The Battle of Waterloo : The positions of the armies
The Duke of Wellington took up a position on the Brussels road
where it emerges from the woods of Soignies south of the village of
Waterloo. The road crosses a low ridge and descends into a valley
before rising on the other side to a further ridge. In the valley,
below the first crest, lay La Haye Sante Farm and on the road at the
southern side of the valley, below the second crest, stood La Belle
Alliance Farm. |
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During most of the battle the Germans occupied La Haye Sante and
the French used La Belle Alliance as a headquarters.

French Cuirassiers attacking a Highland square
To the North of the first crest the Namur road crossed the Brussels
road. The main British, German, Belgian and Dutch positions lay along
the Namur road, behind the first crest. The French approach to the
battle was up from the country to the South of La Belle Alliance.

King's Dragoon Guards attacking French Dragoons
In the valley to the front of the right wing of the British line
stood Hougoumont Farm, the key to Wellington’s right flank. Held by
the light companies of the Coldstream and Third Guards, there would be
fighting around Hougoumont all day.
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"The Battle of Waterloo at 2pm : D'Erlon's infantry attack
past La Haye Sainte"
Lying by the road leading to the centre of Wellington’s position
the capture of La Haye Sante was a crucial goal for the French army.
To the East of the Duke’s army lay Papelotte, another farm that
would be the centre of a ferocious struggle, particularly as the
Prussian Army appeared on the field at the end of the afternoon.
In the Duke’s centre stood the farm of Mont St Jean, used as a
headquarters and hospital.
It rained heavily during the night of 17th June 1815. The French
artillery commanders insisted that the attack did not begin until the
ground had dried out sufficiently for the guns to manoeuvre without
sticking in the mud.
The French attack began at 11am.
The Battle of Waterloo: The morning and afternoon of the
18th June 1815:
At 11am the French bombardment of Hougoumont Farm, on the extreme
right of the Allied line, began the battle. The British artillery on
the ridge behind the farm replied, cannonading the French infantry
massed for the attack on the far side of the valley.
At midday Prince Jerome ordered the assault on Hougoumont and the
French infantry columns of his division moved forward to begin the day
long struggle around the farm buildings.
At about 1.30pm Marshal Ney brought forward 74 French guns over the
ridge opposite La Haye Sante followed by the 17,000 infantry of
D’Erlon’s corps to begin the attack on the Duke of Wellington’s centre
and left. The French cannonade began and was later described by
veterans as the heaviest they had experienced. The Duke ordered his
infantry battalions to move behind the ridge and to lie down. This had
the effect of shielding them from the worst of the cannonade. Only
Bilandt’s Belgian-Dutch Brigade was left on the exposed slope and
suffered heavily.
After half an hour the barrage stopped, giving way
to the roar of drums as Ney’s columns advanced to the attack. The
French infantry passed La Haye Sante and marched up to the crest of
the ridge, where Picton’s 5th division was positioned. As part of the
advance a furious assault began on La Haye Sante, held by the King’s
German Legion, which was to continue intermittently for the rest of
the day until the German troops ran out of ammunition and were finally
overwhelmed.
As the French infantry approached the hedge at the top of the ridge
the line of British infantry stood, fired a volley and charged,
driving back the massed French columns.
Cavalry formations were ordered to charge in support of the infantry
attack; the Household Brigade (1st and 2nd Life Guards and Royal Horse
Guards), the Union Brigade (Royals, Scots Greys and Inniskillings) and
Vivian’s Hussar Brigade (10th and 18th Hussars and 1st Hussars, King’s
German Legion).
It is notoriously difficult to pull up cavalry committed to an
attack and the British regiments did not readily respond to the recall
orders. In particular the Union Brigade continued to attack across the
valley. These regiments charged up to the French gun line on the far
ridge where they were in turn overwhelmed by French cavalry. General
Ponsonby, commanding the Union Brigade was killed. It is of note that
of the three regiments in the Union Brigade two, the Greys and
Inniskillings, had not served in the Peninsula and lacked battle
experience.
The time was 3pm and there was a lull in the battle, the only
active fighting being the continuing attack on Hougoument at the
western end of the line which had been sucking in more and more of
Reille’s corps.
The battle began slowly swinging in the Allies favour as Blucher’s
Prussian Army arrived on the field in the South-East.
Napoleon ordered Ney to capture La Haye Sante, considering the farm
to be the key to the Allied position. Ney launched this assault with
two battalions he found to hand and during the operation formed the
view that the Allied army was withdrawing. It is likely that the
movements he saw were casualties or prisoners moving to the rear.
It was on this impetuous assumption that Ney launched the massive
cavalry attack on the Allied line. Initially the attacking force was
to be Milhaud’s Cavalry Corps of Cuirassiers.
Before the French could reach the Allied line the infantry formed
squares interlaced with artilery batteries. The French cuirassiers
flowed around the squares but were unable to penetrate them.
During the next three hours some twelve cavalry attacks were made up
to the ridge and back. Napoleon while deprecating the initial attack
as premature felt bound the commit increasing numbers of cavalry to
support the assault.
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The Battle of Waterloo at 5.30pm : Ney launches the French
cavalry attack |
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At around 5.30pm Ney launched the final cavalry assault. There were
too many regiments, fresh mingled with exhausted. The attack failed
yet again.
Ney now, far too late, launched the sustained infantry assault on La
Haye Sante which was overwhelmed. By now the Prussian assault in the
South East on Plancenoit was seriously threatening the French
position.

Vive L'Empereur :
The French Cavalry Attack
Sure that the Allied line was at breaking point, Ney sent
desperately to the Emperor for more troops to attack. Napoleon was at
this point deploying the Guard to drive the Prussians back from
Plancenoit. Once this had been achieved he resolved to launch the
Guard at the main Allied line. By this time Wellington had reorganised
his forces and the opportunity that Ney had, this time, correctly
identified had passed.
The Guard marched up to La Haye Sante for the attack. There Napoleon
stood aside and left the command to Ney. Ney led the five battalions
up the left hand side of the Brussels road. As they climbed the ridge
they came under fire from a curve of batteries assembled to meet them.
A deserting French cavalry officer had warned of the Guard’s advance.
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The Battle of Waterloo at 8pm : The Guard attack the Allied
line in the closing stages of the battle. The Prussian
attack is pressing hard from the East |
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The Middle Guard threw back the British battalions of Halkett’s
Brigade but were assaulted by the Belgian and Dutch troops of General
Chassé and Colonel Detmers who drove them back down the hill.
The 3rd Regiment of Chasseurs approached the ridge opposite Maitland’s
Brigade of Foot Guards (2nd and 3rd Battalions of the 1st Foot
Guards). Wellington called to the brigade commander “Now Maitland.
Now’s your time”. One authority had him as saying “Up Guards, ready”.
The Foot Guards stood, fired a volley and charged with the bayonet
driving the French Guard back down the hill.

The Old Guard Advance
The last of the French Guard regiments, the 4th Chasseurs came up
in support as the British Guards withdrew back over the ridge. Sir
John Colborne brought the 52nd Foot round to outflank the French
column as it passed his brigade, fired a destructive volley into the
left flank of the Chasseurs and attacked with the bayonet. The whole
of the Guard was driven back down the hill and began a general retreat
to the cry of “La Garde recule”. Within fifteen minutes Wellington appeared on the skyline and waved
his hat to give the signal for a general attack in pursuit of the
French troops. The British, Belgian, Dutch and German troops poured
forward and the French retreat became a route. Three battalions of the
Old Guard fought to the end to enable the Emperor to escape from the
battlefield as the Allied troops including the Prussians closed in.
General Cambronne is reputed to have answered a call to surrender with
the words “The Guard dies but does not surrender”.

The Line Will Advance |