I had picked up this book because, having read Hasbrouck's Foreign Legions in the Spanish American Wars of Independence, I was excited to find something more up to date.
I should begin by stating that this book, like Hasbrouck's (for the most part), focuses on the wars in the northern part of South America, particularly around the Cordillera of Colombia and Venezuela, in the valley of the Magdalena and the vast plains of the Orinoco.
I feel like the two-volume work by Moises Rodriguez, Freedom's Mercenaries, is the definitive work in English on this subject, and the second volume is concerned with the war in the southern part of the continent. Unfortunately that work is difficult to find and can be very expensive.
That said, this entry is a fine addition to our libraries on this subject. It has always fascinated me that in the years after Waterloo the British were eager to volunteer their services across the world in these budding liberal movements.
There was a British Legion that fought in Spain during the Carliest Wars, and many British Philhellenes volunteered to fight in the Greek War of Independence. Lord Byron famously expired during the siege of Missolonghi.
This book goes some way in encapsulating the spirit of that era, a mysterious zeitgeist that perhaps was inspired by the defeat of Napoleon and the great hopes the British had for the new world that was to emerge from the ruins of war.
If so they were to be disappointed. Reading this book reminded me that I had meant to read Desmond Gregory's Brute New World, which I shall read next. The reason it did was because the British found that the both the Patriots and the Royalists were ruthless and callous, both sides held life to be very cheap.
British volunteers to Greece had a similarly shocking revelation, as recounted by William St. Clair in the work That Greece Might Still Be Free. In that book St. Clair notes that the British set sail for Greece believing in the old nobility and heroism of the Ancients, but found both the Turks and the Greeks to be brutally savage in their treatment for each other. St. Clair wryly notes that perhaps they were closer to the Ancients than the Victorians realized.
In much the same way the British who set sail for South America were led to believe that the Patriots were noble freedom fighters and the Royalists were tyrannical oppressors, representing the dead hand of Spain's inept rule. The reality was that the Patriots were just as inhuman and barbaric as anyone.
The atrocities never end in this book, there is an endless litany of raping, pillaging, massacring, executions (often for trivial reasons), and the like. The British and Irish who sailed to South America faced these horrors and more.
I was interested to find out that the countryside was much the same as when the Spanish first found it, and was surprised to find out that men were often killed by jaguars and crocodiles in the rainforests.
This pristine landscape, largely untouched and untamed, was considered to be of great beauty by some, but for others it was, understandably, a tropical nightmare. There was endless rain, though the men tried to keep spirits up by recalling that it had often rained before Wellington's battles, and said it was an omen for victory.
I felt that there were not enough maps in this book, which is a common deficiency in works of this nature. There are maps of many of the battles described (e.g. Boyaca, Calabozo), and some general maps of Colombia and Venezuela which gave the reader some anchor to fasten on to, but the narrative is all over the place.
The book describes the adventures of these men in various places and at various times, starting with the first arrivals and continuing on to Devereaux's Irish Legion which is described as the third wave of volunteers.
We also learn of the notorious Gregor MacGregor, and his cowardly conduct at Portobello and Rio Hacha. The latter was a particularly unfortunate place because it afterwards suffered incineration during the rebellion of the Irish Legion.
Hughes goes into very great detail about many individual volunteers, their origins, their lives before volunteering, when and where they were killed, their duels, their romances, their trials and tribulations.
This makes the work much more of a personal history rather than a military study. We often lose focus of the military operations and, especially, their relation to the wider conflict between Spain and her colonies.
Much is still said about this, but it it not very well-structured so it's in bits and pieces. We learn some scant information about the Cortes at Cadiz, the Cadiz Constitution, the reign of Ferdinand VII, the rebellion of Riego, and so forth, but without a stronger background on the era it would be difficult to place these events in their proper context.
As Hughes also warns, since this book is primarily dealing with the British and Irish, one has to be careful not to attribute too much to their influence. The South Americans won their independence primarily by their own exertions, though it is a shame that the British contribution has been largely forgotten, or even deliberately omitted by nationalist historians in Latin America.
I was greatly appreciative of the author's decision to include a section on dramatis personae, so that we might keep track of all of the characters dancing across our pages, and he does provide some interesting insights into the personalities of the Patriots and Royalists. He has high praise of Morillo, for example, and short shrift for Brion, who is considered a coward.
True to form I was sad that more wasn't touched upon Brion and the operations at sea, but as this was not a work on seapower it is not much to be regretted.
If one is looking for a general history on these wars, this book is not it. But if one is looking to examine the experiences and adventures of the British and Irish volunteers you cannot do better than to start here. Hughes succeeds in humanizing them and getting us to feel sympathy for them, at times he horrifies us with the savagery of the time, but we see that these men were like us. They fought for ideals, for money, for women, it is a very human and very personal story.