General Jeremiah Bykleigh oversees the crossing of the river by his leading units ~
Over on the right flank, the early morning mist has shielded the Rebs' advances { The Union measure the distance to the nearest enemy unit and then need to equal or exceed the distance score on a D x 20. It took me three turns, which meant the Rebs were right on me before any units could respond!}
Which meant the Sharpshooters got a really close first shot off ~ a pity they missed!
Driven in by weight of numbers, the Sharpshooters exposed the battery to an oblique assault by the leading Reb units ~
The Union regiment occupying the gardens around Rawnsley Farm was ejected after a vicious fire fight and sent tumbling back in rout ~
Meanwhile, just across the river, the band played on ~
And General Bykleigh and his staff planned their next move, oblivious it seemed to the disaster developing over the river ~
In the meantime, the Rebs had swung around and hit the artillery hard as they struggled to cross the ford in the river ~
Turn 9, and its all up for the Union. While they had scored 28 Victory points, the Rebs had scored 46 and so recorded a resounding though not total victory ~
I think we both enjoyed the game, certainly Jon was smiling at the end! In the circumstances I felt I'd done well to extricate half my Infantry and most of my ammunition and supply train, although I did loose my guns and the second Infantry Brigade. Not seeing the Rebs through the morning mist until Turn 3 proved to be the decisive factor in the game at the end.
Fantastic AAR, David. There's so much which is brilliant here. The figures, the terrain, the band(!), those Zouaves, the camp of General Byleigh, the sharpshooters...! Really very nice indeed. It looks like it was a pretty close game - must have been great fun. Thanks for posting!
ReplyDeleteThank you for those sentiments, Sydney! It was a really good game and played out well. Result was not so easy to swallow though...
Delete"Not seeing the Rebs through the morning mist until Turn 3 proved to be the decisive factor in the game at the end".
ReplyDeleteI put it down to the half-time Lemon Drizzle cake myself!
A most interesting scenario with several objectives & temptations. All whilst having to keep one eye on the running points tally.
It was fun wasn't it? Though the myopic Sharpshooters and dozy gunners rather let me down. Have to agree though that the cake was ace!
DeleteMust agree with Sidney, especially on the terrain ;-) Looks like you could have used the services of General Robinson, but then again pan and fire and all that.
ReplyDeleteThought you might agree on the terrain! What game do you fancy next Friday?
DeleteGreat report David, and second all comments on the Figs and Terrain. Hope the Yank band got away uninjured - I hear their brass section is second to none. Speaking of tubas, that geographical name rings familiar a bell I tried to put my finger on but could not quite grasp ;)
ReplyDeleteThanks Joe! Glad you recognised the name!
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