Sunday 23 June 2019

More Odds and Sodds...

Although I have a couple of other projects calling my name I just can't seem to pull my self away from my ECW collection (or stop buying stuff!)  I finished another regiment of cavalry that I had inherited from Jeff. It is a mix of Warlord Games plastic cavalry and Perry metals. I blended the riders and horses: Perry horses with plastic riders and plastic horses with Perry riders just for variety:
 The flag is from Wargames Designs and is Lord Byron's (conjectural):
The Oxen team and limber from Empress miniatures is painted; fantastic little model (shown here with a metal Warlord Saker in tow). 

The drover, suprisingly, came in 4 parts but is otherwise a simple model without superfluous detail that paints up very well:

Negligible mould lines and great texture on the yoke:

As I was desperate to buy something from Warfare Miniatures, but not really needing any more cavalry (I still have 36 in their boxes...) I found some interesting table dressing; a horse and cart:
 ..and an A-Frame gun gin:
I also wanted some engineers so I went with Foundry. I bought a pack of engineers with petard crew and a pack of civilians. Here are most of the two packs primed and awaiting paint:





Monday 3 June 2019

The Battle of Gaines Mill

Finally, several months after finishing the hills for this game we were able to coordinate everybody to re-fight this battle. It turned out to be a special gaming experience for me as the host, McLean, whom I had never net before, has quite a "basement". It is in fact a museum as he is an avid collector of WW2,WW1 and Korean War equipment, weapons, uniforms and other incidentals associated with those conflicts.

He has fashioned the entrance to The War Dungeon after a trench, largely based on a WW1 trench but with elements from WW2 and the Vietnam war.

Inside you walk through the WW1 section...
that includes various rifles used by the combatants:

There is also a Korean War section:

My favourite section is the display of the uniforms and memorabilia of his family members that served in WW2:
Including his great grandfather's bomber jacket, medals and book of memoirs (each silver bomb represents a mission flown):

In his memoirs Mr. Henderson recounts how one of the gunners shot down a German fighter over Holland (if I am not mistaken); the clock in the lower right was recovered from German fighter plane shot down over Holland in the same month of that year...



Anyway, the real reason we were there: the Battle of Gaines Mill (pictures are from my phone as I forgot my proper camera and tripod so some may be a little fuzzy and are dark). The rules used were Brigade Fire and Fury. AP Hill's Confederate force prepare to assault across Boatswain's Swamp: 

The view from the southeast looking over Sykes command:
DH HIll's forces move south from Old Cold Harbour:
Sykes redeploys to meet a new threat and at the left hand edge of the picture you can see some brigades arriving from reserve:

DH Hill's division puts pressure on Buchanan's brigade :
Morrell's division prepares for the onslaught behind hastily erected defences:
.. which comes crashing in:

Successive waves would eventually break and push the Union brigades out of their defenses; it was the beginning of the end. The picture below shows Sykes' division and it's reinforcements pushed back up Turkey Hill to Adam's Farm by DH Hill's:
I
The game played out almost exactly as the real battle with the exception of the Confederate attack across Boatswain's Swamp going in about an hour earlier. The Union forces were pushed back and with the late reinforcements having to keep the retreating brigades from getting out flanked, more or less played the same role as they did on June 27th 1862.

The atmosphere, the combatants and fun game made for a great day out.