| Boer 
        War NotesImperial 
        YeomanryBlack Week fell 
      into December 1899 when the British Army in South Africa suffered successive 
      defeats. Many other disastrous events occurred during that week but from 
      it a new 'national' feeling arose. A new Yeomanry was raised to generate 
      volunteers to serve in South Africa, the newspapers called it the 'Imperial 
      Yeomanry' and so it remained. The Imperial Yeomanry were to be mounted infantry 
      and this appealed in sporting circles. Soon there was a rush to abandon 
      the like of fox hunting to 'go hunting the Boer'. Large crowds formed outside 
      the recruiting office in London, the City of London itself offered and paid 
      for one thousand volunteers. Thirty-four MPs and peers rallied to join the 
      new Yeomanry. The spirit caught the publics imagination and the war was 
      now talked of as a 'national' war. The ranks of the private soldier contained 
      several thousand 'gentlemen rankers' in the form of stockbrokers, journalists, 
      dons and even one MP.South 
        African ConstabularyBaden-Powell 
      was charged with organising the South African Constabulary (SAC) to form 
      both a permanent British Garrison and to also spearhead the injection of 
      British settlers to South Africa. Ten thousand new policemen were to be 
      raised in Britain for deployment in South Africa.Thorneycroft's 
        Mounted InfantryLieutenant-Colonel 
        Alec Thorneycroft raised a Mounted Infantry Regiment of five hundred irregulars, 
        mainly Uitlander refugees, in Natal, where they had been employed as scouts, 
        paid for out of Thorneycroft's own pocket.At Spion Kop two hundred of 
        Thorneycroft's men headed the column in a night attack. The column the 
        2nd Lancaster's and the old 'King's Own' were weary and tired from seven 
        days fighting previously. The hill was taken with the cost of ten men 
        wounded to one Boer killed. Under cover of the early morning mist preparations 
        were made to secure and hold the hill. General Warren was supposed to 
        supply the manpower, supplies and resources to install the naval guns 
        allotted to the hill and to dig the necessary trenches. This he failed 
        to do in time and for 12 hours the hill was pounded by Boer guns killing 
        243 men until eventually Thorneycroft and his men had to abandon it. Thorneycroft 
        was a broken man. Last updated 
        15 August, 2008
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