First Anglo Sikh War 1845-46 A.D.
ANGLO-SIKH WAR 1, 1845-46,
resulting in partial subjugation of the Sikh kingdom, as the outcome of British
expansionism. It was near-anarchical conditions that overtook the Lahore court
after the death of Maharaja Ranjit Singh in June 1839. The English, by then
firmly installed in Firozpur the Sikh frontier, about 70 km from ahore, the
Sikh capital, were watching the happenings across the border with more than
neighbour's interest The disorder that revailed there promised them a good
oppurtunity for direct intervention.
Up to 1838, the British troops
on the Sikh frontier had amounted to one regiment at Sabathu in the hills and
two at Ludhiana with six pieces of artillery, equalling in all about 2,500 men.
The total rose to 8,000 during the time of Lord Auckland (1836 42) who
increased the number of troops at Ludhiana and created a new military post at
Firozpur, which was actually Past of Sikh kingdom's dominion south of the
Sutlej. British preparations for a war with the Sikhs began seriously in 1843
when the new governor-general, Lord Ellenborough (1842-44), discussed with the
Home government the possibilities of a military occupation of the Punjab.
English and Indian infantry reinforcement began arriving at each of the
frontier posts of Firozpur and Ludhiana. Cavalry and artillery regiments moved
up to Ambala and Kasauli. Works were in the process of erection around the
magazine at Firozpur, and the fort at Ludhiana began to he fortified. Plans for
the construction of bridges over the rivers Markanda and Ghaggar were prepared,
and a new road link to join Meerut and Ambala was taken in hand. Exclusive of
the newly constructed cantonments of Kasauli and Shimla, Ellenborough had been
able to collect a force of 11,639 men and 48 guns at Ambala, Ludhiana and
Firozpur. Everywhere," wrote Lord Ellenborough, we are trying to get
things in order and especially to strengthen and equip the artillery with which
the fight will be."
Seventy boats of thirty-five
tons each, with the necessary equipments to bridge the Sutlej at any point, were
under construction; fifty-six pontoons were on their way from Bombay for use in
Sindh, and two steamers were being constructed to ply on the River Sutlej. in
November 1845," he informed the Duke of Wellington, "the army will be
equal to any operation. I should be sorry to have it called to the field
sooner." In July 1844, Lord Ellenborough was replaced by Lord Hardinge
(1844-48), a Peninsula veteran, as governor-general of India. Hardinge further
accelerated the process of strengthening the Sutlej frontier for a war with the
Sikhs. The affable Colonel Richmond was replaced by the abrasive and
belligerent Major George Broadfoot as the political agent on the Punjab
frontier. Lord Cough, the commander-in-chief, established his headquarters at
Ambala. In October 1844, the British military force on the frontier was 17,000
infantry and 60 guns. Another 10,000 troops were to be ready by the end of
November. Firozpur's garrison strength under the command of Sir John Littler
was raised to 7,000; by January 1845, the total British force amounted to
20,000 men and 60 guns. We can collect," Hardinge reported to the Home
government, 33,000 infantry, 6,000 cavalry and 100 guns in six weeks." In
March additional British and Indian regiments were quietly moved to Flrozpur, Ludhiana
and Ambala. Field batteries of 9 pounders with horses or bullocks to draw them,
and 24 additional pieces of heavy ordnance were on their way to the frontier.
In addition, 600 elephants to draw the battering train of 24-pounder batteries
had reached Agra, and 7,000 camels between Kanpur and the Sutlej were to move
up in the summer to Firozpur, which was to be the concentration point for a
forward offensive movement.
Lord Hardinge, blamed
unnecessarily by the Home government for inadequate military preparations for
the first Sikh war, had, during the seventeen months between Ellen borough's
departure and the commencement of hostilities with the Sikhs, increased the
garrison strength at Ferozpur from 4,596 men and 12 guns to 10,472 men and 24
guns; at Ambala from 4,113 men and 24 guns to 12, 972 men and 32 guns; at
Ludhiana from 3,030 men and 12 guns to 7,235 men and 12 guns, and at Meerut
from 5,573 men and 18 guns to 9,844 men and 24 guns. The relevant strength of
the advanced armies, including those at the hill stations of Sabathu and
Kasauli, was raised from 24,000 men and 66 guns to 45,500 men and 98 guns.
These figures are based on official British papers, particularly Hardinge's
private correspondence on Punjab affairs with his predecessor, Lord Ellenborough.
Thus Total number of British troops around Punjab were 86,023 men and 116 guns.
In addition to the concentration of troops on the border, an elaborate supply
depot was set up by the British at Basslan, near Raikot, in Ludhianz district.
The Lahore Darbar's vamps or representatives and newswriters in the cis-Sutlej
region sent alarming reports of these large-scale British military movements
across the border. The Sikhs were deeply wrought upon by these war
preparations, especially by Broadfoot's acts of hostility. The rapid march in
November 1845 of the governor-general towards the frontier and a report of Sir
Charles Napier's speech in the Delhi Gazette saying that the British were going
to war with the Sikhs filled Lahore with rumours of invasion. The Sikh ranks,
alerted to the danger of a British offensive, started their own preparations.
Yet the army panches or regimental representatives, who had taken over the
affairs of the Lahore forces into their own hands after the death of Wazir
Jawahar Singh, were at this time maintaining, according to George Campbell, a
British civilian employed in the cis-Sutlej territory,Memoirs of My Indian
Career , "Wonderful
order at Lahore.. and almost puritanical discipline in the military
republic."
However, the emergence of the
army Panchayats as a new centre of power greatly
perturbed the British authority who termed it as "unholy alliance between
the republican army and the Darbar." In this process Sikh army had indeed
been transformed. It had now assumed the role of theKhalsa. It worked through elected
regimental commitees declaring that Guru Gobind Singh's ideal of the Sikh
commonwealth had been revived, with theSarbatt Khalsa or
the Sikh as a whole assuming all executive, military and civil authority in the
State. The British decried this as "the dangerous military democracy of the
panchayat system," in which soldiers were in a state of success mutiny.
" When the British agent made a referenece the Lahore Darbar about
military preparations in the Punjab, it replied that there only defensive
measures to counter the signs of the British. The Darbar, on other hand, asked
for the return of the estimated at over seventeen lakh of the Lahore grandee
Suchet Singh had left buried in Firozpur, the restoration of the village of Mauran granted by Maharaja Ranjit Singh
to one of his generals Hukam Singh Malvai, but subsequently resumed by the
ruler of Nabha with the active connivance of the British, and free passage of
Punjabi armed constabulary, a right that had been acknowledged by the British
on paper but more often than not in practice. The British government rejected
the Darbar's claims and severed diplomatic relations with it. The armies under
Hugh Gough and Lord Hardinge began proceeding towards Firozpur. To forestall
their joining those at Firozpur, the Sikh army began to cross the Sutlej on 11
December near Harike Pattan into its own territory on the other side of the
river. The crossing over the Sutlej by Sikhs was made a pretext by the British
for opening hostilities and on 13 December Governor-General Lord Hardinge
issued a proclamation announcing war on the Sikhs. The declaration charged the
State of Lahore with violation of the treaty of friendship of 1809 and
justified British preparations as merely precautionary measures for the
protection of the Sutlej frontier. The British simultaneouly declared Sikh
possessions on the left bank of the Sutlej forfeit.
Hesitation and indecision
marred Sikh military operations. Having crossed the Sutlej with five divisions,
each 8,000 - 12,000 strong, an obvious strategy for them would have been to move
forward. They did in a bold sweeps ing movement first encircle Firozpur, then
held by Sir John Littler with only 7,000 men, but withdrew without driving the
advantage home and dispersed their armies in a wide semicircle from Harike to
Mudki and thence to Ferozeshah, 16 km southeast of Firozpur. The abandonment of
Firozpur as a firstt target was the result of the treachery of the Sikh prime
minister, Lal Singh, who was in treasonable communication with Captain Peter
Nicholson, the assistant political agent of the British. He asked the latter's
advice and was told not to attack Firozpur. This instruction he followed
seducing the Sikhs with an ingenious excuse that, instead of falling upon an
easy prey, the Khalsa should
exalt their fame by captivity or the death of the Lat Sahib (the governor
general) himself A division precipitately moved towards Ludhiana also remained
inactive long enough to lose the benefit of the initiative The Khalsa army
had crossed the Sutlej borne on a wave of popular enthusiasm, it was equally
matched(60000 Sikh soldiers vs. 86,000 British soldiers) if not superior to the
British force. Its soldiers had the will and determination to fight or die, but
not its commanders. There was no uniq among them, and each of them seemed to
act as he thought best. Drift was the policy deliberately adopted by them. On
18 December, the Sikhs came in touch with British army which arrived under Sir
Hugh Gough, the commander-in-chief, from Ludhiana. A battle took place at
Mudki, 32 km from Flrozpur. Lal Singh, who headed the Sikh attack, deserted his
army and fled the field when the Sikhs stood firm in their order, fighting in a
resolute and determined manner. The leaderless Sikhs fought a grim hand-to-hand
battle against the more numerous enemy led by the most experienced commanders
in the world. The battle continued with unabated fury till midnight (and came
thereafter to be known as "Midnight Mudki"). The Sikhs retired with a
loss of 17 guns while the British suffered heavy casualities amounting to 872
killed and wounded, including Quartermaster-General Sir Robert Sale, SirJohn
McCaskill and Brigadier Boulton. Reinforcements were sent for from Ambala,
Meerut and Delhi. Lord Hardinge, unmindful of his superior position of
governor-general, offered to become second-in-command to his
commander-in-chief.
The second action was fought
three days later, on 21 December at Ferozeshah, 16 km both from Mudki and
Firozpur. The governor-general and the commander-in-chief, assisted by
reinforcements led by General Littler from Firozpur, made an attack upon the
Sikhs who were awaiting them behind strong entrenchments. The British, 16,700
men and 69 guns tried to overrun the Sikhs in one massive cavalry, infantry and
artillery onslaught, but the assault was stubbornly resisted. Sikhs' batteries
fired with rapidity and precision. There was confusion in the ranks of the
English and their position became increasingly critical. The growing darkness
of the frosty winter night reduced them to sore straits. The battle of
Ferozeshah is regarded as one of the most fiercely contested battles fought by
the British in India. During that "night of horrors," the
commander-in-chief acknowledged, "we were in a critical and perilous
state." Counsels of retreat and surrender were raised and despair struck
the British camp. In the words of Ceneral Sir ISope Grant, Sir Henry Hardinge
thought it was all up and gave his sword,a present from the Duke of Wellington
and which once belonged to Napoleon and his Star of the ISath to his son, with
directions to proceed to Firozpur, remarking that "if the day were lost,
he must fall . "
Lal Singh and Tej Singh again
came to the rescue of the English. The former suddenly deserted the Khalsa army
during the night and the latter the next morning (22 December) which enabled
the British to turn defeat into victory. The British loss was again heavy,
1,560 killed and 1,721 wounded. The number of casualities among officers was
comparatively higller. The Sikhs lost about 2,000 men and 73 pieces of
artillery.
A temporary cessation of hostilities followecl
the battle of Ferozeshah. The English were not in a position to assume the
offensive and waited for heavy guns and reinforcements to arrive from Delhi.
Lal Singh and Tej Singh allowed them the much needed respite in as much as they
kept the Sikhs from recrossing the Sutlej. To induce desertions, Lord Hardinge
issued a proclamation on the Christmas day inviting all natives of Hindustan to
quit the service of the Sikh State on pain of forfeiting their property and to
claim protection from the British government. The deserters were also offered
liberal rewards and pensions.
A Sikh sardar, Ranjodh Singh Majlthia,
crossed the Sutlej in force and was joined by Ajit Singh, of Ladva, from the
other side of the river. They marched towards Ludhiana and burnt a portion of
the cantonment. Sir Harry Smith (afterwards Governor of Cape Colony), who was
sent to relieve Ludhlana, marched eastwards from Firozpur, keeping a few miles
away from the Sutlej. Ranjodh Singh Majithia harried Smith's column and, when
Smith tried to make a detour at Baddoval, attacked his rear with great vigour
and captured his baggage train and stores (21 January). But Harry Smith
retrieved his position a week later by inflicting a defeat on Ranjodh Singh
Majithia and Ajlt Singh, of Ladva, (28January).
The last battle of the
campaign took place on 10 February. To check the enemy advance on Lahore, a
large portion of the Sikh army was entrenched in a horse-shoe curve on the
Sutlej near the village of Sabhraon, under the command of Tej Singh while the
cavalry battalions and the dreaded ghorcharas under Lal Singh were a little
higher up the river. Entrenchments at Sabhraon were on the left bank of the
Sutlej with a pontoon bridge connecting them with their base camp. Their big
guns were placed behind high embankments and consequently immobilized for
offensive action. The infantry was also posted behind earthworks and could not,
therefore, be deployed to harass the opponents.
Early in February, the British
received ample stores of ammunition from Delhi. Lal Singh had already passed on
to the English officers the required clues for an effective assault. Gough and
Hardinge now decided to make a frontal attack on Sabhraon and destory the
Darbar army at one blow. A heavy mist hung over the battlefield, enveloping
both contending armies. As the sun broke through the mist, the Sikhs found
themselves encircled between two horse-shoes: facing them were the British and
behind them was the Sutlej, now in spate. After a preliminary artillery duel,
British cavalry made a feint to check on the exact location of the Sikh guns.
The cannonade was resumed, and in two hours British guns put the Darbar
artillery out of action. Then the British charged Sikh entrenchments from three
sides. Tej Singh fled across the pontoon bridge as soon as the contest started
and had it destroyed making reinforcement or return of Sikh soldiers
impossible. Gulab Singh Dogra stopped sending supplies and rations from Lahore.
Lal Singh's ghorcharas did not put in their appearance at Sabhraon. In the
midst of these treacheries, a Sikh warrior, Sham Singh Attarivala, symbolizing
the unflinching will of the Khalsa, vowed to fight unto the last and
fall in battle rather than retire in defeat. He rallied the ranks depleted by
desertions. His courage inspired the Sikhs to make a determined bid to save the
day, but the odds were against them. Sham Singh fell fighting in the foremost
ranks along with his dauntless comrades. The British casualties at Sabhraon
were 2,403 killed; the Sikhs lost 3,125 men in the action and all their guns
were either captured or abandoned in the river. Captain J.D. Cunningham, who
was present as an additional aide-de-camp to the governor-general, describes the
last scene of the battle vividly in his A History of the Sikhs:
"...although assailed on either side by squadrons of horse and battalions
of foot, no Sikh offered to submit, and no disciple of Guru Gobind Singh asked for quarter. They everywhere
showed a front to the victors, and stalked slowly and sullenly away, while many
rushed singly forth to meet assured death by contending with a multitude. The
victors looked with stolid wonderment upon the indomitable courage of the
vanquished."
Lord Hugh Gough, the British
commander-in-chief, under whose leadership the two Anglo-Sikh wars were fought,
described Sabhraon as the Waterloo of India. Paying tribute to the gallantry of
the Sikhs, he said: "Policy precluded me publicly recording my sentiments
on the splendid gallantry of our fallen foe, or to record the acts of heroism
displayed, not only individually, but almost collectively, by the Sikh sardars
and the army; and I declare were it not from a deep conviction that my
country's good required the sacrifice, I could have wept to have witnessed the
fearful slaughter of so devoted a body of men."
Lord Hardinge, who saw the
action, wrote: " Few escaped; none, it may be said, surrendered. The Sikhs
met their fate with the resignation which distinguishes their race.
Two days after their victory
at Sabhraon, British forces crossed the Sutlej and occupied Kasur. The Lahore
Darbar empowered Gulab Singh Dogra, who had earlier come down to Lahore with
regiments of hillmen, to negotiate a treaty of peace. Thc wily Gulab Singh
first obtained assurances from the army Parishes that they would agree to the
terms he made and then tendered the submission of the darbar to Lord Hardinge.
The governor-general, realizing that the Sikhs were far from vanquished,
forbore from immediate occupation of the country. By the terms imposed by the
victorious British through the peace treaty of 9 March, the Lahore Darbar was
compelled to give up Jalandhar Doab, pay a war indemnity amounting to a million
and a half sterling, reduce its army to 20,000 infantry and 12,000 cavalry,
hand over all the guns used in the war and relinquish control of both banks of
the Sutlej to the British. A further condition was added two days later on 11
March: the posting of a British unit in Lahore till the end of the year on
payment of expenses. The Darbar was unable to pay the full war indemnity and
ceded in lieu thereof the hill territories between the Beas and the Indus.
Kashmir was sold to Gulab Singh Dogra for 75 lakh rupees. A week later, on 16
March, another treaty was signed at Amritsar recognizing
him as Maharaja of Jammu and Kashmir, affirming the suspicion that Gulab Singh
Dogra indeed was involved in sedition against Khalsa Sarkar.
Although Maharani Jind Kaur continued to act as the regent and Raja Lal Singh
as water of the minor Maharaja Duleep Singh, effective power had passed into
the hands of the British resident, Colonel Henry Lawrence. And thus end the
First Anglo-Sikh war..
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