Lieutenant Colonel George Elliott Benson's British No. 3 flying column, comprising 2000 men, specialised in night raids that were terrorising Boer Commandos on the highveld. It had become so successful that General Botha ordered all available Boer forces to accumulate at Bakenlaagte so as to attack Benson.
The No. 3 Flying Column, consisting of mostly the 1st and 2nd Coldstreams,[3] was marching back to a refit station after performing farm clearing operations. Rainy and misty weather had reduced visibility and made the going difficult which caused the marching British column to become spread out into clusters of troops. The column force became further extended when Benson began to deploy small detachments of mounted men and infantry to suppress small Boer sniping teams that were roaming around the marching column.
Engagement
General Botha arrived with about 800 reinforcements after riding about 40 kilometres (25 mi) without stopping, on arrival, Botha observed that the strung out column provided an ideal opportunity for an overwhelming force to roll up the isolated and spread out groups of commonwealth troops piecemeal and immediately ordered a large Boer force of mounted men to attack the small isolated rearguard of the column.
Outnumbered four to one, the Columns rearguard of 210 Commonwealth troops set up a defensive position on Gun Hill and fought about 900 Boers in a close quarter twenty minute gun fight that ended only when the column rearguard was annihilated.
Great bravery was demonstrated by the men on both sides with combined casualties numbering approximately 87 killed with 182 wounded. Colonel Benson (a veteran of the Battle of Magersfontein, 11 December 1899) was to die the next morning from wounds received on the field of battle.
Aftermath
This rearguard action allowed the main column time to deploy and set up a defensive perimeter under Lt Colonel Wools-Sampson. This deployment prevented the attacking Boer forces from riding on and capturing the main column as originally planned. The Boers left the field with what ever spoils they could carry and the British carried in the wounded to the entrenched camp during the night.
Grobler, Jackie (J.E.H.) (2004). The War Reporter : the Anglo-Boer War through the eyes of the burghers. Johannesburg: Jonathan Ball Publishers. ISBN978-1-86842-186-2. OCLC56776191.
Smith, Robin (June 2019), "Bakenlaagte 30 October 1901", Military History Journal, 18 (4), The South African Military History Society / Die Suid-Afrikaanse Krygshistoriese Vereniging, retrieved 24 October 2024.
Willsworth, Clive (2006). Bakenlaagte - The Story (2nd ed.). Just Done Productions. ISBN978-1-920169-20-6.