The Autumn Campaign: advance of the Connaught Rangers, 1872. 'We continue the series of our Illustrations of the [British Army] manoeuvres performed in the open country of Wiltshire by the two divisions of regular troops, militia, and volunteers, each nearly 15,000 strong, under the commands respectively of General Sir Robert Walpole and General Sir John Michel. The former, whose force is styled the Northern Army, or the Army of Defence, had moved from his late head-quarters at Pewsey to encounter the latter, whose Southern Army, representing that of a foreign invader, had marched up from Blandford, so that they joined battle on ground between Warminster and Salisbury, near the village of Codford St. Mary, where the river Wiley, the high road, and the railway afforded a triple line of defence...The Engraving on our front page shows a laughable adventure of the Connaught Rangers (88th Regiment), who found a flock of sheep in their way, as they advanced to line the hedge, in one of the earliest battles'. From "Illustrated London News", 1872.
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