- Patrick William Forbes
Patrick William Forbes (1861 – 1918), was born in 1861 at Whitechurch,
England . He was educated atRugby, Warwickshire and commissioned to the 6th InniskillingDragoons . In 1880, he went toCape Colony and in 1889 he was made second-in-command of theBritish South Africa Police . Promoted toMajor in 1890, Forbes went on to command the Salisbury Column inMashonaland , and later he was selected by theBritish South Africa Company (BSAC) as the Mashonaland Magistrate. In 1893, theFirst Matabele War broke out and Forbes was selected to command all forces in the region against theNdebele . He proved to be an indecisive leader and tried to compensate his shortcomings with a "by the book" attitude. Nonetheless, Forbes later became Commissioner to the BSAC territory inNorth-Western Rhodesia (nowZambia , from 1895–1897. He died 1918.hangani Patrol
Cecil Rhodes andLeander Starr Jameson hoped to capture the Ndebele KingLobengula and quickly end the 1893 war inMatabeleland . After reachingBulawayo , Forbes received a tip about the whereabouts of the Ndebele King. Indecisive and reluctant to risk his men in unknown territory, he sent Major Allan Wilson and 12 men to pursue and capture Lobengula. Wilson's patrol found Lobengula, but they also found themselves greatly outnumbered -- the small patrol had been lead into a trap. On the night of December 3, 1893, knowing the Ndebele would not attack in the dark, Wilson sent back Captain Napier with 2 men with an urgent message requesting that Forbes come to his aid immediately and bring his 2Maxim gun s before daybreak. But Forbes again hesitated. He refused to move his column until daylight and instead sent only Capt Borrow and 21 men to Wilson as reinforcements.The next morning, Wilson and his men discovered that the Shangani river was now completely flooded due to rains and it could not be navigated without extensive fire cover, and Forbes was nowhere to be seen. The patrol was cut-off from the main column and Wilson had no choice but to make a last stand. In desperation, Wilson sent the Americans
Frederick Russell Burnham and Pete Ingram, and an Australian named Gooding, to cross the Shangani and seek reinforcements. Miraculously, the 3 scouts succeeded, but when they reached Forbes the battle raging at the main column was just as intense as the one they had just left. There was no hope of anyone reaching Wilson in time and all 31 men were killed by the Ndebele warriors. The Shangani Patrol incident achieved a lasting, prominent place inRhodesia n colonial history and is considered to be roughly the British equivalent toCuster's Last Stand .References
*"History of Rhodesia", by Howard Hensman (1900) -- the full-text of the book can be found online for free [http://www.rhodesia.nl/hensman.pdf PDF]
*"Scouting on Two Continents," by Major Frederick Russell Burnham, D.S.O., Autobiography. LC call number: DT775 .B8 1926. (1926)
*"Shangani Patrol", a feature film, docudrama by David Millin. Filmed on location by RPM Film Studios. StarsBrian O'Shaughnessy as Major Allan Wilson and co-starsWill Hutchins as Fred Burnham.Adrian Steed plays Major Patrick Forbes. [http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0367031/ Internet Movie DataBase] (1970)
*"A Time To Die", by Robert Carey, the story of the Patrol.
* 35mm copies and publicity stills of this film are preserved at the South African National Film, Video and Sound Archives, Pretoria. [http://www.national.archives.gov.za]There is also a ballad of the Shangani Patrol, by Nick Taylor (1966), and a free MP3 version sung by John Edmond - [http://e-mp3s.eu/mp3_download/9893/John_Edmond_-_Shangani_Patrol ] .
s-ttl|title=Magistrate of
Mashonaland
years=1893–1894
-s-ttl|title= Administrator ofNorth-Western Rhodesia
years=1895–1897
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