ADYE (R.) & W.ELIOT, with new introduction by Dr.
STEPHEN SUMMERFIELD THE BOMBARDIER AND POCKET GUNNER. THIS IS THE MOST
IMPORTANT EDITION OF THE MOST IMPORTANT ARTILLERY MANUAL OF THE NAPOLEONIC
WARS. IT IS THE FOUNDATION OF ANY STUDY, OR ANY WARGAMES RULES. Being
a facsimile of the most important 7th edition 1813 (& virtually
impossible to find in the original) with a new 40pp.introduction, the
original edition 400pp., as carefully reproduced as possible considering
the scarcity of the original copy, A VERY LIMITED EDITION of copies will
be made available, each beautifully hand-bound in cloth backed marbled
boards .
Review by Don Graves for the Napoleon Series
The Bombardier and Pocket Gunner 1813
Stephen Summerfield,
editor
Ken Trotman Publishing, Godmanchester, UK, 2010
ISBN 978-1-907417-02-3
Hardbound, c. 450 pages, index, 6 x 9 inches £65 (approximately
US$100)
Summerfield's efforts permit the reader to fully comprehend the extent
of
professional knowledge in the British artillery during the late 18th and
19th centuries; and it makes this book one of the most valuable English-
language sources on Napoleonic artillery to appear in the last two decades.
Don Graves
In Britain, from the mid-18th century until well into the 19th, there
were no established official artillery manuals or texts that provided
a basic text of the knowledge an RA officer would need to carry out his
professional duties. Instead the cadets who attended the Royal Military
Academy at Woolwich -- the training institution for artillery and engineer
officers -- were required to compile his own
reference text based on notes from his lectures.
It would appear that the theory was that, once he had been commissioned,
the new
gunner would make his own amendments and additions based on actual xperience.
This was hopeful but many of these "Cadet Notebooks" have survived
and, of the
half dozen or so this reviewer has examined, it is clear that many junior
officers did not do much scribbling after graduating from the RMA and
being commissioned. The need for a compact printed summary of practical
information that an artillery officer might require was filled by little
aide-memoires which would probably have
been in the luggage of most competent RA officers during the Great War
with France, 1793-1815.
The best known of these primers appeared in 1801 when Captain Ralph Willett
Adye, brought out the Little Bombardier and Pocket Gunner. Adye had originally
compiled this reference work for his own purposes but it "occurred
to him, that many of his military friends stood in equal need of such
an aid, and would willingly give a few shillings, for what they would
not be at the trouble of collecting," (almost certainly the exact
truth), so he published his little handbook. The Pocket Gunner went through
seven editions (including an American pirated version) between 1801 and
1815 and the most important of these was the 1813 edition, edited by Captain
William Granville Eliot, which contained much new material.
Despite the fact that the various editions of the Pocket Gunner must have
enjoyed very large print runs, seemingly very few copies of the various
editions have survived and the rarest of all is the 7th or 1813 edition,
edited by Eliot. I was fortunate many years ago to acquire a photocopy
of this very rare book and I
regard it as the most useful volume in my library of military technical
literature of the
musket period. For this reason, it is a matter of much celebration to
see The
Bombardier and Pocket Gunner of 1813 brought back to life from the tombs
of rare book collections in a splendid reprint edited by Stephen Summerfield
and published by Ken Trotman.
This new edition of the 1813 Pocket Gunner contains every word of the
original book -- more than 400 pages jammed with concise information and
tables arranged alphabetically -- complete with the original pagination
and index, which
makes it very easy to find asubject within the book. As an example, the
term "Exercise of artillery," contains 39 1/ 2 pages of tightly-reasoned
information
that provide most of the basic drills for all types of British ordnance
and the maneuver of field artillery with limbers, supplemented by numerous
tables. Both Adye and Eliot preferred to present as much information as
possible in tabular form to save space and the Pocket Gunner is packed
with tables. Under the subject of "Artillery: Positions and Maneuver
of Brigades of Artillery," there are six pages of how to best deploy
artillery in the field, which conclude with an injunction to "Never
abandon your guns till the last extremity" as the "last discharges
are the most destructive; they may perhaps be your salvation, and crown
you with glory."
There are listings for almost every conceivable subject that a Royal Artillery
officer should have at his finger tips, and some for a Royal Marine Artillery
officer, such as the management of a bomb ketch in action. There is information
on field engineering subjects, foreign armies and their artillery and
equipment, the manufacture of artillery and small arm ammunition, the
laying out of camps, and on, and on -- the variety of information is nearly
endless but the utility of The Pocket Gunner for the historian, researcher,
re-enactor or wargamer is, quite simply,
boundless. Better still, since the original Pocket Gunners were intended
to actually fit in the pockets of a gunner officer's coat, their pages
were small (about 3 x 5 inches), which sometimes made them difficult to
read (particularly for historians with fading eyesight). Happily, the
2010 edition has a larger format, approximately 135% greater than the
original. Finally, it has been bound (and bound well) in a handsome leather
and marble trim.
The value of this important period source has been enhanced by Stephen
Summerfield's editorial work. Summerfield sets the book and its compilers
in the correct historical context. He provides accurate information on
the various editions of the Pocket Gunner , -- including commentary on
their contents and sources -- which appeared from 1801 to 1827 (and its
competitors). He also provides a useful examination of the training of
RA officers at Woolwich and the training syllabus; biographies of the
Adye and Eliot families; a glossary of the abbreviations that appear in
the Pocket Gunner and, finally, a descriptive list of the sources used
by Eliot to compile the 1813 edition and some description of those sources.
Summerfield's efforts permit the reader to fully comprehend the extent
of professional knowledge in the
British artillery during the late 18th and 19th centuries; and it makes
this book one of the most valuable English-language sources on Napoleonic
artillery to appear in the last two decades.
I highly recommend this new edition of the 1813 Bombardier and Pocket
Gunner to all serious students of Napoleonic warfare.
Donald E. Graves
Review for the Napoleon Series.
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£65.00
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