Battles
Paardeberg
18-27 February 1900
The British forces trapped a Boer army at Paardeberg Drift on
the banks of the Modder River. Among the attacking force were 31
officers and 866 other ranks of the 2nd (Special Service) Battalion,
Royal Canadian Regiment of Infantry. This was the first major Canadian
action of the South African War and it was the first significant British
victory of the war.
Israel's Poort
25 April 1900
The 2nd (Special Service) Battalion, Royal Canadian Regiment of
Infantry left the Orange Free State capital of Bloemfontein and marched
eastwards to take part in a British offensive to cut off Boer
forces operating to the south-east. The engagement
firmly established the Royal
Canadians as a veteran battalion.
Zand River
10 May 1900
On 6 May, a Boer defensive position north of the Zand River was encountered.
The British commander planned to envelop the Boer position.
The Royal Canadians, despite having
been outnumbered by better than ten to one at some stages of the
battle, stood fast.
The Relief of
Mafeking
17 May 1900
With the Boers in retreat and on the defensive, the British began a
major effort to relieve Mafeking, a town besieged by boer forces for eight
months. Despite being both outnumbered and outranged, the
Canadian gunners succeeded in driving the Boers from the road leading
into Mafeking. The next morning Mafeking was relieved.
Doornkop
28-29 May 1900
The action at Doornkop was the only time
during the war that units of Canada's first and second contingents
fought together.
Faber's Put
30 May 1900
Although the British commander claimed victory, the engagement was, in
fact, a defeat. Four Canadian battery played an essential role in
supporting British troops.
Honing Spruit
22 June 1900
The action of the Canadians at Honing Spruit prevented the Boers from
attacking the station from an unexpected direction.
Leliefontein
7 November 1900
Leliefontein was the most desperate situation faced by Canadians
during the war. The number of decorations, including Victoria Crosses to
Lieutenants H.Z.C. Cockburn and R.E.W. Turner and Sergeant E.J.
Holland, all of the Royal Canadian Dragoons, attests to the intensity
of the fighting.
Harts
River (Boschbult)
31 March 1902
The battle was a British defeat. Canadian casualties were 13 killed
and 40 wounded. With the exception of the first engagement at
Paardeberg, on 18 February 1900, Harts River was the bloodiest day of
the war for Canada.