Monday, 2 March 2026

Attacking Kis-Megyer Farm - 3 PM - 1809 campaign



3 PM. The weather is fair and visibility is 114”


Austrian Headquarters - Klenau’s headquarters remains at the farm and he is now in the frontline. To defend the farm he only has a worn battalion from IR 14, a fresh landwehr battalion and a relatively fresh gun battery. They are faced by overwhelming numbers and it is a tough decision whether to retire now and concede, or whether to hold out and just hope that Schwarzenberg arrives in time to save the situation. If the farm is abandoned, the rearguard will have failed and so reluctantly, Klenau tells his local commanders that they will fight on as help is close-by.





[note - A campaign turn is equal to 7 game turns on the table, so Klenau is gambling that his small force will be able to survive that long and that in the next campaign turn, Schwarzenberg will arrive as a reinforcement with his cavalry division - I must say, I am equally in two minds about what is best to do, but if I were to jump off the fence, I would have to agree with Klenau].


Orders - None



Above - This is what Masséna can see. (1) the farm is lightly defended. (2) Schwarzenberg’s 2nd Cavalry are approaching to reinforce the farm. (3) Messéna needs to control the road to Theya. (The original map Graphic copyright of Henry Hyde)


French Headquarters - Messéna has moved up onto the high ground at the church and can see the predicament that the Austrians face. His force is now galvanising as elements of 3rd and 4th Infantry Divisions, plus Lasalle’s cavalry converge on the battlefield. Understanding that Schwarzenberg is close to assisting Klenau, there is an urgency in getting on with the attack before the Austrians can be reinforced. 


While his massed ranks look impressive, the troops are worn as casualties and the breakdown of cohesion are being felt, with some battalions already considered ‘unsteady’.


Orders - attack the farm at once and secure the road to Thaya





Kis-Megyer Farm - As the French columns advance (above), the opening Austrian fire is not particularly effective. The French assault the walled pond, pushing the Austrians back into the farm, but on the flanks, the Landwehr and artillery give a fairly good account of themselves and those French units that were unsteady now falter.





For a short time, it becomes almost believable that Klenau will be able to hold out long enough for his reinforcement to arrive, but then the battalion holding the farm break and flee, while at the same time 8th Hussars make a reckless frontal charge at the Austrian gun battery.





The guns fail to stop the charge and the results are devastating. The gunners take 4 hits (a lot for these rules in one go) and their resulting flight turns into a rout.


The relatively fresh Austrian Landwehr are now isolated, with French cavalry freely roaming the area, so they retire in an orderly fashion towards the Schwarzenberg reinforcement.


The French have secured the farm, importantly, it is the last defensive obstacle that the Austrians could have used to give an effective rearguard. The cavalry move on ahead and secure the Thaya Road.


The reinforcement - Schwarzenberg has been making best speed with his cavalry division and he is confident that he will be at the farm in battle order by 4 PM. However, in making best speed, his attached infantry (a lone line infantry battalion from IR 36 and a Landwehr battalion) are lagging behind and they will not reach the farm before 5 PM.


Summary - Messéna has decided to attack the farm at once, before the Austrians can be reinforced and he successfully captures it and controls the road leading north, with the defenders fleeing.


Decisions, Decisions!


4 PM. The weather is fair and visibility is 90” (still easily a full 6’ table length is visible).


Overview and conclusion - The last couple of hours have been a race to ensure the control of Kis-Megyer Farm and the road to Thaya - a race that that the French have won …… just!


Schwarzenberg’s cavalry could now attack, but without their infantry they would meet overwhelming numbers and they would not physically be able to take and hold the farm. To wait for the infantry to catch up would give the French an additional hour to fortify their position and strengthen their control of the road.


Even then, it is not particularly likely that the Austrian attack would be strong enough to wrest control from the French.


Had the Austrian infantry been with Schwarzenberg in time for an attack this hour (4 PM), I would likely have diced for that eventuality, with a slight weighting of the dice towards attack to reflect the aggressive nature of the cavalry commander. 


However as it stands the odds for an Austrian success are not good and I feel that self preservation of his force would now be upper-most in Schwarzenberg’s mind. With that said, the campaign will conclude.


Schwarzenberg cannot use the Thaya road itself to escape, as it is French controlled, so he will start to move north, cross-country making best speed. If the French were in a better state than they are now, there would be a very active pursuit and most of the Austrian rearguard would be ‘mopped’ up, with a high level of surrender likely.


But as it is, the French Corps is in no fit state to pursue and so that leads us to the question of victory and to the success or otherwise of Klenau’s rearguard action.


Casualties - The French suffered 1500 losses. The Austrians 950. There is a very clear disparity in the favour of the Austrians.


Time - The Austrian objective for the rearguard was to delay the French pursuit by a day, to allow the bulk of the Austrian army to escape. However, by 4 PM they have lost the field and their cohesion. On the face of it, this would appear to be in favour of the French, but due to losses in men and cohesion, the French were in no state to pursue, so they cannot take advantage of their victory on the battlefield.


Tactical Decisions (Austrian) - Short of troops from the outset, Klenau probably made a good stab at defending all three river crossings, but he should have ordered Schwarzenberg’s 2nd Cavalry Division to leave the slopes and fall back on the ford, earlier than he did. Also posting Infantry Regiment 36 to the slopes to support the cavalry was misjudged and that unit would have been better kept as a reserve immediately behind the village. Klenau’s biggest headache was having fixed his deployment and being without a reserve, he was hostage to whatever the French either chose to do or were successful at doing.


Tactical Decisions (French) - throughout the day, Masséna found it easier to get orders to the troops that needed them, by being where he needed to be at the time and using high ground to his advantage. His most serious error was in rushing at everything and relying heavily on the infantry columns for doing that and as a result his formations suffered grievous losses as they engaged determined Austrians, which left his forces increasingly brittle and subject to routing. His advantage in artillery was never really exploited, as there was insufficient artillery preparation or support for the major attacks.


While his infantry suffered heavily, Lasalle’s cavalry performed superbly from their action at the lower ford to securing the area at the farm and ensuring the road to Thaya was controlled. His decision to push against all three river crossings did stretch the Austrians, but one wonders whether the attacks amongst the vineyards below the village and against the lower bridge were necessary, as a successful attack against the village would surely have unhinged the Austrian defence in those places and allowed the French to cross the bridge at the village in greater numbers earlier. As it was, once he captured the lower bridge, Leguay’s Brigade from Molitor’s 3rd  Division was effectively out of the fight for the rest of the day as it would take them too long to reach the church / farm.


Fortunes of war - At the lower bridge, Froon (Austrian) was routed and so later, the Austrians defending  at the church / farm were denied those troops. There was a fairly generous chance (33% twice) that they might return to the campaign and reinforce the church or farm, but the dice said no!


The village fell to the French rather faster than anticipated (by me!). That second assault took the place by storm! (Lucky / unlucky dice). It then became suddenly obvious, just how weak the Austrian centre was and that the other Austrian troops were now in the wrong place (on the slopes).


The random activation system in the Campaign Movement Phase was particularly important in the 1 PM turn when it gave the Austrian the first activation and they promptly moved their artillery up to the church, before Lasalle’s cavalry could pin it down. That one act meant that the fight at the church was not over in a single hour, but rather (just) ran over into a second hour and gave Klenau at Kis-Megyer Farm an increased …. but ultimately false sense of hope. 


The charge by 8th Hussars against the Austrian artillery at the farm, was bold, reckless, ill-advised and amazingly successful. Had the artillery repelled the hussars (perhaps with equally heavy loss!), then there was the prospect that the artillery could have kept the French back long enough for Schwarzenberg to arrive and join a determined defence.  





So who won! - Judging from all that is said above, both sides might claim they won! The whole point of the campaign was for Klenau’s VI Corps to act as a rearguard and prevent the French from a pursuit of the main Austrian army. Klenau might say that in effect that was done - Messéna was left in no fit state to pursue and had suffered very heavy casualties ….. but to get to this point, Klenau had pretty much lost VI Corps and surely that is not the sort of thing that will get him any medals! 


A narrow view takes me towards a draw, but you just have to jump off the fence sometimes and I think we shall say that Messéna unhinged the Austrian defence and practically destroyed VI Corps, giving him the edge in any claims of winning :-)


Campaign system - The campaign as presented in Henry Hyde’s book, worked out really well. The dynamic of three crossings divided our small area into three distinct area for action and each was telling a story that contributed to the whole. I modified the stated movement rates to make things a bit easier and brought orders and order delay to bring a discipline of movement.


The idea of using ordinary playing cards to manage the order of activation during the Campaign Moves Phase, comes from the book, as does the weather determination - which came very close to light rain (and then heavy rain), but the die rolls kept it at ‘fair weather’ throughout.


Thumbs up for the campaign, I will definitely be doing this again.


Rules - Well, I used my own. I am very familiar with them and they mostly work. One thing that I like is that hits are accrued and the more hits, the less capable the unit becomes and more susceptible to routing. This worked well for the campaign as it shows formations tiring and losing cohesion. The one area that always seemed okay in a throw down game, but I think came to plague this campaign (or the French anyway) is that in close combat, the target unit takes a test, if they pass, they make a defensive fire at short range …. which is 4 dice. What was repeatedly happening was that French columns were getting hammered and thrown back, taking those high casualties that we see in the final analysis.


Now maybe this is fair as the French did not support the attacks with artillery or pre-charge fire, or spend more time in line firing, but never-the-less, it just sucked the colour out of the French day! So something to think about there …. Perhaps I should run a couple of the actions again, but with a commercial set of rules and see if the French casualty rate gets a more gentle handling while still using columns.


Finally - thank you Henry Hyde, your booklet has given me a few weeks of pleasure at and away from the gaming table. For something that I cobbled together and ran as a solo affair, it gave a really tight game. I was still unsure in the 3 PM turn whether to allow Schwarzenberg to counter-attack and had he had his infantry with him, I think I would have gone with that, such was the closeness in my mind of outcome - and that says much about a good playing experience to me.


Thanks to all those who have followed this over a number of posts - you have earned your Field Marshal’s Baton!


Resources;


The previous post covering the 1 PM turn. LINK

https://battlefieldswarriors.blogspot.com/2026/02/fighting-at-church-pursuit-of-vi-corps.html



My COMMANDERS site, which is another bit of webspace I use for snippet based stuff. LINK 


https://commanders.simdif.com/dear_diary.html


Saturday, 28 February 2026

A new blog on the block!


 I just want to give a quick nod to Steve W. of the old ‘Disgruntled Fusilier’ blog, as he has built himself a new blogging space called Der Wütende Dackel (The Angry Dachshund) ….. with a very eye catching header banner.

For starters he is putting a 10mm Napoleonic Eylau game up on the table using the Valour & Fortitude rules, there is also a previous post where he shares his Eylau scenario.

E-mail subscription is provided at the foot of the post. 

Good Luck Steve and welcome back to the blogosphere!

LINK

https://angrydackel.com/2026/02/28/the-winter-battle-valour-fortitude-1807/

Thursday, 26 February 2026

Fighting at the Church - Pursuit of VI Corps - 1 PM




1 PM. The weather is fine. Visibility is 152”


Austrian Headquarters - The battle is reaching a crisis point. Our ability to concentrate a final blocking force at the Kis-Megyer farm on the road to Thaya is slipping away. The fatigued infantry at the church are unlikely to withstand a serious assault, but if they can delay the French long enough for Schwarzenberg’s 2nd Cavalry Division to join Klenau at Kis-Megyer Farm, then the rearguard action may yet continue to block the French pursuit. 


Klenau notes that 2nd Cavalry Division has disengaged from the slopes and is moving towards the ford ….. everything depends upon the depleted IR 59 and IR 14 at the church - can they hold out!


Orders - None.


French Headquarters - From his position at the top of the slopes, Masséna can see everything unfolding and he is eager for the assault to begin at the church as soon as possible. Ledru’s Brigade is ready to assault and Lasalle’s cavalry is approaching from the south. The plan is to overwhelm the Austrians at the church as quickly as possible and to then  immediately move up to capture the Kis-Megyer Farm. 


3rd Infantry Division are now on the march, moving north from the lower bridge, but it is doubtful that they will arrive at Kis-Megyer Farm in time to make a useful contribution today … the assault will have to start without them!


Masséna also notes that Schwarzenberg is disengaging and moving towards the ford, which confirms in his mind that Klenau is preparing to pull the rearguard further back.


Orders - Marulaz, maintain a cautious pursuit of Schwarzenberg towards the ford and beyond.


[of note - Froon and his retreating units from the lower bridge have still not shown up. If they can  arrive at the Church or Farm in the next hour or so, they might tip the balance to the Austrian favour].





[of note - when this turns campaign map moves were done (above), the initial order of activation became important. The yellow flag to the top centre is 3rd Foot Artillery about to skirt the woods, they are a fresh gun battery that have been retreating from the action at lower bridge. The green flags to the far right are Lasalle’s cavalry. Will they catch the gun battery before it reaches the church! The top playing card is drawn …. It is a black suit (red for French) and the guns get to move first. This is potentially a fairly important moment in the campaign, as it is the difference between the guns being involved in a prepared defence at the church or not!].





The Church.

After their rough handling earlier at the village, the two Austrian infantry regiments now defending the church are ‘unsteady’ and so the arrival of the fresh gun battery is a most welcome addition to the defence. The French for their part, might easily brush the Austrians to one side if they were fresh …. but they are not and there is a real risk that Austrian muskets can do some serious harm. The situation and numbers look favourable to the French …. but if it goes the Austrian way, this will be a significant moment.





The saving grace for the French is that most of Lasalle’s cavalry division (above) has arrived and they are positioned to assail the Austrian flank.





Ladru, forms his infantry brigade into assault columns in front of the church, he plans to push IR 14, on the front slopes, aside and then assault the walled church.





The fighting is intense and both sides see battalions stream to the rear. 3rd Foot artillery turn to face the French cavalry threat on the flank and cause both 13th and 24th Chasseurs á Cheval to stall, while inflicting grievous harm on Lasalle’s horse artillery, but in the end the inevitable collapse of the Austrian position begins.


1st Battalion of IR 14 manages to disengage and fall back towards Kis-Megyer Farm, but 2nd Battalion is lost. As for IR 59 behind the church walls, 1st Battalion is sent reeling back behind the church and 2nd Battalion flee. 3rd Foot Artillery is forced to limber up and pull out. The problem for these last vestiges of the Austrian defence is that they are being pressed on three sides …. surrender is an increasing possibility at this point!


Summary - The French assault has resumed and the church has become the main focus of the battle. Both sides have taken heavy losses, but the Austrians are less able to absorb them and their defence starts to crumble. This is not a surprise, but with some infantry and the guns still operating behind the church, the Austrians are managing to delay French progress for longer than could have been hoped for.


2 PM. The weather is fine. Visibility is 138”


Austrian Headquarters - (now at Kis-Megyer Farm) The situation is desperate. Positions at the church are collapsing and there aren’t any fresh troops to feed into this fight. If the church falls, then it is likely that the French will reach Kis-Megyer Farm before Schwarzenberg does. The farm was to be our key final defensive position to hold back the French pursuit, but without infantry here, we cannot take advantage of this position.  Our hopes that somehow Froon might arrive, bringing the remnants of his regiment from the lower bridge, are fading and in all likelihood, he is has got caught up in a retreat eastwards.


Orders - none


French Headquarters - The fighting at the church continues. Molitor and Lasalle must press hard. We cannot afford to be distracted here and allow the enemy to build up any strength at Kis-Megyer Farm, as that is the last defensible terrain available to the rearguard.

 

Orders - none


Fighting continues at the church - remnants of 2nd battalion (IR 59) together with 3rd Foot Battery are trying to escape northwards towards Kis-Megyer Farm. Ledrum’s 1st battalion (37th Line Infantry Regiment) have managed to get to the northern tip of the church in an effort to prevent the Austrians escaping. The Austrian gun battery deploy a pair of guns and deliver canister at short range, driving 1st Battalion back and clearing the way for the gun battery to continue in its bid to escape, which it does, but Austrian 2nd Battalion (IR 59) are not so fortunate and continue to fight in place, until eventually they are forced to surrender.





The church is now fully in French hands and both infantry and cavalry re-order in preparation of the advance on the farm.





Action at the upper ford - Schwarzenberg has already managed to cross Göllersbach with his cavalry, but the infantry, which are lagging behind, are still to cross and Marulaz has caught up with them at the ford. The initial action is sharp and brief, with both sides making use of their artillery. 14th Chasseurs á Cheval break and flee, as do the Austrian 2nd Battalion from Kollowrat’s IR 36.





The French cavalry back off and are content to allow the Austrian infantry to scuttle back across the ford, while keeping them under cannon fire.





Summary - Without fresh reserves on hand, the brittleness of both sides is becoming increasingly apparent, making each contact a painful process of some units inevitably reaching their level of tolerance and losing heart for this fight. At the church, a hard fought two hour fight now has the French in control and their forces are concentrating there, ready to move against Kis-Megyer Farm.





At the Ford, Schwarzenberg has crossed the Göllersbach, but it is now becoming increasingly clear that he is still too far away from Kis-Megyer Farm, to be able to fortify it before the French reach it.


Resources;

The next campaign turn (2 PM) LINK


https://battlefieldswarriors.blogspot.com/2026/03/attacking-kis-megyer-farm-3-pm-1809.html


My other piece of webspace is called COMMANDERS, it has a variety of snippet based type pieces there. LINK

https://commanders.simdif.com/dear_diary.html



The previous campaign turns (12 noon) can be found here - LINK.


https://battlefieldswarriors.blogspot.com/2026/02/pursuit-of-vi-corps-12-noon.html