Wellington’s Army of four corps
Over the years I have collected and replaced my 20/28mm wargame figures many times since I bought my first box of Airfix in the mid 1950s. Generally the older figures were replaced with better and dearer ones, and the old collection was always sold to help pay for their replacements. There were four major manufacturers, but many more collected over the years, including a brief attempt to make my own. First were Airfix, second Hinton Hunt, third Minifigs, and fourth Front Rank.
There were also many orders of battle over the years. My first collection was what was available and what I liked the look of. It was about 1971 that I found a book in the library about collecting 54mm figures which may have been called “Collecting Model Soldiers”. It had chapters on organising armies and resulted in my first attempt to write an order of battle.
I experimented with Airfix Ancient Britons v Romans, but my real love has always been Napoleonic. I started with British and French, and gradually extended to Prussians, Russians and Austrians. Then came French allies such as Polish, Bavarian, and Italians etc. I think the last was Spanish.
For many years my wargaming was inspired by Wellington and Waterloo. As the years passed I became interested in all things Napoleonic, and started to study Napoleon’s campaigns. I knew about Wellington in the Peninsula, but not much about the Spanish battles.
By 1980 I had a collection which included all of the major nations involved in the Napoleonic Wars, and many of the minor ones. I also became more interested in the battles of the Iberian Peninsula, and with it my knowledge of the Spanish army increased – as did my collection of Spanish wargame figures.
In 1998 I began my final reorganisation. I created an order of battle which would include all of the major nations and decided to collect them in three scales. The 6mm figures would be Heroic and Ros, 18mm would be AB and 28mm Front Rank.
The order of battle for all three scales was designed to fit my 12x6 foot wargames table. There would be 8 infantry units of 36 each, 4 cavalry of 8 each and 4 guns with 4 gunners. Minor nations, such as Polish or Bavarian, would have 2 infantry and 2 cavalry plus 2 guns. Small nations, such as Italy, Westphalia, would have 1 infantry and 1 cavalry and would use French guns.
It was 2004 when I finished painting and basing the last figure, just about the time we started thinking about moving to Spain for our retirement. A permanent wargames room was always an essential part of our retirement plans. But it soon became clear that we would probably not want to run a wargames club, so a smaller table was more appropriate. We decided that we would settle on a 6x6 foot table. However our order of battle was too large for this smaller table. After much consideration I decided that the ideal number of figures for such a table was half of our current order of battle. Each nation would have 4 infantry units of 36 figures, 2 cavalry of 8 and still 4 guns. This would give us 144 infantry, 16 cavalry and 4 guns for each major nation. I considered that this would be just right for the proposed 6x6 foot table. However it did mean that I would have to sell off half of my three different scale armies. Fortunately they were all popular manufacturers, newly painted and almost unused. Also being in the UK postage was not a problem. It took just over a year to sell them all, but the last one went a few months before we moved to Spain.
We had bought our Spanish house “off plan”. This meant that we had a lot of say in the interior design of the house, and we were able to create an under build to house our wargames collection and table.
We found that our order of battle of 144 infantry, 16 cavalry and 4 guns per side fit just right on our table. Our 4 infantry units would be battalions, regiments or brigades depending on what size of wargame we wanted to fight. All worked well until I decided to create a campaign to provide us with battles to wargame. Given how comprehensive our collection was, we decided that 1813 would be the most suitable. However our order of battle was not. We wanted to play multi corps sized battles, and 4 infantry units of 36 figures did not make sense.
I was determined not to paint any more figures so I was stuck with the numbers and nationalities I already had. I wanted to be able to use all of my model soldiers, and also all of the terrain on the shelves. So I decided to have infantry brigades of 8 figures, cavalry brigades of 4 figures and corps artillery of 1 gun and 4 figures. This would give me 18 infantry brigades, 4 cavalry brigades and 4 artillery. From this I would create four corps, each of 4 infantry, 1 cavalry and 1 artillery brigades.
This left me with quite a few unwanted infantry figures. However my original infantry units included skirmish figures. So there was very few left over when I converted them to 8 figure brigades. The infantry and cavalry were already two figures to a stand, so no rebasing was necessary.
The whole reorganisation for the new order of battle took a few months, and I was using them on the wargames table long before I had completed work on my 1813 campaign. Their first appearance on our new wargames table was in June 2006, just three months after we left the UK. The photo below shows Jan taking part in that first wargame we played in Spain
Jan playing first wargame in 2006