Talk:Battle of Stourbridge Heath

Page contents not supported in other languages.
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Report of the Battle

There is a report of the battle from a 1919 source but it is aonly accessible in Google books in snippet format

Things meanwhile were not going too well with Fox, as has been already stated, he had established a garrison in Stourton Castle, a post well situated to intercept any troops or convoy proceeding to Bridgnorth or passing to or from Wolverhampton to the South. Fox, possibly, as he seems to have been responsible for setting up the garrison here, seems to have been greatly impressed with the importance of the place as a Parliament post, as he wrote to Lord Denbigh on the 22nd March, 1644, from Edgbaston, pointing out the great advantages of Stourton Castle as a garrison from its situation and strength, and of the necessity of reinforcing the garrison. The Tinker was right. There is an entry in Dugdale's Diary under date 22nd March, 1644, that shows how necessary was the warning.[1]

The capture of Stourton is thus described in a letter among the Denbigh papers:— "This night —- brother to Fox ye Tinker which keeps a garrison of rebels in Edgbaston House com Warwick entered Stourton Castle with 200 men to plant a garrison there."[1]

The Royalist, Major Harvey, who held a command in the neighbourhood, seeing the great advantage the possession of Stourton gave the Parliament forces, pointed this out to Gerrard, the Governor of Worcester, and asked for help to enable him to take it. Somehow Fox heard of this, and wrote to Denbigh on 24 March, 1644, imploring him to send reinforcements. For some reason Denbigh did not do so, or at least Fox could get no satisfactory reply, and had to put up the best fight he could with such forces as he had. Hearing of Gerrard's advance, Fox determined to go out and meet him in the open, not waiting to be attacked in the Castle. Gerrard was unaware of Fox's sortie and it looked at first as if the bold tactics would be successful.The main road from Worcester to Stourbridge, outside Stourbridge on the Worcester side, crossed a large heath, known as Stourbridge Heath. It was then open ground well adapted for cavalry ; it is now enclosed. At the Stourbridge end of the Heath, it is crossed by the road from Stourbridge to Bridgnorth, which passes Stourton Castle.[2]

As Gerrard advanced from Kidderminster on reaching the Heath he found Fox with such men as he had, drawn up in in line of battle, waiting for him. Gerrard was taken by surprise, he had not expected anything of the sort. But Gerrard had learnt from Rupert the lesson when you are taken by surprise attack at once. Gerrard's fault had been great in not keeping a proper look out, but he redeemed it by, without hesitation, charging the Parliament force. Gerrard's force was much greater in number than Fox's, and when Fox's men saw a superior force charging down on them, however good they were on plundering excursions opposed to unarmed peasants, they could not stand a charge from a superior force of trained troops. Not waiting for Gerrard's men to reach them they broke and fled. According to the only sources which come from the Royalist According to the accounts of the fight, 'or rather the flight (it should be said the accounts all come from the Royalist side) Fox's men broke and fled, putting into practice the well-known advice:[3]

He who fights and runs away,
May live to fight another day.

The Royalist version of the fight is that the first to flee was the leader of the Parliament forces, whom they style "The Jovial Tinker,” and add as he left the field his example was followed "by all his worthy trayne." Gerrard pressed his charge home, driving the main body of his opponents into Stourton Castle, then bringing up his guns, opened fire on it.[3]

One of his shots pierced the outer door of the Castle, the hole is still shewn. But it did not stop there. The legend says, a girl was crossing the courtyard carrying a porringer, the ball knocked the porringer out of her hands and spilt the contents. What makes the story more credible than such tales usually are, is the fact that no attempt is now, or has ever been, made to shew the remains of the porringer, the bit that was knocked out of the girl's hand, or the mark in the courtyard made by the contents.[3]

Notwithstanding his defeat, the Castle did not at once surrender. Three of the officers, Col. Fox, Capt, Richard Turton and Capt. Thomas Hunt, wrote to Denbigh on the next day, 27th March, 1644, describing the previous day's fight, which they say was "an attempt to relieve Stourton Castle",and asking for reinforcements, "as it would be a great pity to lose such a place."[4]

Whether they go no reply of whether Gerrard would not wait, is not clear, all that is clear, is that on March 28th, 1644, Fox wrote to Denbigh, informing him that "Stourton Castle had been surrendered on honourable conditions."[4]

What the precise conditions were is not stated, but Fox does not seem to have thought he was in any way responsible for the loss, as on the 3lst March he writes to Denbigh respecting an exchange of prisoners.[4]

Fox seems to have become a little nervous of Rupert. On the 3rd April, 1644, he writes to Lord Denbigh "yesterday Prince Rupert kept his rendezvous at Shire Oakes and last night quartered at Hampton Brewood. His soldiers talk of ...".[4]

Notes

  1. ^ a b Reports 1919, p. 385.
  2. ^ Reports 1919, pp. 385–386.
  3. ^ a b c Reports 1919, p. 386.
  4. ^ a b c d Reports 1919, p. 387.

References

  • Reports and Papers of the Architectural and Archaeological Societies of the Counties of Lincoln and Northampton (Volume 35, Parts 1-2), 1919, pp. 385, 386, 387
  • Report of the Royal Commission on Historical Manuscripts, H.M. Stationery Office, 1874, p. 265 § 73 and 74

-- PBS (talk) 15:20, 25 August 2017 (UTC)[reply]