|
The
Experience of Lieutenant C.H. Mecham - Mutiny
at Lucknow, May 1857
While
the 7th Oudh Irregular was at Lucknow a large section of the
regiment Mutinied. This was repeated in many regiments throughout
the Bengal army. On 30th April 1857 the men started complaining
about using the new cartridge which involved biting greased paper.
Rumours had spread about it's being unclean. Lieutenant Mecham
remonstrated with them and initially they were placated. But on the
1st May the sergeant-major reported that the recruits were refusing
to bite the cartridges or even handle them. The whole squad of 30
men were confined to the quarter-guard. The remaining soldiers were
dismissed but hung around in groups. The native officers were
reluctant to get involved but the Havildar-Major was loyal and
reported that the older sepoys had taunted the recruits about loss
of caste.
By
3rd May the men were threatening to shoot officers who forced them
to use the cartridge. Brigadier Gray tried talking to the men but
the situation was still bad. At one point, Mecham was threatened by
mutineers but kept a cool head, "It is true that you may kill
me but what good will my death do to you? You will not ultimately
prevail. Another adjutant will take my place and you will be
subjected to the same treatment you receive from me." He
remained unhurt.
Eventually
Sir Henry Lawrence intervened with a British force of 32nd Foot and
a battery of guns, also 3 native regiments and 2 native cavalry
regiments. The 7th Oudh were paraded and ordered to lay down their
arms. Some tried to run away but were caught. They arrested 57
ringleaders and the native officers were dismissed. There were 200
men allowed to remain armed. Of these men, a company was sent to
quieten disturbances at Malhiabad fourteen miles away. They were
under the command of Mecham and Captain Weston. They also had 40
men, with native officers, of a loyal Irregular cavalry unit.
On
the march to Malhiabad they were surrounded by about 3,000 angry
Muslim men and had to make a run for it. When they arrived the place
was in uproar and they had to use Weston's skills as a linguist to
calm the situation. He also knew many of their leaders and was able
to reason with them. They could not trust the men of their own
regiment but were reliant on the cavalry to keep order. One of the
Risalders of the cavalry had gone into the town to find out how
things stood but came galloping back with a warning that an attack
was imminent. They took up defensive positions in a mosque and
waited while a huge force of men surrounded the place, beating drums
and shouting. But then, after a few hours they dispersed.
All
was quiet for a few days until news came from Sir Henry Lawrence
that mutiny had broken out in various other cantonments and that
they were to return as fast as possible to Lucknow. At the same time
news of another attack came in so they struck camp and took a
circuitous route to avoid the approaching enemy. They were fired on
from every village they passed and had to remain in a skirmishing
formation most of the way. They did not rest until they reached
Lucknow at 4am on 31st May, unable to believe that they were still
alive. Their men had stayed loyal, although they said that if, on
their return they found that the regiment had mutinied, they would
follow.
One
of the focal points of the Indian Mutiny was the siege of the
Residency at Lucknow. Lieutenant Mecham was one of the besieged
British officers who survived. He wrote of his experiences in his
book published in 1858. One particularly memorable incident occurred
on 18th August when a mine blew up throwing him into the air and
killing 7 members of a corps of drums.
It
happened at dawn while Mecham and Captain Orr were with the
sentries. They were on top of an out-house on the south-west corner
of Sikh Square when one of the sentries called "Mine,
sir!" They were blown into the air. Mecham described it thus:
'I can assure my readers that an involuntary ascent of some twenty
or thirty feet in the form of a spread eagle is by no means an
agreeable sensation.'
One
of the drummers, Band-Sergeant Curtain of the 41st NI was blown
outside the defences and decapitated by the rebels. Six other
drummers were buried in rubble and remained there. A breach was made
in the wall by the explosion but the enemy failed to get through.
Although Mecham was badly bruised he suffered no serious injury.
|