Battles
Honing Spruit
22 June 1900
After the fall of Pretoria on 5 June 1900, the western Canadians of the
2nd Battalion, Canadian Mounted
Rifles spent nearly a month guarding the railway line south of
Pretoria. The country around the station at Honing Spruit, about forty
kilometres north of Kroonstadt, was rolling prairie with a prominent
wooded kopje (small hill) about six kilometres
to the east. To prevent the Boers from approaching the station and
railway using the ground for cover, the Canadians instituted a system
of patrols and outposts. By day, they set up a series of four-man
defensive positions: one at either end of the kopje, and one each four
kilometres north and south of the station along the railway.
On 22 June, four men from Pincher Creek, in present-day Alberta,
Corporal Fred Morden, Acting Corporal Thomas Miles, Privates Robert
Kerr and Henry Miles (Thomas's brother), manned the southernmost post
on the railway. The first action occurred as a patrol of eight
Canadian
Mounted Rifles neared the kopje, and were attacked by several hundred
Boers. A running fight ensued before the Boers were able to ride down
and capture the fleeing Canadians. But the Boers then faced an alerted
Canadian camp.
While the main attack was mounted from the east, fifty or sixty Boers
began to circle around to the south to attack the camp from the flank.
Morden and his men, who could have laid low, or fled back to camp, or
even surrendered, opened fire from the scanty protection of the
half-metre high railway bed. Henry Miles was wounded in the hand almost
immediately. Fred Morden sent him back to camp with the horses and a
message that the post would hold out. When relief arrived eight hours
later, the fight was over. Morden and Kerr were dead, and Thomas Miles
lay wounded with a shattered shoulder. Two dead Boers and patches of
blood on the veldt indicated that the fight had been stiff. Even when
the post was reduced to one wounded man, the Boers dared not approach it
too closely and eventually rode off.
The four men from Pincher Creek must have known that they were
inviting death by opening fire. They also knew that if they surrendered,
the Boers would likely have turned them loose in a few days. The action
of these Canadians at Honing Spruit prevented the Boers from attacking
the station from an unexpected direction; their sacrifice is worth
remembering.