Wellington on Waterloo

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Waterloo's Controversial Historian

Captain William Siborne (1797-1849)

Siborne’s gravestone in Brompton Cemetery, London, bears the inscription, ‘The deceased was Secretary of the Royal Military Asylum Chelsea, Author of the History of the War in France & Belgium in 1815 and Constructor of the Waterloo Models’. His entry in the ‘Dictionary of National Biography’ gives his occupation as the ‘Historian of the Waterloo Campaign’. His Large Waterloo Model is on display at the National Army Museum in London; his New Waterloo Model at the Royal Armouries in Leeds. His History, first published in 1844, is still in print today.

Siborne has certainly left his mark, but he has always attracted considerable controversy. The first Duke of Wellington once described the Large Model as, ‘farce, fudge,’ and criticised Siborne for having lain ‘ … aside and unnoticed the authentick [sic] reports by the General Commanding-in-Chief, and by the Generals and others employed at his Headquarters, made to their respective Sovereigns; the letters written by the General on the morning of that day, and all the well-known circumstances of the Battle, known to all the Officers about the Headquarters, and to all particularly whose duty placed them near the Commander-in-Chief on that day’.
Wellington was not Siborne’s only detractor. In 1847, Captain Willem Jan Knoop (right) of the Netherlands Royal Military Academy stated in his ‘Remarques Critiques sur l’Ouvrage du Capitaine Siborne’, ‘A historian needs to combine the necessary knowledge with respect for the truth, in a word to show conscientious and impartial writing and to be master of his subject. This author has proved that he does not possess any of these qualities: His book is nothing other than a miserable speculation on the vanity of his compatriots.’

Not that the controversy ended there, because in 1993, in his ‘Waterloo: New Perspectives’, David Hamilton-Williams wrote, ‘The Lord may have created the world, but Siborne had re-created Waterloo. However, whereas the Lord looked on His creation and found it good, Siborne’s was imbued to the core with the sin of deliberate flouting of the cardinal rule of historiography: the balanced search for the truth. Siborne broke the rule, and in doing so wronged many good men and deceived many others. His books was more than a bad book; it was a bad deed.’ In his Foreword to this book, the Marquess of Anglesey commented, ‘… Captain William Siborne … is here accused without much exaggeration of committing ‘a crime against history’.
Captain Willem Jan Knoop
Based on information provided by Hamilton-Williams, the leading Napoleonic scholar Dr David Chandler stated, ‘… Siborne was not wholly objective in the handling of the evidence he collected … Siborne did not, it seems, attempt to procure French or Prussian evidence – and ignored letters from German officers in Wellington’s army’.

This is all very damning. Yet Siborne was also the subject of very positive and praiseworthy comments. A brother officer once wrote of him, ‘Of Captain Siborne it will suffice to say that he was a perfect gentleman and a most able officer. A man of fine intellect and judgement, truly unpretending in his manner and very well informed.’

In October 1838, the day the Large Model was first exhibited, the United Service Gazette carried a review that mentioned, ‘We recognised many distinguished Waterloo officers at the private view of Lieut. Siborn’s model, all of who bore honourable testimony to its admirable correctness’. The report present from The Times added, ‘A very ingenious model of the field of Waterloo has just been opened for exhibition at the Egyptian-hall, Piccadilly . . . He [Siborne] has executed his task with great accuracy, and presented to the public a plan of the great event of the day, which will convey a better notion than a mere map or the reading a mere account without auxiliary explanation.’

Of his History, Colburn’s United Service Magazine commented, ‘It is written in a free and impartial manner, is lucid in its descriptions, surprisingly correct in details; and many important features of the campaign, which have hitherto remained either wholly unnoticed, or else kept too much in shadow, are now brought forward into proper relief; whilst the grand military operations of the period are delineated with the pen of an enlightened soldier’. The reviewer in The Times described the History as, ‘…a work so faithful and excellent…’ The United Service Gazette commented, ‘It was reserved for Captain Siborne to remedy the defect, by producing a work, which, for accuracy of detail and authenticity of information, is the best of its class that has yet appeared. Captain Siborne’s facility of access to official documents, both English and foreign, the assistance which he has received from the surviving Waterloo heroes of all ranks, and zeal, energy, and talent, which he has displayed in the construction of his materials, have produced a record, not only of the battle itself, but of the whole Waterloo campaign, which is likely to be as enduring as it is creditable to his talents as a writer, and his reputation as a soldier.’

The extremes could hardly be more pronounced, so what is the truth about Siborne? Was he a fool, a liar, and partial, or was he a perfect gentleman, and great historian?

Let us first examine the charges made against Siborne the Model-Maker. Wellington’s objection as he explained to a gathering of prominent people, was that, ‘They went to one gentleman and said, “What did you do?” “I did so and so.” To another, “What did you do?” “I did such and such a thing.” One did it at ten and another at twelve, and they have mixed up the whole. The fact is, a battle is like a ball; they keep footing it all the day through.’ He also wrote to Lady Wilton that, ‘No Drawing or representation as a Model can represent more than one moment of an Action. But this Model tends to represent the whole action; and every Corps and Individual of all Nations is represented in the Position chosen by Himself.’ Was it really the case that the Large Model represented the entire battle and was that the information the Duke had?

The Large Model was commissioned in 1830 for exhibition in the United Service Museum, which was eventually opened in 1833. Lord Hill, then Commander-in-Chief of the British Army instructed Siborne to construct a model that would be the museum’s centrepiece, a major work of art lauding the greatest achievement of the Duke of Wellington. Of course, Siborne consulted the Duke on the progress of his work and sent him a plan of the model for his approval. Wellington commented, ‘I have looked over the plan of the ground of the battle of Waterloo, which appears to me to be accurately drawn. It is very difficult for me to judge of the particular position of each body of the troops under my command, much less of the Prussian army, at any particular hour’. It was well known that Siborne was constructing a model showing the Crisis of the Battle of Waterloo, when Napoleon’s Imperial Guard made its final, but unsuccessful assault on Wellington’s exhausted but still resilient centre, drawn up along the ridge of Mont St Jean, that took place at 7.15 p.m. on the evening of 18 June 1815. This had been announced in the United Service Journal, the official magazine of the armed forces published by the United Service Institute, of which the Duke was Vice-Patron. Siborne had, with the permission of Lord FitzRoy Somerset, Wellington’s Military Secretary and close confident, sent a circular to all surviving army officers that had served at Waterloo soliciting the particulars of the position of their unit at that specific time. Wellington was well aware of that fact, so not only was his charge against Siborne unfounded, the Duke knew it was unfounded. This charge can therefore be dismissed.

The reporter from the United Service Gazette of 6 October 1838 described the preview of the Model he attended as, ‘… this consummate exercise of skill and ingenuity; and [we] have no hesitation in pronouncing it the most perfect model that has yet fallen under our notice’. This journal was the weekly organ on the armed forces; its contributors the most influential military experts of the period and this writer most likely a Waterloo veteran. Why was it Wellington saw matters differently?

To continue with Wellington’s charges, let us look at those he made against Siborne the Historian. He accused Siborne of not having contacted the commander-in-chief or his senior officers while conducting his research. We have already seen that Wellington commented on a copy of the plan of the Model that Siborne sent him. Reference to Siborne’s papers, held in the Manuscripts Department of the British Library in London, show dozens of documents; letters to and from Siborne to FitzRoy Somerset and other senior officers, particularly Lord Hill, Sir Hussey Vivian, the Marquess of Anglesey and all surviving other senior British officers of Wellington’s army at Waterloo. Siborne’s research into the campaign attracted considerable interest at the time and was frequently mentioned in numerous issues of the United Service Journal, over many years. Wellington could not have failed to notice that. This charge against Siborne is equally without foundation, and Wellington knew that.

As for Knoop’s charge of partiality, let us examine one specific point in an attempt to establish its veracity. Knoop claims that Siborne set about playing down the role of the Netherlands Army in the Campaign of 1815, citing as an example the length of time the Netherlanders fought without support at the Battle of Quatre Bras on the afternoon of 16 June 1815. Knoop’s accusation is that Siborne deliberately played this down to exaggerate the role of his own countrymen in that battle.

Knoop criticism of Siborne’s History contains specific points. One important issue was the time at which Picton’s Division arrived at Quatre Bras to relieve the hard-pressed Netherlanders. Siborne gave the time of the commencement of the action at ‘about 2 o’clock’, and the arrival of Picton’s Division half to three-quarters of an hour later. Knoop points out that other accounts time the commencement of the action at between 1 and 2 p.m. and the arrival of Picton’s Division at between 3 and 4 p.m. Did the Netherlanders fight alone for a mere half an hour or was it as much as three hours? Let us endeavour to establish the facts here.

The Dutch source Siborne used was that by Löben Sels. This work was first published in Dutch in 1842. Siborne was evidently not aware of its existence when writing his History, first published in 1844. However, he did use this work to revise the 3rd Edition of his History, published in 1848. Löben Sels’ ‘Bijdragen’ was later translated into French, this version appearing in 1849. As I have been unable to locate a copy of the Dutch version, I will instead refer to the French. Löben Sels stated,

“Many Netherlands documents say that the actual attack took place between 1 and 2 o’clock … Between 3 and 4 o’clock … the 2nd Brigade of Netherlands light cavalry under General van Merlen arrived … Picton’s English division must have arrived almost simultaneously with Van Merlen’s Brigade…”

Evidently, Siborne did not accept Löben Sels’ version in its entirety, so let us look elsewhere for more evidence. The French authority Houssaye, basing his account on archive material and eyewitness statements from the French side, gave 2 p.m. as the time of the commencement of the French attack, and Picton’s arrival at 3 p.m. Houssaye was explicit: He described Ney’s conversation with Reille before the commencement of the attack as having taken place at 1.30 p.m. Furthermore, the later work by De Bas and T’Serclaes de Wommersom, based on the Netherlands archives, gave 2 p.m. as the time of the commencement of the French attack, but noted Van Merlen’s and Picton’s arrival being between 3 and 3.30 p.m. Siborne’s time of the commencement of the French assault on the Netherlanders appears to be correct. It is questionable however that Picton arrived so early. Let us now examine that issue in more detail.
Siborne, as we know, corresponded with various British and German officers. His son Herbert later published part of that correspondence in the collection known as the ‘Waterloo Letters’. One of those letters, no. 156, was from Alexander Forbes, on 16 June, a lieutenant in the 79th Highlanders in Kempt’s Brigade of Picton’s Division. Forbes gave the time his men went into action as ‘a quarter to three o’clock’. In no. 163, MacDonald, in 1815 a captain in the 1st Royals in Pack’s Brigade, gave the time of the arrival of Picton’s Division as ‘at or about three o’clock p.m.’ In no. 169, Robert Winchester, also a lieutenant in the 92nd Highlanders in 1815, stated that Picton’s Division ‘arrived between two and three o’clock in the afternoon’. While one can criticise Siborne for not having sought confirmation of the time from Netherlands officers, it is clear that several British officers gave roughly the same time: the lead elements of Picton’s Division would appear to have arrived at 2 p.m. and commenced fighting about 3 p.m.

How accurate was however the memory of these officers, writing some decades after the events? We know that Wellington did not order Picton’s Division to Quatre Bras until around 11 a.m. on 15 June and that this order did not arrive at their position near Waterloo until between noon and 1 p.m. From there to Quatre Bras was 18 km. Taking 5 km/hour as a normal pace, it would have been a good three hours before Picton could have arrived, that is between 3 and 4 p.m. Had the rate of march been forced, as it surely was under the circumstances, then the lead elements of the Division may possibly have arrived a little earlier. This would be consistent with part at least of Picton’s men having been engaged from after 3 p.m. The Netherlanders thus had to hold their own for more than an hour, but certainly not three hours, as some accounts would appear to imply.
It is interesting to note how Knoop dealt with the issue of Picton’s march from Waterloo to Quatre Bras. Knoop gave the length of their march to be 22 to 23 km. Instead of checking the actual position of this division – it had been ordered to move to the road junction south of Waterloo, but actually halted shortly before there – Knoop exaggerated the merits of his case by measuring the distance from the village of Waterloo. Had he taken the trouble to check the orders given to this division – they were printed in Volume XII of Wellington’s Dispatches, published in 1838 – he would have seen the error in his argument. It is interesting to note that Knoop did indeed refer to this work elsewhere in his Critique, yet appears to have overlooked this important point, one that conflicts with his argument.

Knoop’s charges against Siborne of not respecting the truth, of lacking conscientiousness and of being partial are unfounded, at least with regard to the movements of Picton’s Division on 16 June 1815. Siborne may have played down the role of the Netherlanders at Quatre Bras, albeit acting in good faith based on information he considered reliable, but this was a case of merely minutes and not hours, as Knoop implied. Although he based his timings on the accounts of several witnesses whose integrity he had no cause to question, Siborne could have contacted more eyewitnesses, particularly the Netherlanders. Knoop on the other hand was selective in the evidence he chose to make his case and exaggerated it. Although Siborne’s History was not without fault, it was certainly not dishonest. Knoop’s Critique was, in places, a little unfair, to say the least.

It is interesting to note that Hamilton-Williams, although he made serious charges against Siborne, did not produce a single example of his alleged distortion of history in his entire book. An examination of Siborne’s papers, which contain memoranda he wrote on various aspects of the battle and correspondence with many surviving officers, both British; French and German, indicates the exhaustive nature of his research. Newspapers and journals of the period praised the accuracy of his History and the Prussian General Staff commented about how Siborne ‘troubled to present the truth and to give everybody due credit.’ Certainly they did not see his work as a ‘crime against history’. Chandler’s accusation against Siborne, based on information given by Hamilton-Williams, is also quite unfounded, as an examination of Siborne’s papers will show. In them, there are numerous letters from German participants, copies of official reports from the various contingents and a long correspondence with the Prussian General Staff. Siborne even befriended Baron Bunsen at the Prussian Legation in London and exchanged letters with the King of Prussia. Siborne also endeavoured to get input from the French. He wrote to Marshal Lobau, commander of the VI Corps at Waterloo, asking for information and requesting permission to send a circular to surviving French officers. When he got no reply, Siborne had friends at the British Embassy in Paris go and visit him in an endeavour to get a response. They were not successful – the theme of Waterloo was taboo in France, even twenty or thirty years afterwards. There would appear to be no basis at all for these charges.

Why is it that Siborne has been subjected to so much unfounded criticism? The Duke of Wellington’s motive is clear. Siborne’s quest for the historical truth challenged several of the Duke’s statements on the Battle. Asking questions in the wrong places can lead to attempts at character assassination. Knoop obviously felt it his duty as a serving officer in the Netherlands Army to exaggerate the role of his countrymen in this Campaign and seems to have got carried away with himself. Hamilton-Williams would appear to have wanted to boost his own reputation at the cost of Siborne’s. It is interesting to note that while Siborne’s History is still in print more than 150 years after it was first published, Hamilton-Williams’ was remaindered some years ago, not long after it was published. Siborne has certainly stood the test of time.

© Peter Hofschröer
March 2007


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Contents - Wellington on Waterloo
 

Introduction
De Lancey Disposition

Wellington's deception
  page 1
  page 2
  page 3
  page 4
  page 5
  page 6 - Conclusions
  page 7 - Footnotes
Waterloo's Controversial Historian
 
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