ALS to Rennell.
£400 · Offered by Maggs Bros Ltd
This letter was only discovered recently and do not appear in the posthumously published memoir Roddy Owen … (London, 1897) compiled by his sister. It was one of the last he wrote while serving in the Dongola Campaign which was part of the Anglo-Egyptian conquest of the Sudan. At this time he’d been “placed in command of the Alighat Arabs with orders to patrol the left flank. He started south from Ambigol, crossing the Desert to Sarras in three days, and arranging an elaborate system of patrols” (Bovill). The follow- ing three weeks were spent patrolling between Ambigol, Sarras and Akasheh. The letter was written not long after his promotion as he states that he’s no longer with the Camel Corps. Amid a description of his life on patrol, and the Arabs under his command, he adds that, “Gleichen had been called to Suakin just arrived here for a look at Akasheh before leaving …” (Bovill). Edward “Roddy” Owen combined a successful career in horse racing (he won the 1892 Grand National) with military action in the West African Jebu War. He saw action in Uganda during the Unyoro War, Chitral and the Afghan frontier, and finally Dongola. After Chitral, Owen travelled to Egypt. At this time Kitchener was “preparing the last stages of the advance which, two years later, brought him and the Regiment to Khartoum … In June, Owen was present at the Battle of Firkeh, where, after a daring night march, Kitchener’s Egyptian and Sudanese regiments won a complete victory over the Dervishes—an o
- Year: 1896
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