Waterloo 1815, with contemporary replacement steel clip and split ring suspension. Thomas Hardy, 2nd Reg. Life Guards. Fine

£2,900.00

In stock

SKU: 333059 Category:

Description

Two men of this name with the 2nd Life Guards at Waterloo, the other one being killed in action, this is the second man as he claimed his medal, he did not claim a Military General Service Medal.

At the Battle of Waterloo, they were part of Major-General Lord Somerset’s Household Brigade alongside the 1st Life Guards, the Royal Horse Guards, and the 1st Dragoon Guards. During the battle they were positioned to the left of the Brigade, just west of the Brussels Road. Cavalry commander Lord Uxbridge ordered the Union and Household Brigades to charge against Comte d’Erlon’s infantry columns which were attacking the left centre at La Haye Sainte. To remain unseen by the French, Uxbridge had formed the Brigades behind the ridge and took advantage of the element of surprise in organising the charge and coming over the crest of the hill, the British slammed into the French forces with the 2nd Life Guards smashing into the 1st Cuirassiers.

After slaughtering a great number of the enemy and routing even more, the cavalry did not heed orders to halt their charge, and the unit joined the Union Brigade in their charge of the French Grand Battery. The ensuing counter attack was disastrous for the British cavalry, whose retreat was blocked by General Travers’ Cuirassiers. The British cavalry sustained heavy losses from the counter attack and the 2nd Life Guards suffered the highest casualty rate of any British cavalry unit, with 155 men out of an initial strength of 231 lost during the battle; a casualty rate of 67%.
They arrived in Paris on 7 July alongside the Duke of Wellington and served as part of the Army of Occupation until their return to London in February 1816. Notably, the Waterloo veterans of the Regiment formed the guard of honour at the opening of Waterloo Bridge in London the next year on 18 June.