Saturday, March 29

"Firing into the Brown" #75 - old prints, schools, and stuff...

"So Carnehan weeds out the pick of his men, and sets the two of the Army to show them drill and at the end of two weeks the men can manoeuvre about as well as Volunteers. So he marches with the Chief to a great big plain on the top of a mountain, and the Chiefs men rushes into a village and takes it; we three Martinis firing into the brown of the enemy".

Kipling "The Man Who Would Be King"

Time for another update..  appreciate it's light on wargame nonsense, but hey, the boat is in the final throws of being got ready for launch this weekend..

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Found this while doing some browsing on something else...  brilliant stuff...

Print from 1765 showing a slightly stylised view of (some of) the fortifications around Portsmouth at that time - of main interest is Kings Bastion (labelled #7) is in the center just to the right of the road and the Saluting Battery (#6) as they allow you to orientate the view..  the building left is Southsea Castle

...and this is where they are on that excellent 1860 map..

...which tells us that the road we can see in the print is the current sea front road..  fascinating stuff.. well to me anyway...   😀

Print orientation - Southsea Castle (ringed red) on your left looking in the direction of the arrow..  many (all) of the landward fortifications are long gone (1870's) but Kings Bastion is still there (ringed yellow) and Long Curtain Wall is also still there (green line) .. The Saluting Battery is also still there - must get down and get some pictures..

Better view following.. the Saluting Battery is marked Battery Wall..  we shall be revisiting this area in the future as it is also near one of the gate locations..



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I blame Ben for this minor rabbit hole..  😁

In a comment last week he had cause to assume my school dated back to the same time as the Bastions the houses were named after, and while that was not the case, it did give me pause for thought - exactly how old was my old school building?!

Turns out - it's a 100 years old this year..

It started off as Hilsea College in various locations local to the building I attended..

  • 1915 In London Road, west
  • 1917  London Road, south of Green Posts (a pub)
  • 1918-1928 London Road
  • 1928 London Road - new college buildings (I think this was the building I eventually went to secondary school in)
  • 1928/9 Expanded with two new wings, one girls, one boys
  • 26 Jul 1930 New wings opened by Colonel Sir William Dupree 
  • 1934-1940 London Road, between Northwood & Elmwood Roads
    • School evacuated to Leigh Park House (location is North of the island but Portsmouth was a major Luftwaffe target because of the dockyard and there was a lot of collateral damage in the city)
    • During the war Hilsea Barracks and the school were taken over for the use of US troops. These were quartermasters and other supply troops, who supported the many US forces that were based in Hampshire.(Interesting story - at some point in time during my schooling I had a need to go into the attic space - no idea why - but I distinctly remember there being beds up there..  at the time I just assumed that maybe the school had been boarding once..  it wasn't, but those may well have been the beds the GI's had been using..)
  • 1944  Hilsea College and Grounds owner sold to the City Council for use as Junior Technical College
  • 1955 Building School & Technical Schools merged 
  • 1958 Amalgamated with Portsmouth Building School
  • 1960-1973 Education Committee, Portsmouth Technical High School, London Road (which was the school I attended) - the Headmaster was T McNeil from 1960-1973 (he'd also been headmaster of the Building School since '48 so had a combined career of 25 years in charge of sweaty pre-pubescent boys - the bloke deserved a medal! 😊)
  • 1976 City of Portsmouth Secondary Boys - Headmaster M Pipes 1973/5 or 6 and 1987/9 (which was my school post the move to Comprehensive)
  • 2008 Plans for complete rebuild Renamed Trafalgar School (we're nothing if not traditional in Pompey)
  • Sep 2015 Planned to take in girls as well (outrageous.. and 50 years too late..😏)
...the old alma mater..  the bow window top left was the prefects room - on Tuesday lunchtimes we were all in there waiting for the new top 20 on Radio 1.. ahhh Kate.. note also the attic windows - that was where I saw the beds

From the Portsmouth local history site (reference Schools)..

Cheers Ben ..  enjoyed that.. 😀

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 Laters, as the young people are want to say...

Saturday, March 22

"Firing into the Brown" #74 - Beeston's, Bourbonnais and stuff...

"So Carnehan weeds out the pick of his men, and sets the two of the Army to show them drill and at the end of two weeks the men can manoeuvre about as well as Volunteers. So he marches with the Chief to a great big plain on the top of a mountain, and the Chiefs men rushes into a village and takes it; we three Martinis firing into the brown of the enemy".

Kipling "The Man Who Would Be King"

Time for another update..
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Another in the occasional "regiments of renown" series featuring the histories of various regiments painted in haste at the beginning of a project but which were not documented here for posterity.. so we come to French infantry regiment "Bourbonnais", part of my War of the Spanish Succession collection.. 

There is a very (very) good potted history of this regiment on the Kronoskaf WSS site (link below) so there's little point in me repeating the good work completed there, but by way of a framework to hang some 'rabbit holes' on (😏), the regiment was first created in 1584 from the old Bandes* de Montferrat. On 6 March 1597, it became part of the regular French Army and apart from a 10 year period at the start of the 1600's (when Louis XIII instigated a massive reorganisation of the French army) has been a permanent regiment of the French Army to this day.

Louis de Brichanteau, Marquis de
Nangis (painter unknown)

The regiment is included in those six regiments who, by their ancestry and lineage and therefore ranking, were considered to be the "Petit Vieux" (the 'little olds') giving them the privilege of not being disbanded at the end of any war, and making them second only to those four regiments in Les Vieux Corps (Navarre, Picardie, Piedmont and Champagne). 

By the time of the War of the Spanish Succession, the regiment counted three battalions, but at Blenheim the regiment was two battalions strong, numbering about a 1000 men, and were in Nangis' brigade (who was also their Colonel), entrenched in and around the central village of Oberglau with fourteen (!) other regiments under the overall command of Lieutenant General Jean-Jules-Armand Colbert, Marquis de Blainville (who was to die during the battle). 

By all accounts they fought stubbornly and resisted Allied attacks under Prince Holstein-Beck, which at the end of the battle allowed the remnants of Tallard's Corps to retire in an orderly fashion - they then retreated in column per battalion and formed the rearguard of the defeated army.

During the War of the Spanish Succession, the regiment was commanded by:

  • from 15 January 1700 by Louis de Brichanteau, Marquis de Nangis - he lived to a ripe old age and their are some fascinating snippets about him on this blog [clicky] - he shared a mistress (not at the same time! 😁) with a colonel of regiment Navarre we have already met.. "...Nangis, who was more plausibly reported to have been the lover of the duchesse de Bourgogne (hence of a woman in line to become queen of France), served heroically in his youth, though he would live to become a lackluster (sic) marshal of France. In his prime, however, his amorous exploits were rivaled (sic) only by his exploits on the field of battle...." (from Ladurie & Fitou, "Saint Simon and the Court of Louis XIV")
  • from 1 January 1709 till 1 July 1727: Louis-Antoine de Gramont, Comte de Lesparre - I reckon he was about 20 when he got the Colonelcy and I would think that his might well have been due to the influence of  his much better known father (pictured following) who by that time was a Marshal of France (and was wounded at Malplaquet in 1709) ..  Louis-Antoine (the younger) got his colonelcy the same year..  he was to later die at Fontenoy

Undated portrait of Antoine de Gramont (the elder)

*The Bandes (there were many) by the way were the first permanent, paid, infantry units in the service of France, and were modelled on the organisation of the Swiss units (mercenaries in French pay). You may remember (who would? 😏) that when I did the unit history for Navarre, they also originated from one of the old Bandes.


These are Dixon's and painted and based my me some time pre-2006 - the flag is from the old Warflag.com site which is still - regrettably - down...

Other reading:

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A little rabbit hole presented itself.. 

I was having another look at that 1860 map of the Portsmouth fortifications and happened to notice this in the top corner..  Beeston's Bastion...  now Steve the Wargame is of an ancient enough age that the secondary school he went to, whilst not private in any way, still had a house system, and my school had four houses of which the sorting hat put me in Beeston's (where we then had the privilege of wearing a yellow button badge on our blazer lapels).

The houses (of which there were four) were named after notable bastions in the old city defences, so there was Beeston's, then Guy's, King's and I think Pembroke's (not so sure on this last one but I do remember that the other three houses wore red, green and blue badges) but either way I've often wondered who or what said Beeston was.. this seemed like an opportunity to find out!

My reading would indicate that by all accounts the Beeston's were big cheeses in Portsmouth back in the day (and we're talking Queen Elizabeth the First era). Under a grant from the Corporation in 1574, Thomas Beeston became proprietor of the Sea Mills (a flour mill based on a tidal creek or basin between Portsmouth and the Dockyard), he also constructed a new carriage bridge near it connecting the two locations, he was Mayor in 1591, and in future years both his son and grandson filled the same office, other later descendants were Burgesses of the town.

In 1709, the land the mill was standing on was taken under an Act of Parliament to improve the fortifications, Thomas Beeston (the family had a habit of naming the oldest son Thomas, so he was either the third or fourth generation of the first one.. 😏) was still the proprietor, and sold the mill and the Mill pond. 

It was later renamed King's Mill, by the way, and it produced flour for the Victualling Commissioners of the Royal Navy - you can see it on the map just north of the bastion, it in turn was protected by it's own bastion - the Mill Dam Bastion. Which in itself represents another little rabbit hole, as Milldam Barracks was built on the reconfigured Mill Pond - and the building still exists...🤔

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 Laters, as the young people are want to say...

Saturday, March 15

"Firing into the Brown" #73 - Huey's and gates and stuff...

"So Carnehan weeds out the pick of his men, and sets the two of the Army to show them drill and at the end of two weeks the men can manoeuvre about as well as Volunteers. So he marches with the Chief to a great big plain on the top of a mountain, and the Chiefs men rushes into a village and takes it; we three Martinis firing into the brown of the enemy".

Kipling "The Man Who Would Be King"

Time for another update..
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Was there ever a sight that more represented the conflict in Vietnam than massed Huey's?? I'm an old hippy*  but still remain gob smacked at the sheer impact of such sights as this of a sky full of them in support of ground troops..

Photo Credit: The Associated Press

..a lot of people forget that the Australians also did their bit in Vietnam..  and got their air lifts as well.. 

"1965-07-14. Troops of 1st battalion, the Royal Australian Regiment (1RAR), take up defensive positions after leaving United States Iroquois helicopters that carried them into Viet Cong infested country during operations north of Saigon. The helicopters air-lifted the Australians into action from the Bien Hoa air base".

"Air mobile" love this one.... straight out of Full Metal Jacket, Platoon or Hamburger Hill...😏

"Hueys prepare to pick up members of Company A, 5th Battalion, 7th Cavalry to airlift them to a reported enemy ammunition dump in Thang Binh province, 24 miles north of Chu Lai, Jan. 17, 1968".

Just astonished at the number of roles they were adapted to do..  gun ship, troop carrier, first aid, air ambulance, recue..  the list goes on..  they even fitted them with rockets for close ground support..

More than 16,000 of them built to date#.. 

"7,013 UH-1s served in Vietnam and of these 3,305 were destroyed. In total, 1,151 pilots were killed, along with 1,231 other crew members" (source Wiki).



If I was to embark upon another period or project - this would be the one..  only at skirmish level though..

* I'm not really.. I was about 5 years too late, but that was the time and music that I still most associated with as a spotty youth, so bear with.. 😁
# Amazingly, the Huey still remains in production!

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Bit of a grey day when I visited, but I finally made it to the Landport Gate.. 😀

The gate is now part of the perimeter for one of the Royal Navy's sports grounds, but is actually owned by English Heritage..


Note the Crown above the gate - I have read elsewhere that this is all that remains of the previous gate that was demolished when this one was built to replace it.. 


Still imposing - but not as well looked after as I think it deserves..  I'm guessing those arches on the sidewalls are not fireplaces, but passing points - somewhere for pedestrians to stand when a wagon or wide load is going through - or maybe sentry positions? The smaller arches at the back are doorways, and now open to the outside of the structure but I'm guessing that they may originally have led to guard rooms perhaps..


Better view of one of the doorways..




Side view of the gate - following - excuse the exercise mattresses! Guessing the damage you see is from where additional building works that were originally on the side of the gates was removed..  you can see the outside of that side opening I mentioned above


..originally the whole thing would have been much wider - the "wings" on this gate have been removed - if you compare it with this picture, following, you can see how much of it has now gone..  the wings on either side look to have been the same size again as the central arch section.




... a bit of local news.. 😏

It pays to embiggen this one..  a "blackguard horse"..   😁

Lastly - for this gate - this is fascinating..  there's a bit of artistic imagination gone into this, but it looks remarkably accurate..

St. James's Gate next I think..  but all in good time..  😏

More interesting reading:

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 "Laters", as the young people are want to say... 

PS. All the freebies mentioned last week are still available - they go in the recycling if no takers..

Saturday, March 8

"Firing into the Brown" #72 - City gates , giveaways, and stuff..

"So Carnehan weeds out the pick of his men, and sets the two of the Army to show them drill and at the end of two weeks the men can manoeuvre about as well as Volunteers. So he marches with the Chief to a great big plain on the top of a mountain, and the Chiefs men rushes into a village and takes it; we three Martinis firing into the brown of the enemy".

Kipling "The Man Who Would Be King"

Time for another update..
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...and so a local history mini project starts...  😏

Back in the day Portsmouth (my local city), was far smaller than it is now..  so small, and important a site in fact, that they were able to surround it with a defensive wall. This was mostly to protect the dockyard supply depots, ammunition stores, and the inhabitants of the city a lot of whom who would have either worked in, or supported, the dockyard. To give access to the city there were four ornate gateways - so I thought it might be fun to go and visit them in turn.. 

First though some preamble....

1797 Ordnance Survey map - the walls were well developed and encompassed both city and dockyard in almost a single uninterrupted length by this point in time..

The defences of the city went through multiple stages of development (of course 😏) - and given this is about the city gates, I have focussed purely on the city defences, rather than work also done to defend the dockyard..

  • Earthen ramparts protecting the land side of the port were first built in the 14th century
  • These were strengthened by Henry VIII in the 16th century as part of a general improvement in the area (Southsea Castle was built about the same time, and was famously where he was supposed to have been when Mary Rose sank) - by 1542, Portsmouth was surrounded by defensive ramparts and towers built from earth and wood.
  • Improvements continued through Elizabeth's reign with many of the towers being converted to stone, and in some cases becoming full on bastions
  • By far the most significant update to the fortifications was done during the 17th Century though, when in 1665, Charles II ordered Bernard de Gomme to begin the reconstruction of Portsmouth's fortifications. I think from my reading, De Gomme was a military engineer on a par with with the (probably) better known Vauban. Among many other things
    • The city walls were rebuilt.
    • A (second) moat was also added with a new defensive line being constructed between the two moats.
    • A ravelin was added at Landport where the London road entered the city (see map below).
  • About 1730 the double moat system used around Portsmouth was abandoned with the outer moat being filled in - the sheer number of men required to defend it was too much
  • In the 18th century, as Portsea continued to expand and grow around the dockyard a further series of ramparts and moats were constructed to protect this new settlement in the 1770s - the 1797 Ordnance survey above gives a view of the fortifications at the time .
...and that was largely it - all future work was then focussed on protecting the whole island rather than this very specific area.. it's kind of interesting that in much the same way as the Hilsea Lines were outdated before they were even built, the same eventually happened to these walls - as artillery range improved, landward protective defences for a location needed to move out and out.. the walls simply became irrelevant, and with the continued growth of the city would have been an impediment to any expansion - the majority of the town walls were demolished in the 1870's.. 

So...  having to start somewhere I thought I'd start with the Landport Gate - why start with the Landport Gate??  Well mainly because it's the only one of the four gates in the walls of Old Portsmouth to survive in its original position and is/was considered to be the main gate. 

So starting with a the following, this is a copy of de Gomme's map of 1668, which shows the huge difference a 100+ years has made when compared with the 1797 map above. Note that by then the city and the dockyard are a single entity, whereas at the time de Gomme was working, the dockyard was still very much separate ..  I've ringed the Landport ravelin mentioned above as that's our starting point.. I've also coloured water so that moats and water levels are more obvious..

In 1760 it was decided that for defensive purposes it made more sense to have the this gate in the centre of the northern ramparts rather than were it was (you'll note in de Gomme's map that the ravelin is not central to that stretch of wall, and the military mind was ever ordered.. 😏) so the old gate at the end of the High Street was dispensed with, and the Landport Gate constructed half way between Town Mount Bastion and Guy's Bastion (the two bastions at either end of the wall). 

The design of the gate has been attributed to Nicholas Hawksmoor, though it was constructed after his death. It features a simple stone arch built of Portland stone with octagonal turret above. It would originally have been flanked by ramparts, and had a drawbridge which led to the Landport Ravelin, from which a smaller drawbridge would lead to solid ground (a lot of the area outside the old city was marsh back then) and to what was then known as the London Road.

Landport Gate (outer view, so front face) taken c1870 - note ramparts/moat are still in place - note also Landport Town Mount (cheers Jim! 😁) ravelin in the left foreground and the bridge leading from it..

One last map - this one dates from 1860 and shows the access to the London Road via the ravelin..


Sorry - I lied - I do like a map 😁. This one dates from 1797 and also shows the drawbridges/bridges ..


Time for a visit to the actual site I think!

Other reading:

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Been having a clear out - can anyone use these??  Yours for the price of postage - either leave a comment (I won't publish), or use the 'contact me' button over on the side to contact me with an email address..  after two weeks with no takers they head for the recycle bin..  😁

First off a couple of Arquebusiers.. these date from 2010

Journal of the Pike and Shot Society

Next - some Solo Wargamers Association Journals - published quarterly:

  • Lone Warrior June/Sep/Dec 1998
  • Lone Warrior 1999 - Mar/June/Sep/Dec
  • Lone Warrior 2000 - all four
  • Lone Warrior 2001 - all four
  • Lone Warrior 2002 - all four
  • Lone Warrior 2003 - all four
  • Lone Warrior 2004 - all four
  • Lone Warrior - Mar 2005

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       "Laters", as the young people are want to say...

      Saturday, March 1

      "Jailbreak!" .. the game

      Time for another update..  a game report as promised..

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      [Move 1] As the sun slowly rose over the horizon, and a new day burned its way into the retinas, at the  far end of town Andy and Charlie move stealthily towards the window on the side of the jail closest to them. At the other end of town Dave, Eddie and Frank move into cover of a dune between them and the Assay Office and General Store. 

      In the jail, breakfast over and coffee in hand, the Sheriff spots Andy and Charlie's stealthy approach, puts his coffee down and draws his gun but holds his fire ["Law dog" trait - can't fire until fired upon].

      [Move 2]  It soon becomes clear that they really aren't up to any good as they move rapidly to the front and side windows of the jail, smash the glass, and open fire at the Sheriff inside the jail hitting him in the arm [happily he can ignore the first wound, and then passes his toughness (morale) test]. 

      Over in the hotel, Hank hears the shooting, and nervously comes out on to the balcony to see what's going on. Across the way he sees the Jones Gang members behind the dune, but then sees Charlie below and to his left at the front of the jail, and as he's closer, opens fire but misses. 

      In the jail the Sherriff his iron cleared, returns fire hitting Charlie in the leg [Charlie then failed his toughness test and went "lily livered" (or Shaken)]. 

      Eddie and Frank [Jones Gang] break cover and run across the street towards the Assay office, they've seen Gus hovering in the window with a shotgun and recognise the threat - Gus sees them coming and gives them both barrels hitting with both shots but, amazingly, doing them no harm [Gus threw two 7's on the relevant casualty table which is a non-wounding hit - on the plus side for Gus, both Eddie and Frank then failed their toughness tests - perhaps not surprisingly - and also became "Lily livered"/Shaken - so that means that at this point all three members of the Gang were shaken]

      [Move 3]  Frank gets the draw and fires at Gus [at reduced effect and also with cover benefits for Gus] hitting him in the leg [and causing Gus  to become shaken], but Dave, who also crosses the street, takes a shot at Hank on the balcony hitting him - Hank drops unconscious [Dave threw a serious wound on the relevant table]! The Jones Gang boys have reason to be happy..

      At the jail meanwhile, Andy continues to fire at the Sherriff, hitting him but only grazing him [the Sherriff then passes his toughness test] but the Sherriff turns, and fires back hitting Andy! Andy looks shaken and drops out of sight [failed his Toughness test] 

      In the street Eddy shakes himself down [successful toughness test and becomes unshaken] and races towards the Assay office to give Frank some support. He kicks the door open to get a look in the room, where Gus takes one look at him and runs across the room and dives out of the side window into the alley between the office and the hotel! 

      ...Gus takes one look, runs across the room and dives out of the side window into the alley..

      Move 4 - While Hank remains unconscious on the balcony, at the Jail Andy has finally managed to put his big boys pants on [passed his toughness test], ducks up, fires at the Sherriff and is rewarded with cries of pain in the Jail.. he's hit him! [Twice in fact, in the gut and chest, and not surprisingly perhaps the Sherriff also fails his toughness test and becomes shaken] 

      Bart shouts out to Andy and Charlie that "the Sherriff is scared"! 

      Out in the street, angry that their prey may get rescued from under their feet, Dave fires twice at Charlie but only grazes him. [Charlie then passes his tough test]Charlies shrugs it off, advances to the jail door and kicks it open. 

      Over at the Assay office Eddie has seen Gus dive out of the side window, but runs to the corner of the building and fires off a shot down the alley at Gus, he'd swear he'd hit him but Gus shows no ill effects and continues to run down the alley, turns behind the hotel, and holes up behind the jail..

      Frank meanwhile is nervous and runs for cover in the alley between the Assay Office and the General Store [he fails the toughness test again - he's still shaken from that failed shotgun hit!]

      In the jail, the Sherriff pulls himself together, it looks like this one is going to be to the death so he has no choice but to fight back and hope for the best. He fires at Charlie who is in the open door, scaring him witless [he fails his toughness test 😏] but only grazing him.

      Move 5 - On the balcony, Hank groggily hauls himself to his feet (he got an Ace as his activation card!) and fires at Charlie below, who is still outside the jail - unbelievably he hits him, and then watches him drop to the ground apparently unconscious! [two chest wounds will do that - I also diced for how many shots I'd allow Hank who had only just recovered from being unconscious - he rolled high, hence two shots] 

      With horror though he sees that the poetic justice is only momentary as Charlie gets straight back on to his feet [he had an Ace as well, just a lower suit than Hanks] and then shoots at the Sherriff hitting him in the leg [he passes his tough test] but then Charlies luck runs out - the Sherriff fires back ... killing him.

      In the Alley, Frank finally recovers, and runs up the street along the boardwalk in front of the Assay Office and the Hotel ending up near the corner of the hotel and the jail where he skids to a halt as he sees Charlie, clearly dead, lying there.. Eddie follows him also ending up in the alley between the Hotel and Jail. 

      Round the back of the jail Gus recovers his nerve, reloads his shotgun, and moves  towards the corner of the jail nearest where Andy is crouched at the window on the far side. Andy is almost out of ammo and seeing Charlie is down and done for, drops to the ground and reloads. In the street shots ring out as Dave peppers the balcony of the hotel where Hank is ducked down in cover.

      Move 6 - It's difficult to know what was going through Gus's mind as he stepped out from round the corner - normally a fairly nervous guy, but either way he did it, and with Andy in clear sight and no more than six feet away from him gave him a barrel from the shotgun [tussled with this one in my mind a bit as I was aware from the set up that his key driver is that he shouldn't put himself in harms way unnecessarily, but with Andy's wounds and a +2 on close range I assumed a hit would be odds on]

      He hit's him - but as the smoke clears can see Andy still standing there! [The phrase "chocolate teapot" is now joined in the lexicon of utterly useless things, by "Gus's shotgun" 😏] Andy is however looking very bloody scared [he failed the tough test]  but though shaken, fires at Gus hitting him in the chest.

      Elsewhere Eddie now runs out of the alley and into the jail, he grins as he sees Bart cowering at the back wall of the cell - he fires at the Sherriff hitting him in the leg [but who passes his tough test - with a toughness of 4 he can pass 6 times out of 10 - one tough hombre!] Then Frank runs in as well, and also fires but misses! The Sherriff knows he's living on borrowed time and fires desperately at them but misses - unheard of at that range! 

      On the balcony Hank and Dave exchange fire but while Hank's shots hit, Dave's miss, and with Dave out of ammo he runs to the boardwalk underneath the balcony.

      Move 7 - The lead's been flying and there are plenty of guns that need replenishing..

      In the jail the Sherriff is badly wounded and almost out of ammo - just two bullets, and he's a dead man..  "bugger this" quoth he, and snapping off a shot at Eddie, which only grazes him, he dives through the front window of the jail, on to the boardwalk out front and takes the best cover he can. 

      On the balcony Hank reloads. 

      Eddie, shaken up by the recent shot, does the same but having partially reloaded then climbs out of the window and into the alley between the jail and hotel.

      Dave also reloads, but in the jail Frank is ready, moves to the front door, leans out takes a bead on the Sherriff but misses! 

      Around the back of the Jail, Gus skedaddles [when tested he failed to recover his nerve] he'd done far more than he'd been expected to, to be fair, he runs down the back of the hotel, stopping just in time to avoid being shot by Dave who's at the end of the alley! 

      At the jail Andy is beginning to think that he might have had enough, Bart is no nearer being free, and Charlie is done for - he fires off a hasty shot at Frank who he can see through the window, and runs for cover away from the jail.

      Move 8 - In the jail Frank begins to hope that they might get away with this, moves to the window recently vacated by Andy, and fires at him in the brush across the way hitting him in the leg. 

      Meanwhile the Sherriff snaps off a shot at Dave along the length of boardwalk but misses, and then ducks into cover round the corner of the jail. On the veranda Hank leans over, sees Eddie in the alley and fires, hitting him in the chest. 

      Now reloaded, Dave moves to join Frank in the jail where he covers the front window. Behind the hotel Gus swallows deeply and recovers his nerve, moving slowly to the corner closest the jail he lets off his remaining barrel at Eddie who's hiding in the alley, hitting him in the arm - Eddie, outraged, returns fire killing Gus outright... [😕]

      .."time for the Jones boys to get out of there"..

      Move 9 - in the jail Frank opens the door of cage where Bart is now sobbing like a toddler and ties his hands together behind his back. 

      Out in the scrub, Andy reloads, it may not be over yet. 

      Hank, still on the balcony, again leans over and fires at Eddie in the alley, hitting him badly [in the arm and chest]

      The Sherriff, sheltered against the wall of the jail, reloads. 

      Dave moves to the window that looks out on to the alley between him and the hotel, leans out, and takes a snap shot at Hank hitting him in the arm - with a grunt of pain, Hank ducks back into cover [failed tough test].

      Move 10 - time for the Jones boys to get out of there..  the Sherriff eyes his options and makes a break for the livery yard across the street [I made an error here and forgot to factor in the damage to his leg and what effect it would have on his movement] taking cover behind the fence and some scrub on the corner nearest the jail. 

      Dave and Frank, with Bart in between them, duck down the alleyway between the jail and the hotel - time to get to their horses. 

      Andy runs round the rough ground and scrub to the back of the jail where he now has a clear line of sight on Dave and shoots, hitting him in the leg [he then fails his toughness test becoming shaken]. Hanks snaps off a couple of nervous shots at Frank doing nothing - he's now out of ammo.

      Move 11 - Frank moves to cover the front of the group and shoots at Andy but misses. Dave fires shakily, and manages to hit Andy who returns fire hitting him in the arm. 

      On the balcony, Hank reloads. 

      Across the street in the livery yard the Sherriff has a bit of a  quandary - he has targets in range, but one of them is Bart who is very close to both the Jones boys.. he shrugs and fires twice at Dave killing him outright.. [he's a bit of a Reacher! 😀]

      Move 12 - As sure as eggs are eggs, neither of the bad boys are going to get Bart away..  the Sherriff climbs through the fence so as to get a bead on Frank and fires but misses. 

      Andy and Frank, the writing on the wall, run for it, leaving the Sherriff and Hank to take charge of the still tied Bart - looks like the neck tie party will take place after all..

      Post match analysis:

      • First the damage:


      • made a few errors on rule application - Ruthless are very simple set of rules but there are a few nuances that need to be applied - movement for characters with leg wounds was one of them
      • a lot of shots were fired in the 12 moves, but as you can see a surprising number of them had no discernible effect - grazes, non-impacting hits, etc
      • the Sherriff is one tough mother! 😀

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       Laters, as the young people are want to say...