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Ross Mangles at Arrah |
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Born in Calcutta, Ross
Mangles joined the Bengal Civil Service in 1853 and served as Assistant
Magistrate at Patna until 1857, and after the Arrah action as Magistrate,
Chunparun District, North Behar. He is one of only five civilians to be
awarded the Victoria Cross. The siege of Arrah, though
on a small scale, is one of the great actions of the
Indian Mutiny and this
tiny garrison managed to hold out and inflict severe casualties on the
vastly superior number of rebels, until finally relieved on the 2 August
1857. Strangely, however, there were no awards for this heroic defence but
two well deserved Crosses were given for actions during a poorly managed and
finally disastrous relief attempt on the 29-30 July 1857.
It was the recommendation by
Sir James Outram for the
award Victoria Crosses for two civilians,
Mr. William McDonell and Ross
Mangles, both of the
Bengal Civil Service, which was rejected until the
Governor-General, Lord Canning, had made emphatic representations to London
that led to the Royal Warrant of 10 August 1858 allowing awards to
civilians.
His citation from
The
London Gazette (issue 22283 of 8 July 1859) reads:
"Mr Mangles volunteered and served
with the Force, consisting of detachments of Her Majesty's 10th and 37th
Regiments, and some Native Troops, despatched to the relief of Arrah, in
July 1857, under the Command of Captain Dunbar of the 10th Regiment. The Force fell into an Ambuscade on
the night of the 29th of July 1857, and during the retreat on the next
morning, Mr Mangles, with signal gallantry and generous self-devotion, and
notwithstanding that he himself had been previously wounded, carried for
several miles out of action a wounded soldier of Her Majesty's 37th
Regiment, after binding up his wounds under a murderous fire, which killed
or wounded almost the whole detachment; and he bore him in safety to the
boats."
Ross Mangles
was on sick leave in England from September 1858 to January 1860 and during
this period was able to attend Windsor Castle to be invested with his
Victoria Cross by Queen Victoria on 4 January 1860.
He retired from the Indian Civil Service in 1883 and
returned to England. Ross Mangles died on the 28 February
1905 in Pirbright, Surrey, and was buried in Brookwood Cemetery. His
Victoria Cross is displayed at the
National Army Museum
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In May 2006, the
Brookwood Cemetery Society arranged for
Pankhurst Graphic Masonry to restore the cross so that it
base was set upright. The inscription panels were also cleaned. Following
the completion of this stage, the Society's small restoration group tidied
the grave plot to reveal the decorative cast iron surround. The grave space
was cleared, geotextile sheet was laid, and the area partly filled with
gravel. Finally
the cast iron surround was cleaned and
repainted. Following this repaint, the grave space was finished off with
more gravel.
We are left with a striking memorial
commemorating a brave civilian who lived locally. The restoration was
completed during the 150th anniversary year of the Victoria Cross. |
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