Sunday 5 April 2020

Sugar Islands - An Encounter with The Maroons

On Guadeloupe the British and French patrols have bumped into each other and between them lies a Maroon village.  As each side advances to engage the enemy, the question is what will the Maroons do?

The British. 




The French.




The Maroons.




The British moved off quickest, with the Highlanders leading the way. Two units moved to to the right, to flank the village. The French Marines and the Swiss of Rgt Hallwyl advanced directly whilst the militia moved round the village to engage the flanking British. 

However it was the Highlanders who got to the Maroons first. Quite what a man from Assynt, Skye or even Ulster thousands of miles away, with had little or no English, had to say to the man from West Africa equally far off  and equally linguistically challenged is sadly lost, but whatever was discussed the Maroons decided the British were more friendly and joined them opening up on the Swiss and Marines as they moved up. 




Not everything went the British way though. The seasoned men of the 38th didn't like the odds and recoiled, their wheezy Officer needing a tot of rum before he ordered his men forward. The Scots too seemed reluctant to move off and several turns were wasted before they were able to engage.  However the volleys of the British, supplemented by the sniping Maroons began to slow the French down. First the militia on the flank were halted and took heavy casualties from the 38th and 63rd.  Then the marines were also hit hard and had to retire. 







Hallwyl was now on the outskirts of the Maroon village and the latter decided the enough was enough, fleeing through the scrub, back through British lines. The Redcoats let them pass, they sensed victory was at hand. 




Another crashing volley on the flank scattered the worn militia and the Highlanders began skirmishing with the Swiss in the village. The Marines were now down to half numbers and the 64th were fresh and advancing with bayonets fixed. It was time to head back to Fort St Pierre.




This was a great game to play solo. I diced to see who got to move first and after a few fits and starts it was the Brits who got to the Maroons first. After dicing to see their reaction the joined them, but it could have gone the other way or they could had made a fighting retreat for the opposite corner of the table. This Highlanders didn't do much, the 38th nearly ran off the table when I rolled a double 1, and the militia advanced and then as quickly recoiled and broke. The effect of the Maroons was to take a couple of casualties off one militia unit and the marines and to hold up the Swiss. But the small skirmishing Maroon unit's quickly wore down and fled. All in all I was quite pleased with how it worked out and equally pleased it fitted on the kitchen table and as a solo game.....handy given the circumstances where most Wargamers are away from big tables at the moment. 

I will proof read the scenario and make it available to download or mail out on Monday. Get in touch if you want a copy using the contact box at the top right of the Blog.

4 comments:

Chris Gregg said...

A really nicely presented game, thanks Stuart. I have asked for the scenario info
Chris
http://notjustoldschool.blogspot.com/

Graham C said...

Looks really good I shall promote the scenario - good to see you’re keeping busy 😁

StuartInsch said...

Thank you both.

The scenario is available via a download link now on the next post.

As for keeping busy, it's precisely times like these when it's important to do something that distracts you from everyday life. Stick on some of your favourite music, or an audiobook, pour yourself a dram or a nice cuppa and relax with your figures. That little bit of calm, hygge, or mindfulness will do you the power of good.

And shift your lead mountain 😆

Aly Morrison said...

A nice little scenario Stuart... I would work just as well for North America or even Africa ...

All the best. Aly