ARTHUR
BLEBY. THE VICTORIAN NAVAL BRIGADES. DUNBEATH, SCOTLAND: WHITTLES
PUBLISHING, 2006.
By John Beeler, University of Alabama
John
Beeler is a professor of history at the University of Alabama and his
field of research specialization is Victorian naval policy. He has
published two books on aspects of the subject, British Naval Policy
in the Gladstone-Disraeli Era, 1866-1880 (1997) and Birth of the
Battleship: British Capital Ship Design Policy, 1870-1881 (2001). In
addition, Beeler edited Donald M. Schurman's Imperial Defense,
1868-1887 (2000) and is now editing the papers of Admiral Sir
Alexander Milne (1806-1896) for the Navy Records Society. The first
of three volumes was published in 2004.
Bleby’s work
had as its genesis a Naval Review article on naval
participation in the Zulu War (1878-79), to which he has added
chapters on the Crimean War (1854-56), the Indian Rebellion
(1857-58), the Abyssinian expedition (1867-68), the second Ashanti
War (1873-74), the first and second Boer Wars (1880-81 and
1899-1902), the British occupation of Egypt (1882), the failed
mission to rescue Charles Gordon at Khartoum (1884-85), and the Boxer
Rebellion (1900). It is not, as he makes clear, a comprehensive
history of such participation in Victorian military campaigns nor is
it restricted to purely military activities—much space being
devoted to Charles Beresford’s exploits on the Nile in January
1884, for example—although the focus is first and foremost on
naval personnel fighting ashore. Beyond that, Bleby has concentrated
on campaigns in which Royal Navy officers and men played significant
roles. It is also, above all, a campaign history, with both the
strengths and weaknesses inherent in that approach. Those in search
of operational detail probably will not be disappointed, while those
seeking the larger geopolitical or geostrategic contexts in which
these military actions were situated may wish to consult more general
works for such information.
It
has been written with a general interest audience in view. Bleby
relies wholly on published sources, split fairly evenly between
contemporary accounts—often memoirs—and secondary
accounts. It is to be regretted, however, that he evidently failed to
consult volumes six and seven of William Laird Clowes’s
monumental History of the Royal Navy from the Earliest Times to
the Present Day (1897-1903), which, although more than a century
old, remains an indispensable source for the navy’s activities,
both at sea and ashore, during the Pax Britannica. Clowes furnishes
succinct accounts of all of these campaigns, which would in many
cases have provided valuable supplements to Bleby’s other
sources, and furthermore provide the first names of many of the
dramatis personae appearing in his volume. Clowes, furthermore, has
recently been reprinted by Chatham Publishing (1997), and is thus
easily obtainable, making his omission all the more puzzling.
In
sum, this is a work with appeal to general readers interested in the
Victorian Royal Navy, and in colonial military campaigns, but one
unlikely to be of much utility for scholars, if for no other reason
than it lacks an index. A final note: some readers are likely to be
put off by some of the descriptive terms used for the naval brigades’
foes (and sometimes their friends as well) found in the sources on
which Bleby relied and whom he often quotes. And it is a bit
unsettling, in the wake of Abu Gharib and in light of the scandals
surrounding the detention facility at Guantanamo and the illegal
American policy of “extraordinary rendition,” to find the
following episode recounted without any authorial strictures on the
treatment of civilians: “The Safieh [Beresford’s
vessel on the Nile] was conned upstream by a native pilot.
Beresford...had told him that if the boat was successful in making
the trip he would be rewarded but that if there were any indication
of treachery he would be shot forthwith! He was stood on a box so as
to see over the barricade round the wheel and handcuffed to a
staunchion. Beside him stood an iron-faced petty officer with a drawn
revolver.”(118)