Monday, 18 November 2024

Gaslands (1)


 And now for something completely different..."Gaslands Refuelled" is an Osprey game that I've been playing with the boys.  "The game of vehicular mayhem" is, I think, how it's marketed, and it's a sort of Mad Max meets Car Wars (or Battlecars - does anyone else remember that GW effort?) game.  It's mainly about building tooled-up cars and racing them; but here are some terrain items and 20mm "punk infantry" that I bought off ebay.  I haven't quite worked out how "infantry" feature in the game, but these were fun to paint.  Next on the list will be some punk figures that hang out of / stand on the cars themselves. I also bought a similar set of, er, armed nuns... which I haven't painted yet.  I have a lot of cars that I've picked up here and there (usually while the boys are looking at the latest PS5 games or whatever - if they leave a toy shop with something then I'll usually have at least one Hot Wheels or Matchbox car I think will be good for Gaslands).  Hugo (who turns 15 in 4 weeks - crikes) is very into DC comics at the moment, and has decided that his new Gaslands "fleet" will be various Batmobiles. 

The 20mm figures and bikers come from The Summoning Circle, and the terrain items are from The Artificer's Forge.  All these items were 3D-printed and easy to paint.  The punks reminded me of the adversaries in "Mad Max 2" and I deliberately painted these figures in a kind of uniform.  The black body armour is highlighted with GW Dark Reaper and Thunderhawk. I also used GW flesh paints rather than my usual Foundry ones - just a base of Bugman's Glow followed by highlights of Cadian Fleshtone and Kislev Flesh.  I tried to give each figure a different colour mohawk to ease identification.  This isn't the end of the punks.  I also have to do a couple of motorcyle/sidecar combos and the figures which go in the cars themselves. I really enjoyed painting the terrain, which I think is well-sculpted and quite clever in terms of the stuff they've put together to make the ramparts.  In fact, part of the fun is working out what it is you have to paint - whether a fridge, a toilet, a traffic cone, a sofa etc.  I used GW technical paints to show rust, dirt, water damage etc.  I believe these items come in both 20mm (as here) and 25mm/28mm.  So the larger size would be suitable for games like 7TV Apocalypse.  I recently bought some more terrain items; so when I've painted those I'll set up a Gaslands game and take some photos of the whole collection in action.

My next posts will be a run of 7TV miniatures (including "Dad's Army") with some Maori and Napoleonic French and Ottomans.  I'm then thinking of spending December back on the AWI, with two versions of De Lancey's Brigade.

5 motorcycles, 5 infantry and various terrain items. Painted August 2024.   


 










Wednesday, 13 November 2024

Brigadier-General the Marquis de Lafayette


I'm not going to attempt a biography of Marie-Joseph Paul Yves Roch Gilbert du Motier de La Fayette, Marquis de La Fayette (what a name!). He was born in 1757 into a family with a long tradition of military service (one of his ancestors had been a companion-at-arms to Joan of Arc) and commissioned as an officer in the French army at the age of 13. By this time Lafayette had already become quite rich, as a result of inheritances from various relatives. Six years later he headed off to America to fight for liberty and glory (possibly encouraged by a hatred of the English born of his father's death at the Battle of Minden), and he was given the rank of major-general. This caused a bit of scandal at the time, as Lafayette's uncle-in-law was the French ambassador to Britain and at this stage in the war the French government's official position was against its officers heading off to America and doing anything that might provoke a war with Britain. Lafayette was undeterred and bought his own ship to take him there.

Lafayette began his war as a member of Washington's staff. He was wounded at Brandywine whilst trying to rally some Pennsylvania regiments. In June 1778, when Washington planned to attack the British during their withdrawal from Philadelphia, Lafayette was put in command of the reserve. However, in light of General Lee's reluctance to engage with the British, Lafayette was given command of the vanguard and he hurried after the British column as a presage to what quickly became the battle of Monmouth. He returned to France in February 1779 where, after a token week of house-arrest for disobeying the king, he began to agitate for a French invasion of Britain to support the Americans. That plan came to nothing, but Lafayette does seem to have been successful in persuading the government to send more men to America. He wasn't given another active field command until the siege of Yorktown in 1781, acting in various staff roles.

In the Caliver/"British Grenadier!" scenarios, Lafayette appears as a brigadier in the "early Monmouth" and Yorktown scenarios.  So when I found him in my Old Glory lead-pile I thought it was time to add him to my collection of personalities.  This is an, er,  interesting sculpt.  I can see what Old Glory are trying to do, and the figure does have the long, oval face that one sees in contemporary portraits.  I think they've captured a youthful look, but I can also see how others might think this sculpt is a bit odd.  I assume that it's a map he's not quite carrying (it looks like it's just resting on his thigh) - also a bit odd.  Anyway, here he is.

This is the last bit of AWI for a while.  I'll be filling the time until the next lot of AWI stuff by posting about the various other projects I've been working on, some of which aren't even historical!  That should increase the rate of posts a bit.

1 figure. Painted September 2024. 




Thursday, 24 October 2024

American artillery (8)


This should really be "American artillery (7)", but then that wouldn't include my Rhode Island artillery sets, which were the last American artillery bits I painted, back in 2017. The figures here are from Brigade Games' AWI range. When I placed an order a few months back I bought some Continental and militia packs, which I'm slowly working through, and decided to add one of the artillery packs. As seems to be the fashion these days, each pack comes with 6 crew figures and no gun, which you have to buy separately. The gun is a Brigade Games "6 pounder", although it's a bit on the large side when compared to the Perry/Foundry 6 pounders. As my AWI artillery crews each have four figures, I put two on pennies to have them floating around the rear or standing next to ammunition carts.  

This set takes my tally of American artillery crews to 20, which is pretty ridiculous.  Even for a large battle like Brandywine you only need twelve guns on the American side.  But these are nice figures, even if the faces are a little "rat-like" (as David Bickley describes them!), and I'm pleased to add them to my collection.  Only one of the figures is wearing a uniform coat, and even then it doesn't have lapels or cuffs.  I painted the cuffs on, because I wanted to have at least someone wearing a semblance of a proper coat, and then I tried to put the others mainly in white/beige/off-white clothes to suggest they are in uniform and have just taken off their coats.  But I quite like the irregular look.  In this respect, the Brigade Games artillery figures are similar to the Eureka Miniatures ones, which are also in shirtsleeves and coat-free (although by the look of it, the other "loading" Brigade Games pack does have a couple of figures in uniform coats).    

Apologies for the lack of posts - I simply ran out of photos and have been too busy until today to take any more!

6 figures.  Painted September 2024. 






Saturday, 5 October 2024

American staff (4)

These are more Old Glory staff figures: the guys on foot from the "Dismounted Continental High Command" pack and the mounted general is the Philip Schuyler figure from the "Continental Personalities" set. Schuyler is an interesting choice for a personality figure, as his career as a Major-General in the Continental Army wasn't very distinguished and he resigned in 1779. He doesn't appear in any of the Caliver/"British Grenadier!" scenario books, so I could put him to use as someone else. Most of the scenarios involve the famous trio of Washington, Gates and Greene as the commanders-in-chief on the American side. But there are a hand-full of scenarios that have others as the c-in-c: Brigadier-General John Ashe (Brier Creek); Major-General Charles Lee (Monmouth); Major-General Benjamin Lincoln (Stono Ferry, Bound Brook); and Major-General Artemas Ward (Dorchester Heights). So this is basically a general and staff on a "British Grenadier!" c-in-c base of 70mm x 60mm to represents these gentlemen in the relevant scenarios.

I thought the Schuyler figure was pretty good, and the horse doesn't look like it's about to fall in the Grand National.  He's supposed to be looking at the chap waving his arm but, annoyingly, the eyelines of the two don't quite match up.  I thought maybe the general has received a despatch or some new orders, which the staff are reading, and he's thinking how best to act on this change in circumstances.

4 figures. Painted September 2024.     




 

Monday, 30 September 2024

American staff (3)

This is my rendition of the Old Glory Miniatures pack "Dismounted Continental High Command".  I've used a few of these figures before, in a command stand for British artillery.  However, this is the first time I've collected a large number of the figures together for the purpose for which they are advertised.  This base isn't supposed to represent any particular commander.  I just wanted to use the figures to create a vignette that could be used in a Continental camp.  Perry Miniatures have a "camp vignette" scene, which I painted for the British/loyalist side (see here).   

So I looked trough the Caliver/"British Grenadier!" scenario books to see where a base like this might be useful.  Camps appear on the table in the following scenarios:  

·     Long Island - American

·   Germantown – British/Hessian

·   Whitemarsh – American

·   Stono Ferry – British (71st Foot)/Loyalists

·   Brier Creek – American (militia)

·   Savannah – American

·   Eutaw Springs – British/Loyalist

·   Yorktown/Gloucester Point - American

I decided to create a vignette for later(ish) war scenarios, basically Savannah and Yorktown.  The Old Glory set is supposed to give you 2 of each type of sculpt.  My pack had 3 of some figures and only 1 of others. Also, there's only one table; despite there being at least two tables-worth of figures - that's a bit mean.  Anyway, here are a good number of the figures in the pack, a mix of senior officers, ADCs and others. Further figures will appear in another command stand I've been working on.  I'm intending on turning the remainder into Loyalists.  Old Glory figures can be a bit hit and miss.  I find they can be tricky to paint, not least because it can be difficult to work out what they are actually doing and the uniforms sometimes lack precise definition - and sometimes you realise that a lump of extra metal which doesn't seem to have a purpose is simply a lump of extra metal.        

I painted these figures as best as I could.  There's no particular rhyme or reason to the uniforms.  I guess that the senior guy in the sash pointing is probably meant to be Washington; but I gave the figure a major-general's sash to anonymise him.  The officer delivering the despatch is painted in the brown faced yellow coat of Sherborne's Additional Regiment simply because I wanted some colour to break up the dark blue and buff.  The most difficult figure to paint was the chap who (I think) is taking snuff - his head was simply a blob, with no discernable features; so I did my best to paint those in.  I based the large map on this map of the fortifications of Yorktown.  With 9 figures, it's quite a busy stand, but I think it does the job ok.

9 figures and 1 table.  Painted August-September 2024.








Wednesday, 25 September 2024

On AWI Hessian command figures

After the past couple of weeks' posts, I thought it might be useful to circle back on Hessian command figures, and what one might want or need for an AWI collection.  There is no need, of course, to paint up separate figures for each of the personalities - I've done this simply because I enjoy exploring the lives of these characters and representing them on the tabletop.  The Caliver/"British Grenadier!" scenario books rarely require more than 2-3 Hessian command figures in any one scenario (see below); so that's all you really need.  It's perhaps rather obsessive to paint up 10 separate personality figures (12 if you count the Brunswickers as well).

But let's just remind ourselves how the Hessian corps was organised. The corps consisted of two divisions, the first commanded by Lieutenant-General von Heister and the second (which consisted largely of the garrison regiments) by Lieutenant-General von Knyphausen. (Both commanders were in their sixties, which they used to extract from the Landgrave extra pay and pensions for their families, should they not return from America.)  Once in America, von Heister had overall command of the Hessian corps until he was replaced by his subordinate, von Knyphausen, after the disaster at Trenton.  Knyphausen handed over command to Lieutenant-General von Lossberg in 1782.  The grenadier battalions were brigaded together under the command of Colonel von Donop until he was killed in October 1777, at which point the grenadier brigade was commanded by Colonel, then Major-General,  Kospoth. Major Generals von Mirbach and Stirn also served as brigade commanders, with other officers doing the same as necessary (e.g. Rall, effectively, at Trenton).  One of the things that irritated Hessians commanders was the British habit of promoting officers above them with back-dated commissions - so, e.g. von Lossberg and Kospoth (and two others) were promoted to major-general rank in February 1779, and this prompted Clinton to promote seven British brigadiers to equivalent rank, with their commissions back-dated prior to those of the Hessians.    

In terms of what the scenarios require, we have:

- Commanders-in-chief: 

  • von Heister (White Plains);  
  • von Knyphausen (Brandywine);  and 
  • Rall (Trenton).

- Brigade Commanders: 

  • Brethauer (Trenton); 
  • von Donop (Long Island, Haarlem Heights, Brandywine, Bound Brook, Whitemarsh); 
  • Kospoth (Monmouth); 
  • von Linsing (Pell's Point); 
  • von Lossberg (Newport, Springfield); 
  • von Mirbach (Long Island); 
  • Rall (White Plains); 
  • von Riedesel (Saratoga battles); 
  • Scheffer (Trenton); 
  • Stirn (Long Island, Brandywine); 
  • von Westerhagen (Newport); 
  • von Wurmb (Springfield).

In other words, for Long Island you need 3 Hessian brigade commanders; for Trenton you need 2 brigade commanders and Rall as C-in-C; for Brandywine you need 2 brigade commanders; and for Newport you also need 2.  So having 3 Hessian command figures will sort you out for most scenarios, and if you can live with differences in uniform facing colours etc, then 3 is all you need.  Even if you can't live with such differences, it is possible to "double-up": for example, von Mirbach and von Lossberg were chiefs of the same regiment, and therefore probably wore the same uniform; von Westerhagen and von Riedesel both wore uniforms with yellow facings - the difference was in the weave in their sashes (red for Hesse-Kassel, yellow for Brunswick);  a figure without lapels will do you for Rall and Kospoth. So one figure with yellow lapels, one with red lapels, and a third with no lapels would serve pretty nicely. Personally, I think Carl von Donop is also worth doing, as he was a pivotal figure, appears in a number of scenarios and had a distinctive uniform; and a jaeger commander can then double up as Lieutenant-Colonel Ludwig Wurmb.

So those are my thoughts. Suitable figures are available from Perry, Foundry and Brigade Games, as noted in the individual posts.  Size-wise, Foundry are the chunkiest and Brigade Games the slimmest, whilst the Eureka Miniatures figures are probably the tallest - a comparison pic is below.  If I did this again would I do anything differently?  Yes - I'd paint von Heister in his light blue dragoon uniform (as per the Osprey MAA); and I'd perhaps use the Brigade Games mounted jaeger officer for von Donop.  I use the same blue paints that I use for the Continental Army - the Foundry "Deep Blue" 20 set, and it's maybe a bit "light" for the Hessians.  But I'm pleased with these personality figures. The Hessians were good solders, and they are worth a bit of your time.     

 


From left to right: Brigade Games, Eureka, Foundry


Some Old Glory American command are next!     

Monday, 23 September 2024

Colonel Carl von Donop

Carl Aemilius Ulrich von Donop (1732-1777) was a member of a noble, military family.  He had seen action in the Seven Year's War and was a personal adjutant to the Landgrave of Hesse-Kessel, which no doubt helped when he lobbied the Landgrave for a decent command position with the American expeditionary force.  By this stage he was Chief of the jaeger corps.  Three of the Hessian grenadier battalions were brigaded together under von Donop's command.  In that capacity, he fought at Brooklyn, Haarlem Heights and White Plains, and was then effectively given command of the New Jersey garrison. 

Von Donop drew criticism for his failure to assist Colonel Rall when the Trenton garrison was attacked at Christmas 1776. Von Donop's brigade of approximately 2,400 men should have been stationed at Bordentown, some 9 miles from Trenton. However, Von Donop's command had been moved to Mount Holly in New Jersey after a small Continental force of around 600 had arrived there and set up some artillery. After a bit of skirmishing over the course of 22-23 December, the Americans slipped away. This move diverted von Donop's command away from the Trenton area, Mount Holly being 10 miles further away than Bordentown. It was alleged that von Donop was being comforted by a "beautiful young widow" and was in no hurry to return back to Bordentown.

He met his end in the Battle of Red Bank (or Fort Mercer) in October 1777. Fort Mercer was situated on the New Jersey side of the Delaware. Cornwallis wanted to eject the American garrison and von Donop, who seems to have wanted to redeem the performance of the Hessian corps after Trenton, volunteered to lead the attack. Despite support from five British ships anchored in the Delaware, the Hessian assaults were beaten back with heavy casualties. Von Donop was wounded in the thigh and died three days later. Despoite the Trenton/Mount Holly affair, von Donop seems to have been widely respected. Colonel William Harcourt, commander of the 16th Dragoons and an aide-de-camp to King George, wrote that von Donop was "very justly the pride of the Hessians, and undoubtedly an excellent officer."

In the Caliver/"British Grenadier"! scenarios, von Donop appears as a brigade commander at Long Island, Haarlem Heights, Brandywine, Bound Brook and Whitemarsh. So he's a useful chap to model. This figure is another mounted Russian officer from Eureka's Revolutionary Wars range. I painted this figure twice. Initially, I had assumed that he would be wearing the uniform of the Von Donop Regiment. But then when I started doing some proper research into Carl von Donop's life, I realised that the chief of the regiment was a completely different von Donop, Lieutenant-General Wilhelm Henrich August von Donop! So I had to paint over the blue with straw-yellow coat and change it to the green faced red coat of the jaeger corps. The uniform isn't quite right for an officer of jaegers. There probably should be a plume in the tricorne. In fact, Brigade Games do a mounted jaeger officer, which I haven't seen "in the flesh" but might be more suitable for von Donop. To be honest, the Brigade Games figure looks nothing like von Donop, given that a couple of portraits of him do exist (see here).

1 figure. Painted August 2024.



Wednesday, 18 September 2024

Colonel Heinrich Julius von Kospoth


Heinrich Julius von Kospoth (1724-1801) began the AWI as colonel of the Wutgenau Regiment (renamed Landgraf in 1777). In late 1777 he was given command of a brigade comprising three of the four combined grenadier regiments, replacing Colonel von Donop who had been killed at the battle of Red Bank/Fort Mercer. In February 1779 von Kospoth was promoted to Major-General, but appears to have remained as commander of the grenadier brigade. He served with General Clinton at the siege of Charleston in March to May 1780, and then took his brigade to New York where it remained for the rest of the war. Von Kospoth headed the court martial that the Landgrave of Hesse-Kassel ordered into the Trenton affair.  His only daughter married the son of Lieutenant-General von Lossberg

In the Caliver/"British Grenadier!" scenario books, von Kospoth appears as a brigade commander at Monmouth, in command of the Hessian grenadier brigade. I painted him in the uniform of the Wutgenau Regiment for lack of any alternative. This is another Brigade Games figure.  The lapels on the coat weren't that pronounced, so this is a good figure for an officer whose uniform doesn't have lapels; which is quite a few of them!

My next post will be on Colonel Carl von Donop, and I'll then do a round-up of modelling Hessian commanders for AWI wargaming. This has been a real blast, to be honest. Getting into the personalities of the AWI was always one of the things I enjoyed most about the period.

1 figure, painted September 2024. 




Saturday, 14 September 2024

Major Friedrich von Dechow


Major Friedrich von Dechow was the commander of the von Knyphausen Regiment at the battle of Trenton.  He had been wounded, twice, at the battle of Fort Washington in November 1776, but took command of the regiment because his superior, Colonel Borck, had an even worse wound and was convalescing in New York.  Von Dechow was wounded again in the battle of Trenton, dying of his wounds a couple of days later. When he was unable to carry on during the battle von Dechow handed over command of his regiment to Captain Bernard von Biesenrodt and told him to surrender in other to prevent any further casualties.  However, von Biesenrodt had other ideas and he and a handful of others attempted to flee from Trenton across Assunpink Creek.  Some 50 soldiers from von Knyphausen's Regiment managed to escape.  Before the battle, von Dechow had expressed concern about the Trenton garrison's exposed position.  He suggested to Colonel Rall
 that defence works be built outside the town, but Rall (as noted earlier) insisted any attack would be met by the bayonet and didn't want his ability to deploy compromised by earthworks.  Von Dechow also wrote (with the von Lossberg Regiment's commanding officer, Lieutenant-Colonel Scheffer) to von Heister on 17th December 1776 to warn of the state of the garrison, which was reduced by sickness, was tired and also suffering from the cold.  None of this prevented the subsequent court martial enquiry from placing blame for the disaster on von Dechow (and, of course, Rall). It seems von Dechow was perceived as having been too slow to get his regiment into action and, despite being in a position to secure the bridge over the Assunpink Creek, which the garrison could have used for a retreat, failed to do so.  One senses a brave, competent officer who, like Rall, found himself judged (posthumously) by his performance in his final, difficult battle.      

The figure here is shown in the uniform of an officer of von Knyphausen's Regiment.  It is a lovely sculpt - it looks as if the figure was modelled on the painting of Knyphausen himself in the Osprey MAA on German troops.  This figure shows just how well Paul Hicks sculpts faces.  Unfortunately the horse seems to be a bit of a mis-cast, as its right ear and part of it's back right leg are missing, and the right side of the head was lacking in definition.  The next time I have some greenstuff out I'll try to add the missing ear. One nice touch of detail is that the figure is wearing the "Pour la vertu militaire" award just benath the gorget - hence the light blue ribbon near his neck.

1 figure.  Painted September 2024.




Sunday, 8 September 2024

Queen's Rangers (3)


I'm half-way through my Hessian commanders series, so this is brief interlude on something else.  I first blogged about the Queen's Rangers back in 2007.  The regiment was raised in New York in 1776 by Colonel Robert Rogers, of F&IW fame.  Rogers soon handed over command to a British officer, Colonel French, who in turn was succeeded by Major Wemyss, and in late 1777 the regiment came under the command of Major John Simcoe (who was only 25 at the time).  The regiment was initially organised into 11 companies of around 30 men each, one of which was a highland company.  This was recruited largely from Scottish loyalists in Virginia.  Apparently the highland company was renowned for its discipline and combat skills, so it was often used for guerrilla skirmishing and scouting. A muster roll from February 1780 shows the company commander at that time as one Captain John Mackay (and confirms that the company had a piper, as you'd expect).

These figures are from the Eureka Miniatures French and Indian Wars range.  I bought them ages ago and painted up the 3 skirmishers back in 2005.  I intended the other 4 figures to go on a standard infantry base to add to the rest of the regiment, but for whatever reason never got around to it.  So here is the highland company, in both skirmish and close order.  These are very much "on campaign" figures, with Indian leggings and tomahawks, and Indian braided canteen covers..  I put the Eureka Miniatures highlander officer on my General Burgoyne command base (which, like most command stands, I never blogged about).  I think these figures make a good addition to a Queen's Rangers unit. They do, perhaps, look a bit "F&IW"; but I think the figures work for the loyalists in campaign dress.  The alternative would be to use some of the Perry AWI highlander figures.  Since I bought the Eureka figures the North Star "Muskets & Tomahawks" range has also come out (in early 2020, I think, because I bought the "pre-order" deal and it then got stuck in my work office mail room for the duration of Lockdown).  These are a bit bigger than the Eureka figures.  You have a fair bit of choice now if you want to model the highland company.  Given the company's paper strength was around 30-40 men, you don't need many figures.  I wanted the option of both skirmish and close order.


In terms of scenarios, Brandywine and Monmouth require units of 20 and 22 figures respectively.  The outlier battle is Spencer's Ordinary of June 1781, which appears in volume 2 of the Caliver scenario; I participated in a game of this battle back in 2008 (see report and photos here).  This requires a total of 64 Queen's Ranger infantry figures, including 6 for the highland company (and also 22 cavalry figures, including the dragoon troop).  The highland company is classed as "light infantry" with an "elite" rating. So what I probably should have done was painted 6 highlanders, in two skirmish stands of 3 figures each.  Oh well...that's what happens when you paint and base the figures and only then look at the scenario books!

7 figures.  Painted 2005 and August 2024. 






Talking of the Queen's Rangers, I thought I'd dig out my other skirmishing figures and put them on parade, given that they missed out on their own post earlier.  These figures represent the light and grenadier companies, with some skirmishing riflemen.  These were some of the first AWI figures I painted, right back in 2003; obviously during my "black eyeliner" period! And I'm not the only wargamer painting the Queen's Rangers recently - do check out Lawrence's excellent blog here