- Battle of Bukoba
Infobox Military Conflict
conflict= Battle of Latema Nek
partof= theEast African Campaign (World War I)
caption=
date=June 21 -June 23 1915
place= Bukoba,Lake Victoria
casus=
territory=
result= British victory, capture of Bukoba
combatant1=flagicon|United KingdomBritish Empire
combatant2=flagicon|German EmpireGerman Empire
combatant3=
commander1= General Stewart
commander2= UnknownCampaign
name=East African Campaign
battles=Tanga - Jassin - Bukoba - Salaita - Latema Nek - Kahe - Kilimanjaro - Kondoa Irangi - Dodoma - Mkalamo - Lukigura - Matamondo - Wami - Kilosa - Mlali - Morogoro - Kidodi - Dutumi - Kisaki - Njinjo - Kimbaramba - Kibata (1916) - Behobeho - Kibata (1917) - Mpotona - Utete - Nambanje - Kiawe Bridge - Rumbo - Narungombe - Mahiwa - NyangaoThe Battle of Bukoba was the first victory for Entente forces in German East Africa, coming after the disastrous battles of Tanga and Jassin. The British objective was the destruction of the Bukoba wireless station. Due to Bukoba's location on the shore of
Lake Victoria , it was decided that the raid should take the form of anamphibious assault .The Battle and aftermath
The raid was launched from
Kisumu inBritish East Africa onJune 21 ,1915 . Amongst the units chosen for the attack were the Loyal North Lacashires and the25th (Frontiersmen) Battalion, Royal Fusiliers , more commonly known by the their nickname the 25th 'Frontiersmen'. This unusual unit had been created by Colonel Daniel Patrick Driscoll as an irregular skirmish force shaped by his experiences during theSecond Boer War , and drawn largely from his peacetimeparamilitary group, theLegion of Frontiersmen . A number of big game hunters were recruited to the force by Driscoll—most notablyFrederick Selous , who was 64 when he joined and who died in action at the age of 65.Upon reaching the objective at Bukoba the attackers were accidentally landed in a large
swamp and were pinned down by fiercerifle andmachine gun fire from the German positions. Finally managing to escape the swamp, the British force was then held up by snipers—who succeeded in stalling the attack until a Capt. Meinertzhagen advanced towards them and opened fire, killing one and driving the rest away. The attack continued for a further two days in the town; however, casualties were light on both sides. The Frontiersmen took the town onJune 23 . An Australian member of the unit,Lieutenant Wilbur Dartnell, climbed to the top of thetown hall and removed the German Imperial Ensign from the flagpole as a symbolic gesture of victory.Bukoma
fort and the wireless station were destroyed, the British also captured rifles and 32,000 rounds ofammunition . Due to their status as an 'irregular' unit, the Frontiersmen were granted permission to loot the town by General Stewart. This predictably turned into a disaster, with the 25th robbing and burning much of the town with such ferocity that the incident became known as the "Sack of Bukoba". It was later claimed by an embarrassed high command that no looting had taken place.The aim of the raid, the destruction of the wireless station, was counterproductive for the British as it deprived them of the possibility of intercepting German transmissions. Bukoba was abandoned.
Wilbur Dartnell
After the battle, the 25th Battalion was ordered to guard the
Uganda Railway between Nairobi and Mombasa, which was coming under heavy attack from German forces. During this period Wilbur Dartnell was posthumously awarded theVictoria Cross for an action which took place near Maktau onSeptember 3 1915 .The citation for Dartnell's VC"
On 3 September 1915, near Maktau, Kenya, during a mounted infantry engagement, the enemy were so close that it was impossible to get the more severely wounded away. Lieutenant Dartnell, who was himself being carried away wounded in the leg, seeing the situation, and knowing that the enemy's black troops murdered the wounded, insisted on being left behind, in the hope of being able to save the lives of other wounded men. He gave his own life in a gallant attempt to save others.
"References
* Hew Strachan, 'The First World War in Africa' (Oxford University Press, 2004) pp. 11, 116
External links
* [http://www.frontiersmenhistorian.info/fusiliers.htm History of the 25th Battalion, Royal Fusiliers]
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