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  1. Nov 3, 2012 · John Chard was born in Plymouth in 1847 and joined the army in 1868. Chard’s orders were not clearly written and on the morning of the 22nd he rode to Isandlwhana to seek clarification, from where he was ordered to return to Rorke’s Drift to construct defensive positions for the expected reinforcements arriving from Helpmekaar.

  2. Dec 16, 2020 · Chard and his men advanced with the column that eventually crushed the last Zulu resistance at the battle of Ulundi on the 4 th of July 1879. Despite becoming a favourite of Queen Victoria and a hero across the empire, after the end of the Zulu War Chard drifted between dull assignments before eventually winding up as Chief Royal Engineer for Perth in Scotland in 1896.

  3. The Siege of Badajoz (16 March – 6 April 1812; [baðaˈxoθ]), also called the Third Siege of Badajoz, was an Anglo-Portuguese Army under the Earl of Wellington (later the Duke of Wellington) besieged Badajoz, Spain, and forced the surrender of the French garrison. The siege was one of the bloodiest in the Napoleonic Wars [ 4 ] and was ...

  4. A Remarkable Life: From Early Beginnings to Military Exploits. Born on 21 December 1847 in the vicinity of Plymouth, John Chard's journey to British military fame began with his education at the Royal Military Academy in Woolwich. Following his commission into the Royal Engineers in 1868, his engineering skills were honed as he engaged in the ...

  5. Mar 30, 2023 · Spanish Fort is located in Baldwin County in southwest Alabama along the northeast edge of Mobile Bay. It was the site of military action during the American Revolution and the American Civil War. The city of Spanish Fort was incorporated on July 19, 1993. History European settlement in the area dates back to the French […]

  6. Aug 30, 2023 · Spanish Fort was doing very well until the railroad came through in the late 1880s. A new town, Nocona, was platted about 15 miles south, and Spanish Fort began losing population to this burgeoning burg. Spanish Fort rebounded in the 1920s, however, when oil exploration made its way to the fields outside of the town.

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  8. May 13, 2020 · The Battle of Spanish Fort took place from March 27 – April 8, 1865, during which the Union Forces embarked on a land campaign in an attempt to capture Mobile from the East. Union Major General E.R.S. Canby’s XIII and XVI corps traveled along the eastern shore of Mobile Bay, forcing the Confederates back into their defenses and making ...

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