview.asp?BattleFieldId=24

This Sunday Carolyn and I drove the 300 miles up to York to begin our week's holiday exploring this beautiful and famous city and some of the local sights.

This is not our first visit to York, but the last time was over thirty years ago, before we were married so we thought it was about time to take another look.

As always, I get to build in a bit of JJ's stuff into my holidays and as with our trip to Oxford earlier this year thought I would post on some of the interesting military history sights that abound in and close to the city.

We set out from home about 09.30 and carefully built in three stops to break up the journey to allow for pee breaks and refreshments. So it was not until late afternoon that we started to get near to York and I was able to approach the city, where we had accommodation booked close to the Minster, on a very specific route.

The first part of that route took us to the pretty little village of Bilbrough and more specifically the Church of St James, Bilbrough where lies the tomb of a very famous English Civil War general who hailed from these parts, "Black Tom" himself.

St James' Chuch, Bilbrough - Tomb of General Lord Thomas Fairfax


St James' Church, Bilbrough

I was really pleased to be able to visit this sight and pay my respects to the great general as I feel I have got to know him over recent months with the reading I have done and the recent visits to scenes of his triumphs in the West Country including Langport and Torrington.

The Fairfax Chapel
St James is a very pretty if somewhat understated little church and seems most appropriate for the leader of the New Model Army.

The tomb of John Norton, who as
Lord of the Manor of Bilbrough founded the chapel in 1492

Most famous military leaders of Lord Thomas' rank would in normal circumstances have had a full state funeral and have been interred in Westminster Abbey or St Paul's Cathedral. Of course his times were not normal times, but I really like the look and feel of the Fairfax Chapel and its modesty seems to suit the man.

The tomb of Thomas, 3rd Lord Fairfax who died age 60, Nov 12th 1671






After our trip to Bilbrough it was only a four mile drive, skirting the west side of York to get up to Marston Moor, perhaps the pivotal battle of the English Civil War.

I had originally planned to visit the field on the Monday after recovering from our long drive, but noticing the relevance of the date we decided to head over on our way and caught the end of the commemoration activities, passing Civil War re-enactors heading into Long Marston village, and probably the pub and finding a few members sat around the base of the monument when we parked up.

Battlefield of Marston Moor pictured on the 373rd anniversary of the battle

King Charles I wrote to Prince Rupert with instructions to march to the relief of York, under siege by the Parliamentary Northern Army under Fairfax, later joined by the Scots under Lord Leven.

"If York be lost, I shall esteem my crown little else, unless supported by your sudden march to me, and a miraculous conquest in the south before the effects of the northern power can be found here. Wherefore I command and conjure you, by the duty and affection you bear me, that all new enterprises laid aside, you immediately march, according to your first intention, with all your force to the relief of York. But if that be either lost, or freed themselves from the besiegers, or that for want of powder you cannot undertake that work, that you immediately march with your whole strength directly to Worcester, to assist me and my army; without which, or your having relieved York by beating the Scots, all the successes you may afterwards have most infallibly will be useless unto me."

The tone and emphasis expressed by Charles to his commander Prince Rupert really helps to explain the pivotal nature of Marston Moor and the collapse in Royalist fortunes that it presaged.


It perhaps is also pivotal in that the, until then, irresistible force that was Rupert and his cavalry finally met their nemesis in the form of Cromwell and his Ironsides who brought professionalism, hard training and discipline to the English battlefield and turned a hard fought battle that hung in the balance until Cromwell was able to take control by defeating all the Royalist horse and turn on the hard pressed infantry.

Some of the Civil War re-enactors enjoying the afternoon sun around the monument

The battle showed the pitiless nature of the struggle when quarter offered was refused and Royalist infantry paid the supreme price for their defiance.


The two Parliamentary Commanders at Marston Moor
2nd Lord Fairfax of the English Northern Army and
The Earl of Leven, commanding the Scots Covenanter Army

Not only that but the intimate of the Devil incarnate, 'Boy', Prince Rupert's battlefield talisman and 'hunting poodle' (I kid you not) was killed, never to be seen again prancing into battle alongside his masters horse.


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boy_(dog)

A very fitting reminder of the events three-hundred and seventy three years ago.
The battle is a classic attack and defend battle of the period with a twist. The battle probably didn't get going until about 19.00 when the armies could have expected to have been settling down in the night encampments ready for the fray on the following day.

The Royalist troops were observed in the process of preparing food for the evening pot when the alarm sounded at the crash of Parliamentary guns positioned on higher ground behind Cromwell's horse.

"Cometh the hour, cometh the man" - enter stage left Sir Oliver Cromwell
Both sides horse met in the initial clashes with the Royalists getting the better of it on their left under Goring as Fairfax's troopers became disordered crossing the hedges and broken ground to their front as they advanced; but with control lost in the subsequent pursuit, seeing the Royalists charge off towards the Parliamentary baggage behind and beyond the high ground known as 'Cromwell's Plump'.

Local boy done good - Marston Moor finished the King's army in the north, liberated York from Royalist control and marked the beginning of the end for King Charles' campaign to rule by divine right.

On the Royalist right it was their horse under Byron, possibly stung into action by the sudden artillery barrage, that advanced and were subsequently disordered, allowing Cromwell to take full advantage crashing into them and defeating them, Molyneux and Rupert who attempted to come to their aid.

I have several maps of the battle, all variation on a theme. I have added links at the top for more modern representations for completeness, but I thought I would use this one to illustrate my pictures of the field of battle.

General Thomas Fairfax and his staff who had been defeated by Goring, now found themselves threading their way past enemy rear area troops as they made their way across the back of the Royalist line to join up with Cromwell and direct his next move to taking up the ground formerly occupied by Goring as the latter managed to round up a few of his men and seek to return to the battle via his former position.

JJ's Viewing Route - The points will help to orientate my pictures of the battlefield

When the two remaining groups of horse met, Cromwell's men made no mistakes in dealing with Goring's outnumbered and disordered remnants leaving them masters of the field as both sides infantry struggled for ascendancy in the centre.

View along Moor Lane or 'Bloody Lane' from  Point 1 at the monument
With darkness falling and with the Royalist infantry stuck between Cromwell's cavalry hammer and Crawford's and Ballie's infantry anvil, the end came with the Royalists breaking, hoping to use the cover of darkness to escape and with the cream of their infantry, Newcastle's Whitecoats, refusing quarter and almost dying to a man as it seems they thought they could cover the escape of their comrades.

View from the bottom of Moor Lane at Point 1 looking out to the left flank of the Royalist line and the cavalry positions of Langdale and Carnaby

The King's army was destroyed at Marston Moor and York and the North passed from his control at a stroke.

Just as devastating as the consequences of those facts would be to the King's cause, his best commander had lost his aura of invincibility and heralded a new and final phase of the war that would see Fairfax junior and Cromwell take the war south and south west ending the fighting at a little market town in north Devon.

Arriving late in the afternoon on a day of gloriously hot sunny weather with Red Admiral butterflies in abundance I decided to attempt to get the best views of both sides of the lines without too much effort as both Carolyn and I were on the wrong end of a long drive and were keen to check into our lodgings in York and have a good relaxing brew.

As we set out along Moor Lane the Red Admiral butterflies were out taking in the sun

The monument to the battle erected on the 1st July 1939 provides a great landmark to reference the walker to the lines of battle and with my "Traveller's Guide to the Battlefields of the Civil War" in hand made it relatively easy to work out the positions of the respective forces.

Photos of battlefields can end up as just pictures of hedges and fields if not referenced to where the picture was taken and in what direction, and who would have been stood there at any particular time.

Walking out to Point 2, I took this picture from Moor Lane looking to the right flank of the Royalist line. The Parliamentary lines are to the left of picture

My preferred method is to provide a map of the place as illustrated above, using the one presented to the visitor at the monument, and then simply mark up the viewing points I used to get my pictures together with the route walked between each point which provided further picture opportunities.

Thus Carolyn and I walked from the monument along Moor Lane or more dramatically 'Bloody Lane' (every battlefield has one!), the grassy track close by, towards the Royalist lines with alongside, to our right, the field where Sir Thomas Fairfax's horse fought with Goring's troopers.

Looking back along the lane to the monument and the Parliamentary lines beyond

View  from Point 2 from behind the position of the ditch which would have been lined by Royalist musketeers. The top of the monument is just visible centre left after the tree line. The Parliamentary lines would have been beyond and up on the slope behind. Cromwell's Plump is the little clump of trees on the horizon to the left of the monument

When walking battlefields I am always on the lookout for good reference points to position myself against the map and one area on the Royalist line is the defined area of the old drainage ditch that ran along the front of Rupert's line and behind which his musketeers used as cover.

The track that led off Moor Lane followed that old ditch and gave a really good view of the Parliamentary slopes above the main road and from which the artillery opened fire to herald the start of the battle.

Looking from Point 2 along the path that marks the old ditch, to the hedge on Moor lane and the Royalist left flank where dragoons and musketeers took position alongside the Royalist horse

Carolyn on the track behind the ditch. To the right of picture would have stood the lines of Royalist foot

The views backwards and forwards from the Royalist positions show flat fields but with treacherous ditches and the occasional enclosure to disrupt the potential attacker.

View from Point 2 looking behind the Royalist line along Moor Lane to the right behind the hedge, towards White Syke Close, centre back at the corner of the tree line, and the rear-guard action of 'Newcastle's Whitecoats' as pictured in the header.

After inspecting the view from the Royalist line we headed back up Moor Lane to cross the road at the monument and begin the walk up hill carefully working our way around the field boundaries as the crop of wheat and potatoes is in full growth at this time of year.

Along the boundary paths there were small groups of "Flanders Poppies" which seemed a very appropriate bloom on a battlefield.

Poppies are always appropriate on a battlefield, seen on the walk along the fields up to 'Cromwell's Plump'

The route we were taking was heading up hill to a very famous landmark and easily seen by the little group of trees marking its summit, "Cromwell's Plump".

The guide books recommend the views to be had from the top and so I was keen to walk off the drive and enjoy the weather as well as the views.

Given the hot conditions we grabbed hats and water bottles from the car before setting off and I took pictures along the way as we worked our way through the fields that would have been used by Fairfax's horse and Leven's Scottish foot.

'Cromwell's Plump' pictured at the bottom of the field close to the road and showing the height of the hill. Here in the foreground would have stood the lines of Scottish foot

The plump as we approached Point 3 on the map. It was from here that Lord Leven and Fairfax made their plan of attack. Perhaps it should be known as Leven's plump.

As you can see the guide books weren't wrong and the views on the day we were there were simply stunning and gave a great understanding of the lie of the land as well as great views of local landmarks such as Long Marston Hall and even the great York Minster seen on a heat shimmered horizon with its white stone work immediately recognisable and showing how close the city is to the battlefield.

The view from Point 3 and the plump with the monument centre background and the Royalist line in full view. In the green field would have stood the Parliamentary English and Scottish foot with the horse on either flank.

Close up of the monument from Point 3 in the picture above

Given the height of the crops we didn't cross to the plump from the boundary track, which might have given a better view of Cromwell's position out on the Parliamentary left flank, but wouldn't have done much for the farmer.

Long Marston Hall seen from Point 3

The village of Long Marston can be seen from the plump and I later read that the father of General Wolfe, of Quebec fame was married in Long Marston Church in 1723 to a Miss Thompson from the "big house" or Long Marston Hall seen above.

York Minster and the City of York seen in the distance from Point 3

As we descended the hill on our zig zag route across the fields the rolling nature of the ground on the Parliamentary side is obvious with the top of the monument just peeping above the curve of a lower slope

Long Marston Hall looking glorious in the late afternoon sunshine
We finished our trip to Marston Moor by retracing our drive through Long Marston on our way to York and I pulled in to take a picture of Long Marston Hall looking its best in the afternoon sunshine.

A fitting place to end out tour, as this was where Cromwell retired to on the night after the battle, no doubt nursing his painful wound to the neck sustained during the fighting with Byron's horse.

Lots more to come with trips planned to Towton, Fulford, Stamford Bridge and the sights in York.